By Andrew Gans
16 Nov 2007
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| Ellen Greene in "Pushing Daisies." |
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| Photo by ABC |
Ellen Greene
Ellen Greene is that rare breed: a gifted musical theatre actress and thrilling concert performer who is equally compelling on screen. This season, TV watchers across the country are lucky enough to have the opportunity to enjoy the innumerable gifts of this actress in the new ABC-TV comedy/drama "Pushing Daisies," which is written and executive-produced by Bryan Fuller and directed and executive-produced by Barry Sonnenfeld and concerns a rather unique pie-shop owner who is able to bring back the dead (there are serious repercussions, however, should the undead remain alive longer than 60 seconds).
Last week I had the great pleasure of catching up with the good-hearted Greene best known for creating and preserving the role of the lovably ditzy Audrey in the Off-Broadway staging and subsequent film version of Alan Menken and Howard Ashman's Little Shop of Horrors who explained that she auditioned for the "Daisies" pilot and her role as Sylar's mom, Virginia Grey, on "Heroes" during the same two-week period. "I literally got them both at the same time," Greene says. "The casting people for 'Heroes' tried to work it out for me, [so] that I could do both shows. The day [after the 'Heroes' audition] was the reading [for 'Daisies'], so we had to make the decision in two seconds. Steve LaManna, my agent at Innovative, brought the ['Daisies'] script to me and said, 'Ellen, I see you doing this.' I loved it, but I loved 'Heroes,' too. They were saying that ['Heroes'] would be for more than one [appearance]. The next day, when I came in for the reading, Bryan [Fuller] said, 'Ellen, I made a call.' He made a call for me so that we could work it out, and they changed the schedule for me. So I started on 'Pushing Daisies,' and I think I did two days, and then I went to do two days of 'Heroes' with John Badham, who was directing it. It was very exciting. This all happened back in February."
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| Ellen Greene and Swoosie Kurtz in "Pushing Daisies." |
| photo by ABC |
"Daisies" casts Greene as Vivian Charles aunt to Charlotte (Anna Friel) and sister of Lily (Swoosie Kurtz) the gentler, more affectionate half of the Darling Mermaid Darlings team, who has a love of cheese and humanity. And, Vivian is a character Greene truly adores. "This is my first series," Greene says, adding, "I've never done one because if you want [the show] to live a long time, you have to love your character. . . . It's such a wonderful, multi-layered [character], and I fell in love with Vivian. When you want to live with a character a long while, like I lived with Audrey, you want it to be someone that you love. If you love that character, usually, it will come that other people will love it especially if it has this magical quality. . . . So, for me, as a series, yes I felt it was going to go, but [I also] wanted it to go. What no one knows is the journey that Bryan [Fuller] has in his brain is so wonderfully multi-layered and complex. Even though [the characters] live in this world like 'The Land of Little Shop ,' this is the 'Land of Pushing Daisies,' with quotes around it [but] it's very realistic. There is an obligation of a murder each week, but Bryan is the visionary, and what is so interesting is the characters' journey and their intertwining."
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| Ellen Greene in "Pushing Daisies" |
| photo by ABC |
She is also completely besotted with Sonnenfeld, who directed the show's pilot entitled "Pie-lette" and several other episodes. "The day before we started shooting," Green says, "we all went out to dinner. . . I got to sit next to Barry and Anna, the two of them such delights. . . Barry was so charming and so funny, talking about his 'sweeties,' his wife and daughter. He's just the most charming man. . . . He's also one of the funniest directors I have ever, ever worked with. . . . I like dear, kind souls who have a good sense of humor and are deep [and] complex."
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| Ellen Greene in "Pushing Daisies." |
| photo by ABC |






