¡¡¡Nuevo proyecto de la FOX sobre GOTHAM!!!

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Re: ¡¡¡Nuevo proyecto de la FOX sobre GOTHAM!!!

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- Descripción oficial del 1.14 "The Fearsome Dr. Crane":
1.14 "The Fearsome Dr. Crane" (02 Febrero 8:00-9:00 PM ET/PT): Fish Mooney revela un secreto de Oswald Cobblepot, provocando que Maroni se lo lleve a un viaje para probar su lealtad. Mientras tanto, Gordon y Bullock cazan a un asesino que pone en el punto de mira a víctimas con fobias severas y Bruce Wayne se enfrenta a Gordon por fallar a la hora de hacer progresos en el caso de asesinato de sus padres.

http://comicbook.com/2015/01/14/gotham- ... e-man-who/


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- GOTHAM, 1.12 "What The Little Bird Told Him" Extended Promo:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BwYyBQhHymc



La nueva promo revela que el villano que veremos es el próximo episodio será "The Electrocutioner". En los cómics, 'Electrocutioner, a.k.a. Lester Buchinsky', empieza su carrera usando un traje de descargas para luchar contra el crimen como vigilante, antes de adoptar el estilo de vida de un mercenario y criminal, trabajando para jefes del crimen. También ha sido un miembro del Suicide Squad.


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- GOTHAM, 1.12 "What The Little Bird Told Him" New Promo:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UEMoQ30r34


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Re: ¡¡¡Nuevo proyecto de la FOX sobre GOTHAM!!!

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- GOTHAM | "Fans Ask: Mustache" Featurette:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2uEEN7egtrA


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Re: ¡¡¡Nuevo proyecto de la FOX sobre GOTHAM!!!

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- FOX Renueva Oficialmente "Gotham" por una Segunda Temporada (Nota de prensa Oficial):
B7kv2J9CQAA40g6.jpg

FOX ORDENA UNA SEGUNDA TEMPORADA DEL DRAMA DE ÉXITO “GOTHAM”

El Nuevo Episodio se emite el Lunes, 19 de Enero en FOX

FOX ha renovado su serie dramática de éxito GOTHAM para una segunda temporada, según fue anunciado hoy por Dana Walden y Gary Newman, Presidente y Director Ejecutivo, Fox Television Group.

En el prócimo nuevo episodio de GOTHAM, “What The Little Bird Told Him,” que se emite el Lunes, 19 de Enero (8:00-9:00 PM ET/PT) en FOX, en un intento de recuperar su trabajo, Jim Gordon (Ben McKenzie) busca capturar a Jack Gruber (la estrella invitada Christopher Heyerdahl), un genio eléctrico demente que se escapa de Arkham Asylum. Mientras tanto, Falcone (John Doman)lucha por aferrarse a su imperio después de que Fish Mooney (Jada Pinkett Smith) haga su siguiente movimiento.

Consiguiendo un ráting de 4.2 rating en Adultos 18-49 y 10.6 millones de espectadores, GOTHAM es el drama No. 1 de esta temporada entre Hombres 18-49 y Hombres 18-34. El episodio de su debut, que explotó en la Semana de Premieres con un ráting de 6.0/18 entre Adultos 18-49, superó a “The Blacklist” y “Scorpion” y se convirtió en el debut de un drama de otoño de más audiencia de la FOX en 14 años. Sus rátings Live +7 reflejan la ganancia mayor de tres-días-después (+0.9) de cualquier drama de la historia.

GOTHAM es una historia de orígenes de los grandes super villanos y vigilantes de DC Comics, revelando todo un nuevo capítulo que nunca antes ha sido contado. Del productor ejecutivo/escritor Bruno Heller (“The Mentalist,” “Rome”), GOTHAM sigue el ascenso de un policía a través de una peligrosamente corrupta ciudad balanceándose entre el bien y el mal, y escribe la crónica del nacimiento de uno de los más populares superhéroes de nuestro tiempo. La serie está protagonizada por Ben McKenzie (“Southland,” “The O.C.”), Donal Logue (“Vikings,” “Sons of Anarchy”), Jada Pinkett Smith (“Hawthorne,” “Collateral”) y Robin Lord Taylor (“The Walking Dead”).

GOTHAM está basada en los personajes de DC Comics y está producida por la Warner Bros. Television. El productor ejecutivo Bruno Heller escribió el piloto, que due dirigido y producido ejecutivamente por el nominado al Emmy Danny Cannon (the “CSI” franchise, “Nikita”). John Stephens sirve de productor ejecutivo en la serie. s


http://www.gothamsite.com/press-release ... -season-2/


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Shelby
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Re: ¡¡¡Nuevo proyecto de la FOX sobre GOTHAM!!!

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- El elenco de "Gotham" en la TCA Winter Tour (17-01-15):

Imágenes:
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Videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajvSc9nkTmE (Ben McKenzie)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jFjWRtEMWns (Donal Logue)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmmWV_Go6Ac (Robin Lord Taylor)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kqDX8UOSFk (Ben McKenzie, Robin Lord Taylor, Donal Logue, Morena Baccarin)
http://www.tvguide.com/news/gotham-cast ... O2bVFZwSUc (Ben McKenzie, Robin Lord Taylor, Donal Logue, Morena Baccarin)


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- Robin Lord Taylor Sobre la Renovacion de la S2 de 'Gotham' y qué es lo próximo para el Pingüino (accesshollywood):
Robin Lord Taylor Sobre la Renovacion de la S2 de 'Gotham' y qué es lo próximo para el Pingüino
Por Jolie Lash 19 Enero, 2015 11:02 AM EDT


"Gotham" has been a hit for Fox, and the network announced over the weekend that the series has been renewed for Season 2.

"I found out on Twitter like everybody else," Robin Lord Taylor (Oswald Cobblepot/The Penguin) told Access Hollywood on Saturday, just hours after the Season 2 news was announced at the Television Critics Association Winter Tour, in Pasadena, Calif.

"It's just a dream," he said of knowing the "Gotham" journey will continue, adding, "it's just unbelievable."

The show is currently in the middle of its first season and on Monday night, "Gotham" continues with a new episode. Guest star Christopher Heyerdahl's character, The Electrocutioner, is on the loose, following his escape from Arkham Asylum.

"I am involved in this," Robin confirmed of featuring into the villain's storyline. "You're gonna see Penguin get the crap kicked out of him again. It's just endless for him."

The actor also hinted at more political underworld maneuvering for his extremely ambitious Oswald.

"You'll also start to see -- Penguin has aligned himself with the two main crime families in Gotham City and… he's pulled in two directions," Robin told Access. "You're going to have to see him make these big decisions about how to play one against the other, and… also, who's more important, who's less important and yet also maintain his own importance, because ultimately, it's just about self-preservation for Penguin."

In last week's episode, Penguin got hurt as he was taught a lesson in hubris, and Robin said his character is picking up portions of those lessons along the way.

"He's learning. … That's the thing that I love about the character is that he's still figuring it out," Robin said. "It would be one thing if he was just constantly winning and then, at the end of the season, he's the Penguin we all know. But it's not that, which is so gratifying because he's human. He's making mistakes and hubris – he did learn a big lesson."

http://www.accesshollywood.com/robin-lo ... cle_102991

- Ben McKenzie y Robin Lord Taylor sobre el legado de Arkham, y el juego de poder del Pingüino (Variety):
Ben McKenzie y Robin Lord Taylor sobre el legado de Arkham, y el juego de poder del Pingüino
Por Laura Prudom 19 de Enero, 2015 | 09:56AM PT


The last episode of Fox’s “Gotham” took viewers inside the hallowed halls of Arkham Asylum — one of the most iconic locales in the Batman mythos — but even Jim Gordon (Ben McKenzie) couldn’t keep the inmates from running amok, resulting in the escape of the sadistic Jack Gruber (Christopher Heyerdahl) and his henchman Aaron Helzinger (aka DC Comics villain Amygdala, played by Kevin McCormick).

Jack and Aaron’s breakout may be very bad news for Gotham, but according to McKenzie, it “presents Jim with an opportunity, because he’s able to pitch himself as the only man who can catch them, because he knows them.” In an effort to earn back his badge and his place at the GCPD, Jim will do whatever it takes, and McKenzie told Variety that the Jan. 19 episode, “What The Little Bird Told Him,” is “one of the best we’ve done” as a result. It will also bring Jim back into contact with Dr. Leslie Thompkins (Morena Baccarin), who has a major role to play in upcoming episodes.

For McKenzie, the introduction of Jack (who may go by another name that’s familiar to hardcore comic book fans) and the other Arkham inmates takes the show to a new level: “It’s big and fun and just very entertaining. To have this bizarre villain let loose on the streets of Gotham with his henchman is a fun little conceit and it’s just the tip of the iceberg in terms of what Arkham is eventually going to do to Gotham. All of these villains will eventually be committed there and get even worse while in close proximity to each other.”

And “Gotham” — which was just renewed for a second season — has plenty more rogues from Bat-canon to introduce in the coming weeks, including a precursor to the Scarecrow. “[Episodes] 14 and 15 are a tandem of Dr. Crane and his son. I haven’t seen them put together yet but it’s quite disturbing, actually, to encounter these villains before they become themselves,” McKenzie previewed. “[We] see that a lot of their eventual psychosis is rooted in trauma that’s perpetuated on them by their parents. It’s rough. I hope it allows the viewer to become sympathetic to these villains, to actually see them for the fragile human beings that they are. If we can do that, that’ll be a neat trick, and allow us to go in all sorts of different directions in future seasons.”

One character who has already successfully achieved that balance of villainy and pathos is Robin Lord Taylor’s Oswald Cobblepot (aka Penguin), and the actor remains humbled by the “positive and supportive” reactions his performance as the “underdog psychopath” has received. “I set out from the beginning to make the character human, and I think in making him human he had to be sympathetic in a way. To see that people have responded to that… it’s rare that I ever feel like I’ve accomplished what I set out to do, but this is one of those rare times,” he told Variety at Fox’s Television Critics Association presentation on Saturday.

“What The Little Bird Told Him” is a game-changing episode for both Jim and Penguin, who has been playing a dangerous game of late: working for the head of one crime family, Don Maroni (David Zayas) while secretly spying on him for rival Don Falcone (John Doman).

“This is one of the first times where you see the pull between the two; he has to really scramble to maintain his integrity to one and also his integrity to his ultimate boss, Don Falcone, and at the same time maintain his own personal integrity, because he’s really in it just for himself. It’s all about self-preservation for him,” Taylor explained. “So from my character’s perspective, that’s the most exciting thing about the upcoming episode — seeing him torn between the two and also scrambling and trying to make it work. It adds to that humanness; if he was constantly successful and had everything plotted out, it wouldn’t be nearly as interesting or as fun to play.”

While Taylor admitted that Penguin’s ultimate goal is to unseat Don Falcone and run Gotham City in his stead, “I think he knows enough to know that he’s not ready yet, he’s not there yet. So then I would say his main obstacle would still probably be Fish Mooney [Jada Pinkett Smith], because she’s absolutely ruthless, and she knows more about him than anybody else does besides his mom. She taught him everything he knows about the underbelly of Gotham city, and she will use all of that information against him. She will stop at nothing, so I think she’s definitely still his number one [enemy].”

http://variety.com/2015/tv/news/gotham- ... 201408731/

- Heyerdahl Enciende el Voltage como el Electrocutioner de "Gotham" (cbr):
Heyerdahl Enciende el Voltage como el Electrocutioner de "Gotham"
Por Bryan Cairns 19 de Enero 2015

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There's a reason Arkham Asylum, the psychiatric hospital housing some of Gotham's most dangerous and mentally unstable individuals, exists.

Case in point: The conniving Jack Gruber, played by Christopher Heyerdahl. The "grade-A psychopath" complicated demoted Jim Gordon's (Ben McKenzie) security job at Arkham by performing electroshock on other inmates in order to control them before he, along with his brainwashed accomplice Aaron Helzinger (Kevin McCormick) recently escaped during a prison riot. Now on the loose, the two wreak havoc across the city while matching wits with Gordon in tonight's episode of "Gotham," "What the Little Bird Told Him."

Heyerdahl spoke with CBR News about Gruber's agenda, including his growing rivalry with Gordon, the constructing the Electrocutioner's special costume and his desire to become a force for good in the world of "Gotham."

CBR News: It's been a while since you guest-starred as Zor-El on "Smallville." What's it like, stepping back into the DC Universe?

Chris Heyerdahl: It feels great. I watch the show, so it's kind of exciting from that perspective as well. There's so much to draw on. Aside from Penguin, Two-Face, Cat, Ivy, Riddler and Falcone that are already entrenched in the series, they have so many great villains to bring into it. I'm waiting with bated breath for Mr. Freeze to come in. It's great. To start with the Electrocutioner, who is so much fun to play, especially "Gotham's" take on him -- it's been a blast. He's like a teaser character. I like to call him the minor member of the supervillains.

There was plenty of speculation that Jack Gruber could be "Gotham's" version of the Electrocutioner. Did they spell that out to you in the beginning?

I think they put out a teaser where Nygma plays with that. I don't think I saw a breakdown. I had a conversation with Bruno Heller the first day of shooting. I asked him point blank, "Who is this?" He was very kind to let me know I was going to be an incarnation of the Electrocutioner. That's the fun thing with this character, is that he's been brought in three or four times as different incarnations. The fun thing about the next episode, "What the Little Bird Told Him," is we're going to find out which incarnation of the Electrocutioner our man is.

How, if at all, did the comic books help prepare you for the role?

It's an interesting question, because whenever you have access to the lore or the DC Comics, there's so much there. Then it's a question of knowing that this is "Gotham's" version of this character. They are taking elements of what we've already seen of the Electrouctioner and bringing similar traits, but with a really cool twist.

Arkham Asylum has a lot of crazies locked up. What separates Gruber from his fellow inmates?

I'd have to say his conviction and vision. I don't want to give away too much here, because it's going to be fun to get all this information, as our hero Gordon is going to find out. I would say, ultimately, Gruber's ability to get out. I would also say the reason he is in there.

In their initial meeting, Gruber seemed to push Jim Gordon's buttons. How does he view Jim and what did you enjoy most about that scene?

Again, there are two sides. One is my own, personal side. That was the very first scene I did. I had never worked with Ben before. That was our opportunity for the characters to not only sniff each other out, but for us as actors. Ben is a phenomenally generous actor. Every single thing I threw at him he knocked back. I think the same holds true with the characters. Gruber sees young Jim as a man who has had some injustice thrust upon him. He sees him as great and complicated. Gruber sees him as someone he can relate to on a personal level, someone who has an injustice thrust upon him and maybe someone he can create a kinship with in the future. That's the interesting thing about this world of "Gotham," is the line between hero and the villain at this stage of the game. They have to work together. Gruber definitely wants to see if he can lift Jim back to his full potential and work as a team.

What did you make of that letter Gruber left for Jim at the end of "Rogues' Gallery?" Was it just a taunt?

That's part of it. I think of it as a "Dear Jim" letter. Not "Dear John," but "Dear Jim." It's an inspirational letter. It's a rant, but it's a challenge, an invitation and a bit of a goodbye.

Gruber was a master manipulator in Arkham. In what way does his plans escalate now that's free?

He's cranking everything up a level. His convictions are very strong, and that's what got him out of Arkham. Now that he's free, we're going to find out what his master plan is, so that he can get on with his life. When life's challenges come before us, we need to exorcise our demons. That is what Jack is going to do.

He has been waiting a long time. Gruber was in Arkham for years.

He was in Arkham for a while. He's been in a few places for a while. This is what we're going to find out. I have high hopes Jim is going to figure it out. When the evidence is compiled, we're going to find out where Jack has been, what Jack has been doing and how he's going to exorcise his demons.

Electricity is Gruber's shtick. Now that he no longer has patients to experiment on, how will his electrical modus operandi continue to manifest in tonight's episode?

Well, there aren't that many people to experiment on in Arkham, but there are so many interesting people to exercise his powers upon and toys to use and creative gadgets to bring to fruition. We're going to see Jack really lighting things up. He's charged and ready to go.

What's the device attached to Gruber's chest?

This is one of the things we know about the Electrocutioner. His suit is the important part of his power. His brain is going to create something that is going to allow him to harness electricity. That is "Gotham's" version of that electrical suit. I had a blast with the costume designer. I was wearing nothing, and neither was Kevin McCormick, who plays Aaron Helzinger. We were wearing nothing that could conduct, from top to bottom.

You'll see that he wears this fantastic suit, and it's not conductive. It's very difficult to find a tailor to make a non-conductive suit. When I walked on set, everybody wanted to -- I wouldn't say grope, because that wouldn't be allowed on set -- but they were amazed. The shirt, the vest and the jacket -- everything was non-conductive. It was very cool.

There seems to be this cat and mouse game going on. How does Gruber put Jim to the test?

I think there's a promo of one of my favorite characters, Nygma, holding up two pairs of shoes. Again, these are non-conductive. He gives people very good advice. Let's just say the person who is going to take advice is going to do well in this episode. Jim dismisses the obvious and doesn't dismiss what everyone is going to ignore. That's what makes him such a fascinating character. He's such a black sheep. Jack is going to challenge Gordon's convictions.

These "Gotham" introductions serve as the building blocks for the Batman characters. If Gruber does survive, in what capacity would you like him to return?

What I like about the history of this character is the whole vigilante angle. He actually believes he is doing good. Villains who get away or are allowed to continue on or are not punished to Gruber's acceptable level, he will come back and play with the whole vigilante do-gooder element of the character. I think that is a wonderful moral challenge for Gordon.

Besides the powers, what's different or similar in portraying a Batman villain to a Superman foe?

The commonality is intelligence. All of the villains on both sides of the DC canon, whether it be Superman or Batman, have a high level of intelligence. They have a great strength in their convictions. At the same time, they have great delusions of grandeur. I think that's it. The conviction and intelligence crosses the border.


http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page ... e&id=58595

- Donal Logue Habla sobre Harvey Bullock, Gotham Central & lo que está por llegar (ksitetv):
Donal Logue Habla sobre Harvey Bullock, Gotham Central & lo que está por llegar
Por Craig Byrne 19 Enero, 2015


On Saturday at the TCA Press Tour, we were able to do a one-on-one interview with the fantastic Donal Logue, whose Harvey Bullock is one of the highlights of the FOX series Gotham which sees a new episode airing tonight at 8PM (ET).

"I have to say, it was an episode that I was lighter on," Logue admittted, but he still had some fantastic things to say about tonight's installment, which is called "What The Little Bird Told Him." "I loved [Christopher Heyerdahl]. He's a fantastic actor, and Eagle Eglisson was the director. He's amazing. He did a really great job. People have been talking about how visually stunning and how good it is, so I'm excited to see it," Logue said.

Gotham as a series featured Bullock with almost as much screen time as Ben McKenzie's Jim Gordon -- but with such a large cast, the roster could often change. "There are just so many stories that they have to tell, and there's a lot that I would like to see -- the villains, and there's a lot of worlds. It's hard. Whatever is best for the show. There are a lot of people who need to be busy, and it's only one episode at a time to fill," he explained, before being asked specifically about the recent Harvey Bullock-Alfred Pennyworth team-up that Logue had with Sean Pertwee in a recent episode.

"It was a lot of fun to do," he said. "That was a blast. I love that guy [Sean Pertwee]. I love our cast. It was fun to see Alfred kick some @$$. More @$$-kicking Alfred-style is coming."

Moving back to Jim Gordon's primary partner in crimefighting, Logue said that working with Jim Gordon has woken Bullock up. "It's an exciting new world, and it's kind of on the right side of what he used to be," he said. "I don't think Harvey Bullock is an @$$hole. I don't think he was a bad cop, and I don't think he was really dirty. I just think that someone like Jim Gordon who really wants to change the city, he signed up to be on board with him, and he's done it. Jim's in Arkham because he got busted for taking on the Mayor and everybody, and Harvey was by his side," Logue explained.

Prior to getting the role on Gotham, Donal Logue was familiar with Batman: The Animated Series and the acclaimed comic book series Gotham Central, where Harvey Bullock is played a bit darker. "I can't do what someone else did, and I don't want to imitate anyone else," he admitted. "The Gotham Central Harvey, he's crass. He's super homophobic, he's dark, dirty, street, right? [But] we live in an 8:00 universe, and I kind of think that if [TV's] Harvey was that dark, he could last a couple of episodes, but you couldn't go in the long term with him, if that makes sense," he said.

Gotham Central was a notable comic book series in that it brought characters like Renee Montoya and Crispus Allen to the forefront. Are we going to see more of them being problems for Harvey? "I miss 'em," Logue said. "I haven't seen a lot of Montoya and Allen around lately, and I desperately want them to be [around]. I love those two. It's weird, because when you're doing the pilot, you really feel like this is the world you're establishing, that every episode is going to have this dynamic of Montoya and Allen, and this and that, and it's just a big world, you know? I haven't seen Montoya outside of scenes with Barbara, and Allen I haven't seen in a little bit, so hopefully they'll be back," he wished.

Dr. Leslie Thompkins, as played by Morena Baccarin, is a newer addition to Gotham's world, and Logue thinks that Harvey does trust her, though he might not want to like her. Why? He's jealous, in s way. He feels abandoned - Jim Gordon's one of the few things he's got - but she's good at what she does, and she's really nice to Harvey. I think it's begrudging," he admitted, before saying that Harvey is horrible with women in general.

"He's probably the most f---ed up man in terms of just relationships and intimacy, so he's just dismissive of Barbara, he's dismissive of Thompkins… whatever. He's [also] threatened by other men who could have an actual relationship with a woman," Logue said. When asked if Bullock is threatened by The Penguin, Logue told us that he should be more threatened by the Penguin.

"He should be scared of the Penguin. I always feel like, man, I've threatened this dude… I told Jim while he was in the trunk to put a bullet in his head. He can get me almost any time," Logue said.

The strongest impression from the interview is that for the cast, Gotham is a team effort. "I've felt from the get-go, Ben's the Captain, Ben has to carry the hardest load, and he doesn't have the colors that we get to play with sometimes. I can get cheap laughs. I've felt that whoever played the Penguin, before I knew it was Robin, I felt like in the pilot, that would set the critical tone of the show, because if this person had gravitas and was good, the whole show would veer over the edge of being taken seriously in that regard, and Robin, I think, has done that for our show. Cory who plays Nygma is a brilliant guy. He's had to play this one note for a long time, and it's going to be cool as sh*t when Cory gets to unload and be dark. Jada has been amazing; she's just cool, you know? Everybody is happy when she is there," he said, adding that when not everyone is there, everyone is missed.

"I don't get to work a lot with [some people]. I've had a scene with Camren, but I see her around all the time. David and Camren, they're golden people. They're beautiful young people. They're sweethearts, and their parents are cool. Zabryna's funny as hell… everybody's so different. Erin, Sean… we've got a good kind of U.K. mix in the bunch. We've got a great cast."

Could we see all of these characters coming together as the season comes to a head?

"I hope so! I hope we have one of those big finales that gets everybody involved. I love it when the read-through is everybody. It's Richard Kind, and John Doman, and David Zayas… we have a killer cast that's really great."


http://www.ksitetv.com/interviews-2/got ... come/53298

- Robin Lord Taylor Adelanta el Juego del Pingüino en Gotham Game: ¿Cuánto poder quiere? (TVFanatic):
Robin Lord Taylor Adelanta el Juego del Pingüino en Gotham Game: ¿Cuánto poder quiere?
Por Jim Halterman 19 Enero, 2015 8:00 am.


Oh, Oswald Cobblepot.

The villain-in-the-making on Gotham Season 1 has been busy playing some powerful figures against each other - but will tonight’s Gotham Season 1 Episode 12 see The Penguin get caught by his own game? Or will things work in his favor?

Over the weekend, I sat down with Robin Lord Taylor to talk about the just-announced second season renewal for the freshman series, what Penguin really wants and how he approaches the physicality of the role...

TV Fanatic: Congrats on the second season! Did you see it coming?

Robin Lord Taylor: I mean, it looked good, and you know people on set have been talking about it since like the pilot, you know what I mean? I remember I brought my mom and my sister and my little niece to set and they visited and we got a tour from one of the construction guys and he said to my mom, he brought them to the GCPD headquarters, which is one of the most beautiful sets I’ve ever seen. It’s transformative. It’s stepping into another world, it’s huge and it’s amazing. He brings them into there and then he says, you know, “This is how you know you have a second season, because they don’t build s**t like this for just one season.”

On top of that, the response was so great and we did well and then also it’s not just domestically, but internationally the show is doing very well. So, all of the signs were there that it was going to be good but I’m so superstitious that I was just not allowing myself to even entertain the thought. I’m just glad I don’t have to knock on wood anymore.

TVF: We haven’t seen much with Penguin as far as any romance because he definitely very busy doing other manipulative fun things. Is that going to come into play at all? Does he even have a type?

RLT: You know, I don’t know. I think that his ambitions and his goals are so beyond that that I think he’s more interested in power and I think he also, somewhat, shut that part of himself off because I think that he sees that as a vulnerability, something that could be exploited because he certainly does it to other people. He certainly exploits people’s personal relationships for his own gain.

I would not be adverse to him figuring it out. I just don’t think he’s ever allowed himself to figure it out because, again, he’s been bullied for the way he looks, for his interests as a child, all of this has led to his ambitions. He’s been treated like he’s completely powerless and worthless. I just don’t think he even sees himself as worthy of that, so I don’t know, it’s going to be interesting to see.

TVF: Is power his primary objective, or is there something behind the power? What do you think drives him?

RLT: No, I don’t think it’s power. It’s ultimately power but it’s what goes along with it, what’s really deeper inside of there, I think, is a desire to be accepted and to be accepted by people for who he is. I think because he was not ever accepted that’s led him to this intense need for power and this need for control because if you control somebody they can’t hurt you and they can’t make you feel like you’re less of a person and that’s been his whole life to this point.

TVF: Is his mother a vulnerable spot for him?

RLT: I think so, and that worries me, to step back as an actor. I don’t know anything but I love my scenes with Carol [Kane who plays Oswald’s mother] and I just love the fact that he has a mom and it’s the only other part of his life. We don’t see where he sleeps and we don’t know what he eats for breakfast, we don’t know anything personal about him but what we do know is that he has a mom. We see her, we see their relationship, as twisted as it may be. It just makes so much sense.

But at the same time, as the actor, it’s not the smartest thing for him to have a mother who’s in the same city. It’s vulnerability for him, it’s something that could be exploited, and I’m like, “No one better mess with my mom. I need Carol around.” You know what I mean? She brings so much to show. She’s amazing.

TVF: Moving into the next episode, Penguin is really playing all sides of the fence. Where is his plan heading at this point?

RLT: What comes in this next episode is that he’s bitten off a lot and he’s playing Maroni against Falcone and Falcone against Maroni, and then there’s Fish there, and then also ultimately himself. He’s still doing it all ultimately just for himself so you’re going to see him torn between all three and then also make some major mistakes, which personally I love. I love it when he makes mistakes. I love it when he fails because it’s just so much more interesting and there’s somewhere for us to go. He’s brilliant but he’s not perfect so you’re just going to see a lot of that.

TVF: Talk about Oswald’s physicality because those moments where he’s just filled with glee are amazing. But even other times, there is a physical way you’re playing him.

RLT: I do the old Stella Adler trick where I put the bottle cap in my shoe. And it’s a little reminder that every step that he takes is painful. It’s a real injury that he suffered, it’s not just an affectation, but at the same time, yeah, it’s an actor’s dream because it’s like with the makeup and with the hair and with the clothes and then the shoe and the bottle cap, and all of this, it’s all these like eternal things, it’s like putting on the character and stepping into his skin, and then it just makes it, you know, so much more visceral of an experience, which I love.

TVF: With a show like this, it’s very high profile, you’ve gotten a lot of attention for it, how have you handled just the fact that people want to know more about you and your life?

RLT: Well, it’s a balance. I consider myself a character actor and I think the most successful character actors are the guys where you’re like, “Oh, it’s that guy in that thing.” You know what I mean? You recognize them but you don’t necessarily know who they are and that way they can sort of seamlessly go from one role to another, and you know because ideally we’re trying to create an illusion where I am not Robin Taylor, I am someone else, and so it’s a delicate balance.

I’m still navigating it. I’m still trying to figure it out. Part of you wants to just be completely open and talk about every aspect of your life, who your parents are, where they live and this and that and the other thing, and the other part of me is just like, “No, it’s oversharing. I don’t want to be a celebrity. I don’t really want that at all,” so it’s just a push and a pull. I’m just figuring it out as we go.


http://www.tvfanatic.com/2015/01/robin- ... 9_39030327

- Morena Baccarin Habla sobre "Gotham," Jim Gordon y el Batman de Keaton (cbr):
Morena Baccarin Habla sobre "Gotham," Jim Gordon y el Batman de Keaton
Por Scott Huver 19 Enero 2015


When Dr. Leslie Thompkins made her debut in the Batman mythos nearly 40 years ago, she was a kind, elderly woman who held a special place in Bruce Wayne's heart. On TV's "Gotham," however, Emmy-nominated Morena Baccarin's Leslie is anything but matronly -- and judging by the promos for this week's episode, it looks like her major Gotham City relationship will be with Jim Gordon this time around.

Hours before her second episode of "Gotham" was set to air, CBR News caught up with Baccarin to discuss her latest role. Among other things, the actress said that "What the Little Bird Told Him" promises to introduce a whole new dynamic among the adults in charge of taking care of the pre-Batman Gotham City. Plus, we discuss making the shift from "Homeland" to "Gotham," building an all-new take on her character and why, for her, Michael Keaton will always be the Batman.

CBR News: What was the thing about Leslie that drew you to the character?

Morena Baccarin: To be honest, I didn't know much about it, and they were playing very close to the vest -- I had to take a bit of a leap of faith. But I love the "Gotham" world, and how they were portraying characters and introducing people and characters that we've known. They're not falling into any of the bad traps. And I thought the show was handled really, really well, and I really wanted to be a part of it. So I went with it.

Did you look at the source material? She's been portrayed in very different ways over about 40 years.

Yeah, very different. I don't think we're sticking to any of that mythology. I looked it up a bit so I knew her background, but we've really strayed from that, so I'm just creating my own thing.

So far, we've seen you work with Ben McKenzie as Jim Gordon. Do we get to see you interact with the other characters as things progress?

I'm not sure. As of now, most of my stuff has been with him.

What's been fun about working Ben?

He's a total sweetheart and such a pleasure to work with -- so fun and dedicated. I think he's doing a phenomenal job with a character that has a history, and he's sort of reinventing it and at the same time, keeping it honest to the original. We have a blast together. Our characters have this really fun film noir rapport with each other, and it's really fun to discover those scenes together.

Are you playing things with a hint that there could be a romance between Jim and Leslie?

Yeah, yeah. That door's opened on Monday's episode, yeah.

How saucy does it get?

Pretty good! It's a pretty good one. It's a good one -- I'm going to go with that.

In the comics, she also has a special relationship with Bruce Wayne. Is that going to be part of what you do?

It hasn't yet, but I hope so. It would be fun to work with him.

Does Leslie get some action scenes like the rest of the cast?

She gets her fair share of being part of the action. I'm not, like, beating people up, but she is not shy about seeing dead bodies or being around a crime scene and sort of wanting to -- she's very interested and curious to know how [Jim] solves a crime and just kind of wants to be around for that and everything. I think what makes that relationship work is that she's not afraid of seeing things and being around corruption and the darkness of Gotham.

What's been the most interesting part of working on a series with this much production value and specific look and feel? Obviously, you've done things like "Firefly" and "V," but this is a darker, grittier, more urban heightened reality.

Yes. It's been fun. It's beautifully shot. The art direction and costumes and everything about it is very well taken care of. I feel like it's going to make a real dent -- an impact in this world, the world of these superheroes and this particular brand.

What was your first day on set like?

I was a little nervous. I always am at the beginning of every job. Now, I could care less. No -- totally kidding! That's not true!

It was an adjustment, coming from "Homeland" which was a very, very, very gritty, realistic world to a gritty, fantastical world. I remember, Ben said to me a couple of times, when I was dissecting a moment to try and figure it out -- he's like, "It's Gotham. Just go with it. Have fun." I was like, "Right."

Were you much of a fan of Batman before this?

Of course! I mean, who's not a fan of Batman? I saw the movies, and my brother was into comics, so I would go to Forbidden Planet, this comic book store in New York.

Do you have a favorite version of Batman among those that you grew up on?

Michael Keaton, to me, will always be Batman. I liked his humor. I thought he brought a self-deprecating, but sexy, humor to that part that was really strong. And him with Catwoman, together, is one of my all-time favorite scenes in any movie.

How does it feel now to be living in that world with all those characters?

It's fascinating, and it's been really fun to watch everybody develop, slowly. Watching Catwoman walking through the halls at work, to seeing her performance on camera, and seeing the new beginnings of that is so exciting to me. I think they're doing such a good job of not belaboring it too much and making it really subtle and slow.

Did you do any medical research?

No. I didn't. I felt like, for this world, we're not selling a medical show. We are selling "Gotham," where really anything goes. And so I feel like people will forgive me if I hold a stethoscope wrong or I use the -- what's the blood pressure thingy? I don't really care. It's fine.

You've worked in the DC Universe before as a voice actor, right?

Yeah, I guess so. I've done Talia al Ghul and Black Canary and Cheetah. I have a hard time remembering which is which world. I've been immersed. I think every actor now is immersed in the comic world a little bit.

Do you keep up with "Homeland" now that you're no longer on the show?

I do. I've seen it.

What was fun and/or weird about watching a season without you?

It was really weird when they went to the Brody house. And I was like, "Wait a second! I live there. I should be there!" I almost half-expected myself to look out the door. That was very strange, but it was such a different world this season that I didn't really miss myself. It was a whole other story, and I thought they did such a phenomenal job. All the actors were incredible this year.


http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page ... e&id=58600

- Anthony Carrigan de Gotham Habla sobre el traer de vuelta a Zsasz Back para perseguir a Gordon (comicbook):
Anthony Carrigan de Gotham Habla sobre el traer de vuelta a Zsasz Back para perseguir a Gordon
Por Russ Burlingame 19/01/2015


Tonight's episode of Gotham, airing in just about two hours on the East Coast, features the return to the small screen of Victor Zsasz.

Played by former The Flash villain Anthony Carrigan, Zsasz is a serial killer known primarily in the comics for being covered in scores (literally) of scars denoting the victims he's killed. On Gotham, he memorably held court at the Gotham City Police Department, and then held Barbara Kean hostage, preventing Jim Gordon from either arresting Don Falcone or going out in a blaze of glory trying.

This week, we'll see how he figures into a story that revolves around a prison break at Arkham Asylum, where The Electrocutioner and Amygdala are being pursued by Gordon as well as the rest of the team who are still on the force despite Jim being busted down to guarding Arkham.

Carrigan joined us to talk about the role, expanding from "monster of the week" to recurring threat and joining the talented cast of the hit FOX drama.

Is it kind of cool to be the first "monster of the week" type of villain (with The Electrocutioner) to recur?

It's been a blast. I've had so much fun creating this character and it's been great to just be the psychotic button man who emerges from the shadows, does his job and then retreats back in the shadows. It's fun to be a really terrifying villain in Gotham because Gotham is a pretty scary place.

It's been so much fun and to be joining such an amazing cast has been just wonderful.

Zsasz doesn't have a ton of development in the comics, but he is really beloved by fans. Is it nice to know you can put your spin on a character like that?

Yeah. I think that's the thing about all these different incarnations of the Batman legacy. That's what keeps it exciting is to allow room for interpretation and different possibilities. I've definitely drawn from both the source material of the comic books and also from what I want to be doing, from what I really appreciate about Victor and who I think he is. I think the more genuine and honest I can make that, the more it will be serving the story.

You've incorporated a sense of class that I don't see from him in the comics. Do you think that's something that just works better on film?

I think it's easy to fall into the stereotype of psychotic villains and making crazy faces. I think what's even scarier is creating that schism of, you never quite know who this person is. I definitely can appreciate that dichotomy of being both measured and volatile.

I see him as nervous, but also very smooth. He's psychotic, but he's slick at the same time. And from the backstory, I knew that he was very wealthy, so he is classy but that doesn't in any way lose the psychotic element to it. He's a hard one to pin down and I think the mystery is also what's quite terrifying about him.

Is there anybody from the cast that you really look forward to working with, or to getting more screen time down the road?

Well, you know, honestly it's such a well-rounded cast. Everyone is so much fun to watch that it would be really hard to play favorites. The way I see it is, how would Victor interact with this person? How would Victor interact with this person? How quickly would Victor try to kill this person, and how would he try to get something from this person? I think just playing that game in itself is really fun.

I'm interested to see how he's going to interact with the other villains who are establishing themselves as well and what their dynamics are going to be. I think it's really interesting when two villains who are equally eccentric meet...and there's a lot of eccentricity on the show.

When you're watching the show, what do you take away from it? There are certain actors who go very broad on Gotham and some who don't, and somehow they all fit into this world.

Right. I think the world of Gotham is a stylized world for sure, but it's also really gritty. You see elements of both of those things. There are different performances but I think they're all contributing to the creation of this world. And yeah, to that style that's being cultivated.

Obviously Gotham is a show where you're surrounded by eccentric characters. Zsasz is a really dangerous character; how do you get across that your crazy is different than the other crazy?

That's a good question. I think what's fun about doing more than one episode is you get the opportunity to, at times, just live in the crazy and let yourself go there but at times let yourself be completely normal because when you're not sure what exactly is going through this person's head, that's what's really creepy.

It's like, is this really just a really nice guy who knows what he's doing and has a reason for it? Or is he completely out of his mind and cannot be trusted to be ten feet near anyone else?

Often in a superhero show, the villain is less powerful and so he's trying to assert himself. In Gotham, you guys have all the power because the system is so corrupt. Is there a difference in how you play that?

I think it's both. I think Victor knows how dangerous he is and how dangerous he can be so he has no problem walking in and asserting himself in the Gotham City Police Department but you have to keep in mind that there is a hierarchy of crime and Victor wants to climb that as well. So on the one hand, he's going to assert himself but on the other hand, he has to prove himself as well.


http://comicbook.com/2015/01/19/gothams ... aunt-gord/

- Robin Lord Taylor hsbla sobre GOTHAM, el aumento del poder del Pingüino, el potencial del personaje para la violencia, cuándo conocerá finalmente a Edward Nygma, y más (collider):
Robin Lord Taylor hsbla sobre GOTHAM, el aumento del poder del Pingüino, el potencial del personaje para la violencia, cuándo conocerá finalmente a Edward Nygma, y más
Por Haleigh Foutch 20 Enero 2015


With last night’s episode, ”What the Little Bird Told Him”, Gotham finally paid some a major threads laid out in the first half of the series’ inaugural season , ratcheting the conflict between Fish Mooney (Jada Pinkett Smith) and Carmine Falcone (John Doman) up to the breaking point, and letting Penguin (Robin Lord Taylor) have a moment of triumph. Taylor’s performance as Oswald Cobblepott, a.k.a. The Penguin. has been an undeniable highlight of Gotham’s first season, and it’s been a pleasure to watch him cement his status as the show’s breakout star week after week.

While at the Fox portion of the TCA winter press tour, I had the opportunity to sit down with Robin Lord Taylor for an exclusive interview. He talked about what’s coming up in the back half of season one, Penguin’s rise to power, exploring more of Penguin’s violent side in the back half of the season, where Oswald fits into the power plays of Gotham, and more. Check out what he had to say after the jump and be aware there are some spoilers.

I just watched “What the Little Bird Told Him” and that episode pays off a lot of what’s set up in the first half of the season, so without spoiling anything, what can you say about what’s coming up next for Oswald?

ROBIN LORD TAYLOR: As you see in this episode Penguin has been working for one crime family, but ultimately he is a mole for the other crime family – for the Falcone family, so you see him torn between both without trying to reveal his identity to one and his allegiance to the other and yet also trying to preserve himself. Because ultimately it’s just about him. He’s really in it just for himself. You’re going to see him basically making those decisions between the two and also, ultimately just becoming a player in Gotham city. But it’s not smooth. He makes mistakes. That’s what I love most about him. He’s not perfect. He’s not this supervillain who has it all figured out. He has a lot figured out but he still makes mistakes and oversteps his boundaries.

Yeah, he’s been knocked down a few times this year.

TAYLOR: Yeah, he’s the Chumbawamba song. That’s his anthem right there.

[Laughs] Absolutely. So far this this season we’ve seen a lot of his machinations and the plotting side of him, but we’ve only occasionally seen his potential for extremely violent outbursts. How much more are we going to see that side of his personality come out over the back half of the season?

TAYLOR: I think a lot more, because as he gets more powerful there are more people in his way. You’re going to see him – as with every character in Gotham city – you see it with Jim Gordon, with all of them, the more established they become as powerful people in the city, the more people are out for them and out for blood. Penguin has to stay ahead of those people, so you’re going to see him make those decisions.

That’s great news, because one of my favorite scenes of the entire season so far is the hitchhiking moment from those first few episodes.

TAYLOR: [Laughs] That was really brutal.

Do you enjoy filming those moments? What is it like to film those really vicious scenes?

TAYLOR: Yeah, it was our second episode and we were in an onion field in upstate New York. It was incredibly violent, but at the same time, not to sound like a complete psychopath, but Oswald has been teased his entire life and bullied, and for him to finally almost get back at the bullies in the way – and that’s who the frat boys sort of represent to him – it was weirdly fun, I don’t know [laughs].

Oh, I can definitely see why that would be fun, especially if that behavior’s not in your nature. I mean, I just met you, but you don’t strike me as a particularly violent or aggressive person.

TAYLOR: I avoid conflict – like, any conflict – at all costs. I hate it. Even at a restaurant, if I get the wrong order I’ll just eat it anyway because I don’t want to make an issue. Yeah, it’s just such an interesting thing to be on the other side of it, even though it’s all pretend, and to have to make it believable and realistic to a certain extent. It’s a really fun acting challenge. It’s the kind of stuff you want to play.

Everything in Gotham City is a power play and it’s constantly changing chess board. How much power to you think Oswald thinks he has and how much do you think he actually has?

TAYLOR: I think he’s somewhat realistic, because I think he has to be. He has to be ahead of the game, and to be ahead of the game you have to know the stakes and you have to know where everybody else is. I think he’s very realistic about where he is, but at the same time he’s constantly testing that edge. Like, in one of the previous episodes he decides to raise the taxes on the fishermen and he gets punished for it. He’s constantly testing the borders of how far he can take things, how many decisions he can make himself. It’s a fine line that he’s walking. I think sometimes he’s a little further ahead than he actually is, but that’s what makes him more human. It makes him more of a realistic person in that he doesn’t have it all figured out.

And a lot of the crime bosses in Gotham, their power comes from what’s already there, the existing infrastructure and history of the city, where do you think Oswald’s power comes from?

TAYLOR: His power comes from his own boundless ambition. That’s, I think, rooted in the fact that he was a bullied kid, and because he was treated poorly for the way he looked, and he was treated like he was nothing. I think he has incredible ambition fueled by that because he doesn’t ever want to be that powerless person again. I think that’s where he finds his power. That’s what gives him the impetus to be so scheming and playing every scenario out, to be so many steps ahead of everybody else. That’s what gives him that reason, his ambition.

I read that because they kept the audition process secretive you didn’t know what character you were creating when you auditioned. What remains of that initial character you created in your head and what changed once you realized you were playing this iconic Batman super villain?

TAYLOR: I mean, not that much different, because I didn’t really have a character, I was just given a name and – there wasn’t really a description – I was just given a name, and of course it wasn’t Oswald or The Penguin, it was some other random name because they wrote this fake scene. And I was given this fake scene out of nowhere, no script. It was just like, whatever the circumstances were in the script, whatever the situation was, I just tried to make it realistic and it actually perfectly transitioned into what The Penguin is. It was amazing. It was weirdly – it was the biggest job I’ve ever had, the most important thing I’ve ever done, and yet it was weirdly one of the easiest casting experiences I’ve ever had, which is just really strange.

Man, that’s wild. And it’s good to hear, because I have a lot of friends who are doing the working actor bit, or writing from project to project, audition after audition and not landing the project or the role, or getting the smaller part.

TAYLOR: Yeah, that was me for so many years. What I had to hold on to, because I’ve been doing it for many years, and I worked, but there would be years where maybe I did one job. My health insurance would lapse, then I would get it back, then it would lapse again – it’s a crazy roller coaster – but you just have to remind yourself that you don’t know what’s coming. You don’t know. This business is – you might have some random interaction with someone somewhere, or do some tiny reading somewhere that one person goes to and yet they remember you. You have no idea how it’s going to play out. I look back through my life and how I got to this point and it’ all just a series of randomness. So it may seem like at times that it’s completely hopeless, but you have all possibility ahead of you. That’s what kept me going through it.

Absolutely. Gotham hasn’t held back on introducing a lot of characters, and a lot of villains, pretty quickly, who have you worked with that you feel you have great onscreen chemistry with? Or is there somebody you haven’t had a chance to work with yet that you really want to?

TAYLOR: It’s coming up, it hasn’t aired yet and I’ve been given the OK to tease it out, you will see Oswald and Edward Nygma meet finally, and I have to say I am just so excited for that relationship to develop because – for a lot of reasons – first of all because I am a huge, huge fan of Cory Michael Smith. I think he his absolutely brilliant and what he brings to Edward Nygma, and every other character that he’s played – He’s in Olive Kitteridge, have you seen that yet?

Not yet.

TAYLOR: He is so phenomenal in that. It’s so different than Edward Nygma, it’s just absolutely brilliant. Anyway, to be able to be able to play with him and have that scene and be able to play off of each other is such an exciting dynamic. Because Edward and Oswald are both such weirdos and to see them actually connect and to see what that turns into, I am so excited. That’s the one, definitely.

When you two play a scene together does either one of you have to sort of tone down the weirdness at all and kind of play the straight man, or are you both still off the wall?

TAYLOR: It’s interesting, because Nygma is such an off the wall guy, whereas Oswald is much more – I would say, much more aware of social graces and he’s really manipulative and he’s constantly aware of how others are perceiving him so that he can modify his behavior to get what he wants out of other people. So it’s a whole different approach to people than Edward has. It’s hard to say who’s the straight man and who’s off the wall, but The Riddler is just such a kook, it’s just such an interesting dynamic between them.

How would you describe that dynamic in a word.

TAYLOR: In one word…

Or two or three, if you need, no pressure [laughs].

TAYLOR: Man, what would I say? I would say quirky, first of all, but I would also say – it’s like a meeting between two incredibly intelligent people who have been sort of dismissed for their eccentricities, so I think to see that dynamic in play is really exciting.


http://collider.com/robin-lord-taylor-g ... interview/

- Bruno Heller promete un 'impactante' final de "Gotham" y adelanta la llegada de 'Red Hood' (cbr):
Bruno Heller promete un 'impactante' final de "Gotham" y adelanta la llegada de 'Red Hood'
Por Scott Huver 21 de Enero, 2015


Like its comic book-based sister city, TV's "Gotham" has shown itself to exist in a very unpredictable urban landscape, filled with dimly lit skyscapers, dark corners and blind alleys -- but creator/executive producer Bruno Heller knows every twist and turn by heart.

With the FOX series -- set in the era of violence, decay and corruption that immediately followed the murders of Thomas and Martha Wayne -- recently picked up for a second season, Heller has found himself with even more room to build out the show's pre-Batman world. With ten episodes remaining in Season One, the writer-producer offered CBR News a tantalizing glimpse at the road ahead, including the development of Edward Nygma into the Riddler, the continuing growth of Bruce Wayne and Alfred's bond and what may be the show's first foray into the world of costumed villains with the eventual introduction of Red Hood.

CBR News: Tell me about what's been the fun discovery as the show has gotten further into production, to the point where you are now. What was the excitement of the discoveries you made along the way?

Bruno Heller: I guess the fun thing about the show is, once it got up and running, the characters and the city itself took on a life of their own. So really, the stories have been telling themselves. The characters have been taking the story by the scruff of the neck and pulling them forward. I think, more specifically, it's been wonderful to see a new young actor like Robin [Lord Taylor] just grab hold of a role and shake it and make it his own.

Every day on the show, because it's such a full and vibrant world, it feels like we can go anywhere with the story. When I started the thing, I was very concerned that it didn't fall into a pattern, that it didn't become formulaic or procedural. And so, it's been a great joy. For all the writers involved, it's like having a sandbox full of a hundred different toys rather than just one single gimmick. Which, especially on network TV, that tends to be what you have to work with. Whereas with this, it's an epic. And the deeper we get into it, the more exciting the world is.

Give me a sense of the back half of the season as far as the tone, plotlines and who's going to rise to more prominence.

Well, Morena Baccarin, playing Leslie Thompkins, has arrived. She's going to be a big figure in Gordon's life. We're going to see a slow but dramatic change in the Riddler story. Ed is going to be confronted with some serious troubles that start changing his character in a very profound way. I think for Gordon, even as he starts, to a degree, conquering the politics of the GCPD and acquiring the kind of power and leverage he needs to make changes, his personal life and his moral balance are on much shakier ground. So I think towards the end of the season, you're going to see someone who is at the height of his career, but personally at a very low ebb -- or at a very dangerous ebb.

Here's the thing -- which I'm not used to because I've been working previously on "The Mentalist," where you can kind of tell people the whole season and you're not giving anything away really, because it's, hey, we're going to solve crimes. With this, I'm very careful, I don't want to give away too much story because, more so than most shows, this is the joy of story, the joy of storytelling, the joy of hearing stories. And that's the DC Universe. Anything can happen. The unexpected with happen. The tragic will happen. The funny will happen.

Can you say if will it remain a costume-free season?

That's a good question. Especially now that we have a pick up, I always take a long-term view of a show. I'm looking at several years. So we're in no hurry to [do that] -- there's going to be an episode that involves the Red Hood, which picks up that strand, the costume strand, and sort of gives a kind of philosophical base, if that's not too pretentious a word. Why costumes? What's the power of costumes? What's the power of a mask? All of that groundwork will be laid sort of culturally for that side of the DC Universe before we start rolling into the more spectacular spandex type of deal.

Because -- I can't remember where I read it -- the reason that the comic book characters wore costumes is because in the very rough printing that they used to have in newspapers, that's the only way you could make a character pop. "Oh, that's Batman, that's Superman, that's Dick Tracy." On TV, you don't need that same color and signature to make people pop. It's the characters that pop. So we're never going to be a full-on costume drama. We're going to be a full-on character drama. Like Batman, there's the super powers, super will, and there's super strength, but only on a human level. Not on a supernatural level. It's very important, again, for the longevity of the show, that we take this step by step.

Tell me a little bit about what you have planned for Bruce and Alfred, because lately we've seen those two characters become more and more integrated into the action of the show.

My first thought about Bruce and Alfred was that Alfred must have been a right piece of work to allow and encourage and enable Bruce Wayne to become Batman. So that was the nut of the thing. But this is not a guy -- he's not the fragile old geezer that the original Alfred was. He's much more in the vein of the Michael Caine Alfred. But as the season rolls on, he becomes more and more of a genuine parent. And there's all the conflict and intention that underlies the real parenting relationship, as opposed to a master-servant relationship.

But again, that's one of those [things] -- Bruce doesn't turn into Batman for some years, and this is very much the life of a young kid and those changes. Everyone grows up slowly. It's not a series of spectacular transformations. He's not bitten by a spider. It's an education. And that's really how we're playing that. Especially because we have such a brilliant young actor in David Mazouz, and a wonderful comic, but still very real and mature person, in Sean Pertwee. They're a wonderful combination, so we're really going to take that in a very natural, step-by-step direction.

Did the second season pickup change the plans at all for Season One, or alter your storytelling approach for the remainder of the season? Did you want to set up something big for Season Two as you moved toward the end?

No, because I always take the optimistic view. I assume, when we start, that we're going to get picked up because we're making it work. So again, because we're planning far ahead, you have to with these kind of epic storylines.

What it does is, it makes the other kind of planning for Season Two much easier. Hiring directors, getting ahead of the scripts -- that kind of thing. But, it also means that it allows us to double-down on the strengths of the shows that we know are going in the right direction. We'd always planned for the end of the season to be as big and spectacular and as shocking and as frightening and as sensational as it possibly can be. And we're going ahead with that plan.

Are there any characters that you were quietly planning for Season Two that you now can say, "Yes, we'll be introducing that one when we return?"

No. I wish I could!


http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page ... e&id=58645

- Ben Mckenzie sobre el giro de Gordon hacia el lado oscuro (IGN):
Ben Mckenzie sobre el giro de Gordon hacia el lado oscuro
Por Roth Cornet 21 Enero, 2015


Detective James Gordon made a move to get his job back in this week's "What the Little Bird Told Him", and in so doing, took one step further into accepting that in Gotham there is no such thing as an entirely morally upstanding "boy scout." Not one who'll survive, in any case. We were able to sit down with Gordon himself, Ben Mckenzie, to talk about where we can expect the future commissioner to go on the series from here.

IGN TV: Gordon made a big move in "What The Little Bird Told Him" I wanted to ask, A) what sort of direction do you think he's going in from here? Will we see more of this new, hardend Gordan? and B) Do you think he's the guy that really does think everyone needs protection, including Maroni, or does he just like to win?

Ben McKenzie: I think he likes to win. I think we're going to see that more in the second half of the season. I think one of the things that's compelling about Jim is that, for all of his honesty and forthrightness and moral rectitude, he's also an incredibly ambitious, ego-driven guy, on a certain level, like we all are. If he's got to treat people a little roughly, throw some sharp elbows to get things done, then he's going to do it. The more he learns about how Gotham actually works, the more hardened he becomes. So there'll be a nice element there of taking no prisoners. It's not even so much police work as it is politicking. You can grease palms or break limbs. [Laughs] Whichever gets it done. He's learning how to use leverage, how to call in favors. He's growing increasingly close to Penguin in ways that he could never have anticipated before and wouldn't have allowed. But he realizes, in the way that the world actually works, he has to in order to get it done.

IGN: Do you think that Penguin will become an ally to him now that Fish is out of the picture, the way that Fish was?

McKenzie: Yeah, in a way. He has to have friends on the other side of the law, or he's never going to get the information and he's never going to know the lay of the land. And who better than Penguin, who is ruthless but does fancy Jim as a friend and thinks of him in this bizarre way as his only friend. He tells his mother, "This lovely cop is a true friend." In his perverted world view, Oswald genuinely believes that Jim is a friend of his.

IGN: He's already had a meeting of the minds of sorts with Falcone. Will we see that relationship/alliance continue to develop?

McKenzie: Yeah, it might. I think what's exciting is that he'll be free to deploy whatever tactics he wants to use. So if he thinks he can get leverage by going to someone above him and circumvent the whole situation, then he'll do that. Maybe he thinks that it's better to not get the big players involved -- keep it lower level so they aren't aware of it; could do that. He'll do whatever it takes. I'm really hoping that we can dig into it in ways that surprise and challenge the audience to see Jim as more than a do-gooder. He's a driven guy.

IGN: How do you think this change of heart will impact his mentor/mentee relationship with both Bruce and Selina? Selina's more on that track already.

McKenzie: Yeah, exactly. She sort of has that attitude already as a street kid. I don't know if it's going to affect his relationship with Bruce. I think Bruce at this point is very frustrated with Jim in that he hasn't delivered on his promise. A young man gets impatient and effectively shoes him away, says, "We're done." Maybe Jim showing Bruce he can get things done with looser morals, maybe that appealing to Bruce. But what kind of lesson does that teach a kid?

IGN: To be Batman. [Laughs]

McKenzie: Yeah, exactly. Eventually he's going to do that anyway.

IGN: So talk a bit about the dynamic with the Commissioner. Is that going to continue to be as contentious?

McKenzie: Yeah, it will. And the question for Jim is -- the Commissioner is obviously a source of power and has a lot of powerful friends. He's protected, so what does it take to get over on him? What is it going to take in order to not only get enough help from him to operate at his level but actually unseat him? That would be the ultimate goal if he's the ultimate malevolent force within the firm -- but that's not easy. So that will be a focus for the second half of the season.

IGN: Might he also learn from him in a way? Because he's going to be Commissioner himself one day, as we know.

McKenzie: Yes. And there's politicking. There's a certain amount of all of the things that make for great politicians, which is understanding how to manipulate people, understanding how to present a public face versus a private one, what you might call leadership -- but leadership has good aspects and pernicious aspects.

IGN: Also, Barbara's taken off and temptation has walked in in the form of Morena Baccarin (as Dr. Leslie Thompkins), which -- I mean, if you're going to get tempted...

McKenzie: You know...

IGN: So talk a bit about how that's going to play our for the rest of the season.

McKenzie: Yeah, at this point I think Jim feels pretty unencumbered, because Barbara left him. He came home to an empty house and a note -- a "Dear John" -- and he didn't see it coming, really. He feels upset. So he's been wallowing in that for a minute. So when he meets someone he's genuinely attracted to -- physically and otherwise -- he goes for it. You know, life is short, and she represents hope to him. I think their connection's pretty deep. We'll see how it plays out.

IGN: Can we trust her?

McKenzie: I think he can, yeah.

IGN: There's one good one in the city?

McKenzie: I think so, yeah. I think that's the story we're telling. That's interesting though. What is that based on [the idea that she can't be trusted] I'm curious?

IGN: Because everyone on the show, including the character that's said to be the moral center of the show, has deeply flawed morals. So from what we've seen, she's too good to be true. She's got to be a really evil villain. [Laughs]

McKenzie: Maybe eventually...


http://www.ign.com/articles/2015/01/22/ ... -dark-side?

- McKenzie dice que Gordon de "Gotham" se hará 'Duro, Inteligente, Implacable' (cbr):
McKenzie dice que Gordon de "Gotham" se hará 'Duro, Inteligente, Implacable'
Por Scott Huver 22 Enero 2015


Having played a cop on the mean streets of "Southland," Ben McKenzie had a hunch the even more brutal back alleys of Gotham City might exact a price on Jim Gordon during his rise to the top of the GCPD. And barely halfway through the FOX series freshman season, he's already seeing changes in the future police commissioner, both good and bad, and there's even more to come in the immediate future.

With the second half of "Gotham's" debut season just underway, McKenzie sat down with CBR News to offer a look at what lies ahead for the incorruptible detective, including the shifting ground in his relationships with Bruce Wayne, the Penguin, Harvey Bullock, Harvey Dent and a certain doctor he met in Arkham Asylum.

CBR News: Since the last time we talked earlier in the season, and your journey as Jim Gordon has gone on, what are the elements that you've come to really like about playing, or become very fond of in the character?

Ben McKenzie: I think we're starting to find a little more of the humor. When you're kind of a young idealistic guy like he is -- or he was -- and you bump up against all of this villainy and general corruption, you can either go to a rabbit hole of anger and depression, or you can develop kind of a wry sense of humor -- kind of a morbid sense of humor -- and I think he's kind of developing that. So the humor, along with the burgeoning relationship with Dr. Thompkins -- he's finding, again, the hope that he came in with that's been beaten down a little bit.

[Thompkins is] a breath of fresh air, but on the other side, he's learning what it takes to get by, here. He's going to use, in the second half of the season, the things that he's learned to get what he wants to get. These are things that at the beginning of the season that he couldn't even have fathomed. These are actions he couldn't even have fathomed taking. They would have been, morally, off the table, ethically, off the table. But the gloves are off, and to get it done, and he'll do what he has to do.

What are some of the specific challenges he's going to be facing in the back half of the season?

Up to now, we've focused primarily on the corruption that surrounds the GCPD: Falcone and Maroni and their ties to the mayor and what not. This second half will get into the corruption actually within the system of the GCPD. How it's actually infected the core of the police department, and what the consequences are for that. When Jim discovers the really heinous corruption at the center of it, what is he going to do to try to uproot that, and what are the consequences of attacking the most pernicious element of it head-on? He'll have to use the things that he's learned in order to get what he wants.

How are some of his relationships with the characters we've met in the front half of the season evolving in the back end?

Well, here's a guy like Penguin, who he would have almost literally spit on at the beginning. He's learning that this little rascal has value. That if he can help get things done, then maybe he should be used. He's certainly learning not to trust anybody. He's learning that he can seemingly trust Bullock -- perhaps not as much as he thinks. But seemingly, he can trust his partner. And he can find solace with new friends like Dr. Thompkins and some of the other detectives, like Montoya and Allen.

Tell me about building that new relationship with Morena Baccarin as Leslie. Bringing her in and kind of discovering and knowing that it was going to head in a romantic direction.

It just kind of flowed very naturally. We really didn't know each other before working together, but you show up on a set, or actually, you meet somebody and start working on the scenes you're doing, and you just go, "Oh, this works. This is fun. This is easy." Acting's tennis, and if you've got a great partner who's hitting the ball back to you and challenging you, but getting it back to you, everybody's game gets elevated and the game itself becomes more fun to watch. That's what we've got, so I'm enjoying it.

I'm especially enjoying the relationship between Gordon and Bruce and Alfred. Tell me a little bit about what's been fun about that for you and where you guys are pushing it as we go forward.

Well, the two actors are really fun to work with. David [Mazouz] and Sean [Pertwee] -- Sean has become a good friend, and they're so different. Obviously, you're talking about a 13-year-old boy and a middle-aged man. I think a lot has changed in the relationship between the three characters. The promise that Jim gave to Bruce to solve his parents' murder -- we've already seen Bruce has just called him out and said, "You failed. And I'm pulling it. I don't trust you anymore." They're at a real icy place right now in terms of what's aired. Events will transpire that will bring them back together to a certain degree, but we really have to allow the weight of this, in Bruce's mind, broken promise, to sit.

The relationship that develops, ultimately, between the adult Bruce Wayne -- the Batman and Commissioner Gordon -- is a complicated relationship. Obviously, in an ideal world, there's no need for a vigilante because the police function efficiently, and there's always going to be a tension in terms of, how much does Bruce really trust Jim? Or even just believe that he can handle it? And how much guidance will he allow Jim to give him? What is Bruce's world view? Is he even open to the notion that goodness is possible and things can get better? Or is he going to go down the path or vigilantism and revenge?

How is Harvey Dent's relationship with Gordon going to be different from what we've seen in previous movies and comic books?

That was a relationship that I really wanted to be here. It feels like Harvey, as interpreter of the law, and Jim, as enforcer of the law, have a real connection. There's a convergence there, a natural convergence between what their jobs are, but a real disconnect in how they go about getting them done. Inevitably, the lawyer's going to be a little slicker, speaking as a son of a lawyer. You have to use the words to get what you want. Jim initially recoils at that, but if he sees that Harvey's getting things done, he might go along with him.

I think the relationship will also have its setbacks. Jim feels pretty betrayed by how it went down with Harvey revealing, effectively, his witness in Selina, and putting Selina and Bruce's life in danger. So when they come back together -- spoiler alert, they're coming back together -- it's with a newfound understanding of where they are. Right now, we're starting Harvey at a place where he is crafty at how he gets things done, but he's maybe a little even more naive than Jim as to how brutal things can be. And he's gotten a quick education when these assassins came after Bruce and Selina. Is Jim ever going to trust him as much as he did before? No, he shouldn't.

With 75 years of source material to sort through, since you started the gig, have you found any other things in the comics that you've thought, "Oh, I really want to bring that note in," or, "I really hope they introduce this plot element that I can play with."

Well, Bruno [Heller] and DC are really doing a masterful job, I think, of incorporating elements that fit his sensibility effectively and discarding those that don't. There are certain things that fit the tone of what we're doing in certain iterations of the comics, or certain conceptions of them. And there's certain things that don't. This is a grounded world, and we have to fit in characters that are villainous, mischievous, but in ways that feel human and don't feel as though they're sort of otherworldly.

From doing "Southland," I was always attracted to the notion of the cost of doing law enforcement work -- and what does it cost in a city like Gotham? How does it churn and change this guy? Adding in an element of ego, narcissism, ambition to Jim, that combines with the real politic of helping things get done. And what does he become? A hero -- but a tough, smart, ruthless son of a bitch when he has to be.


http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page ... e&id=58676

- Robin Lord Taylor dice que su primera escena con Edward Nygma es una de las mejores de "Gotham" (CBR):
Robin Lord Taylor dice que su primera escena con Edward Nygma es una de las mejores de "Gotham"
Por Scott Huver 23 Enero 2015


As the breakout star of "Gotham," Robin Lord Taylor knows that millions of eyes are watching his every move of the increasingly nefarious Oswald Cobblepot on his road to becoming the crime czar known as The Penguin -- and there's plenty more under Oswald's umbrella, he says.

As the series, recently renewed for a second season, moves into the latter portion of its freshman season, Taylor promises no shortage of fresh challenges ahead for the frequently roughed-up but triumphantly manipulative gangland ladder-climber, including an increasingly symbiotic relationship with Jim Gordon, his first encounter with The Man Who Would Be The Riddler, a return of Carol Kane as his sometimes cringe-inducing matriarch, and the actor's own hopes for Oswald's long-term ambitions.

CBR News: You've received glowing reviews for your performance from both TV critics and comics fans alike. Did you feel a connection to this character right away? Were you immediately thinking, "I can do something with this guy?"

Robin Lord Taylor: I did, actually, yeah. The character, from the inception, from the pilot -- Bruno [Heller] created something so special. And also, the research that I had done about the character, about his origins, he was a bullied kid and treated very differently because of the way he looks and his interests and everything -- I totally identified with that. I was never bullied to the extent that he was, but I know what it felt like to be a different person. From the pilot, what he goes through, to see that he is vulnerable and that he is fallible and that he's human, he makes mistakes -- I was like, okay, this is a real person. You know what I mean? This I can get into.

We most recently saw Oswald in a position where things are really coming together for him, despite where it sometimes frays around the edges. Can you give me a sense of what he's going to face in the back end of the season? What's coming his way?

We know that he's working for Maroni, but also, ultimately, working for Falcone. He's a mole, so you see that tension between those two. And he makes mistakes -- like he almost let's it slip to Maroni that he's working for Falcone. So you see that tension where he has to like cover all of his bases. And eventually, you're going to see him torn between the two, and yet also trying to maintain his own integrity. Ultimately, he's just in it for himself. It's really just about self-preservation for himself and becoming a big player on the scene, is what he wants. So, yeah -- you're going to see more of that. It's not easy with him. Like, it's not an easy rise to power. It's two steps forward, one step back.

In the process, he often gets the crap kicked out of him.

Yes! He does. Totally. He takes a beating. I was talking to someone, like, not to mix comic book worlds, but in a way, he must be related to Wolverine. Like, he gets punched out by a cop in the episode that aired two weeks ago. I made a joke on Twitter, I was like, "I'm surprised he's not dead." That cop is massive.

Tell me about the relationship between your character and Jim Gordon -- and then acting that out with Ben.

Well, in a weird way, they both need each other. Even though they're on opposite sides of the fence -- Jim is on the legal side of things, Penguin is on the other side -- they weirdly need each other as allies, because Gotham is a place where you have to use the bad to get the good to happen. There's no just one good way of doing things. You have to get your hands dirty for the ultimate good of everyone. Their relationship is very complicated in that way.

It's interesting too, because from Oswald's perspective, Jim Gordon is the only person -- besides his mother -- that he trusts in Gotham City. I think he really does view Jim as a friend and does see him as someone that he would like to be close to. Jim does not feel the same way, obviously, but at the same time, Jim wouldn't be where he is if he hadn't saved Penguin's life. It's just interesting -- again, they need each other.

Playing that with Ben, when we get a scene together, we check in with each other. We make sure that where he's coming from is true to where I'm coming from. Like, in the moments where I've said I wanted to change a certain word of a phrase here and there, because I don't think Penguin would ever want Jim to feel uncomfortable, because he actually really does value him as a person. He's too smart and too empathetic of a person, in a weird way, to allow Jim to feel weirded out. It's a really interesting dynamic. It's so fun to play.

Are there any other actors on the show that you'll get more time with than you've had in the first portion of the season?

Yes, there are. We haven't done a lot yet, and I don't know what's coming, but Edward Nygma and Oswald finally meet, and it is, hands-down, one of the top three things that we've shot in the whole series. It's one of my favorite scenes, and I'm so excited for more. They're both such oddballs and so different, so differently odd. The dynamics between the two of us is just so fun to play and so different. To have two classic villains come together, I think it's one of the first times it's happened so far in the series. That's what I'm looking forward to.

Is Mom back before the end of the season?

Oh, yeah. Mom comes back, definitely.

It is a relationship that, as evoked in the comics, I wasn't sure could necessarily work on screen -- and it worked on screen like gangbusters with you two. Was that really fun?

So fun. Carol is an absolute dream of a person to work with. I've been a fan of hers for basically my entire life, so find myself sitting across from her, like the way we are right now, and looking in her eyes, it's incredible. We really do have a fondness for each other that makes the relationship between our characters so much easier to access and to make realistic and to make real, and also [Laughs] to make probably a little creepy. There is that aspect, too. But it's interesting because basically, until recently, they were the only ones each other had in their lives. And that closeness, that intensity, that strangeness, creepiness, that's where this stems out of. Just to go at it with Carol is amazing. Just a dream.

Have you gotten any word if her old "Taxi" co-star, Danny DeVito, a former Penguin himself, has checked out your take?

The amazing thing is that Carol is very close with Danny, so she's come to set and said, "I just had dinner with Danny last night, and he watches the show." I just completely flipped out!

The relationship you have with on screen with Jada Pinkett-Smith as Fish Mooney has also been really special. Tell me about playing those scenes with her, because they're so unpredictable and tense.

They're some of my favorite scenes to play. She's just an incredible presence, on screen and in person. And yet, at the same time, so down to Earth and kind and just game to go for it. Our scenes together are so loaded, and again, it's so fun to play because she taught Oswald everything she knows about Gotham City, so there's a motherly aspect there. But he has betrayed her -- and yet, he still has a fondness for her, deep down, I feel. And so it's like this really layered, complex relationship, at least from Oswald's end. I think Fish is over it at this point. But at the same time, Oswald remembers where he comes from. Playing those scenes is very fun because it's a really textured, layered relationship that they have.

Is there anything in your Penguin research from all that source material from the comic books that you would like to see come to the show?

Well, this is far in advance, but I would like to see a transition from this sort of nightclub-y, world that he's operated in to more a political arena. I think he actually has ambitions that grand, now. If there's any place where that could fly, it's Gotham City. You know what I mean? Again, that's far, far down the road, but something that I think would be really fascinating to explore.


http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page ... e&id=58712

- ROBIN LORD TAYLOR habla sobre la vida como el OSWALD COBBLEPOT de GOTHAM y los PARAGUACÓPTEROS (Newsrama):
ROBIN LORD TAYLOR habla sobre la vida como el OSWALD COBBLEPOT de GOTHAM y los PARAGUACÓPTEROS
Por Lan Pitts 23 Enero 2015 02:27 PM ET


The Penguin has always lived in the shadow of more popular Batman villains such as the Joker, but in Fox's Gotham Robin Lord Taylor and the show's writers have brought new-found appeal and interest into young Oswald Cobblepot. Taylor portrays Cobblepot as an ambitious henchman, paving his way through Gotham City’s seedy underworld, and getting high praise along the way.

Taylor sat down with Newsarama to talk all things Gotham, his performance and life in the spotlight now, as well as his pick for gimmick umbrella he’d love to have on the show.

Newsarama: Robin, Before we really get started, congrats on the second season being announced!

Robin Lord Taylor: Oh, thank you so much, man, it’s all been just so amazing It’s so validating, too. Everybody is working so hard on the show and trying to bring something and to get a second season, it’s just so rewarding and validating to me.

Nrama: Has it weirded you out yet that you have shirts with your face on it?

Taylor:[Laughs] Yes it does, in fact. It is not a normal thing at all and I’m still constantly weirded out by everything. I didn’t expect anything like this as I really just expected to never hopefully wait tables again and just maintain my health insurance, those were my goals! And now the way things are here, my face is on a shirt...nothing feels normal, but in the best way.

Nrama: I'm curious to know how much your role has changed or increased once the series aired and your portrayal of the Penguin became the breakout star of the show. I wonder if your role had originally been planned as more of a bit player, and then you were moved up based on the response.

Taylor:Well, I think it was already sort of planned to have an intense focus on Penguin's rise and [Executive Producer] Bruno Heller had told me that I was the first major, classic villain that they were going to explore. I knew that, but the response has been so incredibly positive and just amazing. I just hope here to stay in Gotham City and they just don’t lock me up in Arkham Asylum with the rest of the rogues [laughs].

Nrama: First seasons are sometimes tricky, when you go back and watch a long-running show, the cast is still trying to figure out their characters. Do you feel like even after a half season you’ve figured everything out about Oswald or is there a lot of exploring left?

Taylor: I think there is a lot of exploring left. We’ve already discovered so much about him, but there’s still so far to go. Yeah, we know what kind of person Penguin becomes when he gets older, but he’s still making mistakes. That’s what I love about it, he’s still finding his footing, no pun intended, and it’s so much more interesting for me to play. Every success he has, he still falls on his ass and makes huge mistakes. It just seems it all makes him more of a real person.

Nrama:You might not be familiar with this, but I’m curious in how much of your performance was inspired by John Turturro's character in Miller's Crossing?

Taylor: It’s on the list! You’re not the first person to ask this! I need to see it, and John Turturro is another one of those great actors and Barton Fink is just one of my all-time favorite movies. His performance in everything is just mind-blowing.

Nrama: Speaking of your performances, somebody was recently endorsed by Danny DeVito...

Taylor: I mean can you believe that? I mean, again, what is my life? I’ve been a fan of him my entire life. Batman Returns was a huge movie and one of my favorites growing up. It’s incredible. The fact that he’s so grotesque and an awful, disgusting guy, but at the same time, so charismatic. You buy the fact that he is running for mayor and, at one point, could win. That’s one thing that influenced my performance. Both him and Burgess Meredith, both had that charisma and sense of fun that I’ve tried to incorporate into my characterization.

Then to hear he’s a fan of the work, it’s just a great endorsement. I think he’s one of our greatest actors working now and such a legend. He’s also good friends with Carol Kane and every now and then she’ll go “Guess who I had dinner with last night…” “Who?” “Danny.” Ugh! Can you call me next time? I just need to meet him! I’m so close at this point. I just want to get drunk with the dude and talk Penguin and everything else!

Nrama: Now I know you turned to a lot of comics like Batman: Earth One and Penguin: Pain and Prejudice, but have you had the chance to play the Batman: Arkham City video game? That Penguin is incredibly insane and demented and is that a route you’d like to go down?

Taylor:It is and I just need to get my ass to Best Buy and just get an X-Box already. I don’t know what my problem is. I think it was for Wii or PS3, but it was Batman: Arkham Asylum and I don’t know how featured Penguin was in that one, but the characterizations for these games are so fabulous. If you had told me back in the day when I was playing Sega Genesis gaming would be what it is now, I would not have believed you.

Nrama: Now those Joker rumors, you recently shut them down, but also saying you’re not sure what the future holds, what would you like to see from Penguin that really isn’t talked about much?

Taylor: What would I like to see? I would like to see more about his personal life. I love my scenes with Carol and they’re some of my favorite and such a dream to work with. I know very little, but I want to know who his dad was, where did they come from, what was their life like? I know Penguin’s entire childhood and it was just him and his mom, and I guess that’s why they’re...close...is the best way of putting it [laughs]. I would also like to see more of that. Another thing I would like to see is the other supervillains we’ve established and want more interaction with them.

Recently we shot a scene where it’s the first meeting of Edward Nygma and Oswald that’s coming out soon. First of all, I am a huge, huge fan of Corey Michael Smith. I think he’s just a brilliant actor and I love what he’s done to the character and I just want him to be evil so we can have more fun and juicy moments. Also, Nicholas D’Agosto who plays our Harvey Dent, like, these amazing characters played by these incredible actors and I just want more time with them. That’s what I want.

Nrama: Okay, lastly, if you had to pick one trick umbrella to have on the show, what would you want to have?

Taylor: Umbrellacopter! All the way! That would be the one, no question! I mean, it’s the whole thing of penguins can’t fly...or can they? That would be so, so rad!


http://www.newsarama.com/23320-robin-lo ... lepot.html





- Robin Lord Taylor on ‘Gotham’ (KTLA5):

http://ktla.com/2015/01/19/robin-lord-t ... nidVe5i0bM


- 'Gotham': Ben McKenzie Previews Romance With Dr. Thompkins (accesshollywood):

http://bcove.me/codlhmls


- ‘Gotham’ Star Robin Lord Taylor on ‘Coming Out to the World as Penguin’ (The Wrap):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bd2BKeJruLk


- Gotham - The Penguin on Joker, Villain Team-Ups and More (IGN):

http://www.ign.com/videos/2015/01/23/go ... s-and-more


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- GOTHAM | 1.13 "Welcome Back, Jim Gordon" Promo (HD):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UcTHJbgrB84


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- Nueva imagen BTS con Ben McKenzie, Cory Michael Smith y David Zayas (19-01-15):

Imagen

(@ZabrynaGuevara: Nygma better stay in line!)



- Nuevas imágenes promocionales de la S1:

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Añadidos los rátings del 1.12 "What the little bird told him". Podéis encontrarlos AQUÍ


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- Descripción oficial del 1.15 "The Scarecrow":
1.15 "The Scarecrow" (09 Febrero 8:00-9:00 PM ET/PT): Gordon y Bullock salen para detener a Gerald Crane, un profesor de biología que ha estado cosechando las glándulas de sus víctimas de asesinato. Mientras tanto, tras encontrarse a sí misma en un escenario inusual, Mooney continúa intrigando para ganar poder, y Falcone intenta cambiar el plan de Maroni para el Pingüino. Luego, Bruce toma una traidora caminata. Estrellas invitadas: Morena Baccarin como la 'Dra. Leslie Thompkins', David Zayas como 'Don Maroni', Babs Olusanmokun como 'Mace', Eisa Davis como 'Judith Barthel', Peter Jay Fernandez como 'Doctor'.

http://www.comicbookmovie.com/fansites/ ... Ms.twitter


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- GOTHAM | 1.13 "Welcome Back, Jim Gordon" Clip "What do you think mother?":

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ViyEA3DGEs


- GOTHAM | 1.13 "Welcome Back, Jim Gordon" Clip "Got you a present":

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9vMQ3BHlEQ


- GOTHAM | 1.13 "Welcome Back, Jim Gordon" Clip "No one gets hurt":

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VtwJSqDEBGk


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- Stills del 1.13 "Welcome Back, Jim Gordon":

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- Stills del 1.14 "The Fearsome Dr. Crane":

Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen


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- Chelsea Spack sobre la complicada relación de Kringle con Edward Nygma (givememyremote):
Chelsea Spack sobre la complicada relación de Kringle con Edward Nygma
Por Marisa Roffman 26 Enero, 2015


GOTHAM’s Kristin Kringle has found herself the (reluctant) object of Edward Nygma’s affection.

Poor Edward has been desperate for anyone to pay him any sort of attention, and for better or worse (knowing Nygma’s ultimate fate, it’s probably the latter), his co-worker, Kristin, is his current fixation.

I spoke with Chelsea Spack (Kristin Kringle) about her character’s complicated relationship with Edward…

Were you watching the show before you got the role of Kristin Kringle?
Chelsea Spack: I was! I was. I did come along later, and I couldn’t have asked to join a better production, a more wonderful cast. I couldn’t ask for better writers, so I was already a huge fan.

What was your reaction when you found out who you’d be playing, and that you’d be working so extensively with Cory Michael Smith (Edward)?
CS: I couldn’t ask for a better person to be working with; I was thrilled. It was exciting to see how their storyline is developing, and keeping us on the edge of our seats. It has potential, and we don’t know exactly where it’s going. I looked forward, like everybody else, to seeing how this storyline develops.

What is your take on how Kristin feels about Edward?
CS: I think it’s quite complicated. I think he drives her crazy, and he frustrates her. But there’s something about him which intrigues her, which further frustrates her.

Does she sense anything dark within him?
CS: What do you do when someone’s obsessed with you and you really hardly know them? They make you feel exposed, and embarrassed, and you don’t want to tell the cool kids at school you find the nerdy guy intriguing, and she doesn’t understand why she’s intrigued by him. And it’s so many complicated things which make it quite interesting and frustrating. So, I think there’s thing energy she can’t put her finger.

What can you preview about tonight’s episode?
CS: Amidst the dark city and the dark world of Gotham, I think she’s starting to recognize there’s something really refreshing about someone who cares for you. And it’s also a scary thing when you realize you’re holding someone’s deep feelings in your hands, and you have the power to really hurt them.

What is her take on the corruption in the Gotham police department?
CS: I think that’s something she’s starting to recognize that is refreshing and intriguing about Nygma — in this dark world, he does seem to genuinely care for her. It’s refreshing. Somebody who cares about you when a lot of people are looking out for themselves.

Have you filmed anything beyond tonight’s episode?
CS: I have! I have. She’s coming back. She’s absolutely coming back. There’s storylines developing, and we’re excited to see where it goes. She has a lot of potential. She’s a smart, brilliant woman, and we’ll see where she goes.

How much did they lay out for you about her arc when you started?
CS: That’s part of the excitement: the writers are so brilliant, and they allow things to develop in such unique and mysterious ways, that I don’t know the overall picture. I know very general things for where things are going, but thankfully, they’ve really responded to the chemistry between Cory and I, and they’re interested in our storyline, so it’s developing into a bigger picture. But they keep us on the edge of our seats, I’ll say that! [Laughs]

GOTHAM is a show that has such a social presence. How much have you read about the reactions and theories regarding Kristin?
CS: I think there’s a lot of ladies who are taken by Edward Nygma, and they don’t like to see his heart hurt, and they don’t like to see him rejected. I think they also share in realizing the duplicity of how he could be frustrating Kristin Kringle, but she could be intrigued by him. I think they empathize with her, but they don’t want to see him hurt. So there’s quite a strong response.

Since she, seemingly, is not a part of the DC Comics universe, do you have any theories about who this woman ultimately is?
CS: I’m so fascinated, and I love playing her so much, because there’s so much potential; her story is virtually unwritten, so she could go anywhere. She’s mysterious, and she’s brilliant, and she private, and there’s so much that can unfold from that. The fact that she’s tied to Edward leaves a lot of potential. I’m excited and thrilled to see where she goes. I have my theories about what I would love to see, but I don’t know! She’s not in the comics! We get to see where she goes.

Is there anything you haven’t done yet that you hope to do down the line?
CS: I would love to get into the action world. One thing I love about her is she is so smart, and she works in an are of information. And I think information is power. I think there’s so much potential for that, and that’s exciting to me. That’s something I love, and I’m excited to see where that goes.

Have you filmed with anyone new in your upcoming episodes? Or is there anyone you hope to work with?
CS: I hope to work with everybody. All I can say is every interaction she has with Nygma, I think, he believes, is seemingly breaking through to her, or possibly tearing down some of her defenses. But it isn’t smooth sailing for him: he takes two steps forward and then a step back, because things are never as easy as we’d like them to be. There are further complications in how he’d like things to pan out. We’ll have to watch and see who interrupts their journey.



http://www.givememyremote.com/remote/20 ... ard-nygma/

- Chelsea Spack, la actriz de ‘Gotham’ que interpreta al (futuro) interés amoroso de "El Enigma" (batman-news):
Chelsea Spack, la actriz de ‘Gotham’ que interpreta al (futuro) interés amoroso de "El Enigma"
Por Chris Begley | 24 Enero, 2015


Last spring Chelsea Spack received her MFA from Rutgers University, and by the fall she made her debut on the #1 new show on TV. Earlier this week I spoke to the Gotham actress about playing Edward Nygma’s love interest/crush, Kristen Kringle. We talked about her great chemistry with Cory Michael Smith, what fans can expect to see between Kringle and Nygma on Monday’s episode of Gotham, and lots more. Check out the full interview below!

I was checking out your website and you have quite the résumé there. Can you talk about your theater background and let fans know a little bit about yourself?

Sure, absolutely. I’ve done a lot of theater and I have gotten my MFA in acting and have awesome training under my belt. I love doing theater, love doing TV, love doing film. I got my MFA from Rutgers in New Jersey, they have a wonderful program there. I’m obviously currently living in New York City and loving it.

Is Gotham is your first big TV role?

It is, it is. I couldn’t ask to have jumped into a more phenomenal production or work with a better cast or more brilliant writers. This is a dream working on this show. It’s wonderful.

What was the transition like going from theater to television?

You know, I think that it boils down to acting is acting. It’s been an exciting transition and smooth transition. But you know, acting is acting, so it’s been wonderful. It’s been really great to exercise these muscles and crossover to this world.

It’s obvious that Edward Nygma has a crush on your character Kristen Kringle.

Is it obvious? [laughs]

It’s a little obvious [laughs]. She seemed to be warming up to him in this week’s episode, but I noticed the officer who kind of bullied Nygma away… is that her boyfriend or is she available?

[laughs] You’re trying to ask if Kristen Kringle is available, huh? That is something that you will have to watch and see, because there is more to that detective than you know right now. So yeah, Edward Nygma. I think every time they interact I think he’s slowly starting to get through to her in ways and possibly break through some of her defenses. I think that he drives her absolutely crazy and he frustrates her, but I think there’s something about him that she’s intrigued by and she can’t put her finger on it, and it’s frustrating, but it’s there.

You and Cory Michael Smith have great chemistry together in your scenes, what’s it like working with him?

It is everything his adoring fans would hope that it is. He’s brilliant, and fun, and charming, and kind. It’s wonderful and it’s great having this chemistry that the writers have really responded to. We’re excited to see how our storyline develops.

We’ve only seen a little bit of Kristen Kringle. We know she works in the records department at the police station, is there anything else you can say about her?

Well you know I’ll say that I think she’s a mysterious woman, and like all of us she has her secrets. I think one thing that Edward is attracted to is that she, like him, is really brilliant. And she’s focused and takes her job really seriously like he does. She’s on her way up in the world, she has ambitions and things that she wants to achieve. I love that she works in the records room because she’s in charge of information, and I think that information is power.

I read that you’re certified in stage combat. Can you talk a bit about that. Do you think Kristen Kringle might have to defend herself with all the crime that goes on in Gotham?

I think that it always helps for a woman to know how to bust a move and how to defend herself. Being certified in stage combat is awesome and a great skill to have. She has secrets and she’s a smart woman, and you never know when knowing how to defend yourself will come in handy.

I mentioned your chemistry with Cory Michael Smith, but Gotham has a fantastic cast overall. Are there any other actors that you’re hoping you get to mix it up with in a future episode?

That’s a great question because there are so many wonderful actors and I think that Kristen Kringle has so much potential, and because she works in the police department and because she works in the records room, that leaves potential for her to interact with virtually anybody. Anybody looking for some information. It’s such a wonderful cast to work with, they’ve made me feel right at home. I’m excited to see who I interact with, and who bumps into our storyline.

Kristen Kringle will be on Monday’s episode of Gotham. What can fans expect to see between her and Nygma this time around?

All I can say is, like I said before, he’s slowly getting through to her. I think that she’s starting to recognize that amidst the dark world of Gotham, it’s refreshing to have somebody who really cares. I think she’s also realizing how she’s holding somebody’s feeling, that are very deep feelings, and she has somebody’s heart in her hand. That’s a scary place to be… what do you do when somebody is obsessed with you? But it’s deep feelings, and you hold their heart in your hands. That’s a complicated position to be in.


http://batman-news.com/2015/01/24/meet- ... rest-life/

- Cory Michael Smith desvela el misterio de "El Enigma" (THR):
Cory Michael Smith desvela el misterio de "El Enigma"
Por Graeme McMillan 8:30 AM PST 26/01/2015


For Gotham’s Cory Michael Smith, reading a bunch of old Batman comics was “easily the smartest thing” he could have done while preparing to play the Fix show’s Edward Nigma, a character better known as the Gotham City villain the Riddler.

Smith tells The Hollywood Reporter that he didn’t grow up with Batman, preferring to spend his time outside. Outside of repeated viewings of Tim Burton’s 1989 movie and episodes of the animated television spinoff, he was coming to the material fresh — which meant he wanted to research the role.

“When I was auditioning for Gotham, I got a handful of comics from different decades, so I had a perspective — it’s been around for 75 years, which is a long time,” he says. “I wanted to see an evolution of the comics — and of the character.”

What he found was that there is no consistent Riddler throughout the character’s 60-year-plus existence. (The character debuted in 1948’s Detective Comics No. 140, created by artist Dick Sprang and writer Bill Finger, who was also responsible for the creation of the Joker and the Penguin, as well as Gotham’s lead character, Jim Gordon.)

“What I love about [the character’s history] is how diverse it is in terms of how the character is portrayed, in terms of his appearance, the different costumes and hair color,” Smith says. “Sometimes it’s incredibly ostentatious, other times it’s almost professional, or regal. Sometimes, he’s a showman, sometimes he’s a nerd.”

More importantly for Gotham’s purposes, perhaps, is the fact that the comic book version of Edward Nigma — or Edward Nygma, or Edward Nashton, because even his name hasn’t stayed consistent throughout the years — hasn’t always been portrayed as a villain. One thing that has stayed true through the character’s career-to-date is that the Riddler’s reason for turning to crime was never simple greed or a desire for mischief, but instead the need to match wits with a suitable opponent. That means that, like Gotham’s currently benign Nigma, the comic book Riddler has worked with the police on occasion when the circumstances dictated. Indeed, under the pen of Paul Dini, the character spent a number of years working on the side of the angels as a private investigator, occasionally even teaming with Batman to solve crimes (much to the suspicion of the Dark Knight).

While Smith likens the current Gotham incarnation of Edward Nigma to “walking through a field and picking up flower, hanging out with his buddies at the GCPD, and having no evil intentions whatsoever” — a description that could never be applied to any of the comic book versions of the character — he suggests that that isn’t going to be the case for much longer, likening Nigma’s character development on the show to a giant U curve.

“What I’m really excited about is the bottom of that curve,” he says. “Going from this quite innocent, well-intentioned, joyful person to starting to find this other part of him that he didn’t know he had — accessing this place where he responds to the unfortunate things that people are doing to him, and starting to realize how cruel people are to him and how they mistreat him, and then doing that back to them. He’s a person who’s constantly abused, and to finally reach a part of himself where he just can’t take it anymore and starts doing it to other people — and it’s out of anger and exhaustion, and then realizing that when you start taking control of situations like that, you can gain power that way — it’ll be something that he can start to enjoy.”

Although that would make for a far more emotionally brutal origin than the comic book Riddler — where, traditionally, he’s been portrayed as a man too smart and too bored to stay within the law, and more of a playful sociopath than a survivor of trauma — Smith suggests that the end result would be someone as gleefully mischievous and fun to watch.

Once Nigma “slips up the other side of the U as this completely other person because he’s finally realized how to harness power, he’s going to have a great time with it,” he says. “That’s how you end up with the Riddler, who is this very joyful villain.”

And if there’s one thing that’s consistent in all of the Riddler’s inconsistency, it’s the joy he takes in his job — whatever that job may be.


http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-f ... cks-766118

- 'El Pingüino' de "Gotham" no descartará a Fish Mooney 'hasta que esté muerta' (zap2it):
'El Pingüino' de "Gotham" no descartará a Fish Mooney 'hasta que esté muerta'
Por Chris E. Hayner 26 Enero, 2015


After toppling Fish Mooney, the sky seems to be the limit for Oswald Cobblepot on "Gotham." It's not smooth sailing yet, however: As long as she's breathing, Fish Mooney (Jada Pinkett Smith) is a threat.

Zap2it spoke with Robin Lord Taylor (The Penguin) at the 2015 winter TV press tour to talk about the next steps in his character's rise to power and the reaction he's received for the show so far. Taylor also sheds a bit of light on one of his favorite on-screen relationships on "Gotham."

Zap2it: Now that we're reaching the halfway point in the season, everyone loves Cobblepot. He's become the character to watch on the show.
Robin Lord Taylor: I mean, there's a lot of characters, but the response has been amazing. It's out of this world.

It's interesting, because Penguin is a character in the Batman universe that hasn't had much done with it since Danny DeVito in "Batman Returns." Now he's back at the forefront of pop culture. What has that been like for you as a fan?
It's crazy. I can't really put into words how it feels. In some ways I'm in complete denial of it. If I thought about it my head would explode. Literally, I would explode. It's just so gratifying. All you ever want to do is work on anything. To have this kind of response on this kind of show, it's the ride of my life. It's been the best year of my life.

It's been quite a ride for the character too. Showrunner Bruno Heller said before the show premiered that this season was about the rise of the Penguin. Now after "What the Little Bird Told Him," he's standing tall over Fish Mooney. Is Oswald already plotting his next step in gaining power?
I think so, but at the same time I don't think he thinks Fish is completely out of the way. He knows Fish very, very well. He learned everything about Gotham City from Fish. I can't even imagine -- if Gotham City were a real place -- the kind of s*** that Fish Mooney would have to go through to get to be in her position, the kind of sacrifices she would have to make. I think Penguin is smart enough to know, and knows her well enough to know, that she's been through some tough stuff before and you can't count her out until she's dead.

At the same time, he's constantly putting out fires. He has a vision. He wants to be powerful, he wants to be his own man, he wants to run the show. He can't afford to just be one step ahead, he has to be five steps. Even then he doesn't do it perfectly. He still makes mistakes. That's so much more fun to play.

Definitely the focus now is on Maroni [David Zayas]. I think Penguin trusts Falcone [John Doman] at this point and is smart enough to know Falcone is the target eventually, but one thing at a time. And Maroni is definitely the next thing.

[Note: At this point in the conversation champagne was delivered to the table care of "Bob's Burgers" and "The Last Man On Earth" star Kristen Schaal, who shared a class with Taylor at Northwestern University. The two briefly talk before toasting "to success." Schaal then tells Taylor he's going to win an Emmy for the role, before rejoining her table.]

That's something fans of the show have been saying as well, an award could definitely be in your future with this show.
It's so validating. I wanted him to be -- I found something sympathetic in him that I wanted to come across and it seems like it has. It's illuminating something in the character that hadn't been seen before. To see people respond in this way is just amazing.

And like you said, it shines a light on parts of the character fans haven't seen much of before. His home life, for instance. Getting to know Cobblepot's mother and their relationship gives him a new dimension. Moving forward, will we see anyone else enter his life or is he too focused on becoming king of the crime world?
I think he has complete tunnel vision. I think because of what he's gone through in life, and the way he's been treated by people, in a way he views himself as unworthy of love and shuts that part of himself off because he sees it as a liability.

He even views his mother that way. He loves her, and she's one of only two people in the world that he trusts -- the other being Jim Gordon, whom he just met. I think he still sees his mother as a liability. He even tells Carbone in episode 7, when you know what a man loves, you know what can kill him. I think that is very telling in terms of his personal life.

However, he's so eager to have a friend in Jim Gordon, beyond GCPD vs. the crime family. To have a friend, someone to trust, means so much to him. The fact that Gordon saved his life, I don't think Penguin thought anyone besides his mother would ever do that. It means so much to him.

That's a relationship that I think took many by surprise. Jim Gordon stands for everything good in Gotham City, and he has some sort of alliance -- and possible friendship -- with this rising villain.
And that's so Gotham City. To succeed on one side, you need the other side. If Gordon is going to succeed, he's going to have to get his hands dirty. If Penguin wants to succeed, he needs the cops. This is what Falcone has protected and why he basically runs Gotham City.


http://www.zap2it.com/blogs/gotham_peng ... ad-2015-01

- Chelsea Spack habla sobre las parejas, el potencial y el enamorar al friki (comicbook):
Chelsea Spack habla sobre las parejas, el potencial y el enamorar al friki
Por Russ Burlingame 26/01/2015


Last week's episode of Gotham picked up the thread of Eddie "The Riddler" Nigma's infatuation with Gotham City Police Department record keeper Kristen Kringle.

Up to this point, it's seemed like a pretty one-sided crush, but last week we saw Kringle, played by Chelsea Spack, seemingly start to feel a little bit back for Nigma.

So...what's the deal? Where's her head at? Spack joined us for an interview ahead of tonight's episode of Gotham, playing at 8 p.m. ET/PT on FOX, and revealed that even she isn't totally sure what's going on with Kristen Kringle sometimes...!

Is it fun to come into a fairly structured world like Gotham and have a character who is essentially a blank slate?

Absolutely, that' a great question. So fun, so exciting. Kristen Kringle is a bit of a blank slate in that there's so much pot for where we can go and how her storyline develops. That's an exciting and a wonderful and a creative place to be. She's wonderful and brilliant and mysterious and, like all of us, she has secrets and I'm looking forward to finding out what they are.

Have you been paying attention to the fans and their speculation? Anytime there's an original character on these shows, I feel like there's a sense of, "Could she secretly be somebody we know?"

It's so much fun watching that. It's so interesting to see how people respond, who they think she reminds them of. The writers are so brilliant. We're all on the edge of her seat to see how she develops and how her relationship with Eddie Nigma develops.

What drew you to this script? Obviously when you look at that first appearance it would be easy to dismiss the role as just another "pretty girl" part.

You know, I think I immediately responded to the fact that she is a woman working her way up in the dark world of Gotham and working in what is kind of a man's world. I saw her as smart and private and mysterious.

Also, she works in the records room and is in charge of all the information and information is power. People need to come to her for help. So I never worried about that. Also, the fact that Nigma is so drawn to her shows that he sees in her intelligence and drive and mystery.

Obviously in this most recent episode, she seemed to be softening to Eddie's advances, but then she thanked the other officer for scaring him off. How do you play a relationship like that?

To me the human heart is so complicated. Things are never black and white, and as a woman you don't always know where your heart is at.

I think Edward Nigma is frustrating to Kristen Kringle and I think he drives her crazy but there's something about him that she's intrigued by and she can't put her finger on. I also think it's like in high school: You don't want to admit to the cool kids that you think the nerdy guy is intriguing and I think that further frustrates her.

You and Cory Michael Smith have great onscreen chemistry. Has that helped to inform the way your characters are being perceived, do you think?

Absolutely. Workng with Cory is everything his fans hope it would be. He's brilliant, charming, hilarious and kind, and I agree completely that he's created a complex character that has caused people to relate to him and feel endeared to him and love him. He's a terrific actor who's given a lot of humanity to Eddie Nigma.

Now...given the fact that you aren't in the comics, do you ever worry that your character could die or be written out at any time?

I think that because the writers are so brilliant and keep us on the edge of our seats and write in such complex and nuanced ways, you don't know what could happen. Anything could happen and there's so much potential.

Kristen Kringle has such a wide array of potential so there's always that excitement of what's happening this time and wanting to see how she develops. Her story being connected with Eddie Nigma's is so wonderful and the fact that the writers have responded to the chemistry between Cory and I is wonderful.

I think the dark world of Gotham is something she feels and is starting to recognize that having somebody really care about you and persistently make effort to let you know they care, she finds that refreshing in this very dark world. There's so much potential and such mystery and I'm excited to see how she develops and not worried about the future so much.

Because she works in the GCPD, and in the records room, I love that there's so much potential for her to interact with almost anybody. Anybody looking for information. Information is power and so I'm excited for who it could be and who comes and bumps into our storyline as well. So I am excited that there's so many possibilities

How have you done with the shippers so far? This isn't a show with a ton of romantic relationships or subplots yet, so you guys are getting the lion's share of that attention. Have you seen that?

Yes and it's wonderful to see people responding and seeing how they feel hurt when Eddie Nigma feels hurt, and also feel confused because they can see how Kristen would feel frustrated at times but they feel so deeply for Nigma that they don't want to see him hurt. I love it! I love the word "shipping," too, and I'm excited to see fans following the story and connecting to it and following these ups and downs.


http://comicbook.com/2015/01/23/gothams ... mancing-t/

- Dejando las cosas claras: Una entrevista con Chelsea Spack de "Gotham" (dccomics):
Dejando las cosas claras: Una entrevista con Chelsea Spack de "Gotham"
Por Tim Beedle 26/01/2015 - 10:00am


In the darkened world of Gotham, the line between creepy and charming can be quite thin. No one knows this better than Kristen Kringle, the often-on-edge GCPD records room attendant who has captured Edward Nygma’s eye. Last week, Nygma tried winning her affection with—no surprise here—a riddle. That really didn’t work out so well, but it’s easy to see that Kristen isn’t quite so cold to Edward as she’d maybe like to believe. Could there be romance in the cards for Gotham’s Riddler-to-be?

While Nygma may enjoy being cryptic about such things, we much prefer answers, so we went straight to the source—Chelsea Spack, the Rutgers-trained actress who plays Kringle on Gotham. Just in time for her appearance in tonight’s new episode, “Welcome Back, Jim Gordon,” we spoke with Spack about riddles, how she feels about romancing future super-villains, and whether there may be a bit more to her character’s name than simple alliteration.

Kristen was in last week’s episode and she’s in tonight’s as well. Will we be seeing her again before the end of the season?

She’s coming back very soon. The writers are so brilliant. They like to keep us on the edge of our seats. Thankfully, they’ve really responded to the chemistry between us and our storyline is developing more and more. We’ll have to see where things go, but she’s definitely coming back very soon. There’s more to see.


Your character has a name like something from a comic book, but she’s original to the show. How would you describe her?

I love how she’s a woman of great intelligence and mystery. She takes her job really seriously, just like Edward Nygma. She’s on her way up in the world. She’s a very private person. She’s in charge of information, and I think that information is power. She works in the records room. She’s a fierce, brilliant woman that like everybody has a lot of secrets.

Do you find the fact that you’re portraying an original character rather than one from the comics is a little more freeing? Fans don’t have the same expectations for you that they have for Jim Gordon or Edward Nygma.

Yeah, I find it so exciting. It’s like a blank slate and there’s so much potential. And then working opposite a character from the comics who’s so beloved, it’s exciting. Seeing how our storyline develops is fascinating. So in a way it is freeing that it’s kind of a blank slate and we get to create and see how things pan out.

Gotham has such a large cast and so many of the characters are flamboyant and really stand out. However, Kristen has managed to stand out despite having appeared in only a few episodes. How have you managed that?

I think that mystery is always intriguing, and she’s a mysterious woman. She works in a very private world. I think that’s something Nygma is very intrigued by. Kristen’s focused and brilliant, and she doesn’t let people get in her way. She’s a private person and I think that he responds to her intelligence and her drive. Maybe the glasses help a little bit too!

But yeah, I think she stands out partially because she’s mysterious. There’s a lot to her that isn’t so obvious, but it’s there.

How does Kristen feel about Nygma? It’s hard to tell at times!

The human heart is so complicated. If only things were black and white, it would be so much easier. All I have to say is Edward Nygma drives her crazy. He frustrates her, but there’s something about him that she is intrigued by. I think that it’s something she doesn’t want to admit, and I think she doesn’t quite understand it. You don’t want to tell the cool kids at school that you think the nerdy guy is intriguing, and I don’t think she quite understands it herself. There’s something there that she can’t put her finger on.

When I think of Nygma on the show, he’s the sort of person that would probably be pretty creepy and kind of disturbing in real life. You wouldn’t want to have to work with a guy like him. But he’s actually pretty endearing on Gotham. I know it’s partly the writing, but do you think a lot of it also has to do with Cory Michael Smith’s performance?

Absolutely! He is brilliant in that he understands that there’s so much more to a person than one thing. Instead of going with the label that he’s weird, or creepy, or nerdy, [he realizes] there’s so much underneath that.

I think that part of why Edward’s so endearing is because he cares so much. He truly cares for Kristen Kringle, and he takes things so seriously. I think that’s why he’s so beloved, because he’s created a really complex character.

Yes, I realized that of all the characters that we know will one day become super villains, he’s the one that I’m dreading the most. He’s such a fun supporting character on the show, and you see him just trying to connect with people. You kind of want him to get a happy ending, yet you know he’s not going to get one!

I know, I know! That’s the most interesting when you see what it is that causes somebody to snap. The motivations that they come up with make it more relatable. More human.

As we touched on, Kristen Kringle has a real comic book-skewing name. You’ve also mentioned secrets a few times. Could she potentially have a villainous future ahead of her?

We’re all on the edge of our seats to see how she develops. I have no knowledge of the large picture. But I have my ideas of what I think makes her tick, what her secrets are and what she hopes to achieve. I think having a name like Kristen Kringle, there’s obviously so much potential there. And of course it’s the kind of name that Edward Nygma would find incredibly endearing, amusing and attractive. We’re just excited to see all the ways that Kristen can unfold and how she can develop.

So, how do you feel about riddles in real life? Would the bullet in the cupcake thing have worked for you?

I love riddles! I love subtext and how you can say something to a person when what you’re really saying is completely different. I think that riddles are a way of expressing two things at one time and playing with somebody’s mind, while also exercising your intelligence to communicate. I think it’s so awesome and intriguing. I love riddles.

http://www.dccomics.com/blog/2015/01/26 ... lsea-spack

- Donal Logue: 'Harvey Bullock se enamora' (cbr):
Donal Logue: 'Harvey Bullock se enamora'
Por Scott Huver, 26 Enero 2015


If there's one thing that's surprised Donal Logue about playing "Gotham's" tarnished, disheveled detective Harvey Bullock, it's how well-tailored a fit the rumpled role has been.

With world of the pre-Batman series now guaranteed to unspool for a second season, the veteran character actor spoke candidly with CBR News about taking on the GCPD's increasingly less corrupt cop and the discoveries that he's made along the way, the surprising effects of taking on such a high-profile project and frankly feeling a bit flummoxed that breathing life into the role isn't, in fact, a little bit harder.

CBR News: Now that you know you've got more road to go with this character, what has you excited about his journey ahead?

Donal Logue: I don't know! I don't have any clue. I have no clue what his journey's going to be, and I stayed pretty flexible. And I think he's been all over the map a little bit: I think he's inherently a good guy, but he's kind of a dirty cop. And you saw a little bit of his private life, in the fact that he takes care of Dix -- I'm just open. I just like any time he shows a crack to his internal life, and I think that there's an episode coming up where he finds himself kind of falling for somebody and revealing a little bit about himself. And I like that. I think the crass, crude, whaa-whaa, stuff is a little easy. Sometimes you get rewarded for doing the easy stuff, but it's got to be both.

Tell me some of the discoveries you've made since the beginning of the series.

It sounds absurd. It sounds crazy, but part of what I feel guilty about with Harvey Bullock is I really feel like it's so easy -- that I'm like, "Oh, you're doing a good job." I'm not doing shit! I'm not even trying. It's so easy. This was a coat that was so -- I knew what it was immediately when I put it on. And now I'm like, "Maybe that's what it's supposed to be. Maybe it's not supposed to be so tortured a process."

It was hard to do "Vikings." It was hard to do "Copper." Part of that was, like, there's dialect and other things. But Harvey was just like "Boom -- I know this dude. Wow, I know this guy." And I also know really well, that it doesn't have to always clock in the most emotionally logical way from episode to episode. Sometimes it's like, "Dude, you just need to bring some energy in the scene or some humor into this world." And I get it. That's my job, you know. And so it's a theatrical world, and I like that.

I feel like I'm really lucky because I get to sometimes maybe vibrate at a frequency that's a little deeper and darker than people anticipate. So I'm pretty lucky. And I have to get over too what it's like to just not being everything and not feel bad about someone else like Ben [McKenzie]'s pulling a lot of the heavy lifting for stuff -- I think it's chilled out for certainly me and for him a little bit. And sometimes that's okay too, you know.

Do you want it to still be hard on occasion?

Oh, yeah, totally. I'm a happy human being when I'm overloaded with stuff to do, but I got stuff to do... I'm trying. I know that we deal with this dirty cop, Dash Mihok, that I'm old friends with. And there's a cool episode with this woman, Maria Thayer [who plays Scottie Mullen] -- Bullock falls in love, and with someone other than Jim Gordon. [Laughs] And so yeah, wow, it's a big world for [Executive Producers] Danny [Cannon] and Bruno [Heller] to have to juggle, and all the writers. I just want to be of service to the piece whichever way I can. And I think Bullock is -- not me, but a color to have in that world. I think you would feel the absence almost more than you [might think] -- it's kind of a grounding, because he can be funny as shit, but he is dirty like the old city.

He represents Gotham as it's been, but he sees the potential of what Jim Gordon wants Gotham to be.

Yep.

Do you get to play with some of the regular cast more than you have?

I don't know. Honestly, we got Episode 18 yesterday which I didn't read -- I was with my kids last night -- so I only know what we're shooting for [Episode] 17 this week, and I don't know what the next five episodes are. I don't even know what the arc of the end of the season is. I'm hoping that it's big. I'm hoping that Montoya and Allen come back and people that we haven't seen in a while. I'm sure it will tie up something stuff. There's just a lot. I feel for those guys, because what do you say when Richard Kind and John Doman, some seriously good eff-ing actors, [are also in the mix]. So hopefully, we'll see everybody for the next half -- I'm sure there will be some kind of like three-episode arc or something to close it out.

Has there been something intriguing you've found in the fan response to Bullock?

I've stayed away from it. I don't think I've ever felt as kind of isolated -- I live across the street from where we work in Brooklyn, and I feel like I'm in "Gotham"-world with my workmates and I'm living in another city where my family's not. And I think this is the most I've felt isolated. I know that the marketing campaign as massive. I know that there's a big wave of stuff. I know that it's probably bigger than anything I've been involved with in my life. But I weirdly have been separate from it.

So it's almost disconcerting sometimes -- even from my kids' lives. They're like, "Dude, 'Gotham' changed stuff." Just the way their friends treat them and stuff. "Oh, your dad's on 'Gotham.' You don't have any fucking problems. Why don't you buy me this, dude." Like, weird shit. And I'm like, "Oh, 'Gotham' is the next level -- no complaints. It's not a big deal," and all that kind of stuff, and it's all cool.

I'm just, like, it's interesting psychologically to be involved in something that was that Front Street. I'm kind of used to being like, "Oh, that dude was great in 'Terriers.' Real shame that it died." "Oh, man, I was rooting for that dude." "He's like the kiss of death." Whatever -- which never was the case and not true and all that kind of stuff. But I was involved in some kind of underdogs that were really lovable but not quite [successful]... this is different. This thing, it's a big world. And it was known before we came along, so we just had to not eff it up. We had the responsibility to keep the franchise going and do our bit.

Were there any notes you saw in your comic book research that you're still hoping you get to play?

Yeah, a couple of the things in this Bullock story where he really goes dark and dirty. And then when he's really heroic and saving people from fires. There's a level of crassness to that Bullock that we could never play at 8 o'clock on a Friday night. And I don't know if I'd necessarily want to. There's kind of a homophobic side to him and all this stuff that I don't -- I also don't disagree with playing characters like that because if you're an asshole, you're supposed to play like a straight-up asshole, because the message to people is this guy's a dick. Not trying to make assholes in the world seem like kind of nice guys, too. But I think certain dark tones, you just can't lean on it for a long time or else Bullock wouldn't last that long, you know?

The project is so interesting because it's got a kid appeal because of the superhero element, but you're taking it very serious, very adult and frequently very dark.

It's hard. You've got to strike that tone. They'll talk about it. It's 8 o'clock, and things I haven't had to worry about for a long time, but it's just like, wow, you've got to be dark and scary, but you can't get that dark. We can't do what the "Walking Dead" -- there's limitations to what we can do. It's okay. It's all storytelling. But striking a tone balance is really interesting challenge.

What has been the best part of your "Gotham" experience so far?

I think when you're in a van, and you're working with them, and you're driving home at night, and it's been a cool day on the set, which I never take for granted, and you're driving over the Manhattan bridge back to Brooklyn, and the lights are twinkling. Man, pinch me, New York. Wow. My Jujitsu dude -- I go to this dojo in Brooklyn, and he's like, "There are no good old days. Today is the good old days."

And today is the good old day, because I will at some point in my life, whatever happens, I'll be, "Man, I remember when it was crazy. I used to live in LA, and I was working on this stuff, I was working in New York and we'd be doing press junkets at fancy hotels..." And it will be part of a story. Even when someone might be like, "Bullshit, dude." I guess it's hard not to look up -- you can verify or whatever. Now, you can't really talk that much smack because you can just look it up. But today's the good old days.


http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page ... e&id=58780

- Morena Baccarin sobre el enamorar a Jim Gordon y el unirse a la fuerza policial de GOTHAM ():
Morena Baccarin sobre el enamorar a Jim Gordon y el unirse a la fuerza policial de GOTHAM
Por Joseph McCabe on January 26, 2015


Few TV stars have won a place in the hearts of genre fans like Morena Baccarin. After breaking through in Joss Whedon’s Firefly and its spin-off film Serenity, the Brazilian-born stunner won memorable roles on Stargate SG-1 (and its direct-to-video spin-off Stargate: The Ark of Truth), V, Homeland, and the animated Justice League, for which she provided the voice of the Black Canary. She’s even found time for guest turns on The Flash (as the voice of Harrison Wells’ computer Gideon) and Batman: The Brave and the Bold (as the voice of the Cheetah). This month saw her return to the Batman universe in high style on Gotham, as the first live-action incarnation of Dr. Leslie Thompkins, longtime confidant of the Dark Knight and Jim Gordon, with whom she’s already initiated a romance on the show.

We caught up with Baccarin at last weekend’s TCA Winter Press Tour in Pasadena and she explained how she won the role, as well as what lies ahead for the good doctor.

The Nerdist: You’ve shown a great deal of chemistry with Ben McKenzie. How did your casting come about? Did you test with him?

Morena Baccarin: No, they just kind of threw us together and it worked. So it was both sheer luck and tenacity.

N: In developing your Leslie Thompkins, what did you draw from? She’s very different than she is in the comic books.

MB: Yeah, it was on the page. Bruno wrote a very well-rounded character right away, and that’s what I was playing — what I was given.

N: Leslie’s a hardened professional, but she has a warmth that we haven’t really seen so far on the show.

MB: Yes, that’s true.

N: Was that something the producers said they were looking for?

MB: Yes, I think the show was wanting that, a female energy, something a little bit different. Somebody who can [tolerate] the shit that she’s gotta put up with and not be phased. That’s how she was written.

N: After your experiences with Firefly, Stargate, and V, is it comforting to know you have fans who will follow you from project to project?

MB: Absolutely, I think it’s a wonderful world to be in. It was very stigmatized ten years ago, but now we’re here and we’re all very lucky to have such fans. They really do follow you. A lot of them watch Homeland, which is not at all their cup of tea, and follow me to whatever I do. It’s really nice.

N: What do you think attracts Gordon and Leslie to each other?

MB: They get together pretty quickly [because] they’re both very lonely and they find refuge in each other. They’re kindred spirits.

N: Now that you’re a regular on the show, will we see you in every episode for the remainder of this season?

MB: No, not necessarily. Next season perhaps.

N: Bruno Heller has told us Leslie will soon become a part of the police force.

MB: Yes, I start working at the GCPD very quickly. So I’ll be around.

N: Have you had a chance to interact with the rest of the cast now that you’re at police headquarters?

MB: Not too much. A little bit with Bullock and a little bit with Nygma, which was really fun. But mostly just with Jim.

N: What’s Leslie’s position with GCPD?

MB: She’s the medical examiner. So she’s pretty much there on every case.

N: Will we learn more of her backstory in the days ahead? We don’t know much about her past yet.

MB: To be honest, I’m not quite sure. I think eventually. They do such a great job of making everybody a well-rounded character that you can kind of spin off on any character. So hopefully they’ll give her a little more back story. Right now we’re just going day by day.

N: Did you come up with one for her in your head?

MB: No, because that stuff changes. So I’m just really trying to take it a day at a time, and what they’ve written has been mostly focused on our relationship. So that’s been really the key element to it.

N: Does that relationship get at all complicated by Jim’s prior relationship?

MB: Mildly, but not too much. It gets more complicated as the season goes on just by the virtue of what we do, and the troubles in Gotham.

N: Well it’s reassuring to know the show won’t fall prey to a cliched love triangle.

MB: No, it won’t.

N: Great meeting you, Morena! Thanks for your time.

MB: Absolutely! Nice to meet you. Thank you. I appreciate it.


https://www.nerdist.com/2015/01/firefly ... ice-force/

- Jada Pinkett Smith: "Va a ser un poco duro con Fish de aquí en adelante" (comicbook):
Jada Pinkett Smith: "Va a ser un poco duro con Fish de aquí en adelante"
Por Russ Burlingame 28/01/2015


Each of the last two weeks, FOX's Gotham has shifted the ground under Jada Pinkett Smith's character Fish Mooney, giving the actress new challenges as the character's position in the show's world and her outlook on the world change radically.

That isn't going to let up, she told reporters on a conference call this afternoon, as they move into the first season's home stretch. Things are not going to be easy for Fish, who will have to become more human and humane, and less ruthless, to get along and survive now that she's been stripped of her station and her men.

ComicBook.com was part of the conference call, and sat in to see what else the woman behind Fish Mooney had to say about the part.

At the end of this week's episode, Fish appears to be leaving. Can you tease us about what's coming?

[Pauses] Well, it's not quite over yet but we'll see if Fish survives the season. It's a little tense from here on out, that's for sure. It's a little rough on Fish from here on out.

What's been your favorite scene so far to do?

I think one of my favorite scenes would have to be that Maroni scene when I go to Maroni and I hear that Penguin's alive but I have yet to see him, and then he comes from the back in the kitchen and I see him for the first time. I think that's probably one of my favorite scenes that we've done so far.

What was it like preparing for this role, since you had comparably little source material to draw on?

That's one of the reasons that the role was so interesting to me; it was something that [showrunner] Bruno [Heller] really wanted a partner in creating Fish Mooney and I love female gangsters. I think they're really interesting characters and interesting people. There's one -- Griselda Blanco who I had studied and I really love the character from Sunset Boulevard and it was kind of a mishmash of those two. When Bruno had some suggestions and it was really coming together and I said, "Well, I would really like to do a mixture of these two women."

One thing I love about the supervillains in Gotham is that they're always so colorful. I really wanted her to be grounded but also have quite a flair.

Are you enjoying being part of a comic book universe?

Yeah, I am enjoying it. I love comic books and so it's been a real pleasure to be able to participate in this way, for sure.

What did you add to Fish that hadn't been scripted for you?

I would say some of her Fish-isms. Her "tk, tk, tk." Kind of a lot of her mannerisms and those added attitude phrases that Fish has. That's pretty much what I would add. Thank goodness I have a lot of room on set because Bruno and the writers know that we're still trying to find the voices as characters. So we have a lot of room to improv at times when it comes to Fish so that's fun as well. Just adding those little flavors that make Fish Mooney, Fish.

You're new to Twitter. Are you enjoying the immediate feedback you get during the episodes?

I have so much fun. This is such an enthusiastic genre. The fans that participate in this genre are so much fun, so I have a good time when I'm on Twitter talking about the show. I have a blast.

Acting challenges of creating a character people love to hate and root for?

That's a really good question. As I was saying before I love how colorful Fish can be but at the same time you still want her to be relatable, you know what I mean? You still want people to be able to look at this woman and maybe not necessarily know her story but be able to relate to her.

I think this world of Gotham sometimes in finding where you need to be emotionally or how grounded you need to be in a scene or how far you can go with the colors of Fish Mooney sometimes tend to be a bit challenging. That's always a seesaw, you're always trying to find that balance. That's the hardest part is finding that balance of having her flair but keeping her grounded and real.

How would you describe her relationship with Penguin?

I would say that she saw Penguin as one of her adopted orphans -- someone she took off the street and helped him become something, so I think that she felt deeply betrayed by Penguin. It will be interesting to see where their relationship goes from here. Right now they're not getting along too well [laughs] and she's still pretty upset with him but it will be interesting to see where it goes from here.

A lot of comments were that people were noticing a change in delivery style. Is that a conscious decision for you to be playing Fish Mooney the thug but pretending to be Fish Mooney the sophisticated gangster?

Yeah. You know, the thing about Fish Mooney is that you'll see, especially in the upcoming shows, the many faces of Fish Mooney.

I think Fish Mooney is a woman who because of her background and because of who she really is has taken it upon herself to do a lot of cover-up. She has all of these different kinds of personalities that she picks and chooses to use during certain times. You have this kind of sophisticated Fish, what she considers to be sophisticated....

But then there are times when she loses her cool and you kind of see her original essence, which can get a little gutter. And sometimes when she has to be influential with men, you'll see her put on her little sexy kitten voice, which is coming up.

This is a woman who has created all these different masks to fit different times just depending on what she's trying to do at times. If you watch people in real life, you see that all the time. She just does it in a more extreme way.

I've heard that your family members are actually fans. What do they tell you about Fish Mooney?

No notes -- that's the wonderful thing, no notes. You just go "good job," that's it. We stay away from notes.

I read that when you came in to audition for Fish Mooney, you came in with a man on a leash and "liar" across his forehead. What gave you the instinct to show the people that's what Fish embodied?

It wasn't for an audition. I know that's a better story. We were actually doing a work session about Fish Mooney and trying to find the character. That's one of the reasons I decided to do something as extreme as that. I felt like instead of talking about it just show it. I felt like from the psychology I had put together in regard to who I thought Fish was, that's something better to show than to explain verbally. That was one of the reasons why I decided for that creative session that I had with Bruno and Danny [Cannon] at the time after it had been decided that I would play Fish, I decided to come in with the guy on the leash to just go "this is who this woman is, this is what I see." It was a very short session to say the least.

And they were like, "Okay, got it." [Laughs] It was a very short session to say the least. It was like, "Okay, we're clear." I was done up and I had this guy on a leash with no shirt on with "liar" written across his head with red lipstick and they were like "We are clear." It was awesome; it gave Bruno a nice foundation to work from, for sure.

You like to play these strong women. Which one would you say is your favorite to play, and is there another character you'd like to play some day?

I would say I love playing Fish Mooney. You're going to see a lot more color from Fish in the next episodes, you're going to see a lot more vulnerability, you're going to see a more human side of Fish Mooney.

I see Fish Mooney as a more extreme version of a woman. A woman who wears many faces, a woman who is strong but yet afraid. I would say that the Fish Mooney character has, especially in these coming episodes, has been really fun and I love how smart and perceptive she is.

She just decided to use her skill and not...well, she's a criminal. She decided to be a criminal instead of, you know, a doctor. I really love her and what she's becoming too. I think in the next few episodes and definitely toward the end you're going to see a whole different Fish and a woman that definitely has some heart. You've seen the ruthless now you'll see some heart.

Is there a character you'd like to play in the future?

Character coming up in Magic Mike that I'm really happy about that is totally different from anything I've done thus far, once again. And this woman is strong in a much different way also, and I think from the response we've been getting in regards to the character I portray in Magic Mike I'm really happy with how that turned out and she'll probably end up being one of my favorites as well.

Can you talk more about the sexuality of the character and what that's been like?

It's been great. I think as far as the Fish Mooney character is concerned, anything pretty much goes. "By any means necessary" is kind of her motto. I think that Fish doesn't discriminate when it comes to her sexuality.

What did you initially find compelling about Gotham?

Becuase Gotham is so mysterious. There's this undertone to Gotham and the idea that the city itself has kind of this underbelly. What is going on in these alleys? What's going on in these so-called high rises? What is happening? Why is it that this place has some of the most incredible villains and you have one of the most beloved superheroes which is Batman, and he comes from this dark, gritty atmosphere? I just felt like Gotham itself is such a mystery and I've always been drawn to it. What is Gotham? What is the city about? Who's there, and why is it this place? What is it about this place?

And so that has always fascinated me about the Batman story, is just his backdrop which has been Gotham.

Was there a particular scene or episode where you felt like you really clicked with Fish and became her?

I think, funny enough, it really felt like as soon as I put on that wig, Fish is there.

As soon as I put on that wig and her gear, because it's so specifically her, there's a unique and immediate transformation. So the first day, as soon as I put on that wig and that dress, I just felt like "oh, there she is." And every time I do it, she is alive. It's a really good feeling to have. You just don't have to work hard for it. That I'm grateful for. That wig and those heels and those nails really conjure her.


http://comicbook.com/2015/01/28/gothams ... rom-here-/

- Entrevista con Jada Pinkett Smith – Gotham (starrymag):
Entrevista con Jada Pinkett Smith – Gotham
Por starrymag | 30 Enero, 2015


Q) Fish Mooney has an awesome wardrobe. Do you have any input on that creative process at all?

A) I actually do. Our fantastic costume designer usually just comes to me and says, “What do you think about these fabrics? What do you think about this idea?” So, that’s pretty much it. I pretty much told Lisa to just do whatever, whatever she feels because she’s such a fantastic artist, and so we usually just talk about shape and color.

Q) What’s your favorite outfit been so far this season?

A) I think it would probably have to be the one that I wore when I went to see Maroni about returning Penguin to me. And it’s the first time I realized that Penguin was alive, and the first time I see him after seeing him in Maroni’s restaurant, and think it was like teal. It was this beautiful kind of antique fabric, but yet it had this kind of punk rock edge to it with the trim that she used, which was this kind of spiked teal leather and I just thought it was just a beautiful mixture of the old and the new and even with the shape of it, it was high waisted, but yet it had this kind of like warrior-esque, but quite feminine top that went to it. It was pretty cool. It was really quite beautiful. Not that comfortable to wear, but beautiful.

Q) At the end of the recent episode, obviously, Fish appears to be leaving. Is there anything at all you can tease about either what’s coming or maybe when she’s coming back?

A) Well, it’s not quite over yet, but we’ll see if Fish survives the season. It’s a little tense from here on out. That’s for sure. It’s a little rough on Fish from here on out.

Q) What’s been your favorite scene so far to do?

A) I think one of my favorite scenes would have to be that Maroni scene when I go to Maroni and I hear that Penguin’s alive, but I have yet to see him and then he comes from the back, in the kitchen, and I see him for the first time. I think that’s probably one of my favorite scenes that I’ve done so far.

Q) What was it like preparing for this role? There are so many actors that had some much reference material in terms of comic books or previous films for their characters. You character was created for this show. What was it like preparing for the role, not really having much to reference?

A) Yes, I think that was one of the reasons why the role was so interesting to me was because it was something that Bruno really wanted a partner in creating this Fish Mooney character, and I love female gangsters. I just love them. I think that they’re really interesting characters and interesting people, and there’s one, Griselda Blanco, who I had studied, and I also love the character from Sunset Boulevard. I did kind of a mish-mosh of those two because Bruno had some suggestions, and it’s coming together, and I was like wow, I would really love to do a mixture of these two women, because the one thing I love about the super villains, and Gotham, is that they’re always so colorful. I really wanted her to be grounded, but also have quite a flair.

Q) Are you enjoying being a part of a comic book universe, being that’s kind of like the thing now in entertainment?

A) Oh yes. I am, I am enjoying it. I love comic books and so it’s been a real pleasure to be able to participate in this way for sure.

Q) I was wondering, what was it that you added to Fish that maybe not have been originally scripted for you?

A) I would say, some of her fishes, kind of like a fish-ism and just a lot of her mannerisms, and just some of those little added attitude phrases that Fish has. I would say that would be pretty much what I would add. Thank goodness I have a lot of room on set just because Bruno and the writers know that we’re still trying to find the voice of this character, so I have a lot of room to improv at times when it comes to Fish. That’s been fun as well. Just adding those little flavors that I think make Fish Mooney, Fish.

Q) You’re a new addition to Twitter, are you enjoying the instant fan feedback you receive during the episodes?

A) Oh, I have so much fun. Yes, I have a lot of fun. It’s like, because this is such an enthusiastic genre, the fans that participate in this particular genre, is just so much fun. Yes, I have a good time when I’m on Twitter talking about the show. I have a blast.

Q) I wanted to find out what sort of acting challenges have you found sort of making a character in Fish that people love to hate, but at the same time, sort of root for her sometimes?

A) I think some of the challenges, and that’s a really good question because it’s, as I was saying before, I love how colorful Fish can be, but at the same time, you still want her to be relatable. You know what I mean? You still want people to be able to look at this woman and might not necessarily know her story, but be able to relate to her. I think that this world of Gotham sometimes in finding where you need to be emotionally, or how grounded you need to be in a scene or how far you can actually go with the color of the Fish Mooney sometimes tend to be a bit challenging. That’s always a see-saw. It’s always trying to find that balance. But, I would say that aspect is the most challenging of just keeping that flair, but at the same time, trying to keep her grounded and real. That can be really challenging.

Q) I just wanted to get your take on how would you perhaps describe Fish’s relationship with Penguin and what maybe have you enjoyed most seeing that relationship develop?

A) I would say that I think she saw Penguin as one of her adopted orphans. Somebody that she kind of took off the street and helped them become something. So, I think that she felt deeply betrayed by Penguin. It will be interesting to see where their relationship goes from here. Right now, they’re not getting along too well. They’re pretty upset with him. But, it will be interesting to see where it goes from here with the two of them.

Q) A lot of comments early on in the season people were noticing a change in your accent. A change in delivery style. A lot of times, people were saying that you sounded like Eartha Kitt in some scenes and others where the accent was dropped. Is this a conscious decision for you to be playing Fish Mooney the thug pretending to be Fish Mooney the sophisticated gangster, or is that something you discussed with Bruno and the production team? How did that come about?

A) Yes. The thing about Fish Mooney, is that you will see, especially in the upcoming shows, you will see the many faces of Fish Mooney. I think Fish Mooney, this is a woman who, because of her background and because of who she really is, really has taken it upon herself to do a lot of cover-up. So, I think she has all of these different kinds of personalities that she picks and chooses to use during certain times. You have this kind of sophisticated Fish of what she considers to be sophisticated. What a sophisticated woman sounds like. What a sophisticated woman looks like. But then, there are times when she loses her cool and you kind of see her original essence. Which can get a little gutter. Then sometimes, when she has to be influential with men you’ll see her put on her little sexy kitten voice, which is coming up. This is a woman who has created all of these different masks to fit different times, just depending on what she’s trying to do at that particular point in time. It’s interesting, because when you watch people in real life, you’ll see that happen often. She just does it in a more extreme way.

Q) I’ve heard that your family members are actually fans. What do they tell you about Fish Mooney? Do they give you notes about whether she’s a good villain as she is, or if she needs to be more devious or brutal?

A) No notes. That’s the wonderful thing. No notes. You just go good job, that’s it. We stay away from notes.

Q) I have read that when you decided to audition for Fish Mooney that you came in with a man on a leash and liar across his forehead. What gave you the instinct to show the people that’s what Fish Mooney embodied?

A) I know that’s a better story, but it wasn’t for an audition. We were actually doing a work session about Fish Mooney and trying to find the character, and that was one of the reasons why I decided to do something as extreme as that because I felt like instead of talking about it, just show it. I just felt like, from the psychology that I had put together in regard to who I thought Fish was, that’s something better to show than to explain verbally. That was one of the reasons why I decided to, for that particular creative session that I’d had with Bruno and Danny at the time, which it had already been decided that I would play Fish. I decided to come in with the guy on the leash to just go this is who this woman is. This is what I see and they like, “Okay, got it.” It was a very short session to say the least. They’re like, “Okay. She was in a gown, and I was done up, and I had this guy on the leash with no shirt on, with liar written across his forehead in red lipstick, and they were like, “We are clear” and I was like, “Cool.” Bruno, a nice foundation to work from for sure.

Q) You are known for playing strong characters, which one would you say is your most favorite to play and is there a character that you would love to play in the future?

A) I would say, I love playing Fish Mooney. I think you’re going to see a lot more color from Fish in the next episodes to come. I think you’re going to see a lot more vulnerability. I think you’re going to see a lot more of a human side of Fish Mooney. I see Fish Mooney as kind of an extreme version of a woman. A woman who wears many faces. A woman who is strong, but yet afraid. I would say that the Fish Mooney character has, especially in these coming episodes, has been really fun and I love how smart and perceptive that she is. She just decided to use her skills – you know, she’s a criminal. She decided to be a criminal instead of a doctor. But, I really love her and I love what’s she becoming too. I think in the next few episodes, and definitely towards the end, you’re going to see a whole different Fish, and a woman that definitely has some heart. You’ve seen the ruthless, now you’re going to see some heart. I think there’s a character coming up in Magic Mike that I’m really happy about, that is totally different from anything that I’ve done thus far. Once again, this woman is strong in a much different way also, and I think that from the response that we’ve been getting in regards to the character that I play in Magic Mike, I’m really happy in how that turned out and she’ll probably end up being one of my favorites as well.

Q) Can you talk more about the sexuality of your character and what’s that been like? And you did bite the girl and girl kiss, and all of that. How has that been?

A) It’s been great. I think the Fish Mooney character anything pretty much goes as far as she’s concerned by any means necessary. It’s kind of her motto, but I definitely think that Fish doesn’t discriminate when it comes to her sexuality.

Q) I know you said it when you first got cast, you really found the world of Gotham to be really interesting. What did you find so fascinating about it?

A) Well because Gotham is so mysterious. There’s this kind of undertone to Gotham, the idea that this city itself is kind of this underbelly and it’s just like, what is going in these alleys? What’s going on in these so called high rises? What is happening? Why is it that this place has some of the most incredible villains and then you have one of the most beloved super heroes, which is Batman and comes from this kind of dark, gritty atmosphere? I’ve just felt that Gotham, itself, has been such a mystery, and I’ve always been drawn to it. Like, what is Gotham? What is the city about? Who’s there? Why is it this place? What is it about this place? So, that has always fascinated me about the Batman story. It’s just his backdrop, which has been Gotham.

Q) Was there a particular scene or episode where you felt like you really clicked with Fish and just like became her, or did you already kind of have her down before you stepped onto the scene?

A) I think, funny enough, it really felt like as soon as I put on that wig, Fish is there. Because I put on that wig and her gear, because it’s so specifically her. It is an immediate transformation. The first day, as soon as I put on that wig and that dress, I just felt like, “Oh, there she is,” and every time I do it she just arrives. It’s a really beautiful thing to have as an actress. Yes, you just don’t have to work hard for it and that I’m grateful for. That wig, and those heels, and the nails really conjure her.

http://starrymag.com/?p=5333



- Ben McKenzie y Robert Lord Taylor nos hablan sobre los villanos que llegan a "Gotham" (EOnline):

http://uk.eonline.com/videos/230822/ben ... -on-gotham
http://uk.eonline.com/videos/230825/rob ... tham-scoop


- ‘Gotham’s’ Robin Lord Taylor Teases Penguin and Riddler’s First Meeting (The Wrap):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M_jXKcclzxU


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¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

Shelby
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Mensajes: 32772
Registrado: Dom May 21, 2006 12:15 am

Re: ¡¡¡Nuevo proyecto de la FOX sobre GOTHAM!!!

Mensaje por Shelby »

- El actor Colm Feore será 'The Dollmaker' en "Gotham":
B8Sh1l8CMAAN_1F.jpg
Otro villano está llegando a "Gotham"...

El actor Colm Feore (The Borgias) ha sido el elegido para interpretar al 'Dr. Francis Dulmacher', también conocido como 'The Dollmaker', en la serie de la FOX.

En la serie, se hizo referencia por primera vez al personaje en el episodio 1.02, cuando Selina Kyle (‎Camren Bicondova) dijo que qra la figura tras los raptos masivos de los niños de las calles de Gotham. Con un fanatismo que roza la locura, y ayudado de su intelecto de genio y su vasta experiencia médica, el Dr. Dulmacher persigue sus investigaciones dementes, incluso aunque el costo de sangre se sus acciones aumentan incluso más.

Feore, representado por Greene & Assoc. & the Coronel Group, tiene experiencia como villano de cómics, ya que ha interpretado a 'Donald Menken' en Amazing Spider-Man 2 y al 'Rey Laufey' en Thor. Lo veremos próximamente en la película 'Rey Lear' dirigida por Antoni Cimolino.

El personaje de 'The Dollmaker' también fue introducido en la serie de la CW "Arrow" donde fue interpretado por Michael Eklund en la segunda temporada.


http://deadline.com/2015/01/colm-feore- ... 201358290/


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¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

Shelby
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Mensajes: 32772
Registrado: Dom May 21, 2006 12:15 am

Re: ¡¡¡Nuevo proyecto de la FOX sobre GOTHAM!!!

Mensaje por Shelby »

- Nueva imagen BTS de la S1 (26-01-15):

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(@clarefoley_: Happy Gotham Monday)



- Nuevas imágenes promocionales:

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Añadidos los rátings del 1.13 "Welcome Back, Jim Gordon". Podéis encontrarlos AQUÍ


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¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

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