Interview with cast of
Law & Order: Criminal Intent
(April
2009) - PCM recently participated in a media phone
interview with actors Jeff Goldblum, Vincent D'Onofrio and
Kathryn Erbe from TV's Law and Order: Criminal Intent. Vincent
and Kathryn costar as Detectives Goren and Eames on the
USA television show. Check out the Q&A where fans can
learn all about the latest news with the actors careers
and the show!
Q: Jeff, you're known
for your dramatic roles and also for your dry sense of humor.
I was wondering why you chose to be on Law & Order:
Criminal Intent. Do you at least get to express some of
your sense of humor while you're doing the show?
J. Goldblum:Yes, such as it is.
Maybe I'm funny sometimes, maybe not so funny other times,
but yes. They actually write, Dick Wolf has been fantastic,
kind, cordial and brilliant, I think. And they have a brilliant
staff of writers and producers and they have intendingly
built a part that is suited for some of the things that
I like to do and can do. That's what they've tried to do
and after seeing the first episode that was aired I think
there's some humor in there. Along with the solving the
crime and the very passionate part of this character and
serious part of the character, I think there's some humor
in it; I'm enjoying some of the funny parts of it.
Q: Detective Nichols
seems to work from an observational point of view, where
he's working on motivations more than just the facts. So
he's kind of intuitive a bit. How would you describe your
character if you were actually Nichols describing the character?
J. Goldblum:I'll take a crack
at it. Yes, I think you're right. I am an intuitive fellow.
Of course people know that both my parents were shrinks
so I was sort of raised in an atmosphere where there was
that interest in the human mechanism and the human psyche
and what makes people tick. And yes, I think I'm particularly
creative and adventurous and improvisational and spontaneous
in my inner impulses and patterns and deeply curious and
appetized in the unfathomably mysterious and delicious phenomena
that is the human being and who we really are.
And why certainly people go off the
rails and commit murder here in New York City, that interests
me particularly, and oftentimes I find it's a mistake of
identity and having their ego built around mistakenly and
their sense of identity built around some aspect of form,
if you will, in their lives, either their careers or their
reputations or their bank accounts. That mistake gets them
into trouble and they wind up doing risky and awful things
in order to pursue that mistaken notion and defend it and
help that survive. It's a bad, but not uncommon disease
of the psyche that I find results in murder sometimes. I'm
a humble student of that whole subject.
Q: Were you nervous when
you were being filmed during a scene where you got to play
the piano in an episode?
J. Goldblum: I did take lessons.
Our parents gave us music lessons early on in Pittsburgh
and I took to it and loved it. I kind of guess it's a hobby
of mine. I've always played piano ... I decided on being
an actor, I played the ragged cocktail lounges here and
there, a couple of jobs while I was still in high school
in Pittsburgh and then have always had a piano where I am,
where I live and now where I work, too. I just love to play
all the time. For the last several years I've had a jazz
band called the Mildred Spitzer Orchestra in Los Angeles
and when I'm off work we book ourselves into places and
play gigs around town.
Then, yes, they knew about it a little
bit and worked it into the character so my character, Detective
Nichols, is able to play a bit and in these couple episodes,
one that you saw already, maybe that first episode, and
there's another one where I play. No, I'm not particularly
nervous. I get excited and I got excited about it, but I
always was sort of thrilled to play. Even when I play gigs
these days I have no career aspirations or no fear of criticism.
I really do it because I love to do it. Whenever I do it
I love to do it, so it was particularly enjoyable for me
having it be part of a scene or two.
Q: Kathryn, what
about your role continues to challenge you?
K. Erbe:Finding ways to - let's
see. That's a very good question. I don't know, every day
we have new challenges, just in dealing with the new actors
that we get to work with. We have new writers on the show,
new producers and I feel like it's a challenge just staying
involved with the work that we're doing and staying actively
involved in finding ways for Eames to stay important to
the stories and to bring a positive - just have a positive
effect on what we're doing.
Q: And Vincent,
after so many seasons, how do you all continue to maintain
chemistry between each other?
V. D'Onofrio:I think it's been
eight years now, so I think that anything the audience sees
is just whatever has happened naturally in the eight years.
I think that both of us kind of just rely on that - the
history of the show and the history of the characters -
to just somehow translate to the audience in some way.
Q: Vincent, with
the events of last season's finale, what is your character's
mental state at the beginning of the season? Is he resolved
about - resigned himself to all of the loose ends being
tied up or is he at all - has he broken down at all in the
face of everything that's happened to him and his nephew
being missing?
V. D'Onofrio:We never really
tie anything up when it comes to Kate and my characters,
because it's - they always want to leave it open. You know,
we tie up criminals, but - we'll end those stories, but
not - they'll never really shut any kind of storyline down
completely, so it's kind of open as to what's going to happen
with my character, I don't know. I think that this eighth
season, I just - you know, I just played it differently
than last season, but last season was very, very extreme.
So this season, it's like he's just trying to be a cop,
trying to do the best you can kind of a thing.
Q: Vincent, what is it
like to be developing a character over several TV seasons
as opposed to having to develop a character in a two-hour
film?
V. D'Onofrio:
Yes,
it's completely different. When I first started the TV show,
I kind of thought it's ostensibly about the character, and
did a lot of planning and stuff. Most of the planning went
out the window, and then I just kind of tried my best after
that. With a film, it's much more - it's really planned
out scene by scene and there's a real solid arc hopefully
most of the time. The structure of the film is in three
acts, you know it's going to end - it's easier to plan out
a role like that. It's just as interesting but it's a completely
different thing.
With the show, it's just wide open.
We just keep doing it, and there's different crimes, different
little stories to tell. So it's two different things. I
think I just always will prefer films. I just think that's
my favorite thing to do. But Goren's a great character,
so it's good to do.
Q: Have you worked
with any particularly interesting guest stars or bad guys
for the new season?
K. Erbe:We have a lot. We have
Lynn Redgrave, we have Scott Cohen and Kathy Baker are in
the episode Sunday night. We had a great time with them.
Who else, Vince?
V. D'Onofrio:We've also worked
with some really good unknown actors, like young people
that were really good. We're very lucky in that way, that
most times we get really good actors, whether they're known
actors or not.
Q: What
do you like best about your character?
K. Erbe:
What
do I like best about my character? What I like best about
my character is she usually has the right thing to say.
She knows what to say; she's fairly straightforward and
doesn't seem to have difficulty making choices. Nothing
like myself in real life. I rarely know the right thing
to say and she seems to almost have infinite courage and
she's sort of like my fantasy of what it would be like to
be like that - strong all the time and know what to do all
the time and have a clear idea of what the right thing is
to do and that sort of thing. So I like that about her.
I like that she's a strong woman in a tough job and a scary
job. I think they're both courageous. I think most of NYPD
is very courageous. So that's what I like about her.
Q: Goren is always touted
as being this unstable genius and the brains of the partnership,
and sometimes you're there to be like the dry witness conscience.
Are you okay with this role, or do you think Eames deserves
more respect?
K. Erbe: Sometimes I get a lot
to do, Eames has a lot to do, and sometimes she doesn't.
I've fought for the whole time for her to have more of an
impact on the work that they're doing, and it's gone up
and down. I like being the dry wit. I wish I actually did
more of that these days. The humor has kind of gone out
of the character and so I would like to find a way to bring
that back.
Q: What got you started
in acting in the first place?
V.
D'Onofrio:I was introduced to it by my dad at a
very young age, because he was always involved in community
theater and stuff. So I used to run lights and sound and
stuff like that for plays and things. But I really didn't
think of acting until I guess I was like 18, and then -
I don't know, it just - I just thought I'd try it out. I
don't really know why. I think it was just in my life, really.
I think it's my dad's fault. So I just thought I would give
acting school in New York, in Manhattan, a try, so I did.
And then I guess I just caught the bug and went for it.
Q: What kind of advice
would you give to new young actors coming up as far as what
kind of education they should get and how they should pursue
an acting career.
K. Erbe:What would you say, Vin?
V. D'Onofrio:I think when I was
younger I would have said go to like a private acting school
or something like that, but I think that these days, the
drama departments and the universities are so great that
I think that's the way to go, and unless they want -
K. Erbe:Get an education.
V. D'Onofrio: Get an education.
Go into the drama department, whatever, film department,
or just like the arts section of a university and - start
there, study there. And then after that, go to the city
you want to live in, like L.A. or New York and then try
to be - then try to get jobs. Do theater and stuff. But
when I was younger I would have said just go straight to
the city and take an acting class and try to get jobs. But
I think these days - I've been checking out universities
and stuff and I know some teachers and some teachers that
teach writing, film writing, and I know some drama teachers
and - they're all really good teachers, so - I'm swaying
towards that now.
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