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tv guide magazine interview

Author: yuzu

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Date: Sep 30th, 2011

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Caps from the interview on the gallery.

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Categories: gallery: interviews, media: interviews, tv: two broke girls



tiff 2010 portraits

Author: yuzu

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Date: Sep 29th, 2011

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Thanks to Nat of Kat Dennings.ORG for these new photoshoot pictures of Kat and Josh Lucas from TIFF 2010. They look adorable <3

Categories: film: daydream nation, gallery: photoshoots



craig ferguson appearance caps

Author: yuzu

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Date: Sep 28th, 2011

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Caps from Kat’s appearance on Craig Ferguson last Friday are now up in the gallery!

Categories: gallery: interviews, tv: two broke girls



2 broke girls – and the break-up scene screencaptures

Author: yuzu

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Date: Sep 27th, 2011

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707 caps from the second episode of 2 Broke Girls now up in the gallery!

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2 broke girls pilot episode caps

Author: yuzu

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Date: Sep 25th, 2011

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Screencaps from the pilot of 2 Broke Girls now up in the gallery.

Categories: gallery: screencaptures, tv: two broke girls



kat on craig ferguson

Author: yuzu

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Date: Sep 24th, 2011

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Categories: media: interviews, tv: two broke girls



new 2 broke girls photoshoot pictures

Author: yuzu

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Date: Sep 16th, 2011

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2 broke girls

7 new pictures from the 2 Broke Girls promotional photoshoot now up in the gallery! Click the image or go here to see.

Categories: gallery: promotional, tv: two broke girls



ny times article + 2 broke girls facebook game

Author: yuzu

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Date: Sep 16th, 2011

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SIX ACTRESSES NOT IN SEARCH OF TV WORK

IN her dressing room, so newly occupied that the only visible decoration was a bag of Reese’s Pieces, Kat Dennings was pointing out the couch where she’d had a minor meltdown here on the Warner Brothers lot the night before.

That evening she was preparing to face a studio audience and film her second episode of “2 Broke Girls,” a CBS comedy that will make its debut on Monday, and she freely admitted she didn’t handle the pressure well.

“I was talking on the phone to my mother,” said Ms. Dennings, 25, a spirited, self-deprecating actress whose film credits include “The 40-Year-Old Virgin,” “Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist” and “Thor.” “I was like: ‘Mom, there’s no air. I’m going to throw up. What do I do?’ She’s like: ‘Go out there, you’ll be great. Go get some water. Eat a piece of fruit.’ ”

Ms. Dennings said she was revitalized once she took the stage, but she might want to keep her mother on speed dial anyway. This season she is among a handful of actresses in their 20s and 30s who are hardly household names yet have been given the pressure, the obligation and the opportunity of carrying their own network shows.

In a crop of new series that run the gamut from bawdy comedies (like “2 Broke Girls,” on which Ms. Dennings plays a sassy waitress who befriends an heiress who’s hit the skids) to “Mad Men”-style period dramas, the notoriously dues-paying medium of television has turned to these relatively untested young women to be the faces and voices of its broadcast networks.

Their résumés vary considerably. Some have played one or two prominent film parts or labored in the salt mines of supporting television roles, while others have hardly been seen on screen before. One possesses a quaint acting trophy called a Tony Award. None has the long track record or recognizability that usually prefigures a starring prime-time role.

Yet they understand that they came to their positions through some combination of the shifting popular culture, coincidence and the experimentation (or random flailing) of the networks — not any specific outreach to female talent or viewers.

“I don’t think that these shows are on because women are the stars of them,” said Whitney Cummings, 29, a creator of “2 Broke Girls” and the star of her own NBC comedy, “Whitney.” “The shows that just happened to be the best this year happened to be centered around women.”

They are also hopeful that their shows — if they survive the season — might signify a moment when characters who are their ages and in circumstances they recognize from their lives are finally considered worthy of their own narratives.

“There is something very interesting about a woman in her late 20s, early 30s,” said Laura Benanti, a Tony winner for the 2008 revival of “Gypsy” who is co-starring in the NBC drama “The Playboy Club.” “She’s clearly on the cusp of something, changing from something into something else. And that leads to many more stories to tell.”

It is a first-year class that includes Zooey Deschanel, a star of the romantic comedy “(500) Days of Summer” and lead singer of the retro-rock band She & Him. She is playing a socially awkward single woman living with male roommates in the Fox comedy “New Girl.” At 31, she has had a healthy film career, but she said her goofy charm made her an oddity in the movie industry. As she described it, the reaction she elicits from Hollywood is: “ ‘She’s not a cheerleader, she’s not a jock, she’s not a goth. We don’t know what to do with her. Who is she?’ Well, I’m my own thing.”

Ms. Deschanel said that the offbeat roles she covets have become even harder to come by in recent years, and Ms. Dennings echoed this point, saying that the harsh reality of filmmaking economics was a strong incentive to consider a transition to television. “It was really disappointing to lose something because you won’t get any money for the production,” she said.

Without comparable film or television credits, Ms. Cummings has been making her own luck as a stand-up comedian, parlaying jobs on Comedy Central’s celebrity roasts into a one-hour special and a pilot deal with that network. Though that project was not made into a series, it caught the attention of Michael Patrick King, who produced “Sex and the City” and directed its two films, with whom Ms. Cummings wrote the pilot script for “2 Broke Girls.” That show, in turn, was picked up by CBS just as NBC gave the green light to “Whitney,” a comedy about Ms. Cummings’s relationship with a live-in boyfriend. (She continues to receive creative and consulting credits on “2 Broke Girls.”)

Though she knows unfamiliar viewers may believe she is the beneficiary of overnight success, Ms. Cummings said she had been “aggressively, violently failing” for years.

“I’m calling my agents: ‘Will they see me for that part? Do they want to meet me?’ ” Ms. Cummings said. “They’re like, ‘No, just go to law school, you’re embarrassing yourself.’ ”

It is that do-it-yourself spirit that these women most admire about professional idols like Tina Fey, Amy Poehler and Chelsea Handler (whose memoir “Are You There, Vodka? It’s Me, Chelsea” is being adapted as an NBC comedy), and they want to see that quality reflected in the roles they play: independent, un-self-conscious, occasionally foul-mouthed characters once reserved exclusively for male performers.

(As Ms. Dennings put it, “Women are supposed to be mysterious, and there’s a veil you don’t cross, but vagina jokes are just gold, man.”)

In the pilot episode of the deeply irreverent comedy “Apartment 23,” which ABC is planning for a midseason debut, the lead character played by Krysten Ritter sells drugs, lets her neighbors watch her walk around naked and splits up her roommate from her fiancé.

But Ms. Ritter, 29, who has appeared on “Breaking Bad” and in movies like “Confessions of a Shopaholic,” said she saw her character as “this disenfranchised girl who refuses to conform and makes her money in these twisted ways.” She added: “I think that speaks to a generation. Everyone’s out there hustling. No one wants to climb a corporate ladder anymore.”

To find these roles two actresses said they had to turn the clock back to the 1960s, or at least the version of that decade depicted in “The Playboy Club,” a drama about the Chicago nightspot and its bunny-costumed hostesses during an era of social upheaval.

This series has already met resistance from KSL Television, an NBC affiliate in Salt Lake City that said it will not broadcast it, and Gloria Steinem, who once worked at the Playboy Club in New York, who said the show “normalizes prostitution and male dominance.”

Amber Heard, who portrays one of the principal Bunnies, said she was “playing a real character.” “In the ’60s, there were different opportunities and responsibilities afforded to women,” said Ms. Heard, 25, who has appeared in the films “Pineapple Express” and the coming “Rum Diary.”

“That being said, in 2011 I am a part of a group of women who do not have to choose between combat boots and an apron,” Ms. Heard continued. “Denying a woman’s sexuality is just as chauvinistic, if not worse.”

Ms. Benanti, 32, who plays a Bunny being pushed out of her job at the age of 30, drew a more direct line from the transgressive “Playboy Club” characters to the present day. “It’s because of women like this,” she said, “who are creating options for themselves that you get to have shows like ‘Whitney.’ ”

It’s not only the series about women clad in cottontails that have the potential to rile viewers. Ms. Ritter’s series, “Apartment 23,” has already had its title shortened from “Don’t Trust the Bitch in Apartment 23.” (“My publicist said it’s for the best they’re not calling it that,” she lamented. “We’d have such a hard time.”)

And “2 Broke Girls” and “New Girl” have stirred debate by describing their adult protagonists as girls, though Ms. Dennings said she fully endorsed the title of her show.

“When someone describes me as a woman,” she said, “I’m like, ‘Ucch, O.K.’ It’s like being called ‘ma’am.’ It’s more of a proper term, and propriety doesn’t have much of a place in TV comedy.”

Among the actresses there was no consensus as to why all of their shows landed in the same season. Maybe the success of the summer film comedy “Bridesmaids” demonstrated a larger appetite for stories about young women, or maybe enough female writers had risen through the ranks to create them. (In addition to the female creators of “Whitney” and “2 Broke Girls,” “New Girl” was created by Elizabeth Meriwether, the screenwriter of “No Strings Attached,” and “Apartment 23” was created by Nahnatchka Khan, a producer of “American Dad!”)

Or maybe, Ms. Benanti said, “networks have finally realized that women are watching television, and they buy things.”

Whatever had brought them together these women said they felt a strong sense of camaraderie with the actresses they already knew and those they hoped to meet someday: they were watching one another’s pilots and sending supportive messages on Twitter.

“There’s room for everybody,” Ms. Ritter said. “If one is successful, we all get to come up together. It’s all about cheering each other on.”

Ms. Deschanel agreed, saying, “It’s feeling like a very exciting time to be a woman.” She paused to correct herself: “A girl. A lady. Female. It always feels like it doesn’t describe me because it seems too old. But I’m a grown woman, I know.”

The New York Times.

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Categories: gallery: photoshoots, media: game, news: articles, tv: two broke girls



2 broke girls episode 2 stills + a collider interview

Author: yuzu

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Date: Sep 15th, 2011

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2 broke girls
Click image for more stills from ‘And the Break-up Scene’.

KAT DENNINGS TALKS 2 BROKE GIRLS, RENEE AND THE THOR SEQUEL

The new comedy series 2 Broke Girls, premiering on September 19th, is about two young women who waitress at a greasy spoon diner and strike up an unlikely friendship in the hopes of launching a successful business, if they can ever raise enough cash. Sassy and streetwise, Max Black (Kat Dennings) works two jobs just to get by, while uptown trust fund princess Caroline Channing (Beth Behrs) is having such a run of bad luck that she finds herself picking up shifts at the retro-hip Williamsburg Diner. At first, Max sees Caroline as yet another in a long line of inept servers that she must cover for, but she’s surprised to find that Caroline has as much substance as she does style, and the two girls from entirely different worlds become friends.

During a recent interview, actress Kat Dennings talked about what led her to make a weekly series commitment, that she loves how real her character is, how lucky they are to have such strong comedic forces behind the show, and how being in a business as risky as acting had often led her to wonder where her next paycheck was coming from. She also talked about playing a bi-polar girl in the indie drama Renee, and how her TV contract will allow for her to go do the sequel, if she ends up in Thor 2. Check out what she had to say after the jump:

Question: What led you to make a weekly series commitment?

KAT DENNINGS: To be honest, things were actually picking up. I was getting really exciting things, and Thor was just coming out, and I was doing really interesting projects, but I got to a point where I have done so many small films, and I’ve worked really, really hard, and then they just disappear. Four months of your life never get seen, and you start to feel tired. This came at the right time for me because I had just finished the most intense shoot of my life, in a really amazing way. It was an intense, complete physical transformation, and I was really drained.

And then, this literally fell into my lap. I was feeling like, “What do I do now? I can’t do another one of these films for a really long time. I want to do something where people will definitely see it because I’m a hard worker, and I want people to appreciate it. Not because I want people to look at me, but because I’ve been doing this since I was 10 years old.” TV wasn’t something I had intended to do, but when this came, and it was Whitney [Cummings] and Michael [Patrick King], with Michael giving me my first big job, it almost seemed like a gift, at just the right time. I was like, “God, this is exactly the answer to everything I’ve been wanting.” I’m just really lucky that this came along.

With so many films going on, both indie and blockbuster, were you hesitant about doing a TV show?

DENNINGS: I’m just in a really lucky place where I’ve gotten to work with amazing film people and amazing directors, like Kenneth Branagh, and amazing casts. This is just something different. It’s something cool and new, that I haven’t gotten to do before. If this goes for eight years, I’ll be thrilled. I love who I’m working with. I love this show because it’s real. It’s more like a half-hour movie than a half-hour sitcom. It’s very fresh.

What did you like about this character?

DENNINGS: I just love how real Max is. I’m from Pennsylvania, so I was in New York a lot and my brother lives in New York. I’m very familiar with New York girls, and I just love how gutsy and real they are. Max is so hard working. All she has to think about [is] her jobs and her rent. She’s never really had a moment to relax. It’s nice to watch that journey unfold.

What is your line for when sarcasm becomes too mean?

DENNINGS: I think it’s a personality thing. I have friends who are so sarcastic, but I never view it as mean. It’s just an intention thing. Hopefully, as the show goes on, Max’s soul will start to come out and you will know her as a person. What’s so great about a show that’s on every week is that you really get to know these people. As people get to know Max more, if she says something that could seem mean, they’ll know that it’s not because she is a good person.

You’ve got two strong comedic forces behind this show, with Whitney Cummings and Michael Patrick King. Were you familiar with their work before this?

DENNINGS: Yes, I was heavily immersed, as a matter of fact. I’ve always been a huge fan of Whitney’s. She’s so funny. And, I was actually on an episode of Sex and the City when I was 14. I played Jenny Brier, the blowjob, Bar Mitzvah girl, in the episode called “Hot Child in the City.” It changed my life. Really, it did. I was a home-schooled kid, living in the forest, and I didn’t even have cable. I’m serious. We had to get cable to watch that episode, and all my little home-schooled friends and their moms saw Kyle MacLachlan’s ass. It was pretty incredible.

When is the last time that you were broke?

DENNINGS: Well, things have been going well, as of late, but acting is one of the most risky businesses you could ever be in. You literally do not know where your next paycheck will come from, and there have been moments where I haven’t worked for a year. I’m a very safe spender. I save everything. I save all my money. My parents raised me like that. It’s never been an emergency, but there have definitely been times where I’ve been worried.

Do you have any regrets over having started in the business so young?

DENNINGS: No. I asked my parents, from the time I was 4 years old, if I could be an actress and they were like, “Absolutely not! You’re going to college and you’re going to be a normal person.” But, I wouldn’t stop. I wouldn’t let up, and I was very passionate. I was a smart kid. I wasn’t a rebel. I wasn’t difficult. I was just really passionate about this one thing. When I was 10, they were finally like, “Okay, you can try it for a month. If you don’t like it, we’ll stop. If you like it, we’ll go for another month.” To have their support was something that not a lot of actors get to have. I’m so lucky they have been amazing.

What do they think of your success?

DENNINGS: They’re very happy.

Did you study comedy at all?

DENNINGS: I haven’t actually studied acting at all. As a required thing, when I was 10 and I signed with this manager, she made me take her husband’s acting class once, which was enough. Acting is something that I couldn’t recommend to anyone because the odds of it working out are so insane. I don’t know how it worked out for me. I had no connections to this industry. I had no ins anywhere. I was just a normal kid. It’s amazing that it’s come this far. I’m so thrilled.

What was it like to play a bi-polar character in Renee?

DENNINGS: It’s based on the true story of this girl, Renee Yohe, and the organization To Write Love on Her Arms. It’s an amazing organization with a lot of cool young people behind it, and it was started for her. It’s about her journey and how she gets to that point of recovery. It’s an indie film, but I think there is distribution. They’re still editing it.

Will you be able to be in Thor 2?

DENNINGS: Marvel is so secretive; we never know anything until the last minute. But, one of the things that happened when I signed for this show was to make sure that I could still do films on my hiatus, so they would absolutely work that out. I did Thor before I did this show, so they would find a way to work everything out, if I was in Thor 2.

What do you like to do for fun?

DENNINGS: I don’t know. The time I had behind shooting the pilot and our first week of shooting was the only vacation I’ve ever had, since I was 10 years old. I’ve been working this whole time. I’ve never had that much space between jobs. This was the first time I’ve had space to do anything, or to take any kind of vacation. I had all these ideas, but I ended up just staying home, reading books, watching movies and seeing friends, which was the best vacation. My mom calls it a stay-cation.

What was your life like, growing up?

DENNINGS: Part of the reason why I relate to this show so much is because we didn’t have any money when I was growing up, and I used to get all of my films from the library. My mom would get me classic movies. I actually wasn’t allowed to watch TV, as a kid, except for PBS and Sesame Street.

How did you become an actress?

DENNINGS: I grew up in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, and my dad is a scientist and my mom is a speech therapist. It came out of nowhere. I would watch these films, and I just took that little kid wanting to be a movie star thing way too far, and actually ended up doing it. My brother’s friend from karate was on Pete & Pete sometimes, and I met his manager. She sent me on auditions in Philly and then in New York, and then I started getting commercials. When I got Sex and the City, it just changed the things I was able to get. And then, I eventually moved out to L.A. and somehow wound up on 2 Broke Girls.

Why were you home-schooled?

DENNINGS: At that time, my parents were disenchanted with the school system, and rightfully so. I was also a weirdo. I didn’t always look like this. I’m an actor now, and all that weirdness growing up has just somehow worked.

Source.

Categories: film: renee, film: thor, gallery: stills, news: interviews, tv: two broke girls



2 broke girls questions answered

Author: yuzu

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Date: Sep 9th, 2011

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Kat Dennings, from the new CBS comedy ‘2 Broke Girls’, sat down to answer your questions about what superpower she’d want to have, how good of a cook she is and more. Check out ‘2 Broke Girls’ Mondays at 8:30/7:30c only on CBS!

Categories: media: interviews, tv: two broke girls