TNT's
Witchblade series will kick off on Tuesday, June 12 with an episode called
"Parallax," one week after the network rebroadcasts the Witchblade pilot
movie.
Yancy
Butler returns as Sara Pezzini, the police detective who acquires a mysterious,
mystical gauntlet.
TNT
has provided The Continuum with a question-and-answer transcript from an
interview with Butler, at least part of which will probably air on the
network.
QUESTION:
Does the series pick up where the movie left off?
BUTLER:
Basically, yes. Sara is dealing with the loss of her partner. She's dealing
internally with that, and with having this blade on her wrist. She still
doesn't know how to use it.
QUESTION:
She had real struggle in the original pilot accepting the blade. At this
point has she accepted it?
BUTLER:
I think she's starting to accept it. Sometimes it's just a real pain in
the wrist as we say, but she is starting to accept it. I think more because
it's used in her favor, and she thinks that she knows how to use it without
giving too much away. She's starting to summon it, if you will. And it's
working for her. So I think there is a bit more acceptance.
QUESTION:
How does Sara know that something's about to happen?
BUTLER:
It's funny. That's part of the problem. She hopes that something will happen
when she needs it, but more often than not it just kind of spontaneously
happens. I think that's her frustration in both the show and the comic
book.
QUESTION:
How does Danny Woo's character come back into the series?
BUTLER:
He's become a bit of a mentor. He's obviously somebody that she still misses
very much, and he kind of creeps up like the Witchblade when she least
expects it. Sometimes (not to give too much away) when she doesn't want
him to be there. It's kind of like this lost love that keeps calling you
on the phone. You know he's gonna call sometimes around your birthday,
but other times he just shows up and you're not quite sure what to do.
QUESTION:
And what about this Nottingham character? It seems like you have got Danny
Woo on one shoulder and Nottingham on the other shoulder.
BUTLER:
It is interesting. Danny Woo is kind of on this shoulder and Nottingham's
over there. I can't say it's good and evil at all because Nottingham's
character has definitely lent himself to both and continues to do so. And
that's part of the enigmatic threadline of his character -- you're never
quite sure where he's going with anything. The dynamics between all of
us are interesting.
QUESTION:
Where do you see Nottingham's allegiance?
BUTLER:
It's very funny you ask that question because I think that Irons would
like to think that it's with him. But in this episode that we're shooting
now it's questionable where his allegiance is. I don't know exactly where
that's gonna go, but it's interesting how it manifests itself.
QUESTION:
We talked about some of the supernatural elements. What grounds this show
in reality?
BUTLER:
The thing that I think made the pilot such a success and will make the
series even more of one is my character's vulnerability and strength. The
show is set in a real homicide office of the police department. The situations
are in fact very realistic. It's great because it makes it that much more
potent when we're really solving a crime every week.
QUESTION:
Talk more about that if you would, because I think each episode is an individual
story?
BUTLER:
Yes, each episode is an individual story. However, one of the things that
makes it so intellectually different from any other show that I've seen
or certainly that I have done is that it's very unformulaic. As Danny Woo
said, everything is connected, and the amazing thing on the show is there
are bits and pieces from each show that you will remember.
QUESTION:
What's Jake's story? In the movie I would have said maybe something romantic's
going on here. Is it?
BUTLER:
I think he's got a little bit of a thing for me. But it's an unrequited
love. Sara begins to really love him like a brother and the rookie partner
that he is. But as we saw in the pilot, she definitely did not think that
he was a match for her.
QUESTION:
How does she feel about Captain Siri retiring - he was a father figure
to Sara?
BUTLER:
Having Captain Joe Siri retire was one of the other losses that my character
incurred in the first episode to air. Which is quite devastating to her,
obviously. She thought she was having a bad day (LAUGHS) before and this
is definitely not a good one. His replacement, Captain Dante, is somebody
that she can't stand. Just can't stand. He's just itching and waiting for
an excuse to get her off the force.
QUESTION:
Do you think that maybe there's something more in their relationship than
meets the eye?
BUTLER:There
is definitely something more to Captain Dante and his relationship with
Sara and what he's trying to cover up than meets the eye. Dante knew her
father and that's all I'm going to say about that. So it's quite mysterious,
and it doesn't give her a good feeling.
QUESTION:
Okay, jumping to your love interests.
BUTLER:
My new love interest is a character named Conchobar, a musician, and the
story has it that we were involved centuries ago. Sara gets flashes of
this and she clearly thinks she's losing her mind. She's not quite sure
of him, but their bond is so tight and so instantaneous that it's a wonderful
story. The last thing she needed. Always the case when the love of your
life comes around.
QUESTION:
How does he break through to her?
BUTLER:
Sara is very shut down and she's very scared and- like a lot of us - she
masks a lot of her fear with hardness and rough edges. It certainly doesn't
hurt that he's drop-dead gorgeous, but through his music I think, and through
his sense of humor, and through not letting her get away with a lot, he's
chiseling away.
QUESTION:
Why is she so scared?
BUTLER:
I think my character is scared because she honestly does feel as if she's
losing her mind. It is a scary thing that's happening to her. And a lot
of these visions (which I can relate to right now working these hours)just
kind of pop up and she does feel like she's losing her mind. And I think
that she's scared, as we all are, of loss. The death of her father. She
lost her best friend. She's now lost her partner. And then she loses her
surrogate father - she's not a happy camper and I think that she's scared
to care about anything anymore.
QUESTION:
Why doesn't she just get rid of the blade?
BUTLER:
(Laughs) Why doesn't she get rid of this thing? She can't. It won't come
off. We saw that in the pilot. She desperately tried to. And I think now
she doesn't want to. She's intrigued by it. You know, some of the things
that scare us are the things that are good for us. It's empowering her
in a certain way. But it's a frightening force as well. But she just can't
quite get around to letting it go.
QUESTION:
Do you think the reason is partly because of its lineage?
BUTLER:
I think the reason she can't get rid of it is a lot of her lineage. We
find out a lot more about her lineage. That's another great through line
to the story. There's so much in our scripts and so much in our story that's
really wonderful that it's hard to pinpoint things to talk about -- they're
all just wonderfully colorful and very full. No stone is left unturned.
QUESTION:
What roles do you think your fans most associate you with?
BUTLER:
Very action-oriented characters, which is not something that I sought out
at all. Those roles just kind of graciously fell in my lap, which I'll
ride for as long as I can. Keep kicking and blading people and stuff. But
I think of films like Drop Zone with Wesley Snipes and films like Hard
Target with Jean Claude Van Damme. I think that those are the kind of things
that people are more familiar with. Sara Pezzini is different from those
characters, however. I feel for her. A lot of stuff is going on. She's
having a bit of a meltdown. I think it's wonderful that Ralph Hemecker
is able to write and really construct a character like a jigsaw puzzle.
She's not all hard and male-hating and not 'I'll annihilate anything that
says good morning to me'. She is not just angry and bitter or somebody
that's just fluffed up -- we very much could've gone in that direction.
So I'm liking this character more. I think it's an extension of everything
that I've of worked for.
QUESTION:
Have you taken anything from past roles and used it in your portrayal of
Sara?
BUTLER:
Other roles were definitely stepping stones to this character. I've always
played strong women who are doing their own thing. In this show, they are
really allowing a female character to shine through in all of her colors.
And it's quite interesting. So I think that all the roles I have played
have been like little lily ponds to the big fountain in the middle.
QUESTION:
Have you gotten any feedback from the comic book fans?
BUTLER:We
have gotten great feedback from the comic book fans. We did that whole
comic book tour circuit last summer, and the fans couldn't have been happier.
There was definitely some pressure there because, unlike a lot of other
comic book characters, my character had never had a voice. The first day
you should have seen me. I was so nervous because these people had been
living with this character for years, and I had to give Sara her first
voice.
QUESTION:
Has there been any question about allegiance to the comic book? Was it
followed episode to episode?
BUTLER:
We definitely had to take some creative license with the storylines. There
are a lot of comics, but we're doing the equivalent of about 76 comic books
in one show! I think that we kind of ran out of established ideas.
QUESTION:
What are some of the blessings of possessing the Witchblade?
BUTLER:
There are many blessings -- It gives Sara a certain power. It gives her
insight. It's giving her certain relations with people and a new perspective
on herself, both in what's going on around her as well as knowledge of
her lineage. Knowing where she came from is important to Sara.
QUESTION:
So do you think Sara controls the blade or does the blade control her?
BUTLER:
I think a little of both. I think that Sara is controlling the blade and
that the blade is controlling her. It's a give-and-take relationship. But
as she learns more, hopefully it will work more in her favor.
QUESTION:
Describe how Sara sees the world from a cop's eyes.
BUTLER:
I think being a cop is one of the toughest jobs there is. Actually, my
grandfather was a cop in Long Island. I often try to draw on things that
I've heard about him. It's got to be extremely difficult. One has to become
quite jaded. I don't know if there's any difference with a cop's world
through Sara's eyes. I think that Sara's quite jaded. But she really does
care. She wants to do good. And I think that it's a struggle with her to
remember to do good in every episode without giving up too much. Still,
Sara's taking some knocks and she's treading water, that's for sure. But
she's going strong.