Pushing Daisies’ Secrets: How the Storybook Came to Life

s640×480.jpg

“A guy who loves a girl wants to be left alone to make pies but can’t because of the situa­tion he’s in.” So star Lee Pace explains his surreal new ABC series Pushing Daisies (Wednesdays, 8 pm/ET, ABC). For those who have yet to cultivate a Dai­sies crush, the situation is this: Pace’s character, Ned, a lonely pie baker, can bring the dead back to life with a touch — but can also kill with one more. Which kinda throws a kink into romancing Chuck (Anna Friel), the childhood sweetheart he’s resurrected from the grave. Here’s a primer to ABC’s promising freshman fantasy.

1. Daisies bloomed out of a never-realized storyline for Show­time’s Dead Like Me. The protagonist of creator Bryan Fuller’s previous death-centric series, Grim Reaper George, “was going to find out she wasn’t able to collect some souls because somebody was coming along and bringing people back to life [with a] touch,” he reveals. So when he left Dead to do the short-lived Fox series Wonderfalls, Fuller tucked the idea in his back pocket until last year, when he was charged with coming up with a new show for Warner Bros. To flesh out the tone, he found himself drawing inspiration from one of his favorite films, 2001’s whimsical Amélie. “Really sad things happen in it,” Fuller explains. “But you never get bogged down in the sadness. Like Daisies, it’s really about human kindnesses.”

2. From its hyperactive color palette to its fantastical sets and props, Daisies looks like nothing else on TV. And that’s ex­actly how production designer Michael Wylie wanted it: “My goal was a storybook come to life. I wanted everything to look almost like an illustration.” He achieved it by concentrating on “conflicting patterns in different colors,” particularly reds and oranges, but per director Barry Sonnenfeld, virtually no blues. One of his proudest creations is the “vaguely Parisian” Pie Hole — built, naturally, in the shape of a pastry — where Ned works. There, no detail is too small. Its mouthwatering tarts “are all real,” Wylie reports. “There’s a chef that comes in and [makes] new pies every time we shoot there.”

3. Fuller had Pace in mind to play the gifted/cursed Ned when he sat down to write the pilot. He’d cast the 28-year-old Oklahoma native on Wonderfalls and felt confident he could “bring the material to life in a way that didn’t feel like the written words were so written.” There was just one problem: “I wasn’t looking at TV,” remembers the then-film-focused actor, who appeared in The Good Shepherd with Matt Damon. “His agents shut the door in our faces,” Fuller says bluntly. Ultimately, Pace’s manager interceded. “The more I thought about it,” Pace says, “I couldn’t see this going wrong.” So far, he’s been right.

4. Friel is a stage-trained British actress who made her first stateside splash in Closer on Broadway. Little surprise, then, that Friel brings dedication and theatricality to Daisies’ set. She speaks in an American accent at work, even when she’s not filming, “to stay in character,” she says. And before each scene, she performs a curious little routine that includes pumping her arms furiously like she’s running in place: “It gets my energy going.” The trick — which Sonnenfeld has dubbed “the Anna” — has proven as infectious as Chuck’s fizzy optimism. Says an amused Friel, “Lee and the aunts [Swoosie Kurtz and Ellen Greene] do ‘the Anna’ now, too!”

5. Daisies has more imaginative curveballs in store. This week, sparks will fly between Chuck and a man with a prosthetic arm, while pint-size Pie Hole waitress Olive (Kristin Chenoweth) is revealed to be a former jockey in the upcoming Halloween episode. But there’s at least one development you’ll never see if Fuller has his way: an explanation of why or how exactly Ned got his life-and-death abilities. “I really would like not to,” the executive producer says of creating an elaborate mythology. “Then all the fun goes out the window.” And that’s one thing Daisies couldn’t grow without.

Source via ONTD

4 Responses to “Pushing Daisies’ Secrets: How the Storybook Came to Life”

  1. Maria Says:

    This is my favorite show now, not just my favorite new show.

  2. Amanda Says:

    I love this show

  3. coops Says:

    Love this show, I think he’s cute!

  4. Dooface Says:

    Pushing Daisies is the best show on TV hands down. Don’t miss the season premier in Oct 1 at 8/7c.

Leave a Reply. May take a few minutes to appear.







Powered by MyPagerank.Net
Get the tips and secrets that men need Amy Winehouse
Angelina Jolie
Anne Hathaway
Ashlee Simpson
Ashley Olsen
Beyonce
Bradley Cooper
Brad Pitt
Britney Spears
Cameron Diaz
Carrie Underwood
Charlize Theron
Chris Brown
Christina Aguilera
Clive Owen
Daniel Craig
David Beckham
Demi Moore
Dita Von Teese
Drew Barrymore
Ellen Page
Eva Longoria
Evan Rachel Wood
Fergie
George Clooney
Gerard Butler
Gisele Bundchen
Gwen Stefani
Halle Berry
Hayden Panettiere
Heath Ledger
Heidi Klum
Heidi Montag
Hugh Jackman
Isla Fisher
Jake Gyllenhaal
James McAvoy
Jamie Lynn Spears
Jennifer Aniston
Jennifer Garner
Jennifer Hudson
Jennifer Lopez
Jessica Alba
Jessica Biel
Jessica Simpson
John Mayer
Johnny Depp
Josh Duhamel
Josh Hartnett
Julia Roberts
Justin Timberlake
Kate Hudson
Katherine Heigl
Katie Holmes
Keira Knightley
Kim Kardashian
Kirsten Dunst
Kristen Stewart
Lady Gaga

Latest Movie Trailers!

Leonardo DiCaprio
Lindsay Lohan
Madonna
Mary Kate Olsen
Matt Damon
Matthew McConaughey
Megan Fox
Miley Cyrus
Naomi Watts
Nicole Kidman
Nicole Richie
Orlando Bloom
Paris Hilton
Penelope Cruz
Rachel McAdams
Reese Witherspoon
Renee Zellweger
Rihanna
Robert Pattinson
Robert Downey Jr.
Ryan Gosling
Ryan Reynolds
Sarah Michelle Gellar
Scarlett Johannson
Shia Labeouf
Sienna Miller
Spencer Pratt
Tom Cruise
Twilight
Victoria Beckham
Zac Efron
ALL OTHERS...
ICYDK's Favorite Sites!
She Knows
Pop Eater