Sci-fi
TV, #6 -August 1999
ABSOLUTE
GABRIELLE
by Maureen McTigue
Reneé
O'Connor revels in being much more than a sidekick.
Put a mountain in front of Reneé O'Connor and she'll climb it.
Whether it's Mount Kilimanjaro or directing an episode of Xena:
Warrior Princess, O'Connor will accept the challenge and rise to
the occasion. But not without great preparation, and maybe a little
trepidation.
"I have all my old notes on directing out," the novice director says,
"and wow, did I really do all that?!
"I've mostly enjoyed the directing for the moment. It has been the
single most challenging experience for me on this show," O'Connor
reveals. "I love playing Gabrielle, but this is something I didn't
think I would be able to accomplish and I managed to get through it.
"I would love to do it again. I didn't think I would. At the
episode's end, I said "That's it! I'll never do that again," she laughs.
" Lucy Lawless likened it to when she's singing, because she's absolutely
terrified when she walks out on stage. She knows it will be the most
humbling experience of that day. And she's right. Directing for me
was a situation where you can't succeed. You can't do it right but
you had to just do the best you can. It brings out the spirit in you."
"Deja Vu All Over Again", which aired last month, was the "ideal
episode to shoot," O'Connor says. "Lucy definitely rose to the occasion.
The cast was Lucy, Ted Raimi, Robert Trebor, Kevin Smith and me. The
whole idea behind 'Deja Vu' is that this woman Lucy plays realizes
she was Xena in a past life. So she goes to a past-life counselor
to find out if it's true and all these different characters discover
who they were in a past life. It's Rob Tapert and R.J. Stewart's idea
of yet another clip show with a new twist; a very freaky but wonderful
concept. We need one clip show a year to meet our schedule and usually
it's shot in five days. This clip show was shot in four."
Anyone who deals with deadlines can appreciate the ability to
bring things in on time.
However, O'Connor admits, "I had no idea what I was getting myself
into. I thought four days was good; I would get a small learning curve
for myself and a taste of what it's like. It turns out to be such
a difficult schedule that they should have had a more experienced
director in order to complete all the days."
"I started off the first day, and just because I had no experience
behind the camera, the director of photography and the cameraman were
guiding me along, going through the shot list telling me what was
technically impossible to do," she laughs. "So, I was learning as
I went the first day, which put me behind schedule to begin with because
I was slower than any other director. The problem with that is the
first day of shooting is supposed to be the easiest to complete
because we didn't have as much to cover. So, not only didn't I finish
my easiest day, I moved things from it to the next day. So, this mountain
became the Southern Alps. Every day, I just had more work [pushed
back] that I was supposed to get done and it became an impossible
task. It became comedic."
"I would start the day with such a high; a huge adrenaline rush that
I had this challenge in front of me and to encourage the crew to work
as hard as they possibly could and they did it," she says. "On my
third day, I made an announcement to the crew: 'I really dug myself
into a hole here from my lack of experience, so we have to try and
complete the biggest day we've ever done yet on the series,'
and that only pertains to actual minutes on screen. It was very simple
work because we were in one set; just a matter of telling the story
as basically as possible. We typically shoot six minutes per day,
but we had to shoot 10 minutes that day. We normally have 25 camera
set-ups in a day and they actually managed to complete 49 camera set-ups
on my last day. That gives you an idea of how hard everyone worked.
And it was so hot, the air was so stagnant, but the crew really pulled
through for me."
"I've learned a great deal from that experience, but I would have
to have so much more behind me in order to have educated opinions
to offer the team. That comes with experience. Everyone was so supportive,
it's like they were trying to help out their kid sister. At the very
last day, after I've bulldozed through everyone's creative energy
in order to finish on schedule, they brought me flowers and champagne
and congratulated me. Everyone was in high spirits considering what
they had to work with; me," she says. "It's funny. The producers were
quite good to give me my first episode, but the true test is after
it's all said and done: Do they give me a second one? I'm so thankful
and lucky for this opportunity."
One thing that made directing such a pleasant (if stressful) experience
for O'Connor was the on-set camaraderie.
"There truly is a family feeling on Xena," O'Connor observes,
confirming reports from other cast members. "I can't imagine starting
off on what I call my virgin episode with anyone besides a family.
It was a little more intimidating with my meetings at the production
office because, although I know all the people there, I don't work
with them daily. So I was much more nervous going to the production
meetings and guiding them through the script. That was a challenge
in itself.
"I had a meeting with Ngila Dickson, our costume designer. She just
looks at the characters and finds out everything about them; why they
wear their pajamas, why they choose that color. She has a reason for
everything she puts on a costume. Four our first meeting, she asked
me most of the questions and I hadn't gone to that great a depth with
the characters at that point, so I was completely blown away by her
thorough questioning of the characters' histories. That set a precedent
for me going into the whole pre-production schedule of what I had
to live up to.
"You're obviously limited by the amount of time that you have to accomplish
anything, so you may have a grand scheme in mind of what you would
like to manifest on film, but much of that just isn't possible because
of the restraints," she explains. "It takes time to make costumes
for the cast and stunt doubles. Here in New Zealand, Ngila had difficulty
trying to find modern clothing. They make all their own costumes for
Xena and Hercules, so they use material that's more
easily obtainable compared to modern fabrics. She found it difficult
trying to find something that looked contemporary and yet funky, so
that was a setback. But we managed. That's the deal, you end up being
satisfied with what you have."
Xena can be difficult or really difficult to shoot,
depending on the elements. As O'Connor notes, "Filming in the wind
and cold, those are the days that most exhaust crew and cast. You
come home tired and you climb into bed and try to get as much sleep
as possible before your call the next morning. The body creates an
endurance level that you didn't realize you had before you started
12-hour days. You become stronger than you originally thought you
could ever be. There is sitting around but it's a matter of trying
to learn when you should save your energy for other moments.
"To climb Mount Kilimanjaro," explains O'Connor, who made the expedition
during a Xena production hiatus, "I was working out an hour
every day. I was the strongest physically I had ever been, because
I wanted to accomplish the goal of climbing that mountain. I've stopped
working out to that extent right now because I've realized it's not
exactly flattering on camera. I'm much weaker than I used to be. A
lot of climbing is sheer determination, because it's not so much that
there's a steep incline to the mountain as a lack of oxygen. Your
body has to use what little oxygen is available at the moment. I did
it just from being stubborn, I think," she laughs.
Fans saw a somewhat different Gabrielle in the fourth season. The
star was shorn.
"I've been wanting to cut my fair for a long time," O'Connor admits.
"Lucy's body double had passed this magazine picture around the makeup
department. Everyone 'oohed' and 'aahed' and then it became the topic
of conversation: 'Wouldn't it be great if Gabrielle could have a haircut
like that?' I just thought, 'Don't I wish!' and dropped the idea.
Then, Rob came to me and asked, 'Hey Reneé, what do you think about
cutting of all your hair?' And I jumped on it immediately. Of course,
there were many people within the production who protested the idea
of Gabrielle losing her golden fleece, but I thought it was a bold
move. Fans protest, but only after the fact. Once the hair is gone,
there's no going back."
"Yesterday, we did a flashback scene and I had to put on my old outfit,
with the little green top and they put me in a wig with long hair.
And whenever I was on the set, there was silence. I didn't look real
at all anymore."
"I looked like a doll. It's really interesting because my character
had grown up so quickly during the whole India story arc, that no
one would believe how different I was in my old Gabrielle uniform.
Everyone commented on how it wasn't right for me anymore. They didn't
miss it."
Gabrielle tends to get into trouble while trying to find her way.
She looks for the good side of things, but often finds the bad.
"Gabrielle is the flawed character," O'Connor explains. "She reacts
with her soul, her heart. That gets her in trouble because she never
thinks before she acts, whereas Xena is the pragmatic warrior. It's
necessary for the show that you always have one person to create the
conflict and jeopardy, and many times it has to be from Gabrielle's
lack of vision. Gabrielle is learning, but she's a bit slow in that
department.
"I think that Gabrielle has grown inasmuch as I've grown through my
twenties, as I've come to realize who I am as a person, and that has
rubbed off on the character as well. I've started to see the essence
of the character in a new way. From the very beginning, Gabrielle
was this young girl who desperately wanted to see the world with Xena;
just a wide-eyed, naive girl looking for adventures. In that way,
I was very similar. I was coming to a new country meeting all new
people and starting a whole new career."
"Then in the second season, Gabrielle went through this transformation
where they played with torturing her soul, and it was, 'How much could
Gabrielle take and still survive with her integrity intact?' That's
how I saw her in the second and third seasons. Gabrielle in the third
season went through a reflective time when she saw who she was as
a person and discovered she could stand up to Xena in her own right.
Gabrielle became more of an individual: thinking for herself and standing
up to the person she respects, which is quite a feat."
"This year," O'Connor continues, "it's more thorough. She knows who
she is, she has chosen her own path and life, and it's the adverse
path to Xena's. It creates another conflict between the two. They're
yin and yang, and yet they want to be together so badly
because they are soulmates."
Recently, Gabrielle has become more of a pacifistic character, a dove
among the hawks. "I think the whole story arc with Gabrielle traveling
the way of peace is an interesting way to go," O'Connor agrees, "because
it's the direct opposite of what Xena is and what the show is about.
It was a huge risk for the producers. But it is just another development
in the character and we'll probably move on from there. Actually,
yes, Gabrielle does move on. We've played with the idea and
Gabrielle realizes she isn't strong enough to live as Christ would
where it's all about love and peace and never defending yourself in
a physical way. That's not a realistic approach to the world these
days. In one sense, Gabrielle becomes a bit cynical, not that she'll
act cynical, but that she realizes sometimes she must fight
and that might mean killing someone. That's part of life and traveling
with Xena. She will probably become the strongest friend Xena will
ever have. It's the strongest Gabrielle has been throughout the series.
Next year, Gabrielle will be more like Xena; the emotional side of
Xena which, I'm sure, will always happen because that is the essence
of Gabrielle."
"I'm actually quite pleased with the way they're going with Gabrielle
at the moment, where she'll be the most reliable and loyal friend
to Xena possible, more than she has in the past," Reneé O'Connor enthuses.
"That's a nice interaction between these two women, absolute trust
and absolute dependability."
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