Elizabeth Banks on The Next Three Days, Prison Panic and Sympathy for Demi Lovato
You mentioned Avery from 30 Rock earlier. Alec Baldwin has mentioned that he's leaving 30 Rock after 2012. If he leaves because of Avery, are you prepared for America's scorn?
It's not my fault if Alec Baldwin leaves 30 Rock, OK? Don't try to lay that sh*t on me, dude. It's not my fault.
You took John Dorian away, too.
I did not take John Dorian away, either! They just bring me in too late into the seasons.
So should we expect you to show up on The Office at some point this season?
No... I do think Holly is going to end up taking him away. I think Holly is the love of his life, and I think he's going to New Hampshire.
I know the back story on why you changed your name from Elizabeth Mitchell to Elizabeth Banks -- because of the other actress Elizabeth Mitchell. And I know Banks really had no meaning for you. But how do you sell that to your family? "Hey, Mom, you will now refer to me by this name..."?
Oh, it was so upsetting. I was never going to change my first name because I honestly couldn't imagine answering to something else. If someone was like, "Hey, Rachel," I'd be like, "Are you talking to me?" I would never have caught on, I'm a little slow. I'm [comforted] by the fact that most women in America change their last name when they get married. I think it's slightly weird that Banks has no connection to anything in the world. But I also really love that I was able to create a really public persona that's not me. I like that. Although I am melding now, I'm sort of more Banks than Mitchell.
Does it help you separate work and private life?
It does a little bit. It also means that people can't track me down as easily. Like my high school videos and stuff for Leno.
You're kind of like Maggie Seaver on Growing Pains, who changed her name to Maggie Malone when she became a TV reporter so that...
So that you don't get the phone calls! As I like to say, I don't want to take the phone calls. I'll be honest with you: I bawled my eyes out when I did it; it was very upsetting. It's your whole identity; it's your family, your connection to your family. So I was not happy about it.
Did you worry that people who knew you wouldn't realize that it was you?
There is a sense of pride. Like, "Oh, I want all my mom's friends to know that it's me in this play." And you lose that a little bit. But, again, I was warmed by the fact that most women change their last names. My sister has had two husbands and three last names now.
Why does it seem like you've been an actress longer than you have? Wet Hot American Summer is really not that long ago.
It wasn't. I came into this business very late. I'm actually working with the actor Jamie Bell -- he was Billy Elliott -- so he's 24 years old. And he's been doing something his entire life that I had not even started dong when I was his age. I was not in SAG when I was 24.
What were you doing?
I went to college! I was a real person! I went to college; I went to grad school. I was living my life and dreaming about being an actor but worrying that I wasn't going to make any money doing it. And then I got lucky because I started making money almost immediately upon deciding that I was going to be a professional actor. I got an agent, started making money, and that was it. I never had to do anything else.
Is it better to not start your profession at the age of 15?
When you think about most actors, I can think of a few people -- Brad Pitt was doing smaller... I love True Romance, it's one of my favorite movies of all time. I remember seeing Brad Pitt in that and Thelma and Louise. But he wasn't 17. He was in his 20s at that point. But that doesn't happen now. You get the Kristen Stewarts and it's like... I am so grateful I never had to be an 18-year-old actress in the limelight. I would have died.
I always look at Phil Collins. I'm not sure he could come along today and be the big star like he was in the 1980s.
Oh, I don't know if that's true. Jonah Hill is a big star. I think if you are talented and devoted, it doesn't matter how old you are. Look, the fact of the matter is Demi Lovato works her little f*cking ass off. I was not interested in working that hard when I was 17 years old. I liked going to school and going to dances and just being a person. She lives in a reality that makes sense to 99.9 percent of people in America.
Does that make it easier to be in the position that you're in? Having a normal life growing up? I've interviewed Demi Lovato and, frankly, she just gives the answers that she was taught to give.
She has no life experience! [Laughs] I personally believe that good actors bring their life to their work so you need to have as full of a life as possible to inform your work. I tell young actresses that I meet to go to college. Go to college. Because this sh*t, it's so fickle. You can be something when you're 17 that you're not going to be when you're 35. And you will have no fallback position. Everything has consequences. That was always my take on it. There was no option in which I was ever going to leave college to be an actress. No way. I wanted to be educated.
Which of your movies did this for you? The one that put you where you're at now?
I'm a chameleon, for the most part. I look very different in roles. There are many, many people who only know me from comedy. Only know me from 30 Rock, or only know me from Seabiscuit. Or only know me from horror: I did Uninvited and Slither. So I have that little crew of people who love those movies.
I think Definitely, Maybe was a big movie for you.
Definitely, Maybe was a big movie. I thought Zack and Miri and W., doing them back-to-back, was really my moment. That to me was the big moment. But, at the same time, the same people didn't watch. They're for such two different audiences. It was hard, also, for people. I think people still only saw W. or saw Zack and Miri. You know what I mean? Older people really liked W., and younger people really loved Zack and Miri. But I still didn't have people like, "Oh, yeah, she's that actress that does all of this crazy sh*t." I literally did them back-to-back.
Is W. underrated? I feel some people dismissed it because Oliver Stone was involved.
I think he's personally a political person, which is tough for that kind of subject matter. But I agree that actually his filmmaking, generally, is so patriotic. I think he's a true patriot. He's one of our great artists in America. He's great, I love him. But to indict war, to indict the media as he did with the serial killer movie, Natural Born Killers, I think he's constantly questioning our society. Holding up a mirror and going, "Guys, really, this is what we're OK with?"
Are you and Leslie Mann making What Was I Thinking? Is that happening?
We are loosely attached, but I don't know if it's actually going to happen.
What does "loosely attached" even mean?
It means that before there was a script, before there was anything, there was this idea of, "Everybody likes this book; it would be really fun to tell a story where we flashback to use our past relationships to improve our future lives." Great concept. OK, write the script, find the director, set it up, sell it to the studio, get the money. Honey ... it could be years. [Laughs] I definitely want to work with Leslie, for sure. If it's not that, we'll find something else.
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Comments
Big ups to Allegheny County! Thanks for the mention.
Fun interview!
She knows nothing about Demi Lovato and what not. WHo is she to comment about life experience? A rather big name in hollywood with large works under her belt? I Like Liz Banks and all but sometimes it's a bit pretentious to talk like this.
pretentious that just MAYBE it might be a good idea to check out higher education BEFORE becoming a child star? I think she's a smart girl, her cool points just went up x1000.
She's not my favorite but this was quite the enjoyable read.