Q&A Interview with SONS OF ANARCHY Star Maggie Siff About Season 6
Maj Canton - September 13, 2013
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TV Tango recently participated in a conference call with SONS OF ANARCHY star Maggie Siff, who dished about how her character has evolved, revealed details about the relationship between Tara and Jax, discussed what's ahead in Season 6, and talked about her future in television and film.
SONS OF ANARCHY airs every Tuesday at 10pm ET/PT on FX for the next 12 weeks, through December 3, 2013.
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Question: What still surprises you about playing Tara? How much of Tara is Maggie? Or is there nothing about Tara that's like you? Maggie Siff: I've been joking that Tara's like the place people go to see their dreams die, so I guess what surprises me is the darker and darker progression of the things that she sees fall away. The thing that surprises me in playing her -- and in figuring out how to play her -- are really her reserves of strength and power. Even as her mind is sort of warping and things in her psyche are shifting in a way that I think is really negative and things are kind of breaking, there's also a fierceness in her that rises up perpetually. That's the surprise. |
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Maggie Siff (cont): In terms of how much of me is in the part, I think Kurt has always been pretty savvy in terms of his casting. I think that one of the things that was alluring to him about having me in the role initially was the feeling of this is somebody who's different, one of these things is not like the others and trying to figure out how that person fits and doesn't fit and then slowly gets pulled back into a world that she's worked really hard to define herself against. I think that who I am as a person and perhaps similarly has some disjuncture with the world of the show, but that part is the part I'm trying to break down a little bit more as we go along.
Question: We've seen Tara become more like Gemma over the years, and that prison scene in the season premiere really showed her manifest her Gemma-ness. What's it been like for you playing that conflict, becoming this person that you really are trying to escape and not be like?
Question: It seemed towards the beginning of the series that Tara might be our moral compass to the show, which obviously seems to have gone to a much darker place as far as all that she's been through. Did Kurt Sutter ever, in the beginning, go, “Listen, Maggie, this is the character arc. This is where we're going with the character” or has it been very organic on how it's grown?
Question: Do you think that's what she wants at this point, to be the neo-Gemma?
Question: She has that ability to turn back at this point or do you think it's the point of no return?
Question: The whole idea at the beginning of Maggie being a doctor, someone who was helping and healing others and to just turn that around so much to in some ways – maybe not directly and in other ways directly – hurting people, was that always a conscious decision on Kurt's part to make her that person at the beginning? What are your feelings on it?
Question: You talked a little bit earlier about Tara's evolution and how these days she seems quicker to let the violent sides of her nature take over. We saw a little bit of that in the premiere at the end of when she walked over to the other gal in the jail and just beat the shit out of her. Are we going to see more of that side of her as the season goes on or is she going to have trouble keeping that side of her in check?
Question: The short black hair that you have, it kind of gives you a Joan Jett, Patti Smith punk rock look. Was that directly made for the show or is that something that the SONS OF ANARCHY writers had to work into the script? Maggie Siff: I had been wanting to cut my hair for a long time. At the end of last season I talked to Kurt about it and he was like, “Yes, let's do it” once we knew that she was going to prison. ... for the episodes when she's in prison is that it not look too done. The thing that I ended up feeling before I cut my hair was that it would be a really good thing for the character and for the season because it's tougher and I think it's – what is it? There's something about losing the hair that's a little bit like losing the part of her that is submissive, I think, to Jax and to the club and losing that really feminine edge I think is a really good thing for the season and for the character. It all ended up coming together, I think.
Question: Kurt was talking about how it's going to lead us into the last two seasons of the series. I was wondering just how it will affect Tara? Is there anything substantial that we'll see in it affecting her? Maggie Siff: I think for much of this season she's a little bit off to the side figuring out for herself how she's going to get out. I mean, yes, it does absolutely affect her in a side fashion, just the way everything is woven together thematically. There are several tactics that she tries throughout the season in terms of what she can do for herself to help her out from under her legal problems but also to help get her kids out of Charming. She does start to intersect with that storyline in ways that I can't actually get into. I mean, I think it affects everybody because the law sneaks in in a very powerful way. Everybody's caught up in ramifications. |
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Question: I'm a big fan of Jax and Tara. I was wondering, do you think I'm just hopelessly naïve to keep pulling for them at this point? Maggie Siff: I don't think so. I think that the thing about the show, one of the things about the show that really pulls people in is that no matter how awful things get between people there is this deep and passionate, kind of violently passionate love between the characters, within the family, between Jax and Tara. It's hard not to, on a basis level, root for that. I think I root for that. I think we all root for that. That said, it's such a brutal and brutalizing world, god knows how it's all going to end. I think it's natural and I think it's set up for us to root for that. |
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Question: I know fans were very upset when Jax cheated on her in the season opener. I'm wondering what you thought when you read that in the script, or was it something Kurt had told you beforehand? How do you explain the disconnect that happened between them? Maggie Siff: I'm glad to hear that fans were upset. I was upset as well. I think that they're in such a disconnected place from each other right now. I think that at the end of season five we saw just incredible disillusionment on both their parts with the other person. I think Jax is feeling the sting of her betrayal in terms of trying to set things up so that the kids would be given to Wendy and she was feeling the sting of his betrayal in terms of a real lack of support for her priorities in terms of getting out and getting her kids into a safe place and also some of the more violent and terrifying aspects of his nature that were revealed to her at the end of last season. They're on different planes right now and she can't even see him when she's in prison. What I was playing with in the premier episode is that she's using the time to really collect her thoughts and create a plan for herself in terms of what she's going to do to protect herself and her kids because nobody else is going to help her, and that includes Jax. Therefore, she can't expose herself to him because it would be too difficult.
Question: I don't think it's too much of a spoiler to say next episode when Jax picks her up and there's no dialog in that scene, I was wondering if that was scripted that way or if you had filmed any dialog? It was really powerful and uncomfortable to see them not speaking to each other on the back of the bike?
Question: One of the great things about a television show or a movie is actors kind of get a second chance to get something right, whether it's that first kiss or fight. What's something you wish you could have a take two on?
Question: There seems to be people who absolutely love Tara, think she's the best thing for Jax and then there's a little faction who think she's the worst thing for Jax, that her independence is a traitor and stuff like that. Why do you think there's such a big difference between fans, that they have such a different idea about her? Maggie Siff: I don't know. I really don't read those things, partly because it's hard not to take it personally. I mean, I do know that that's true. I think a lot of women ... Tara and a lot of people are really hooked into their relationship and the love. Then I think there's a contingent of people who are more male fantasy based about who he is as a gangster and don't appreciate the vulnerability that it signifies that he would be with somebody and be in that kind of relationship that pulls him around a bit. I'm not really sure. What do you think it is?
Question: Heading towards the ending of the show and these final two seasons, I wanted a personal perspective from you on Tara. It seems to me that she could sort of go the way, if you're looking at the Hamlet metaphor, of Ophelia or Horatio. Do you root for her to stay with the club? Do you hope for her to have that disconnect? It seems to me if she stays and keeps on this path, obviously she's heading towards the Ophelia path of destruction, but I've sort of ... Horatio ... I wondered if you still root for her and Jax after everything. Maggie Siff: Yes, I do. I think the thing that's complicated is I think in Tara's ideal world it's like she has the love of her life, who's Jax, and she has procured the safety of her children. I think the question, though, that remains as if those things can actually happen together. I think Jax's happiness is dependent upon there being a club and him being part of it. If the club attempts to come clean it's like is that possible, is it possible, is it possible? Those are the looming questions. I don't know if she's Horatio or Orphelia. It's a live question. I'm hoping for Horatio. |
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Question: I really enjoyed the scenes both at the end of last season and the beginning of this season between Tara and Lee Toric. Are we going to see those two cross paths again in the future? Maggie Siff: Yes, a little bit. He's such a worthy adversary for the club this year and Donal is so fantastic. I've enjoyed working with him so much. Yes, as you saw in the premiere he's working every angle. That continues to happen. |
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Question: The women's role on SONS OF ANARCHY really conflicts me. How do you feel about women's role on television? Maggie Siff: It's a long and complicated answer. I think the women's roles are actually pretty fictitious in terms of what's actually out there in the world. I don't think any outlaw ... club would let their women into the inner workings nearly as much as Gemma is a part of the inner workings. I think that what we see on this show are two very powerful and smart women who are also marginal to the life of the club and the kinds of decisions that get made. In certain respects they're reactive to events and then in other respects they're very conniving and right at the heart of how things get done and what happens. I think Kurt is walking a really strange and kind of interesting line in terms of where their power lies. I have moments where I'm like “Hmmm” and then I have moments where I'm like “That's interesting.” I think they're pretty powerful women in general in terms of the spectrum of powerful women on television.
Question: In the past, it's kind of been bad people doing bad things to worse people, so you could kind of still get on board with them. With the whole school shooting and the cover up, does that put a whole different slant to it, in your mind? Is it harder to rationalize what those characters are doing now?
Question: As an English major, what stuck out about SONS in terms of the writing and why do you think people connect to such a dark world? |
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Question: You basically played the moral compass to Don Draper on MAD MEN and the same could be said of your relationship with Jax on SONS OF ANARCHY. Do you find any personal relation to playing these characters as far as being the opposite side of the coin to these guys that come from the wrong side of the tracks? Maggie Siff: You know, what is that? I don't know why I keep getting cast that way. I think they're characters who can sort of speak truth to power a little bit. I don't know, you know? I'm not sure that I can entirely answer what that is. I don't think the characters have that much in common, quite frankly, but I've never played flighty women, I've never played particularly girly-girls. I think that I've never really been an ingénue, you know? I've often been cast in roles that are a little bit more grounded and still, or something. I don't know. Maybe that's why I've been playing these roles. I'm kind of grateful. I think they're somewhat unconventional roles for women. I have a lot of gratitude for that. |
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Question: As an actress, when you're on set everyday and dealing with some of this darker subject matter, how do you separate yourself from that when you go home for the day? How do you leave that on the set and not let it affect you, your personal life? Maggie Siff: That's a good question. I always feel like maybe I'm a freak this way, but when I'm there I'm there 100% and when I leave I'm gone. I don't know why. The world is so dark and so specific and we throw ourselves into it, but the beauty of shooting film and television as opposed to theater where you have to keep reliving things night after night is that you do it and it's done. If you do it well it's like a form of catharsis. That's what I find. I find that if I commit to something 100% and I'm satisfied with what comes out then I can walk away from my day and I feel pretty light. I know that that's not true for every actor, but on this show I have found that to be relatively true. Also, I will say as Tara, I don't have to do a lot of that shooting that the guys do where they're constantly in the middle of these terrifically violent things that are happening day after day and they're riding around in the desert in their leathers. Really, my job is so confined to a really specific portion of the story.
Question: Hour dramas nowadays seem to be quite dark. Any thoughts on that? Is that a reflection of where we are as a society or any thoughts at all?
Question: There seems to be this consensus that some of the best roles for actresses now are being written not in movies but in television. Would you agree with that statement?
Question: What TV shows do you like to watch?
Question: How has it been returning to SONS after those two major theater stints? Do you find yourself embracing the Shakespearian element more now with the show?
Question: What do you plan to do after SONS OF ANARCHY? Go to another series? Films? What are you looking forward to?
Question: Do you have a wish list of directors that you'd like to work with in the future as far as future films go? |
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