Holly Hunter is ‘Grace' in new TNT series
By Brandy McDonnell
Entertainment Writer
After more than 20 years on the big screen, movie star Holly Hunter is forging new territory
The Oscar winner is starring for the first time in a television series,
the Oklahoma City-set character drama and police procedural "Saving Grace,” which
premieres at 9 p.m. Monday on TNT.
"One of the things I've always wanted in my career was to work with people that I like more than once. And you rarely get to. ... Through my entire career, and now that's been going on 20-odd years since "Raising Arizona” in 1986, you can really not run into the same people twice. And I've always wanted so badly to work with actors repeatedly, because the relationship, you know, the intimacy that you feel, and the safety that you feel and the comfort that you feel, with some actors, is something that you don't want to walk away from because you can only build on it,” Hunter said in a recent conference call.
"I really love these actors that share the show with me. It's dynamite to get to do a different story every week but with the same people.”
But
Hunter, 49, said the true motivation for her switch to television was the character she plays, jaded
Oklahoma City cop Grace Hanadarko. Scarred by her tragic past, Grace is on a self-destructive path of heavy drinking, reckless affairs and defying authority. But when she kills a man in a drunken driving accident, Grace uncharacteristically asks for God's help. She gets it, in the form of a tobacco-chewing angel named Earl.
"I wanted to play Grace, and I didn't want anybody else to play Grace. It was kind of that much of a private attraction that I had for the character, and that doesn't happen with me often. And I felt kind of privileged to feel it again, because I've felt it only a few times with characters,” Hunter said.
Series creator Nancy Miller, who grew up in Oklahoma City and graduated from the University of Oklahoma, said she wanted to set a show in her hometown for years, but never had the justification. But she thought "Saving Grace” needed a Bible Belt setting.
The
series is set in the Sooner State, but the pilot was filmed in Canada [Vancouver to be exact], with one day of location shooting in Oklahoma City. The other episodes were made in Los Angeles.
"I like to write about taboo subjects. ‘Any Day Now' was about race. My series before that (‘Leaving L.A.') was about death. ... And for my next subject, I wanted to explore God and faith and religion and sin — those things we're not supposed to talk about — through the eyes of a character who has had a deep pain in her life and questions if there's even a God,” Miller said in a phone interview.
"I think a lot of times, television has portrayed angels and God in ways that I can't relate. I think God has a great sense of humor. I think God laughs at us when we do stuff, and He cries with us as well. And I had never really seen that. So I wanted an angel that I could relate to if I was ever gonna sit across from my angel.”
Hunter said she doesn't personally believe in angels, but her beliefs don't matter. She makes her living as a storyteller who embodies fictional stories.
Her lengthy career has included many memorable characters, from the cop desperate for a baby in "Raising Arizona” to her Oscar-winning turn as a mute woman married off to a New Zealand farmer in "The Piano.” She has won two Emmys and been nominated for three more — all for TV movies — but this is her first role in a series.
The Georgia native said accepting the lead role in an hourlong drama series is an ambitious commitment. She called Dylan McDermott, formerly of "The Practice,” to ask, "How do you do this?”
"He just said that the most exciting thing about it is that you have to be very spontaneous. You have to live, you know, a somewhat different life in front of the camera ... inside that you could find a life that you might never have anywhere else except for in the one-hour drama schedule,” she said. "And I think that that's true, you know. ... The day can take you, and the rhythm of the speed of the shooting can be really intoxicating.”
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