|
<< back
November 28, 2005
TVGuide.com
Author: Matt Webb Mitovich
After nine ratings-tastic
years as Everybody Loves
Raymond's Debra, Patricia
Heaton wanted to shake
things up with her next,
non-put-upon-housewife role. In TNT's The Engagement Ring
(premiering tonight at 8
pm/ET), she plays Sara Anselmi, a vineyard owner
whose own love life is
thrown for a loop when a
decades-old marriage
proposal arrives in the mail
for her mother (played by
Lainie Kazan). Heaton shared
a few minutes with
TVGuide.com to discuss this
return Engagement, life
after Raymond and her new
sitcom dreams.
TVGuide.com: What was
your strategy in picking
your first post-Raymond
project? Patricia Heaton: We had The
Engagement Ring in
development for quite a
while and I always loved it
because of the question that
it poses, which is, "What is
true love? Is it chemistry,
this excitement you feel
when you first meet someone?
Or is it many years of being
together and building a
family and a history?" I
also loved the fact that it
was multigenerational, that
it was not just about my
character and her romantic
life, but also about my
parents. You don't get to
see that very much.
TVGuide.com: I eagerly
awaited Sara's reaction upon
opening the long-lost letter
that could have changed her
mother's life.
Heaton: That's one of my favorite scenes in the
movie! And especially once
Lainie Kazan was cast, I
thought, "Oh, I cannot wait
to see her do this," and she
was just so wonderful.
TVGuide.com: She certainly
is a force of nature in this
movie.
Heaton: Isn't she? She is a
force, and that is so what
that part needed. I loved
that no matter how old you
get, you can still have
these intense romantic
feelings for a lost love. It
was great in that my parents
have to grapple with that,
that my dad has to grapple
with my mom's feelings for
someone else.
TVGuide.com: The premise
alone can give a person
goose bumps.
Heaton: Yes. It builds up to
this sort of intrigue and
almost a comedy of errors.
The emotions are so high,
and with it being an Italian
family, it's like this comic
opera. I thought it was so
different from anything I
read that was a TV-movie.
And as our [director of
photography] said, "It's so
nice to shoot a TV-movie
that's not set in a hospital
or a courtroom."
TVGuide.com: Yes, it has
this great, palpable
vineyard feel to it.
Heaton: Mmm-hmm. Well, we
shot two days in Napa, and
we shot the rest in these
vineyards up on Vancouver
Island. We had these
beautiful locations. That
was another thing that
attracted me ¡ª if I have to
spend 12 to 14 hours a day
somewhere, it may as well be
in a vineyard! [Laughs]
TVGuide.com: Is it just me
or does your leading man,
Vincent Spano, have a hint
of Ray Romano-ness to him?
Maybe it's the voice?
Heaton: [Laughs] You think
so? I suppose you're right,
I hadn't even thought of
that. It wasn't intentional;
maybe I just do that out of
habit because I was with Ray
for so long.
TVGuide.com: You're part of
ABC's big project based on
the 9/11 Commission Report.
Who are you playing?
Heaton: I play Barbara Bodine, who was the
ambassador to Yemen at the
time that the USS Cole was
bombed. I have a scene with
Harvey Keitel [playing FBI
investigator John O'Neill],
which was a dream for me -
we had a wonderful time.
I'll tell you, it is a
terrific script. I read it
while I was in England; it's
a three-part miniseries, and
boy, I couldn't put it down.
I'm really looking forward
to seeing that come out.
TVGuide.com: Would you ever
do a series again?
Heaton: You know, I'm in
development with ABC for a
sitcom, so hopefully in the
next year I'll be back on a
sitcom. A four-camera
sitcom, at this stage of my
life, with the kids, is
really the only schedule I
can accommodate. We had all
the kids with us while we
were shooting The Engagement
Ring and my husband [David
Hunt] was there, obviously,
because he plays my fiance,
but it was hard with the
very long hours. It's very
difficult to do that and
have a normal family life,
so I'm looking forward to
getting back to a sitcom.
TVGuide.com: It's funny that
Raymond ran for so long
because you also were up for
the role of Seinfeld's
Elaine. Either way, you're
indentured!
Heaton: Yes! It's a good
kind of indentured to be.
TVGuide.com: Do your two Emmys still make you smile?
Heaton: Yes, they do. I have
offices in the old animation
building on the Disney lot
and they're right there, all
shiny!
TVGuide.com: Is there any
chance for a Raymond reunion
somewhere down the road?
Heaton: I would think so. We
had such a great time
together and everybody loved
seeing each other, so any
excuse to get together would
be great, yeah.
TVGuide.com: Brad Garrett's
spin-off stalled; was there
ever a germ of an idea for
you to get the follow-up?
Maybe kill Ray in some
tragic hockey-puck accident?
Heaton: [Laughs] No, I don't
think that was ever
possible! |