GQ: “Now on the third week of production, what can you tell us about where Garrett finds himself next? How much of Hannah Wells and Garrett are we seeing?”
BC: “You're going to get a good amount of Hannah and Garrett again this season. We have another arc. Dean and Allie are the main focus this season. We're only two weeks in, but I'm already extremely proud of Stephen [Kalyn] and Mika [Abdalla]. Fans are going to be really, really, really happy with what they get from the two of them. I can't say a damn word about Garrett. You will just have to watch the show.”https://t.co/dNnLSvNv4X
For @TeenVogue, I caught up with #EveryYearAfter stars Sadie Soverall, Matt Cornett and Michael Bradway and showrunner Amy B. Harris to discuss all of those big changes and how that ending sets the stage for a potential Season 2: https://t.co/imGPxwEuGT
“What if we didn’t have any chance in love?”
“No, if it were possible to have a second chance.”
Flashback: “I choose you Percy”
Now: “I want you Percy, I want to live an authentic life, I don’t want to live a lie .. I want us”
THIS PARALLEL PLEASE 🥹🤏🏻
#everyyearafter
Louisa Levy on working with intimacy coordinators & Ella Bright via THR
“When we met Ella and fell in love with her, it was really important to me that before we closed any deal or any contract to have a very in-depth conversation with her. As much as I loved her and believed her to be a star, which she now is, I was not about to put her on set if I felt like she wasn’t equipped for it. I talked to her on the phone and walked her through everything that was expected of Hannah this season because I didn’t want there to be any surprises and walked her through what the process of working with an intimacy coordinator is or would be. I told her to reach out to people who she trusts and knows who have done intimacy work and ask them about that experience. I can tell her everything I’ll do from my perspective as a showrunner and as a producer, but I’ve never been in her shoes. I can only tell her that I’ll do everything in my power to make her feel safe. I will never make her do something that she doesn’t feel comfortable with, but I will never know what that’s like. I encouraged her to speak to someone. I don’t know if she did, but the fact that I told her not to close this deal if she felt even a little bit that this wasn’t something she was ready for and excited to do — that was really important to me. Frankly, that was important to me with everyone.”
“I still say it on a regular basis. We will not roll camera if you don’t feel comfortable. You might think you’re comfortable in one day. Then you show up, and we’re ready to roll and you don’t feel comfortable again. I will never make you do something you don’t want to do. I tell the directors that and everyone that we’ve hired has the same ethos. Nobody’s going to force anyone to do something that they don’t want to do. That creates safety, but it also creates a cast that feels good because when they’re filming these scenes, they’re excited to do it, and they’re looking forward to embodying these scenes because they’re collaborators. They’re not just puppets.” https://t.co/dLSsfJlSs4