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Blake Lively talks about ‘Gossip Girl’
Erin Carlson
NEW YORK—Wide-eyed teens excitedly watch as “Gossip Girl” star Blake
Lively films a scene with co-star Penn Badgley. Take after take in New
York’s Stuyvesant Park — a perfect setting with its stately gates and
statues — the youthful onlookers linger on this cold autumn day,
providing some evidence that the low-rated CW series holds interest for
its target demo: BlackBerry-holding, DVR-using Gen-Yers.
Lively, who got her big break as a soccer-loving teen in 2005’s “The
Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants,” plays Serena van der Woodsen on the
glossy soap, based on the popular young-adult novels about rich
Manhattan private school kids whose scandals and trysts are dishy fodder
for an anonymous blogger.
Serena captures the most attention: the Queen Bee hooked up with her
best friend’s man — OMG! — and now has a budding romance with brainy
black-sheep-on-campus Dan Humphrey (Badgley). Lively, 20, talk about her
“Gossip Girl” success, her determination to stay grounded as her star
rises and her love for a certain guitar-themed video game.
Q: Do you get recognized on the street?
Lively: It’s pretty crazy. Not only (as) Serena van der Woodsen, but
people know my own name. ... (Everyone) from young girls, teenage girls,
women in their 30s and 40s to, like, Guido-type guys, like frat boys.
One day these, like, thuggish guys were, like, coming out, rolling out
of their Escalade and they go — they’re like, “Man, that’s gossip girl!”
And they were, like, freaking out. It was so strange how many people
would just get giddy over it. And it’s people that you would not expect
at all.
Q: Are you anything like Serena?
Lively: No, not at all. Serena was brought up very differently than I
was brought up. Serena was given everything her whole life. ... I grew
up in a small little town in California — Burbank. I went to high school
(and) what we would do on our nights off (was) go to a school
fundraiser, go to a football game, where these people have masquerade
balls or go lounge at The Palace Hotel and sip martinis. ... At the
heart of it all, Serena really wants to be a good person — despite all
odds, despite all the chaos that’s going on around her and all the other
people in her life. So I think that I strive to do the right thing and
not fall into the norm (like) so many young people in Hollywood who —
because they were raised differently — get caught up in some of the
nonsense. And I really try to steer clear of that. So, you know, we’re
like that in the same way. We both giggle a lot. We look alike.
Q: On a recent episode, Serena kicked butt playing (the video game)
“Guitar Hero” at a party. Did you do any research for that?
Lively: The reason they wrote it in was because I’m such an amazing
“Guitar Hero” player. I saw clips of it. It doesn’t really debut my
skills so well, which I was very disappointed about.
Q: “Gossip Girl” will halt production if the Hollywood writers strike
continues. What do you think about that?
Lively: Everybody needs to do what they need to do, so, you know, we
just have to keep our fingers crossed that we’ll be able to pay our rent
soon. Everybody understands what’s going on, and, so, there’s nothing
anybody else can do about it.
Q: Did you grow up knowing that you wanted to act?
Lively: I had no clue what I wanted to do, but I knew it was not acting
— just because my whole family (her parents and siblings, including
sister Robyn Lively, who starred in 1989’s “Teen Witch”) was in it, and
it was the only job I really knew of. And I thought, “That’s really cool
but that’s not something I want to do.” So I worked my whole life to go
to Stanford, and the summer between my junior and senior year of high
school ... my brother decided I would love acting. So he made his agent
send me out on a few auditions. I went on two auditions and I got
“Sisterhood.” |