Breaking In’s Megan Mullally: “I’ll Say Yes to Almost Anything”
By Kate Stanhope, TV GUIDE
Published 08:59 a.m., Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Actress, singer, talk-show host and… model? Megan Mullally is about to make her runway debut on Tuesday’s episode of Breaking In (9:30/8:30, Fox). So how did they talk her into it?
“Fortunately, I had not read the script very carefully, so I read it and I thought: underwear, fashion show, runway, I walk down it, whatever,” Mullally told reporters last week on the set of the office comedy. “I just didn’t think about the fact that I really had to do that. I’m glad I didn’t.”
Mullally’s foray into high fashion comes when Contra Security is hired by a lingerie company to protect a diamond-encrusted bra – much to the disapproval of new boss Veronica (Mullally). “I walked in and it was this giant, really fancy runway and probably about 250 background people. They were all young, attractive and dressed up really nice. I was like, ‘Oh, sh–,’” she said. “I had no idea what I was going to do, so I just kind of winged it. It was fun.”
So far, Mullally’s improvisational skills have served her well on Breaking In. After eight seasons and two Emmy wins on Will & Grace, Mullally has recently made memorable guest-star turns on Parks and Recreation – as manipulative library employee (and Ron Swanson’s ex-wife) Tammy No. 2 – and as Penny’s loose cannon of a mother on Happy Endings. “I guess I just was playing it by ear and just going with the flow. This came along at a good time,” she said. “I’ve been guesting on all these shows and I’ve been thinking, ‘I guess it would be nice to have my own show that I get to go to work every day.’”
Mullally had never seen an episode of Breaking In when she received the offer, but she thought the show had potential after catching up on the first season. “I thought that it was something I could have fun with. I’ll say yes to almost anything,” she said. “It’s always a big crapshoot though. You never know.”
Once she signed on for the role, producers were more than happy to tailor the role of Contra’s new boss to Mullally’s style. “Even in that first episode, Veronica has shades of still being a corporate person, but it ultimately fell away because Megan is so fun and so kooky,” showrunner Adam F. Goldberg said. “The more we saw what Megan was doing, the more we realized that was just not where the comedy was coming from.”
Added Mullally: “It was nice to have some really great collaboration and freedom to play around a little bit.”
Mullally’s comedic skills have not only served her character, but have also helped raise the rest of the cast’s game, according to Goldberg. “I’m certainly very grateful to get the opportunity to work with someone like Megan,” Christian Slater said of his new comic foil. “She’s quite hilarious and full of great ideas, and I like the chemistry.”
While the cast has been very welcoming of Mullally off screen, it won’t be so easy for Veronica to gel with the rest of the Contra team as the new woman in charge. “I don’t think anybody has completely accepted me and they may never,” Mullally said. “But we’ve made a little progress.”
Watch an exclusive clip from Breaking In to see Mullally in action:
Megan Mullally on Her New Breaking In Role
Mar 6, 2012 11:32 AM ET
by Rob Moynihan
Emmy winner Megan Mullally is out to steal laughs as Veronica, the new head of Contra Security on Fox’s Breaking In. We caught up with the funny lady to get the scoop on her newest character — and perhaps the wackiest one yet.
TV Guide Magazine: You’ve been busy with guest stints lately on Parks and Recreation, Happy Endings and Up All Night. Were you nervous about taking on a series-regular role?
Mullally: I wasn’t, because I like to say yes to things and just take a leap of faith. I definitely considered it very carefully, and I see a lot of promise. Everything about the concept of the show and the feel of it is very different from anything I’ve done.
TV Guide Magazine: How does this character compare to others you’ve played?
Mullally: She’s crazy, but she has this sort of brattiness like [Will & Grace's] Karen and the vulnerability that Lydia from Party Down had. It’s nice to have a little bit of both.
TV Guide Magazine: What’s Veronica’s M.O.?
Mullally: She doesn’t really realize when she’s doing something unpleasant. I throw a big weird office party because I’m trying to get people to like me and basically tell everybody if they don’t come, they’re going to be fired. I conduct a roast and it’s really horrible. It goes way too deep.
TV Guide Magazine: Is there the possibility of a romantic connection between Oz (Christian Slater) and Veronica?
Mullally: At the beginning, we’re really warring a lot because there’s a power struggle, but further down the road I could see a funny romance between us that’s unconventional. I had never met Christian, but I have a weird special skill where I can watch an actor and tell if we would have chemistry or not. And I could tell with him.
TV Guide Magazine: Are you familiar with the nerd culture the show pokes fun at?
Mullally: I couldn’t care less about that, although I do have a comic-book collection! Just a few when I was a kid: The Spirit, Aquaman… I even have some Fantastic Four. Then I spent one summer when we first got a computer in 2003 buying comics off of eBay. I guess I just got busier, because I look back and think, “I had a whole summer to buy comics on eBay? How did that happen?” [Laughs]
Breaking In premieres Tuesday at 9:30/8:30c on Fox.
(http://www.tvguide.com/News/Megan-Mullally-Breaking-In-1044506.aspx)
Why can’t I just be happy?
Nick Offerman and Megan Mullally bring some love to the garage at The Cat Ranch. They tell Marc about their starts in legitimate theater, their courtship as co-stars, and their two classic television characters, Ron Swanson and Karen Walker. This episode is sponsored by Stamps.com. Click the radio mic and enter WTF for a no-risk trial and a bonus offer worth $110.
http://www.wtfpod.com/podcast/player/episode_259_-_nick_offerman_and_megan_mullally
Mon, March 05, 2012
Lets do this, People-
First off, I am at Acme Comedy Club in Minneapolis this week, Thursday through Saturday. It’s a great club and I haven’t been there in years. After that I will be in Austin, Texas at SXSW on Sunday, March 11. I will be doing a live WTF at 4PM at Esther’s Follies. It will be a one on one with Jeffrey Tambor. I have no idea how to get tickets or how SXSW works so you are on your own getting in. On Monday the 12th I will be taping The John Oliver Standup Show in NYC, if you’re in the area you can try to get tickets here. The following weekend I will be appearing at Gilda’s Laughfest in Grand Rapids, Michigan. I will doing a standup show on the 15th and a live WTF on the 17th with Drew Hastings, Tommy Johnagin, Kevin Nealon and Alan Zweibel. Should be good.
That said, I have been plagued with weird headaches in the back of my head and my shoulders are tight and achy. Maybe I’m stressed, maybe there is something growing inside my skull. I don’t know. Let’s try to track it down. Do I have any reason to be stressed? I eat a shitload of nicotine lozenges and drinking over a pot of coffee a day. You see my schedule. My book is due on the 15th. I just had my house ripped apart to install heat and AC and I had a wall demolished and rebuilt. Jessica has moved in. I just rented a huge storage space to house both our hoards. I haven’t moved my stuff yet and it’s already almost full. I need to paint and have a shelving unit built. Shit is all over the house and I just broke down the biggest Ikea unit I have ever seen. I barely remember building it for my ex-wife. You think it could be tension or am I storing a tumor? There’s certainly no room in the storage space for it.
It’s amazing that once you make the decision to live with someone how quickly that becomes frightening. She’s been basically living with me for a year but she always had her apartment, a safe house for her and an emotional insurance policy for me. Now, it’s gone and shit just got very real. I’m excited but I’m also a little freaked out. Why can’t I just be happy? I don’t know, let me ask my aching head.
Speaking of happy couples, Megan Mullally and Nick Offerman are on the show today. It was lovely to talk to them and I can only hope to be as happy as they seem to be.
On Thursday Jake Johannsen is in the garage. He’s a pro, been around a long time, I have never talked to him. It was a pleasure.
I have to take some aspirin.
Love,
Maron
Megan Mullally’s interview at Conan O’Brien (March 1st)
Megan Mullally’s Plushy Threesome Birthday Party
Megan Mullally has always wanted a surprise party, but not the kind Nick Offerman threw for her.
Megan Mullally Will Take Any Job You Offer
Megan Mullally is very successful, but hell, she’ll do anything if you ask nicely.
Now Imagine Megan Mullally in a sparkly silver bra and long hooker boots shaking her body like a crazy and being totally HOOOOTTT!
So, let me tell you that it actually will happen on some episode of Breaking In season 2 and the clip is on the interview she gave to Conan O’Brien last night. [ x ]
Megan on a catwalk in a short robe + black hooker boots shaking it like a stripper.
I’m not prepare for that. Died.
Megan Mullally just can’t say no
March 1, 2012 3:58 PM
By Rick Bentley
For those of you have been asking when Fox was going to bring back the quirky comedy “Breaking In,” the answer is 9:30 p.m. March 6. It returns with one big change as Megan Mullally — the actress who was so wild on “Will & Grace” — joins the series. She plays the head of a big conglomerate who takes over the small prive security business.
The change is being made to make the series feel more like an office series than an action program. Executive producer Adam F. Goldberg says that meant adding more people to the office. He also wanted to add a foil for Christian Slater’s character, Oz, the master manipulator and all-knowing boss of the business.
All that sounds good but it feels like there’s another reason Mullally agreed to be on the show.
“I like to say ‘yes’ to things anyway you may have noticed,” Mullally says.
That’s a very honest answer as Mullally has been a regular on three comedy series and guest starred on a host of others since “Will & Grace” ended in 2006. She’s been on “Party Down,” “Childrens Hospital,” “Parks and Rec,” “Happy Endings” and “Up All Night” to name a few.
She can now add “Breaking In” to the growing list of TV shows she agreed to do.
Megan Mullally Serenades Justin Bieber
For his 18th birthday, Megan Mullally gave him what every boy his age wants — a jazz standard sung to him by Megan Mullally! She may have taken a few liberties with the lyrics, but this is one birthday present Justin will never forget!
Random Roles – Megan Mullally
by Genevieve Koski March 1, 2012
Welcome to Random Roles, wherein we talk to actors about the characters who defined their careers. The catch: They don’t know beforehand what roles we’ll ask them to talk about.
The actor: Megan Mullally, probably still best known for her two-Emmy-winning role as high-pitched rich bitch Karen Walker on the long-running Will & Grace. But her appearances on some of the most critically/cultishly beloved comedies of the last five years—not to mention the two decades plus she’s spent as a television journeyman—have earned her a reputation for being, as Grantland recently put it, one of television’s hardest-working comic actors. From regular roles on Party Down and Childrens Hospital to memorable guest turns on 30 Rock, Happy Endings, and perhaps most notably Parks And Recreation, where she plays the crazy ex-wife of her real-life husband Nick Offerman, Mullally has carved out a memorable place for herself in some of TV’s funniest ensembles. The creators of Breaking In are apparently banking on those skills: They brought her in as part of a major retooling for the cancelled-then-uncancelled Fox comedy, which returns March 6.
Breaking In (2012)—“Veronica”
Megan Mullally: I play this character named Veronica who is working for this giant conglomerate that’s taking over the entire high-tech security firm that the series is predicated upon. So it’s a corporate takeover, which is not ideal for them, but the other bad news is, it’s me, and my character’s very annoying. She’s just a weird woman. Crazy as a fox is a better way to describe it. So she comes in and has a very unusual personality and an unusual way of wielding authority. She basically pawns everything off on her poor assistant, who’s this great, young English actress, Erin Richards. But it’s kind of like she’s the mother and I’m the child and she’s constantly having to run damage control on me, but I also at the same time do know what’s what. It’s a little deceptive, my personality. But there’s a character on the show named Creepy Carol, played by Jennifer Irwin, who’s this very, very weird, freaky girl/woman, and it’s turning out that Veronica and Creepy Carol are becoming besties, because I don’t think she’s weird, I think she’s awesome.
The A.V. Club: This isn’t the first time where you’ve joined an in-progress show as a regular.
MM: Well, it’s pretty different now. When I was in Party Down, that show just kept going in exactly the same fashion that it was before, whereas this show is being almost completely revamped. They’ve brought in these two new characters, me and my assistant, whose character’s name is Molly, and the other characters now are just Christian Slater, Bret Harrison, and Alphonso McAuley, and then Odette Annable is going to recur because she’s on House now too, so she can’t really do every episode. So it’s very different, because they’re trying to rebuild the show in many ways. It’s taking on a very different tone, it has a little bit more in-your-face comedic tone than it had before, and they’ve cut back considerably on the security-firm aspect, so they’re not doing as many capers and heists and techno-geek things. It’s more about the people and the relationships between the characters.
The Children Nobody Wanted (1981)—“Sharon”
AVC: To jump all the way to the other end of your IMDB page, this is the first role listed. Do you remember doing it?
MM: Yes, I remember that, definitely. I think I was 20 and it was the first TV thing I ever auditioned for in Chicago. And I had two lines, and I remember in my audition, they were like, “Oh my God, she’s a star.” I mean, they went insane over my audition, and it was two lines, and I thought, “Oh my God, it’s all happening.” And then I got there on the day and was so nervous that I could barely function, and I could barely bring the magic. Not that I ever brought any magic, I think that was all in their imaginations, but I was so petrified to do my two lines. And then we were shooting in some small town in Missouri, and there was a tornado—and I’m from Oklahoma, so I’m familiar with those. We were staying in a Holiday Inn and we were all downstairs in the restaurant, and I was having dinner with Michelle Pfeiffer, and the waitress came running in and screamed out that a tornado was coming, that she had just heard on the radio. And so everybody is getting all freaked out, and we all had to go down to the lowest level and get under card tables. So Michelle Pfeiffer and I and two other people were under a card table together. I really haven’t seen her since we were hiding under a card table from a tornado. And the tornado took out the Walmart-ish super-store that was across the street from the hotel. It was gone. That’s how close it came.
AVC: Between that and how intimidated you were on set, it’s surprising you continued on in the business and didn’t consider it a bad omen.
MM: [Laughs.] I know, exactly. It didn’t seem like the signs were in my favor, but I was clueless to that.
Party Down (2010)—“Lydia Dunfree”
MM: Like I said, I came into that show and they didn’t skip a beat. They were right on, and I had to be in step with them. So the very first morning, my first scene up, I was like, “Okay, let’s pull a character out of my ass. I’ve got the wig and I’ve got the glasses. Now what goes with this wig and these glasses?” You really had to hit the ground running. And I did, and I liked that character quite a bit. I thought her positivity was very sweet, and she was just wanting things to be happy. I think those are nice qualities. But I also knew that—my first scene that I shot was a scene with Lizzy [Caplan] in the kitchen area of this venue where we were supposed to be working, and I knew that Lizzy’s character was the last character who would want somebody coming up in their face and being over-familiar with them, so that’s exactly what I did. And I loved any scene with Lizzy, because I loved the dynamic between those two characters. There couldn’t be any two more opposite women on the planet, and I thought that was great for the show. I thought it was fun to play. I loved all the actors and characters on that show, and working with everybody. That’s an extraordinarily close-knit group of people, and they took me under their wing right away, and everybody was very welcoming and gracious. It was great.
AVC: It sounds like you kind of developed the character on the fly. How much of Lydia was presented to you before you actually got on set?
MM: Well, I had three scripts, which was a luxury, because I didn’t have any scripts when I signed on to do Breaking In. Which I said I would never do again. Whatever. So I had three scripts, so I had a pretty good idea, and I had the great advantage of having seen the first season. I knew all the characters and who I was going to be interacting with, and sort of how I could play differently off each person and each character. I had an advantage there. So I’m saying I pulled it out of my ass there, but I had three scripts and kind of knew what I wanted to bring to the table in general. It’s just that you can’t plan it out too much, because when you’re there on the day, you have to go with the flow. If I had something in mind and it didn’t feel right, once I was there on the set, I would scrap it and come up with something else.
Will & Grace (1998-2006)—“Karen Walker”
AVC: Karen was the big breakout character on Will & Grace, which seems like it would invite typecasting. Were you resistant to that? Do you think it’s helped you?
MM: You know, I didn’t pay any attention to that, because that character of Karen is so far away from me in real life, I never gave it a second thought. I can understand everybody associates me with Karen, but beyond that, I think after time passes and a few years go by, that sort of becomes a non-issue. That character is far—I mean really, all the characters I’ve played are pretty far away from what I’m really like. Which makes it so much easier for me, and it’s so much more enjoyable. I love creating new characters that are whatever they are.
When I first auditioned for [Will & Grace], I auditioned for Grace, and they stared blankly at me, and I slumped out of the room. And a couple weeks later, my agent called and said they wanted me to audition for this pilot called Will & Grace, and I was like, “I did audition for it,” and he said it was for a new part. I asked what other part, so they sent me the script and I read it, and I said, “Oh God, I don’t want to play that part, it’s exactly like what I’ve done before.” So then I looked at it again and thought I could put sort of a new twist on it, where it would be quirky and different. So I went back in and I got the part. And you know, if you’ve ever seen the pilot of Will & Grace, the character is very different than what it became. It’s much more by-the-numbers.
AVC: She wasn’t as weird as she became.
MM: She wasn’t weird, although I made her weirder than it had been originally. But it wasn’t weird enough, so I kept trying to bring in the quirks and colors to the character, and they wrote to that, so we just kept building. I wanted to do things like the high voice earlier on, but I was positive that they would fire me. So I worked it in gradually. I was sure the voice would work for that style of comedy and that particular show and that particular character, because my regular speaking voice is very laconic, and that voice has a lot more energy. But also, I just thought it was funny that this über-rich woman who is so critical of other people would have this—literally, her speaking voice makes you want to murder her.
AVC: Was that show taped in front of a live studio audience?
MM: Yes, it was. People always think that there was a fake laugh track and stuff, but there actually wasn’t. There were many, many episodes where there was no laugh track whatsoever, because as a matter of fact, if anything, we had too many laughs. You know, you have 21 and a half minutes of actual show, and sometimes we had as much as five minutes of just laughing. That leaves you with very little dialogue.
AVC: Multi-camera sitcoms with live studio audiences are almost unheard-of now. What do you think about that transition? Do you miss the rhythm of that, and the energy of having a live audience?
MM: I like both. Multi-camera’s fun, because you have the immediacy of the audience, and just being able to tell the story more or less straight through. The thing I like about single-camera is that you have the luxury of shooting a lot of different options. You can really shoot things you think might work on camera one way, then you can try it that way, and then if you think it could also work another way. You have that luxury of shooting a bunch of different steps, and then they can decide in editing what works the best.
Parks And Recreation (2009-2011)—“Tammy Swanson”
AVC: Had you been looking for something to do with your husband, or did the writers approach you?
MM: That came from them, and I was thrilled. I didn’t think that they would ever have me on that show, because on The Office, they never had any recognizable people on until way down the road. They all had newer, fresher faces that weren’t so known to the general public, so I didn’t think they would ever have me on. Then they wanted to know if I’d be interested in playing Nick’s ex-wife, and of course I was like, “Yes!” That first script that they wrote, “Ron And Tammy”—oh my God, what a brilliant episode. And then “Ron And Tammy: Part Two” was another amazing piece of writing. So good.
Nick and I had so much fun shooting those. When we were shooting the first scene on the first day, at 6 o’clock in the morning, and the scene was that Nick and I were supposed to screech into the parking lot of a motel in Burbank, and run into this motel room to have, like, crazy jackrabbit sex. So I decided, at 6 in the morning—and I hadn’t really even met any of the cast—I said, “Nick, I’m gonna take my shirt off,” and he was like, “All right.” So I took my bra off in advance and as we screeched into the parking lot, I threw it out the window of the car, and then after running into the hotel room, I just pulled my whole sweater off. And they said, “Cut!” and the director came over and said “Hi, I’m Troy.” Like, I hadn’t even met the director yet.
AVC: That must be why they invited you back.
MM: [Laughs.] Probably. “Bring her back, she’ll take her clothes off.” It was really fun. The next scene we shot was the sequence in the diner, where we ended up actually sort of trashing the diner. Nick literally ripped the table out of the wall. The customers were obviously background people hired to be there, but there were a lot of outtakes from that. I mean, they could probably do a 10-minute reel of outtakes from that sequence. We were abusing the other patrons of the restaurant, we were abusing the manager of the restaurant, we were throwing food, we were throwing full glasses of water at each other’s faces, stuff that didn’t make the actual cut, but was really fun to do. So that was a blast. That show was still kind of new at that time, and I knew it was a great show, but people hadn’t quite gotten on the bandwagon yet, you know? Party Down is an excellent show with excellent show-runners and an excellent cast. Same with Parks And Rec, it’s unbelievable. The entire cast—and they have 10 regulars—are all unbelievable. They have this incredible producer, Morgan Sackett, who just makes that show run so smoothly. They shoot 12 hours or more, and almost always have at least one or two days a week off, each character. It’s just a great show: great writing, great cast.
AVC: The various residents of Pawnee have become such a huge part of the show that you’ll probably get to go back whenever you want.
MM: Yeah, Nick said in an interview that they have some big episodes planned for Ron and Tammy at the beginning of next season, and I don’t know what it is yet. It’s just a rumor at this point, but that would be fun.
Murder, She Wrote (1988)—“Molly Connors”
AVC: I’ve never seen this episode you guest-starred in, but I have to ask you about it because it’s called “Coal Miner’s Slaughter.”
MM: [Laughs.] Okay, first of all, please watch it. You will not believe how amazing it is. I was 27 or 28; I had moved to L.A. when I was 26. I did really well the first year here, but then didn’t work for two years or something. This was, I think, the job that came at the end of those two years. I got a call, and I’d never been hired from anything just from my reel. I mean, I was destitute. I had no money, I didn’t know how I was going to pay my rent, and I got this call that I’d booked an episode of Murder, She Wrote off of my reel, and it paid $5,000. I think I literally dropped to my knees and started crying. I was ecstatic.
The first morning, my alarm didn’t go off and I was really late, and everybody was really mad. But then I did the first scene and they were like, “Oh, she’s good,” and Angela Lansbury took sort of a miniature shine to me. Nothing crazy, but she was really nice to me. She was a lovely person, very gracious, as you can imagine. She took a shine to me, and was very nice to me, and thought I was a really good actress. Well meanwhile, this episode—you know, the show had a lot of guest stars—had Barbara Bain and Hoyt Axton and [Chuck Connors and Denver Pyle], and they’ve all passed away except for Barbara Bain—and me. At the first act break, I get framed for murder, and Axton is the sheriff, and he says to me, “Molly, I’m puttin’ you under arrest for the murder of so-and-so,” and then it was literally one of the scenes where there’s music like [imitates dramatic music cue] and they cut to each person: Barbara Bain, Angela Lansbury, me, Axton, and some other celebrity. And they cut to each of our faces, separately, our reactions. Like, “What?! No! It couldn’t be! What’s happening?!”
AVC: It’s like a sketch or a spoof of a mystery show.
MM: It’s like SNL. Literally, like a sketch. And it was heaven on earth. I knew at the time we were shooting it that I was going to fucking love it because it was so queer. And it was.
AVC: So you went into it with a “This is silly” attitude?
MM: Well, no. I was just absolutely out-of-my-mind grateful that they offered me this job, because I could pay my rent for three months. It was like a miracle when I got that job, so I was really excited about it. But I also knew that it wasn’t, like, a cool, young, “Hollywood” thing to be doing. It was an episode of Murder, She Wrote, which was a very popular show, but not necessarily a “cool” show. But I’ve never cared if it was cool or not. Maybe my way of being elitist is to not be elitist? I don’t know. I’ll try anything, basically. I’ll say “yes” to pretty much anything, as long as the people involved are nice people. And I want the material to be relatively good, obviously, but I don’t care if it’s cool.
Childrens Hospital (2008-2012)—“Chief”
MM: I wanted to do Childrens Hospital because that show is a hotbed of comedic creativity. I mean, those guys—David Wain, Rob Corddry, Jon Stern—everyone involved in that show, including the entire cast, it’s on a separate plane, I think. I’ve learned so much just from Childrens Hospital alone.
AVC: It’s definitely a more absurd type of comedy. Was there any kind of adjustment for you to get into the swing of what they were doing?
MM: Many of the people I’ve worked with over the years came from a sketch-comedy background or an improv background, and I’ve learned a lot from them. Even 10 years ago, or certainly 15 years ago, if you’d gone into a show and improvised—it was unheard of. And now, it’s like if you don’t improvise, you might be in trouble. It’s totally changed. Everybody wants you to improvise now.
AVC: But Childrens is pretty tightly scripted, right?
MM: They’re all tightly scripted. It’s not so much that we’re crazy about actually improvising; it’s more about just being really loose, and if something else happens that wasn’t scripted, and that’s funny too, then you go with that. So it’s just a different mindset, and everybody on Childrens is so good that it’s somewhat expected. When I first started doing that show, I only did the web series, and I didn’t know anybody. I’d met Rob Corddry once, but I really didn’t know any of the other people except Ken Marino, who I’d worked with a couple of times on other things. I thought, “Come on, who are these people, I’ve never heard of them?” And then they’re all just so brilliant, and I learned so much from everybody.
That show has a special tone, you know? It’s almost like it’s done on the fly, but it’s not; it’s very carefully thought-out. All the department heads have a really low budget to work with, but all of them are so good at their jobs. There’s something really fun about it, like “It’s not a real show, we’re just doing something naughty in somebody’s basement.” But it is a real show, and it’s brilliantly conceived, and I think conceptually and stylistically, the show is groundbreaking in many ways. I think in 10 years, it’ll creep onto networks, if there still are networks. Network just isn’t ready for it right now. It’s sort of an “anything goes” type of atmosphere. There’s not really any season arc, and characters don’t really have arcs. It’s just kind of jokes, but it’s so well done. Those guys are geniuses, and they’re such nice guys. When you’re that brilliant, you can afford to be really cool and nice.
Happy Endings (2011-2012)—“Dana Hartz”
MM: Yeah! I loved doing Happy Endings. That was another one that, the first episode I did… My God, that part they wrote for me was so incredible!
AVC: It’s amazing how perfectly you and Casey Wilson fit as mother and daughter.
MM: We didn’t know! Nick and I had gone to a party downtown that was all comedy people. And we went in the club, and we went downstairs—I’d been watching Happy Endings, and I thought it was really funny, but nobody had really gotten on the bandwagon yet. And I see her, and I’m like, “Oh my God! Hey!” We introduce ourselves, and I’m like, “I love your show, I think it’s so good and you’re great on it. I think it’s going to do really well,” and she’s like “Oh my God, thanks!” I had my phone out, and we were just chatting, and I said, “Let me get your information.” And then she was flipping through the address book in my phone, and she was like, “Oh my God!” She thought I had a lot of good names in my phone. Which is odd, because I don’t really have that many good names. But anyways, so then I guess she went and pitched me to them and said, “Megan Mullally, I met her at a party, she loves the show, blah blah blah.” So they wrote this episode, and it was such a great, generous role that they wrote for me.
And we got on the set and it turned out that Casey Wilson and I have a rapport, like, we literally have a psychic connection. We could make up song lyrics simultaneously together. We didn’t know that going in, but we do, and it’s really, really fun to work with her. I love her, she’s a doll. And that whole cast, oh my God. It’s a wonderful show run by wonderful people, and the cast is charming, delightful. They’re all young actors that are all so good. … I can’t believe how many great, young actors in their 20s and 30s are now comedic actors. It’s so great. Comedy’s so different now; it’s more high-stakes, it’s fresher, you can do a lot more. And also, women are allowed to be on-par with men now, comedically, which wasn’t really the case years ago. Certainly, women did it, like Carol Burnett and Imogene Coca, but for the most part, it was the funny guy and then the hot babe.
(http://www.avclub.com/articles/megan-mullally,70133/)
Megan Mullally joins cast of Fox sitcom “Breaking In”
A two-time Emmy winner as the high-pitched-in-all-ways Karen Walker on “Will & Grace” (still shown in weekday repeats on Lifetime), the amusing actress surely isn’t lacking work. She’s a regular on Adult Swim’s “Childrens Hospital.” She’s had guest roles lately on ABC’s “Happy Endings” and NBC’s “Parks and Recreation” (which co-stars her husband, Nick Offerman) and “Up All Night.” And she’s supplying voices for the soon-to-start Season 2 of Fox’s animated “Bob’s Burgers.”
Mullally, a Casady High School graduate and former soloist with the Oklahoma City ballet, also is climbing aboard the second season of another Fox show.
She plays the new boss of Contra Security as “Breaking In” resumes at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, with the humor more office-based. She joins a cast that includes Christian Slater, Bret Harrison and Odette Annable.
“I remembered seeing the billboards, but I hadn’t seen the show,” Mullally says of receiving the “Breaking In” offer.
“They sent me three episodes, and I thought, ‘This definitely has potential.’ I got on the phone with the producers, and they were very nice, and we talked about what qualities might play best for my character. Then they wrote two sample scenes, and I thought this was something I could have a good time with.”
Though Michael Rosenbaum has left “Breaking In,” Mullally is enjoying working with another newcomer to the show: Welsh actress Erin Richards, who plays the new chief’s executive assistant.
“She’s quite good, and she adds a fun element,” Mullally says. “And she’s not hard to look at.”
Joining an existing series isn’t new for Mullally, who did the same on the Starz comedy “Party Down” after Jane Lynch left to begin her “Glee” run on Fox.
“I would say the difference is that on ‘Party Down,’ they didn’t miss a beat,” Mullally says. “They just plugged me in and carried on exactly the same as before. ‘Breaking In’ has been completely revamped, and it’s almost like starting from scratch.”
The fact that Slater’s character is no longer the boss alters “Breaking In” automatically.
“Christian has so much energy, just a bottomless well of it, physically and emotionally,” Mullally says. “And it’s positive energy, which is great. Since he’s No. 1 on the call sheet, that’s always a nice thing, and he couldn’t have been nicer in welcoming me. He sent me a lovely email when I decided to do the show, and he sent flowers on my birthday. He really is quite a gentleman.”
Read more: http://newsok.com/megan-mullally-joins-cast-of-fox-sitcom-breaking-in/article/3653657#ixzz1nuaPg6yX
Watch Megan Mullally & Many More in a Les Miz Flash Mob on It’s A Brad, Brad World
By Broadway.com Staff February 28, 2012 – 4:40PM
Nothing says love like a Les Miserables flash mob! On the season finale of reality show It’s a Brad, Brad World, celebrity stylist Brad Goreski was treated to a very special surprise serenade arranged by his boyfriend Gary Janetti on their anniversary. First, Janetti gave a speech about how he knew love was in the air when the pair started singing Les Mis together within 12 hours of first meeting one another. Then, one by one, a flash mob of friends, family, and coworkers joined forces for a—surprisingly good!—rendition of the show’s flag-raising musical number “One Day More.” The couple’s pal and Broadway veteran Megan Mullally even showed up to take on the role of Eponine, while Goreski’s mom played Madame Thenardier, and Janetti himself sang Javert, to name just a few participants. You think that’s adorable? Wait until you see Gorseki’s reaction. Check it out!
(http://www.broadway.com/buzz/160301/watch-megan-mullally-many-more-in-a-les-miz-flash-mob-on-its-a-brad-brad-world/)
Breaking In Sneak Peek: Megan Mullally and Christian Slater Butt Heads
Today 12:19 PM PST by Jenna Mullins
Breaking In has conned its way out of cancellation and will return to Fox this spring with its second season, a fact that we are thankful for.
So what can we expect in season two, besides the addition of the great Megan Mullally? We’ve got your video first look…
Christian Slater, Brett Harrison, Odette Annable and the rest of the Breaking In cast are back, along with some newcomers. In this exclusive footage of a cast publicity shoot, we hear from Slater, Mullally, Annable and the rest about what’s coming up when Breaking In comes back, plus a first look at season-two photos.
So what happens when Oz (Slater) and Ronnie (Mullally) are forced into business together? By the looks of this preview, it’s not going to be a friendly partnership. Check out the sneak peek below!
http://foxflash.net/jwplayer/player.swf
(http://www.eonline.com/news/watch_with_kristin/breaking_in_sneak_peek_megan_mullally/296592)
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- Fox pulls ‘Breaking In’ from its schedule
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- THE FIRST GAY SHOW TO SUCCEED IN PRIME TIME IS NOT ONLY LAUGH-OUT-LOUD-FUNNY, IT’S CHANGING PERCEPTIONS OF SEXUALITY.
- Exclusive Breaking In Sneak Peek: Does Oz Like Veronica?
- Breaking In’s Christian Slater and Megan Mullally on Second Chances, Cast Changes, and Creative Control
- Breaking In’s Megan Mullally: “I’ll Say Yes to Almost Anything”
- Megan Mullally on Her New Breaking In Role
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