![]() Once I get past that, then I can start breaking down the performance a little better, I can see the show for what it is, and so for me, watching the episodes is a good learning tool. The first time I watch it, I can’t think of anything except the ridiculous things. So you’re basically getting a chance to self edit, based on the episodes, after they’ve all been shot.Įddie: I know a lot of actors will say they don’t watch themselves, but I tend to watch every episode. With that in mind, I will boldly go into Season Two. Look, I love the fact that he’s funny, but I want the character to be spontaneously funny and not just a caricature. That’s why he’s at the Warehouse to begin with.Įddie: Exactly. I don’t want him to turn into just a silly character. So I want to make sure that Pete remains grounded and remains…I want him to seem competent at his job. I feel as I’ve watched some of the episodes, I feel like maybe…and Jack will probably kill me for saying this, but I feel personally, that maybe my performances at moments felt pushed to me. Like even if something isn’t necessarily written in the script to be funny, I’ll always try and find something funny in it. But I want to make sure that Pete stays…I tend to really kind of go for the joke a lot. I’ll kind of let them do their jobs, and Jack Kenny (executive producer) runs such a great efficient writers’ room that I feel like I don’t really have to say much. ![]() I thought they did such a great job, that I don’t know if I really need to add much to it. I’ve been invited to say whatever I feel in regards to the character. Since season one was completed before the writers knew about season two, have you had any discussions on where you’d like Pete to go? Now that the writers can take their time a bit, what type of character development is in store for Pete, and do you have any hand in that?Įddie: Um, yeah, I do have input. In this exclusive Eddie talked to us about where he’d like to take Pete in Season two, a little about tomorrow night’s season finale, and his hopes for next season. ![]() Your old pal Seels recently had the opportunity to chat with the one and only Eddie McClintock, star of SyFy’s original series WAREHOUSE 13. She played Anna Ripley in Amazon's critically acclaimed show "The Legend of Vox Machina," Karai in several "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" properties, and various characters in "Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters." She was also Adira in "Rapunzel's Tangled Adventures," and D'Vorah in multiple "Mortal Kombat" titles.Hey GMMR fans. Hu has also turned into a prolific voice actor in the years since "Warehouse 13," performing in dozens of animated shows and video games. When her time on "Warehouse 13" came to an end, Hu landed a string of TV roles, making some brief but notable appearances on "Being Mary Jane," "The Orville," and "L.A.' Finest." She also bagged a recurring role on The CW's "Arrow," playing the deadly Triad assassin Chien Na Wei, better known as China White. Before "Warehouse 13," Hu was probably best known for playing Eva Watanabe in "Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan," Yuriko Oyama (aka Lady Deathstrike) in "X-Men 2," and The Sorceress in "The Scorpion King," the Dwayne Johnson-led spinoff of Brendan Fraser's "The Mummy" movies. ![]()
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