by Jonathan Reiner
TV Guide Online - March 1, 1999
They're not exactly the traditional soap couple -- he's a brooding mobster, she's a spoiled, rich, teenage spitfire -- but they're burning up the screen on Guiding Light since their arrival in November, thanks to a killer story and some dangerous chemistry. Over a quick lunch of Chinese food, Paul Anthony Stewart and Joie Lenz (now Bethany Joy Galeotti) (Danny and Michelle) talk about leaving their past soap roles behind (he was druggie/photographer Casey Bowman on Loving; she played GL's Clone Reva as a teen) and embracing the Light.
Joie, even though you were already on Guiding Light, and Paul, although you're a veteran of soaps, you're both sort of newcomers in this situation, coming into an established storyline. Is that odd?
LENZ: I think it's good that they're doing a storyline with basically all new people.
Is it scary at all?
LENZ: It's a little nerve-racking at times, but I'm enjoying it.
STEWART: I love coming into the middle of a story and having a lot of reading material to catch up on. It's kind of like being thrown to the wolves, but it's exciting.
You guys seem to have a good real-life relationship so far.
STEWART: We're actually arch-enemies, but we put on a really good show.
Did you guys bond of necessity, or do you generally like each other?
STEWART: We really like each other.
Paul, how does it feel to be the veteran?
STEWART: Should I take that as a compliment?
You should! You started on soaps more than six years ago. How many years were you on Loving?
STEWART: Three. Does that make you a veteran?
I think so. The character was so memorable, and you were involved in so many storylines. Plus, you were relatively young when you started, and you grew up on the show. I think that anyone who serves a three-year contract can be considered a veteran. Why does being a veteran bother you?
STEWART: It doesn't bother me. I'm not sure what my reaction is to it, exactly. I guess because it feels so incredibly new -- maybe because I'm playing a new character.
Do you feel like a veteran?
STEWART: The only time I feel like a veteran is when I'm looking at the red light on the cameras.
Joie, do you still feel like a newcomer?
LENZ: In some ways. There's a lot that I have to learn. I'm getting used to the daily grind, and I'm more settled into the routine now than when I first started.
Do you feel like there were any expectations you had to live up to when you started as Michelle?
LENZ: Well, I was nervous, but everyone was great.
Did you watch Rebecca's [Budig, the previous Michelle] stuff?
LENZ: Not really. I wasn't watching it for any particular reason other than to catch up on the storylines. The producers wanted the character to change a little bit, and I couldn't do that right away -- I couldn't just come in and all of a sudden be a completely new character. I had to ease into it. I remember watching the first three weeks that I did and thinking how much I hated it. This week and last week are the first times that I'm happy with what I'm doing, and I'm actually getting more comfortable doing it.
STEWART: Regardless of how you feel about your work on a particular day, tomorrow is going to be a new day; you can't get hung up about it. It's a great lesson that could apply to life in very much the same way. Part of my time off [between soap jobs] was about getting into another place and not being so critical with myself and my work. I love what I do, and if I'm not happy, I shouldn't be doing it.
Do you miss doing theater?
STEWART: No, because I know I'll do it again on my time off.
During your time off, some of the theater that you did was pretty heavy stuff compared to this current storyline. Which is more difficult -- [18th-century French dramatist] Marivaux or soaps?
STEWART: You know, I felt that this part came along at the perfect time in my life. That always happens in my life with jobs and roles -- they always coincide with where I am in my life at the moment. Lately I've been trying to get in touch with some deeper, scarier places within myself, and this part actually gives me the freedom to explore some of those aspects of my personality.
Joie, when you were on the first time as Teen Reva, you were playing, well, Reva. Now you're sort of playing the victim.
LENZ: I'm glad I didn't come back as the bad girl, because I think it would've been too easy for me to do the same stuff, the same manners and facial reactions that I did with Reva. I would not have been happy with myself if I were to do that. It's a challenge when you have to compare tapes to make sure that I'm not doing the same stuff, because I don't want to repeat the same character. So I'm glad for the challenge I have of playing the "victimish" character.
Was Reva your first work on daytime, or had you done extra work or under-fives [roles with less than five lines of dialogue]?
LENZ: I tried pilots but I didn't get the job, obviously.
You must have liked soaps enough to do one so early in your career.
LENZ: Yes, I did. I really enjoy the everyday challenge. I knew I could handle it because I only had one class my senior year and I was going to be bored out of my mind! I probably would've gotten a job as a waitress or something. I also knew it would be a good challenge for me because I memorize stuff so quickly and there was such rapid character growth.
Do you ever feel like you signed away your part of your adolescence?
LENZ: Not at all. I've been working professionally since I was 11, doing commercials and a lot of theater. It was a hobby, but more than that, it was something I really had a passion for. I had a lot of friends who played soccer and they put their heart and soul into their game; acting was exactly like that for me. So I don't feel like I missed out on anything. I may have missed out on a few dances at school because I had to work, but it wasn't so bad. I got to see my friends on weekends, so I really don't feel like I missed out.
What's fan reaction been since you took over as Michelle?
LENZ: I guess it's mixed.
STEWART: How so? I'm curious.
LENZ: Well, you read a lot of stuff on the Internet, where sometimes people criticize every little thing like, for example, "What was that face she made at the end of the scene?" Well, I'm sorry, but who cares? Every once in a while things like that are going to happen.
STEWART: You really shouldn't be defensive about those things.
LENZ: You're right -- the fans have been nice, and I haven't gotten any hate mail yet, so I think that's great.
STEWART: I've had a couple of opportunities to consider doing a recast in the past few years and I didn't want to do it. I think it's like throwing yourself to the lions. I purposely didn't watch the show, because when I went to try for the role, I read with Joie, who hadn't started to air yet. I knew that whatever I was going to find in the character was going to be from working with Joie.
How did you guys go about developing a rapport?
STEWART: When I first came on the show, I didn't know what characters the writers were interested in. I knew they were looking at my character as a potential romantic interest for one of the girls, or women, I should say, but I didn't know which one. I got a feeling it was Joie because I read with her, but I still wasn't sure. And they had the character Drew coming on to my character, so I was flirting back with her! Then [executive producer] Paul Rauch came out and said, "No, I don't want you flirting with her. I want you to put up a stone wall with her, and you're going to treat Michelle very differently." So then I started putting two and two together. I don't know how you describe the on-air chemistry -- it's sort of intangible, but I don't think you can create it. It has to happen. And I love that it's sort of mysterious and exotic.
LENZ: I can't wait until I see what they are going to do, but of course they won't tell us.
STEWART: I was told that the character of Michelle was more intriguing to my character, and that gave me some clues as to who my character is. It takes a couple of monthsvv for an actor to really start settling into the character because new information is coming rapidly, and so, on the first day of work, you're doing one script's worth of information. You're always learning about your character, and to know that my character would be more interested in Michelle than Drew says a lot about my character and what kind of women he's interested in.
We were just talking with Saundra Santiago [who plays Carmen, Danny's mother]. Is it cool having a mother on the scene?
STEWART: Yeah, it is. Some relationships are going to be explored, especially with this kind of family, where family means so much.
Joie, has all of this been scary, exciting or both?
LENZ: I grew up doing theater, where you're around adults most of the time, so I felt comfortable.
STEWART: Joie is the type of colleague who's very professional and mature.
On the other hand, is it also challenging if everyone thinks of you as an adult? I mean, these are the years that you want to be young and sort things out.
LENZ: Well, I sort things out all the time. There are always going to be things to sort out, but when I go to work, I work. I haven't had anything too heavy personally, but if I did, I'd deal with it.
Did you bond with Kim [Zimmer, real Reva]? Everyone wants to believe that you and Kim are pals because of the fact that you played the same person.
LENZ: Well, we don't hang out on weekends or anything like that! It's hard to build any kind of relationship with someone that you don't work with on a daily basis. I have nothing to do with that storyline. We're sometimes in on the same days, but for the most part, we just see each other in the hallway, and then we talk.
STEWART: In fact, I haven't met all of the cast members yet. An entire day can go by at the studio and I won't see some of the other actors who are there working on the same day, because it's such a large operation. It's possible to go the entire day and not run into another actor if they're not in your story.
Source: link
TV Guide Online - March 1, 1999
They're not exactly the traditional soap couple -- he's a brooding mobster, she's a spoiled, rich, teenage spitfire -- but they're burning up the screen on Guiding Light since their arrival in November, thanks to a killer story and some dangerous chemistry. Over a quick lunch of Chinese food, Paul Anthony Stewart and Joie Lenz (now Bethany Joy Galeotti) (Danny and Michelle) talk about leaving their past soap roles behind (he was druggie/photographer Casey Bowman on Loving; she played GL's Clone Reva as a teen) and embracing the Light.
Joie, even though you were already on Guiding Light, and Paul, although you're a veteran of soaps, you're both sort of newcomers in this situation, coming into an established storyline. Is that odd?
LENZ: I think it's good that they're doing a storyline with basically all new people.
Is it scary at all?
LENZ: It's a little nerve-racking at times, but I'm enjoying it.
STEWART: I love coming into the middle of a story and having a lot of reading material to catch up on. It's kind of like being thrown to the wolves, but it's exciting.
You guys seem to have a good real-life relationship so far.
STEWART: We're actually arch-enemies, but we put on a really good show.
Did you guys bond of necessity, or do you generally like each other?
STEWART: We really like each other.
Paul, how does it feel to be the veteran?
STEWART: Should I take that as a compliment?
You should! You started on soaps more than six years ago. How many years were you on Loving?
STEWART: Three. Does that make you a veteran?
I think so. The character was so memorable, and you were involved in so many storylines. Plus, you were relatively young when you started, and you grew up on the show. I think that anyone who serves a three-year contract can be considered a veteran. Why does being a veteran bother you?
STEWART: It doesn't bother me. I'm not sure what my reaction is to it, exactly. I guess because it feels so incredibly new -- maybe because I'm playing a new character.
Do you feel like a veteran?
STEWART: The only time I feel like a veteran is when I'm looking at the red light on the cameras.
Joie, do you still feel like a newcomer?
LENZ: In some ways. There's a lot that I have to learn. I'm getting used to the daily grind, and I'm more settled into the routine now than when I first started.
Do you feel like there were any expectations you had to live up to when you started as Michelle?
LENZ: Well, I was nervous, but everyone was great.
Did you watch Rebecca's [Budig, the previous Michelle] stuff?
LENZ: Not really. I wasn't watching it for any particular reason other than to catch up on the storylines. The producers wanted the character to change a little bit, and I couldn't do that right away -- I couldn't just come in and all of a sudden be a completely new character. I had to ease into it. I remember watching the first three weeks that I did and thinking how much I hated it. This week and last week are the first times that I'm happy with what I'm doing, and I'm actually getting more comfortable doing it.
STEWART: Regardless of how you feel about your work on a particular day, tomorrow is going to be a new day; you can't get hung up about it. It's a great lesson that could apply to life in very much the same way. Part of my time off [between soap jobs] was about getting into another place and not being so critical with myself and my work. I love what I do, and if I'm not happy, I shouldn't be doing it.
Do you miss doing theater?
STEWART: No, because I know I'll do it again on my time off.
During your time off, some of the theater that you did was pretty heavy stuff compared to this current storyline. Which is more difficult -- [18th-century French dramatist] Marivaux or soaps?
STEWART: You know, I felt that this part came along at the perfect time in my life. That always happens in my life with jobs and roles -- they always coincide with where I am in my life at the moment. Lately I've been trying to get in touch with some deeper, scarier places within myself, and this part actually gives me the freedom to explore some of those aspects of my personality.
Joie, when you were on the first time as Teen Reva, you were playing, well, Reva. Now you're sort of playing the victim.
LENZ: I'm glad I didn't come back as the bad girl, because I think it would've been too easy for me to do the same stuff, the same manners and facial reactions that I did with Reva. I would not have been happy with myself if I were to do that. It's a challenge when you have to compare tapes to make sure that I'm not doing the same stuff, because I don't want to repeat the same character. So I'm glad for the challenge I have of playing the "victimish" character.
Was Reva your first work on daytime, or had you done extra work or under-fives [roles with less than five lines of dialogue]?
LENZ: I tried pilots but I didn't get the job, obviously.
You must have liked soaps enough to do one so early in your career.
LENZ: Yes, I did. I really enjoy the everyday challenge. I knew I could handle it because I only had one class my senior year and I was going to be bored out of my mind! I probably would've gotten a job as a waitress or something. I also knew it would be a good challenge for me because I memorize stuff so quickly and there was such rapid character growth.
Do you ever feel like you signed away your part of your adolescence?
LENZ: Not at all. I've been working professionally since I was 11, doing commercials and a lot of theater. It was a hobby, but more than that, it was something I really had a passion for. I had a lot of friends who played soccer and they put their heart and soul into their game; acting was exactly like that for me. So I don't feel like I missed out on anything. I may have missed out on a few dances at school because I had to work, but it wasn't so bad. I got to see my friends on weekends, so I really don't feel like I missed out.
What's fan reaction been since you took over as Michelle?
LENZ: I guess it's mixed.
STEWART: How so? I'm curious.
LENZ: Well, you read a lot of stuff on the Internet, where sometimes people criticize every little thing like, for example, "What was that face she made at the end of the scene?" Well, I'm sorry, but who cares? Every once in a while things like that are going to happen.
STEWART: You really shouldn't be defensive about those things.
LENZ: You're right -- the fans have been nice, and I haven't gotten any hate mail yet, so I think that's great.
STEWART: I've had a couple of opportunities to consider doing a recast in the past few years and I didn't want to do it. I think it's like throwing yourself to the lions. I purposely didn't watch the show, because when I went to try for the role, I read with Joie, who hadn't started to air yet. I knew that whatever I was going to find in the character was going to be from working with Joie.
How did you guys go about developing a rapport?
STEWART: When I first came on the show, I didn't know what characters the writers were interested in. I knew they were looking at my character as a potential romantic interest for one of the girls, or women, I should say, but I didn't know which one. I got a feeling it was Joie because I read with her, but I still wasn't sure. And they had the character Drew coming on to my character, so I was flirting back with her! Then [executive producer] Paul Rauch came out and said, "No, I don't want you flirting with her. I want you to put up a stone wall with her, and you're going to treat Michelle very differently." So then I started putting two and two together. I don't know how you describe the on-air chemistry -- it's sort of intangible, but I don't think you can create it. It has to happen. And I love that it's sort of mysterious and exotic.
LENZ: I can't wait until I see what they are going to do, but of course they won't tell us.
STEWART: I was told that the character of Michelle was more intriguing to my character, and that gave me some clues as to who my character is. It takes a couple of monthsvv for an actor to really start settling into the character because new information is coming rapidly, and so, on the first day of work, you're doing one script's worth of information. You're always learning about your character, and to know that my character would be more interested in Michelle than Drew says a lot about my character and what kind of women he's interested in.
We were just talking with Saundra Santiago [who plays Carmen, Danny's mother]. Is it cool having a mother on the scene?
STEWART: Yeah, it is. Some relationships are going to be explored, especially with this kind of family, where family means so much.
Joie, has all of this been scary, exciting or both?
LENZ: I grew up doing theater, where you're around adults most of the time, so I felt comfortable.
STEWART: Joie is the type of colleague who's very professional and mature.
On the other hand, is it also challenging if everyone thinks of you as an adult? I mean, these are the years that you want to be young and sort things out.
LENZ: Well, I sort things out all the time. There are always going to be things to sort out, but when I go to work, I work. I haven't had anything too heavy personally, but if I did, I'd deal with it.
Did you bond with Kim [Zimmer, real Reva]? Everyone wants to believe that you and Kim are pals because of the fact that you played the same person.
LENZ: Well, we don't hang out on weekends or anything like that! It's hard to build any kind of relationship with someone that you don't work with on a daily basis. I have nothing to do with that storyline. We're sometimes in on the same days, but for the most part, we just see each other in the hallway, and then we talk.
STEWART: In fact, I haven't met all of the cast members yet. An entire day can go by at the studio and I won't see some of the other actors who are there working on the same day, because it's such a large operation. It's possible to go the entire day and not run into another actor if they're not in your story.
Source: link
[excerpt]
Then Tina told me something that I found truly shocking. "I'm really loving Guiding Light." But Tina, last year you told me you absolutely hated the clone story (moi too!), and had stopped watching the show.
"I did peek in every once in a while," she admitted, "and my 17-year-old daughter told me what was going on. Bravo to the killing of the clone. But what's really great about GL right now is Danny and Michelle."
"I love Danny and Michelle," swooned Ginny and Tina and some of the other women simultaneously.
"When Danny kisses Michelle, he really, really kisses her," cried Tina as the women swooned. "We just love Paul Anthony Stewart."
Source: link
Then Tina told me something that I found truly shocking. "I'm really loving Guiding Light." But Tina, last year you told me you absolutely hated the clone story (moi too!), and had stopped watching the show.
"I did peek in every once in a while," she admitted, "and my 17-year-old daughter told me what was going on. Bravo to the killing of the clone. But what's really great about GL right now is Danny and Michelle."
"I love Danny and Michelle," swooned Ginny and Tina and some of the other women simultaneously.
"When Danny kisses Michelle, he really, really kisses her," cried Tina as the women swooned. "We just love Paul Anthony Stewart."
Source: link
Since Joie Lenz (now Bethany Joy Galeotti) made a huge splash as teenage clone Reva this summer, we were hardly surprised when Guiding Light decided to put Lenz in the role of Michelle when Rebecca Budig left in the fall. But even we couldn't have predicted how quickly she'd get up to speed.
In only weeks she's made the role her own and then some. Suddenly, the used-to-be-too-good-to-be-true Michelle is now a spunkier rendition of the former incarnation, and we're delighted with the change. As an added bonus, Lenz can more than hold her own opposite daytime vet Paul Anthony Stewart, who recently signed on as Danny Santos. So where does this leave Michelle's longtime love, Jesse?
Probably caught in the middle of a four-way tug-of-war (don't forget about the ever-scheming Drew). And we can't wait to see who winds up with whom.
Source: link
In only weeks she's made the role her own and then some. Suddenly, the used-to-be-too-good-to-be-true Michelle is now a spunkier rendition of the former incarnation, and we're delighted with the change. As an added bonus, Lenz can more than hold her own opposite daytime vet Paul Anthony Stewart, who recently signed on as Danny Santos. So where does this leave Michelle's longtime love, Jesse?
Probably caught in the middle of a four-way tug-of-war (don't forget about the ever-scheming Drew). And we can't wait to see who winds up with whom.
Source: link