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Yancy
Butler, star of TNT's original television movie Witchblade,
took her job without knowing a thing about the Top Cow comic
series on which the film is based. When she finally got around
to reading the comic--which features a scantily clad heroine
and over-the-top swordfighting--she says she got very nervous.
But her
fears calmed when production on the movie began. The pilot
for a potential series, the movie takes a more real-world
approach to the supernatural storyline. Butler plays Sara
Pezzini, a New York City police detective who comes into possession
of a magical gauntlet that confers mystical powers.
The part
allows New York native Butler--the daughter of Lovin' Spoonful
drummer Joe Butler--to make use of her previous television
experience as a cop in the short-lived CBS series Brooklyn
South and as a heroine in NBC's equally short-lived SF series
Mann & Machine. As Pezzini, Butler has the chance to plumb
emotional depths and indulge in physical action at the same
time. Recently the actor took a moment to speak with Science
Fiction Weekly about Witchblade, which premieres on TNT Aug.
27 at 8 p.m. ET.
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Had you heard of Witchblade before you agreed to take the
role?
Butler:
Never in my life. And actually, the story goes, I met with
everybody, and then got the comic and I totally panicked.
I thought, "What the hell? Dog collars, well-endowedness,
metal." I had a panic attack ... and I literally called
my manager. ... [But] I just liked the script. ... After talking
with [director] Ralph [Hemecker], I got the idea ... he would
go in a different direction, and we were on the same page
about it. ... It had the potential to not be cool. And it's
so not-cheesy. I'm so happy. ... It's realistic and potent.
You care about her because we're playing it as if [she's saying,]
"What the hell is this thing?" She becomes [like]
an audience member. We both don't know what's going on. She
still doesn't know what's going on. It's not better or worse
[than the comic], but much more user-friendly.
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What can you tell us about your character, Sara Pezzini?
Butler:
People have asked me what it's like to be the star of Witchblade,
but the God's-honest truth is, I'm simply wearing the star
on my wrist. [But] what I loved about [Pezzini] and why I
wanted to play this part and why I got interested is her dual
nature, which we would all do well to admit to ourselves.
She's extremely vulnerable and extremely sad where we pick
up her life, but she's also extremely tough and can kick some
real royal ass. ... I'm very curious about the possibilities
[of the character]. They're endless: What she can do and where
she can go?
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Is there a good chance Witchblade will become a series?
Butler:
I'm just an actress. They try to give me as little information
as possible [laughs]. ... Originally, this was conceptualized
as a series; hence, the untied loose ends at the end of Sarah's
journey. ... We're game, and very excited for that to happen.
Given the ... push towards comic fantasy, magicness, with
the X-Men and everything, the market's ripe. I think for the
amount of money they had, regardless, they did a fantastic
job. ... Hopefully they will pick it up. ... I know I want
to see what happens to her.
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Are you prepared for another series?
Butler:
Yes, even if I did have a choice, which I don't. I too am
curious ... to see, not only the possibilities of what she
did in these two hours, but ... the possibilities are endless
with Sara Pezzini and this beautiful bracelet that dons her
right wrist.
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Are you aware of the fan interest in this project?
Butler:
Very much so. ... We just returned from [the International
Comic-Con] comic book convention. ... It was quite a relief
and actually an honor to have so many people--especially the
people at Top Cow, but also the fans--who have invited Sarah
into their homes to actually say, "When I heard you were
playing the part, I was very excited." That was the biggest
compliment I could get, ever. ... The fans haven't seen it,
but the people at Top Cow who created this entire story ...
are ecstatic. And thank God. That was a big relief. ... What
was really cool, we visited the comic book convention ...
with director Ralph Hemecker. I don't think I was as incognito
as I thought. My hair was all over my face like Cousin Itt.
I watched people watch the trailer, which is an acting study
in itself. But people walked away, and they wanted to see
more.
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So you were pleased with the reaction?
Butler:
Whether it goes to series or stands by itself, I'm proud of
what we did with it, not only from the standpoint of what
it could have been, but for itself. My cup runneth over with
relief and being jazzed.
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Do you think the movie captures the spirit of the comic?
Butler:
As I've been telling people, we're not acting in a [comic
book] cell. [A comic] can be aesthetically beautiful. But
we have to move. I think they captured it beautifully and
accurately.
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Witchblade has some "Matrix-y" stuff in it.
Butler:
Yes, that's part of its flavor. "Matrix-y" would
be another word in my mind for the sign of the technological
times, which is [the special effects that are] available to
us, which astounds me. ... I know when something's really
good when I'm involved in it. ... I've only seen it twice
myself, but I was agape and agog at the stuff that is available
to us now.
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Did you do your own stunts?
Butler:
I did a lot of them. I'm still paying the price for that [laughs].
A little massage here, and a little stretching there. ...
My mother ... enrolled me at the Joffrey and Alvin Ailey [dance
company schools] to keep me out of trouble, but it helps me
walk down the street. And for Mann & Machine, I learned
firearms training by fire. Now I'm quite confident with a
Glock nine-millimeter.
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Are you a fan of science fiction?
Butler:
I dig science fiction, though it was never really my thing.
My taste in music and entertainment is quite eclectic. I'm
open to it, but I was never a diehard fan. I have no idea
why it keeps following me. I'm extremely lucky, I guess; it's
a lucrative venue.
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