Hey, this is director Jenny Curtis. You'll hear me say this in the coming clip. But the character of Chelsea is one of my favorites in the entire series, and she is played beautifully by Julia Henning. Julia is a friend of ours. So when she joined Chris Porter and I to talk about the role, we had a really candid conversation about who Chelsea is and the joys and challenges of recording this character.
You guys kind of took the words out of my mouth in terms of Chelsea being the personification of the thing that's left behind. We know Chelsea to be Jamal's best friend. They're like brother and sister. They were neighbors. She was his greatest cheerleader is in so many ways. But in my mind it was like she's the humanity in the show that like, carries across gravity. So you think about your isolated in space, you're isolated in yourself.
I mean, if solo is so much about being separated, but the unity of hope, of grace, of the will to live, the will to survive, I feel like Chelsea represents what we're surviving for, what we're living for. I loved that she kind of had, you know, this energy to her. We're hearing so much of the crew in space kind of panicking and struggling. And I feel like she's going through these moments of tender celebration and these
moments of tender reflection. And she's so innocent and beautifully naive to the whole situation of what Jamal going into space is. And for me, that's just such a beautiful representation of. You know, love like people are going through crazy things, and yet we just think of them as being our best friend. You know how you're in space. But like she says, she's like, What up, J? You know, she talks to him as if there's no distance or
proximity between them. So for me, Chelsea was so much the essence of what we're fighting for and who we are at our core. And I actually I love that in the show, you guys talk about so much of the Russian doll, and I felt like Chelsea in a lot of ways was the core of the Russian doll. She's, you know, part of what they keep peeling back.
Oh, I love that. I love it.
Also, I want to mention that the what up, Jay was 100% Julia country.
Oh, yeah.
We didn't say no. No, you're.
Right. You did. You forgot about.
I've said this before. I'll say it again. That's the beauty of working with actors, because you guys come in with personalities that we couldn't have anticipated and surprises. And I remember moments we were in the booth and we're finding like where the humor is and where the gravity is. And I remember one of my favorite things is the
joke of Schrodinger's box. And Chelsea doesn't know what Schrodinger's no, And so Julia mispronounced it and we were like, Huh, that's funny, but maybe say it right once just so we have it. And they were like, How? How do I pretend.
Like this is real time, real life? I have no idea what that says.
But it like, became this really wonderfully rich moment because it felt so authentic.
Yeah, I know there's some quantum component that you mentioned, so I don't get this joke, but here goes. Schrödinger's cat walks into a bar. That's it. That's the setup by J. O. I do remember that moment to actually my laugh in the take that you guys kept was true was honest because I just remember we got it. I finally said it right and then I laughed because I was like, I don't know. I had no idea what this means.
Just to go back into the editing in the first monologue in episode four, you go, Here I am sending you this message. Woo! The woo is actually not from that chunk. I think we had like said, okay, we got it. And you went, Woo! And that was like somewhere else. And I was like, I love that. That's got to go.
I was going to say, I don't remember reading there and I was listening to it again yesterday and I was like, okay, I was really excited for it. I think really you can hear it. You can feel it. You leave Earth orbit the day you start getting these messages. So here I am sending you this message. I mean, I'm sure that will come up again. But I in talking about recording, nothing will ever be the story of me getting over the question mark line. There is one line.
I don't remember what it is, but Dear Jenny had to stop me so many times and literally go, Julia. This is a statement with a period and you keep making this a question. And I was like, okay, I got it. So I would do it. Question Mark. And I was like, okay, mirror to me, Jenny, tell me,
what am I doing wrong about this line? And of course, as an actor, you can't help but like suddenly become really conscious of that because when somebody gives you a very specific thing and you're like, I got to get it right and nothing will ever be me hearing you say it. I mirrored it back. And then as soon as you press record couldn't get out of it, it was like, I'm sorry, this is going to be a question from here on out.
It's also the director actor thing of like finding the performance and finding who the character is. And I think you as Julia, are such a grounded person. You're like the most grounded person I know. It gives me chills just thinking about with Chelsea. Like you said, she's light hearted, and I think that encourages the little bit of thinking like this.
Yeah, exactly. And I think.
That's what we kept trying to get out of. But we didn't end up in question. We did end up.
You got it. Because you literally I remember you, like, conducted me with your finger. You were like, go up now. Go down with the statement. Go down with the statement. And I was like, And it's done, done. I remember when we had it and I was like, Can we please provide? We're doing that right now. Those are my favorite moments, though.
That was also part of like me as a director, but not a learning process for me in this. But I did that with a lot of our actors where there would be like a line or a word. Sometimes it was just like the word yes. And I swear to God we did it 20 times and everybody in the booth, like, not in the booth because they're on Zoom, but everyone be like, okay, Jenny, you have 20 takes of. Yes, like move on.
That actually came up, though. I was thinking about that. That was actually a really beautiful moment that I kept between you and I during that, because you even said, you know, I'm an actor and I'm directing and we're friends. I'm hearing this line in this monologue in my head and how I would say it. And so that's coming through a little bit in how I'm directing you. And I remember separating in that moment as an actor, you know, some people with I think a thicker ego might go, okay,
this is my time. I'm the actor. But it actually was really impactful to me. A that admittance and that humility because I was able to go I want to hit what she's hearing in her head as a director and as an actor because the resonance of the emotion underneath both of our performance, if we can amalgamate those two tones, then it's going to come out and it's
going to hit so many more listeners. And I just remember as an actor going, I understand that the actors director, I understand the director's actor, those two roles coming together. And I don't know, it just taught me a lot in that moment. I was really grateful that you shared that with me because it allowed me to understand your process. And I think open up as an actor a little bit more.
I love you so much of you, but it is. And I've had this conversation with John Bangs to working with friends who you can really just be with. Yeah. Has been a huge learning tool for me because there is that graciousness there of let's stumble through this together. And I really love that when I really said that to you was when we were doing the second monologue from ten, which when I say these are two of my favorite monologues Chris has written, the second one is just gut wrenching.
I mean, it was, Yeah. Oh my God. It was an honour.
Best with it. Thank you, guys. Like I have said before, I was like, I was almost upset that I was Ali because I would have just seen.
So I, like.
Perform.
That monologue. I feel that.
I think that's why I did have to say to you, I'm aware of this thing that I have so totally thank you for working through it with me. But also when we were trying to get through it and we were going through the various takes and I was probably asking for too many takes and whatever, I think we were doing the thing. Everyone's like, okay, you got it, you got it, you got it. And I was like, okay, I want to do it one more time. And I
gave you this direction. Julia I just want you to think about how much art means to you.
So that night you scrawled on a series of 15 napkins. Hiroto showed them to me a list of every book. Every movie, every show, every song. Every play and free musical. Anything that had ever given me joy. Anything that you knew. I loved any piece of creativity you ever saw me digest and comment on. And you told Hiroto that if he read every book, watched every movie, listened to every piece of music on that list, that he would know who I was. That he would know how to love me. Oh,
my God. I remember.
That. That's like the acting in the show is phenomenal, but I did a lot of micro cutting. I really crafted some things in this show. That's just a take, man. Like you went through.
You're when it starts in the monologue, too, because the beginning, again, was kind of that energy where we were like, This is foreign to me a little bit, especially when coming out of the pandemic. I mean, and that being the first recording, that energy, accessing that levity in myself was an exercise with you guys that I felt safe to do. But the minute I remember that, the minute you said that you hear it, I'm choked out from the beginning.
And it's like your lines, Chris, when you're like the movies, the plays and the musicals. When I hit musicals, it was like my favorite musical is Phantom of the Opera and Cats. And I do not I do not apologize for it. So deal with it. You know what I mean? Like, I know the difference. But I just remember thinking that and especially at that time, the relationship I was going through at that moment, those were the things that we
bonded over. So that art became like, Oh my God, the people who know me, it's in my voice now. Who the people who know me know where art lives in me. And I don't actually share that part of myself with a lot of people. And so when you said that, I just remember being like, We're not going to go any deeper than this. You opened up my heart and it was perfect. Oh, thank you so much for that. What a gift to be reminded now. Thank you.
Thank you both. Thank you, everyone. I guess we would just say that I love us.
Julia has so much more to say about Chelsea, and it's all available for you to listen. To hear the entire conversation in the solar panel on our Apple Podcasts Premium channel.