Behind the Scenes

EW: Did you expect to be on the show all season?
Cherry Jones
: It was funny. The week before the Emmys I was told they weren’t going to be able to use me in the back half. The arc had gone in another direction. Then two days before the Emmys they called and said `We are going to need you for the whole back half.’ When we started getting into it, [executive producer] Howard Gordon kept coming to me and giving me ideas that maybe my character was going to be taking a turn. Each script I got, I’d look at it and go, ‘Really? REALLY?’ Every day I’d go to work and say to myself, `It’s for the little children. It’s for the little children.’

You mean the little children she is saving by signing the peace agreement?
The peace she has become completely blindsided by. It doesn’t matter who tries to blow up New York or who is responsible for Hassan or whatever, we are going to make this work! Obviously she has lost her marbles.

At the beginning of the season, you sure spent a lot of time on the phone in the U.N.
A lot of phone calls! I thought that was going to be my fate and then at the very end, I lose my marbles. It was challenging but of course, its always more fun for an actor to trip over to the dark side. Example A: Gregory Itzin as Charles Logan. Guy Skinner, the handheld camera guy who does all of those insane close-ups, came up to me and said, `Is this kind of hard for you?’

Would you talk about it with Howard Gordon? Maybe argue that her actions were way out-of-character?
By the end of the season, these guys are just this side of brain dead. They have been trying so hard. They don’t have an arc. Most TV shows would have an arc and they would figure out how to nudge everybody in the direction they wanted to go in. These guys look at the performances, look at who they’ve got and try to follow things they think will be the most shocking. The fact that my character has suddenly taken this turn was never anticipated by anyone, but they have to figure out a way to justify it. They and I have managed to do that. I’ve got to hand it to them, they live right on the edge. They don’t take the easy road.

Are you satisfied by how it ends for you?
Given how they needed to use me, I am. They give me a personal if not a professional redemption.

Is there an opening for you to do the 24 movie?
I can’t imagine that would be the case.

Up until the last month or so, have fans come up to you and said they wished you were the president?
Yes, to which I would reply, `Oh no, you must be grateful and joyful that we’ve got the President we have.’ I would tell them to wash their mouths out with soap to utter such a thought.

What scene did you have the most fun doing this year?
I adore working with Bob Gunton (Ethan) and Greg. I was so happy to be with those two men, scene after scene. There was this one scene where I’ve got Ethan on one shoulder and Beelzebub on the other. It’s an actors dream. I didn’t have to do any of the lines, I just had to listen.
I thought the producers were setting up the possibility of a romance between Allison and Ethan!
I never thought that when we were doing it but my friends back home in Tennesee would say, `In the trailer you all were holding hands.’ He had a wedding band on! That’s the thing, even the actors don’t really know about their characters. I used to say to Bob, ‘Are you married, widowed, what’s going on?’ And he’d say `I don’t know!’ On 24, there is no past and no future, only the present. You are carving out the character as you go. It’s like sculpting. You don’t know from one script to the next where the chisel is going to fall. You have to go with it and make it work. Because the stakes are always so high, you can get away with so much more than something that isn’t so high drama-rama.

Source: Entertainment Weekly

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The 19th Scenemakers of 24 Season 8 with writer Patrick Harbinson and actress Mary Lynn Rajskub (Chloe O’Brian).

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The 18th Scenemakers of 24 Season 8 with director Michael Klick and actress Katee Sackhoff. “Director Michael Klick takes us behind the scenes of Dana’s death.”

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The 17th Scenemakers of 24 Season 8 with many crew members discussing how they keep continuity on 24 – Director Michael Klick, Script Supervisor Annie Melville, Director of Photography Rodney Charters, and Hair Department heads Audrey Futterman-Stern and Michael Marcellino.

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Kiefer talks about filming a special “goodbye” feature for the 24 Season 8 DVD and how he became emotional as the cameras were rolling.

Kiefer Sutherland admits he wasn’t ready when his time on “24″ stopped the week before last.

“We had months to prepare for that last day, and I’d thought of what I wanted to say,” Sutherland tells Zap2it. Now in his last Mondays of playing antiterrorist operative Jack Bauer in the FOX run that ends May 24, he says, “We’re usually running-and-gunning so fast, it’s like, ‘We’ve gotta move on!’ Since we knew it was almost the last scene, though, we were doing extra coverage of my feet, my elbows, my hands … we were making up shots, just to have the next one not be ‘the one.’

“I thought there was still one shot left. Just as I walked out on the stairs for it, they said, ‘Ladies and gentlemen, that is a show wrap.’ It kind of caught me off-guard, but I figured,’”Well, I’d better say something.’ It was going to be short, because there was nothing you could say to explain how much all of this meant.”

Sutherland thought he was doing well with that goodbye — which he says was filmed for the forthcoming final-season DVD set — until he “caught the eye of our key gaffer and our key camera operator, and my voice started to go. Then my lips started to go, and I had to look down at my own feet.

Update: Watch the 24 DVD special feature “Goodbye” here.

“We all went out afterward, and I think it was the shortest night I ever had on the show. We wrapped around 9, went across the street, then everyone was gone by 10.”

Currently reading the script for a “24″ feature-film spinoff, Sutherland will return to movies first with “Melancholia” for writer-director Lars von Trier. The role is “almost as 180 degrees a turn (from Jack) as you can go,” Sutherland vows. “My immediate instinct is, ‘You can’t pick up a gun and chase anybody for a while.’ Not unless you’re playing Jack Bauer in ’24,’ anyway. That would just be too odd … almost icky.”

Source: Zap2It

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The 16th Scenemakers of 24 Season 8 with actors Gregory Itzin (Charles Logan) and Cherry Jones (Allison Taylor). “Actors Cherry Jones and Gregory Itzin take us behind the scenes of Charles Logan’s return.”

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24 director Milan Cheylov and Mary Lynn Rajskub (Chloe O’Brian) discuss a pivotal scene that happened in episode 17. Good stuff.

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Howard Gordon talks about the end of 24 and says that he knew from the start it’d likely be the final year. He also gives a very nice tidbit at the end saying that “There will be some old cast members making an appearance in the movie”.

Video Link: CNN

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Behind the scenes photos of 24 Season 8 episode 17. Too bad FOX had to spoil this an hour before the episode aired – Annie Wersching did such a great job at keeping it under wraps for all these months only for FOX to blow it.

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The 15th Scenemakers of 24 Season 8 with director Milan Cheylov, actor Kiefer Sutherland and actress Annie Wersching. “Director Milan Cheylov gives us an inside look at Jack and Renee’s last moments.”

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Today was the final day of production on 24 after nine years – the end of an era. Very sad to watch this unfold *ahem* in real-time on Twitter with all of the cast and crew saying their emotional goodbyes. It really started to sink in that this was the end. To the cast and crew of 24, thanks for all the memories.

Annie Wersching (Renee Walker):

9 years ago, in 2001 I had just moved to LA and started watching 24 in my beatup studio apt in Hollywood and became a forever Fan. 9 yrs later, after 3 years/2 seasons 24 has again truly changed my life forever…here’s to the end of an era and to truly one of the most groundbreaking, original and kick ass shows of all time!!!!!!!!!!!! (Facebook)

Mary Lynn Rajskub (Chloe O’Brian):

Wow . These last few days of 24 are intense. I’ve never done anything like this before (tweet)

I’m going to miss all these damn people- 24 family… (tweet)

Jon Cassar (Former 24 Director):

After many years of shooting 24, all over L.A. and Washington DC, at the end of today the cameras will stop rolling, the cast and crew will leave the set never to return and 24 will be take its place on the shelf of television history. Thx to all the fans. U kept us in the game. And 2 the cast & crew of 24, you were the best group of people, period. Enjoy the last few hrs. (tweets: 1, 2, 3)

I’m sadder today about #24 coming to an end then when I left over a year ago. I guess there was comfort in knowing it was still being made (tweet)

Rodney Charters (Director of Photography):

Last shooting day and our last scene is 2424!!! (tweet)

Last scene with ML wow strange disjointed atmosphere on set (tweet)

list of visitors Gary Newman 2oth Chairman Joel Surnow Anil Kapoor Glen Morshower speeches choked back emotion lotta lovin Bye Kiefer (tweet)

Marci Michelle:

Sushi for lunch!Not a bad send off!by the way,the season finale is some of the best acted television I’ve seen!U will not be disappointed! (tweet)

Series wrap on Mary lynn…..ok that hurt…love u ML! (tweet)

It’s a bit weepy here and my sunglasses can only mask so much!
Hurry, someone tell me a joke!;) (tweet)

6:56pm and that’s a wrap folks~ (tweet)

the cool thing was, we film out of sequence, and the very last scene we shot was…2424……. (tweet)

Robin Charters (Rodney Charter’s son)

Kiefer seconds away from finishing his last scene on 24 ever… (tweet)

That’s it, it’s over, there is no more #24 (tweet)

Necar Zadegan (Dalia Hassan):

said goodbye to my beloved 24 set today. It’s a wrap… (tweet)

Photos

Rodney Charters also tweeted out a few photos:

- The Last Call Sheet of 24 the Series
- Guy waves good bye as we lv the stage soon to be returned to industrial space
- The lights go out on New York
- The cake

Also check out the “That’s a wrap on CTU” photo/post (thanks to Beau Bowden for sending that in).

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The 14th Scenemakers of 24 Season 8 with director Brad Turner, actors Katee Sackhoff (Dana Walsh) and Freddie Prinze Jr (Cole Ortiz), and stunt coordinator Jeff Cadiente.

“Director Brad Turner and crew take us behind the scenes of Dana’s not so quiet escape from CTU.”

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The 13th Scenemakers of 24 Season 8 (episode 15) with director Brad Turner, special FX coordinator Stan Blackwell, and Director of Photography Rodney Charters.

This one shows how they accomplished the great stunt of Tarin’s vehicle driving off a parking garage.

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Pretty interesting behind the scenes story here. Alex Berenson, reporter for New York Times and author of several novels was invited to consult on 24 Season 8 for a month after Howard Gordon liked his novel The Faithful Spy. He gives a look at what goes on in the writers room and just how hard it is.

We sit on couches and comfortable chairs, looking for answers. Season 8 will be set in New York. But why is Jack in New York? He’s a diplomat. No, he’s in a hospital, rehabilitating from his near-death experience in Season 7. No, he’s handling security for a rich guy.

We spitball possible plots. When the process is going well, it is like playing soccer with an invisible ball. One writer pushes an idea forward until another steps in. Someone says, “So the terrorists seize a school bus filled with rich kids. …” “except one kid hides a cellphone. …”

But all too soon someone finds a hole in the plot, or argues that it doesn’t give Jack enough to do, or that it’s too maudlin. We backtrack. Sometimes we succeed in addressing the complaint. Sometimes, after a few minutes of arguing, we fail. Howard steers us in a new direction. But the original argument will flare up a few minutes later, like a fire in a garbage dump.

Howard has a reputation as a very democratic lead writer. He likes to build consensus. The good news is that everyone gets a say. The bad news is … that everyone gets a say. The debate can seem exhausting and circular.

I wish I could say I contributed mightily to Season 8, but when I left a month later Howard and the guys were still plotting the first episode. Not one line had been written. In the end, they did find an arc for the season, and the reviews have been reasonably good. But when Howard told me a few months ago that he couldn’t imagine coming back for Season 9, I understood.

Check out the full article at NY Times.

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The 12th Scenemakers of 24 Season 8 with director Milan Cheylov, actor Anil Kapoor (Omar Hassan), and stunt coordinator Jeff Cadiente.

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