TV Soap Magazine, 26th December 2007
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Thanks Marcia!
By Michael Fairman
Mary Beth Evans and Stephen Nichols have been friends for over two decades and they say the key is brutal honesty.
TV Soap: Aside from working together for so long, the
two of you have become close friends away from DAYS.
What bonded you initially?
MBE: We were saying the other day, we've been hanging
out with each other for 22yrs. That's crazy! I don't
even think we realize how much we mean to each other.
We're good friends. He has a big heart. He makes me
laugh like crazy and he doesn't mean to. It's fun to
hook up with him when I come to work. Even when we
were on GH together it wasn't the same. Patch and
Kayla just jelled so nicely together.
SN: When Mary Beth is not there, and I am working by
myself or with other people, I am a completely
different person. I am so sad and lonely in my little
dressing room. When she's there, she comes in and
throws her stuff on my chair, She never goes to her
room until she has to get dressed.
TVS: You're like little kids!
SN: Yeah, we are like little buddies. When I am at
work with her I am in heaven, and when she's not
there, I miss her badly. I really do!
TVS: What's the key to your enduring friendship?
SN: We are totally honest with each other.
MBE: We are so honest with each other that it hurts,
and it has hurt before.
SN: We can hurt each other.
MBE: We do come around to each other with an apology,
now and then.
SN: And we are not afraid to fail with each other. We
are never in competition with each other. To me, Mary
Beth is like a family member. I love her that much and
I would give her anything. I see in other people, when
they do compete in scenes, instead of being partners
in collaboration.
TVS: Patch and Kayla are currently tied up in an
emotional storyline involving the abandoned baby boy
pocket. Tell us your thoughts on that:
MBE: I think for me, right off the bat, I was attached
to the baby, and Stephen came along, right Stephen? It
was sweet, and the characters of Patch & Kayla are
both very loving people, so that part was easy for the
baby, but now the baby keeps getting sick. The fingers
are pointed at us, and he is finally taken away from
us to a foster family. Seeing this lovely foster
family, we all have to make a decision about what we
have to do.
TVS: How has it been working with the twin baby girls
who play Pocket?
SN: I absolutely love it. I am a baby hound. I love
babies.
MBE: His character at first was reluctant, but not
Stephen. He's a total Papa!
TVS: Has it been implied that the reason Kayla wants a
foster child is that she can no longer bear children?
MBE: That had never been said. I think she's back with
the man she loves, and they missed that whole part of
their relationship. Kayla has been yearning for that.
Patch was worried he was not a good father. Then, with
the Pocket situation, his being an abandoned baby
fulfilled all her needs. Kayla did not have to
convince Patch that she wanted a baby because this
baby just showed up.
TVS: Patch & Kayla already have a grown daughter,
Stephanie, previously played by Shayna Rose. How is
Shelley Henning doing in the role?
SN: She has been great and she's working really hard.
She's open to collaboration on set and making scenes
better than they are. All Mary Bath and I want are
actors who do their work and try to make it better.
They should be willing to get down in the trenches and
work with us, because that is how we like to do it.
TVS: Do the younger actors on the show ask you both
for advice?
SN: They do. I never offer, but I will, if they ask.
MBE: We have given the actresses who have played our
daughters tips on some history and insight to the
characters. We really are happy to have Shelley.
Stephen and I were both in on the audition. We wanted
to have a daughter who is heartfelt, like we are, and
that we would all work well together.
TVS: Your characters are not central to the
Brady-DiMera vendatta storyline. How does that sit
with you?
SN: I think it's always better for an actor, and a
character on the show, to be rooted in some history.
That brought me back into into the fold, history-wise,
because Patch has been out for years and it was really
good for me. I just think too much DiMera is too much!
The problem that has been evident on the show is that
story gets thrown in one direction only, and anybody
who is not involved in that particular thing gets
sidelined. I really believed what worked in the '80s
was the 3 or 4 supercouples that were on air at the
same time, all the time. That's why the show worked.
All the eggs in one basket does not work on Days.
TVS: Did the veteran actors feel frustrated at not
being a big part of the vendetta storyline?
MBE: For me, I don't get too wrapped up in all of it.
I had a few nice scenes were I stand up to Stefano and
I slapped him; that was fun. Working with Joe Mascolo
is always fun, but you know, I feel like I have a lot
of life going on. I can't worry too much about it.
TVS: How have things changed at Days since Ed Scott
took over as executive producer?
MBE: He flipped the whole thing around. People will
come up and give you direction and we did not have
that before.
SN: Now, it's people who really know what they are
looking at. When they give a note it makes sense, and
it's relevant to what is going on.
MBE: I was so excited to get a note!
SN: Generally, notes help, and they listen to us. We
give each other notes, and that's the way it should be
done, and everyone has a mutual respect for one
another. We didn't have that before with the previous
regime, there was none of that. People who had been
around for years trusted us, because we have been
around for years, but there was no one you could
really go to and say, "What did you think about that?"
or, if you were unsure, "I think I could do that take
again, and what did you see?" Before, you could not do
that, you were totally on your own. It's really good
to be self-reliant as an actor, because you need to
be, but there are times when you want to turn and say,
"Hey Ed! What do you think man? Can we put this colour
in?" and he gets it. And that's what's happening now.
MBE: It's nice having someone in charge. I like that a
lot. I think the whole atmosphere is better.
SN: The morale is way better now, that's with
everybody. When the actors are happy, the crew is
happy and vice versa. We just feed off each other. We
are joking around and working long hours, but nobody
cares, because we are just happier doing the job.
--
TVS: Do you have any projects on the go outside of
Days?
SN: Yeah, I am working on a thing with the Pacific
Resident Theatre, with three one-acts my wife wrote. I
think I am going to act in one of them. Then I'll be
raising money for my next flim project.
MBE: I don't have time to do theatre. I just took my
pies to QVC shopping network last Sunday here in the
US and sold 3000 pies in 7 minutes.
TVS: How did you get 3000 pies prepared?
MBE: You have to have them before you go because you
have to ship them within 24 hours. That was total
insanity and they want me to come back. From now
through Christmas it's going to be back and to
Philadelphia (QVC headquarters) and the pie insanity.
I kind of think, "What the heck am I doing?".
TVS: A recent side project for you was judging reality
TV contest, I Wanna Be A Soap Star. How was that
experience?
MBE: I was terrified to do it. I hate those vote-off
reality shows, but it wasn't that bad and the whole
production company loved Hogan Sheffer, (talent
manager) Michael Bruno and I together. It was funny.
You would have to give them these notes and make the
contestants think they are going to be voted off. I
honestly did not know what I had to say. I had
half-sentenced answers. I had so much to say, I didn't
think I had so many opinions, but then you become
passionate about it.
End
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