From Evil Foster Mom to Goddess Of Love - Debrianna Mansini
Debrianna
Mansini who along with her husband David Forlano long ago opted for the New
Mexico oasis called Santa Fe, over the bright lights of Los Angeles, it is safe
to say, is an actress who is very much in demand these days, a tribute to her
versatility and excellence performing in films, on television and on stage. She
has appeared in films with Academy Award winning actor Jeff Bridges and actress
Maggie Gyllenhaal (as Ann in Crazy Heart),
with Charlize Theron (as Paula in The
Burning Plain) and with Jennifer
Lopez / Martin Sheen / Antonio Banderas (Bordertown).
Most recently, Ms. Mansini has appeared on television in A&E’s modern western
Longmire (July 2012), AMC’s
Breaking Bad (July 2012) and ABC
Family’s The Lying Game as Clarice.
She just finished appearing (June 2012) in the stage version of
Other People’s Money presented in
Santa Fe and she is playing Aphrodite in a short film (being shot in July 2012).
In addition, Debrianna Mansini is producing, starring as Helen Sawyer and in
collaboration with British director and screenwriter Peter Kershaw, is writing
the screenplay for Cyphers a web
based series filled with suspense and that poses serious questions as to what is
happening with our food and water supply and who is controlling it.
Cyphers is preparing to enter its
second season.
“I auditioned for
The Lying Game in New Mexico and I was very happy that I got the part,
because it was a large part to be cast from here. I got the role and
subsequently the production moved to Austin, Texas. It was (to be filmed) here
and then they (the politicians) started fighting about the film incentives and
that did not get straightened out in enough time, so the production moved to
Texas. I thought for sure that they were writing my role out, because I didn’t
think that they would import me. We shot in (continuous) 103 degrees weather
there. Holy cow! I was quite pleased that they brought me back and they are
scheduled to do a second season. I don’t know if I will do a second season, but
it does not appear that I have disappeared (from the series and she laughs). I
definitely threaten her (the step-daughter) in my last scene with her. It is
possible that she could still be a troublemaker, so we will see.
The Lying Game
is based on a novel called The Lying Game,
which is about a set of twins who were separated, I believe at birth and who
were adopted into two very different families, one very wealthy and one very
poor. They find each other via the internet and they want to meet each other
then they exchange families. That is basically what the story is. The one who is
on the poor side, is into the foster system and I play her nasty foster mother,
which I got some flack about, because (people said) ‘Oh you are playing the
typical nasty foster mom and there’s a lot of good foster parents out there.’ I
was well, it is television and there are also nasty foster people and that’s the
one I play. There are nasty people in every walk of life period. There are bad
doctors, there are bad policemen, there are bad teachers and there are bad
everything. The point is this is fiction and that is what this is based on,
someone who’s bad,” says Ms. Mansini.
As we went to publication with this interview, the episode
of Breaking Bad in which Ms. Mansini
appears, was being kept under wraps, but she was able to talk more at length
about Longmire. “I play a woman whose
brother is the object of the investigation. It is a modern western. This is the
first season and it was shot in New Mexico.
Longmire came here after the
incentives were decided (the tax incentives have now been significantly reduced)
and we were all surprised that they decided to come.”
For those of you who may have
Longmire tucked away in your PVR,
Debrianna Mansini played the role of Pam Grey. The series stars Peter Weller as
the sheriff and he also directs Longmire.
Ms. Mansini refers to Peter Weller as an “amazing director, an actor’s
director.” Two other actors from New Mexico, Merritt Glover and Jackamoe
Buzzell, also appeared in this episode.
As for the play
Other People’s Money, “It just closed yesterday and it was great. It was
co-directed by Ron Bloomberg who was a big writer in Hollywood. He did
Three’s Company and
All In The Family. He co-directed it
here with another fellow. It is a play that he said he read every year, whether
he needed to or not. It is so interesting and it is prophetic in a way that we
aren’t real happy about. It’s about venture capitalism and in this case it is
about a New England company that is (experiencing) a hostile takeover. That is
the setting and it is about the relationships between the family members and the
owner of the company and his secretary who plays my mother.
I am an investment banker lawyer that they ask to represent them during
the hostile takeover. Larry the Liquidator is the main character and he is doing
the hostile takeover. It has two of the most powerful monologues about venture
capitalism ever written into theater. It is a Tony Award winning play. The thing
I love about this play is that it presents both sides of the argument and it
allows you to contemplate the other side. It is still relevant,” she says.
Continuing to talk about her busy summer, Ms. Mansini says,
“I am working on a short film called
Psyche Ascending and it is based on Greek mythology. I play Aphrodite. A
friend of mine wrote it and Peter Kershaw who directed the season finale of
Cyphers and with whom I am writing
season two, is also directing Psyche
Ascending. It is about the love story between Psyche and Eros. I play
Aphrodite, who is not that thrilled about Psyche (she laughs).
There are no togas (she laughs again). We haven’t started rehearsals or
anything, so I am not sure what the approach is going to be. Greek mythology
sort of transcends time in a way. We all still fall in love and we have bitchy
mother-in-laws. All that stuff still goes on believe it or not. (She quickly
adds) I love my mother-in-law. See there you go, just like in all things there
are good people and bad people. It is (being filmed) in Santa Fe and it will be
shot as a short film. I believe the purpose will be film festivals and stuff
like that. (Digressing she says)We were really lucky to get Peter to work on
Cyphers, because it was one of the
first projects that he did in the U.S. “
“We are on track to finish writing the end of season two at
the end of July and then we will begin fund raising. We hope to shoot it and
have the money and everything by probably January or somewhere in there.
Part of the funding is being raised from the new script and the concepts
that are in it. What we want to do is to present our ideas and the script to a
group of people, so we can raise the money that way. We will see if these people
are interested in contributing and to get this kind of a project off of the
ground. It’s a big deal. I am really committed to developing web television,
because I believe that’s where we are headed. It is all that I ever see coming
up, so and so is backing independent production. We know that’s where it is
going.
The storyline for
Cyphers is the same in terms of the corporations trying to gain control of
food and water. That is our theme and that will continue to be our theme. It may
end up looking different and feeling different, because there are different
writers, it is me and Peter. We have a different approach to writing then the
previous writers had. The themes that we are dealing with will definitely be the
same in terms of the starting point. It is similar to what I was explaining to
you about Other People’s Money, the
framework and the backdrop was about the takeover, but it is always about the
relationships and the characters and that is the way that I see
Cyphers too.
The backdrop is the corporate takeover of food and water, but the story
is about the characters and the personal relationships. That’s what garners you
an audience and it is what people find interesting. What do those situations do
to people and how do they behave in ways that we either like or don’t like. You
care about the characters and what is happening to them and what choices do they
make when they are under the gun in those kinds of situations. That is really
the interesting part. It is who we are as human beings. We all have the same DNA
and we all have the same makeup. It
is what choices that life presents us with and how we handle them that make an
interesting story. Taking over a business, bad parents, those kinds of issues,
all of those things happen and they have happened since the beginning of time.
Jesus throwing over the tables of the money changers, HELLO, it goes all
the way back as far as we can think. Capitalism and greed and all of those basic
things we all deal with, the seven basic sins are always there. It is just how
we deal with them that make life interesting,” she says.
Perhaps, it is fitting that an actress of Italian descent
and one who is known for her great recipes, is working on her own project called
The Meatball Chronicles. “I call it a
coming of age story through food. It’s a one woman show that I have been working
on and off on for ten years. I was
more concentrated in the last year, as I worked closely with Tanya Taylor
Rubinstein. She is well known for teaching her gift of solo performance.
She has been on Oprah. She
started her journey doing what is called the cancer monologue. She takes people
who are going through cancer and talks about what is happening to them in a
performance way and then they end up doing a ten minute show. Her show is
powerful and it teaches people how to take their life and turn it into theater.
I had always wanted to work with her on this piece and I was fortunate enough to
be able to do that all of last year. Now I am in my rewrite stage. It is a high
concept performance piece. It is not just going to be me talking, because I will
be cooking. I am developing the concept of how to present it and now I am just
looking for the right director. I
hope to do the first presentation of it in November.”
You can visit the Cyphers website here.
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