Post by nhmystix on Nov 10, 2005 21:22:11 GMT -6
Mary Hart's Secrets From the 'CSI' Set
November 10, 2005
MARY HART is on the set of "CSI" as WILLIAM PETERSEN and MARG HELGENBERGER get ready to shoot a two-part episode of the hit CBS procedural drama, beginning tonight at 9 p.m.
"We don't know who the shooter is and two of our main cast members are suspects," Marg tells Mary. "It was a big shootout with bullets flying everywhere, shooters everywhere and cops everywhere. A lot of science is required to figure it out, find the suspects and find the bullets."
In "A Bullet Runs Through It," the entire forensic team is on the case to sift through the massive amount of evidence from a shootout with drug dealers. They are charged with figuring out who was responsible for the death of a member of the Las Vegas P.D. And it is one of the few times they are shooting in daylight!
"It is nice because you get to get up early and go home early," Bill comments. "It does make it easier in a way, because we don't have to hang lights all over the neighborhood, which is what we do mostly when we work nights."
The intricacies of storylines like this one are what keep "CSI" at the top of the ratings heap, and it is a fact that the actors appreciate.
"It is great," Bill admits. "You just thank the fans. They tune in. We try and do our best and we appreciate the fact that they watch. We will never understand why so many people watch, but I don't think that is our job. Our job is to just do what we do and they seem to embrace it. It is a really nice relationship. We go around the country when we're off and everybody's pretty positive. It is a nice reaction."
That said, will there be more personal stories on the show this year? Perhaps, a little romance?
"They keep hinting at it," Marg points out. "They keep taunting the viewers with it. I am up for it because it would be something new and intimate and those kinds of scenes are different to play because they involve nuance and history and other things we as actors don't get to play on this show. We're cerebral and tough and that is the antithesis when you start having feelings for another person. You are vulnerable and you are giddy."
For more of Mary Hart's visit to the "CSI" set, tune in to tonight's ET.
et.tv.yahoo.com/tv/13039/
November 10, 2005
MARY HART is on the set of "CSI" as WILLIAM PETERSEN and MARG HELGENBERGER get ready to shoot a two-part episode of the hit CBS procedural drama, beginning tonight at 9 p.m.
"We don't know who the shooter is and two of our main cast members are suspects," Marg tells Mary. "It was a big shootout with bullets flying everywhere, shooters everywhere and cops everywhere. A lot of science is required to figure it out, find the suspects and find the bullets."
In "A Bullet Runs Through It," the entire forensic team is on the case to sift through the massive amount of evidence from a shootout with drug dealers. They are charged with figuring out who was responsible for the death of a member of the Las Vegas P.D. And it is one of the few times they are shooting in daylight!
"It is nice because you get to get up early and go home early," Bill comments. "It does make it easier in a way, because we don't have to hang lights all over the neighborhood, which is what we do mostly when we work nights."
The intricacies of storylines like this one are what keep "CSI" at the top of the ratings heap, and it is a fact that the actors appreciate.
"It is great," Bill admits. "You just thank the fans. They tune in. We try and do our best and we appreciate the fact that they watch. We will never understand why so many people watch, but I don't think that is our job. Our job is to just do what we do and they seem to embrace it. It is a really nice relationship. We go around the country when we're off and everybody's pretty positive. It is a nice reaction."
That said, will there be more personal stories on the show this year? Perhaps, a little romance?
"They keep hinting at it," Marg points out. "They keep taunting the viewers with it. I am up for it because it would be something new and intimate and those kinds of scenes are different to play because they involve nuance and history and other things we as actors don't get to play on this show. We're cerebral and tough and that is the antithesis when you start having feelings for another person. You are vulnerable and you are giddy."
For more of Mary Hart's visit to the "CSI" set, tune in to tonight's ET.
et.tv.yahoo.com/tv/13039/