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[Sonya Cassidy on Lizâs journey through Lodge 49](
Sep 16, 2019 12:00 AM
Sonya CassidyPhoto: Jackson Lee Davis (AMC)
Hereâs whatâs happening in the world of television for Monday, September 16. All times are Eastern.
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Top pick
[Lodge 49]( (AMC, 10:01 p.m.): Free idea for the Lodge 49 team: Get âWhen youâre lost, the thing to do is... get more lostâ printed on T-shirts, because thatâs a big part of this show in a nutshell.
And is anyone more lost than Liz Dudleyâexcepting, perhaps, her twin brother?
We spoke with the terrific Sonya Cassidy about her experience playing Liz, her thoughts on the machinations of fate, and the L.A. flip-flop sound.
The A.V. Club: Do you personally believe in destiny?
Sonya Cassidy: As in, fate?
AVC: Yes.
SC: I myself, I donât. I think thereâs the bigger question of whether or not we as human beings truly have free will. But removing that from the equation, I know I take responsibility for my actions, and what happens in my life that I happen to have control over. As for those things that happen happily by chance, or unhappily, Iâm of the opinion that this is just how the world, my world, my time in this universe, works. Iâm not denying there are things that can happen that seem kind of uncanny. The timing of them can make it seem that there is some sort of destiny involved. But no, I would say Iâm not a believer in fate.
AVC: What about Liz? Does she believe in any kind of fate, or destiny, or some kind of cosmic pull?
SC: I would say a definite no to that. I think maybe she believes the opposite of that. Sheâs very practical. She thinks, âThese are the cards Iâve been dealt in life, and if itâs shitty, so be it. Letâs get on with it. And if itâs good, then great, enjoy it while itâs there.â
I think the idea of fate in the show is an interesting one, and perhaps our show has an element of that for our characters. But whatâs nice is, I think you can choose to believe in that or not as a viewer. We are seeing things happen in Lizâs life in part because sheâs having to dig kind of deep inside herself this season, to delve a little bit more into her past, her Dudley legacy, in order to figure out quite what her future holds. So with that in mind, there are things that happen that I think catch her off guard, and help her on that journey of discovering where she should be headed. Lizâs lack of belief in faith is tested a little, but Liz being Liz, she will continue to analyze it and question it and deny it until [sheâs], you know, thrown in the towel.
AVC: What role does pain, either physical or emotional, play in Lizâs life?
SC: Thereâs pain of her dad dying very suddenly and the grief that has come from that. And sheâs been reeling from the realization that she had all that debt. All that was in my head when I was writing her backstory. I felt that the pain of that was immediate and all-consuming, but as a kind of coping mechanism, and to protect Dud and herself, she very quickly went into [in a brisk, toneless voice]: âOkay. Get a job. Pay off the debt. This is your life now. Get on with it.â So sheâs not one to wallow. If sheâs feeling something, I think she is someone who either doesnât deal with it, very quickly puts it in a box, and packs it away, or if she is dealing with it, itâs a very private thing for her.
This year, itâs a question of whatâs going to be satisfying to see? That pain, which has doubled in a sense, sort of laying like a sediment in her subconscious, has been whipped up. She no longer has her debt. Dud, heâs got his hospital bills, but heâs alive and as happy as ever, and going down his own avenue with the Lodge and trying to save the Lodge. So weâre seeing Liz actually have time to herself, and thatâs both exciting and unnerving for her. Sheâs no longer distracted by her debt. It was a tremendous burden, but it had been a very useful excuse to not look at her life and look back on things that have happened in terms of her relationship with her dad and her relationship with her mom. That is a really interesting avenue that weâre exploring this year. But to give you a short answer: I think sheâs a very rip-the-plaster-off person. If itâs going to cause her any more pain, she would deal with it very privately.
AVC: Very nerdy actor question: Liz moves differently than anyone else on the show. How did you find that in her?
SC: Iâm a very physical actor. At drama school, you do a lot of physical work. Itâs half of the characterâthe mind and the body. Liz is someone who is mentally and physically very strong, but I donât think she has particularly a good core. I donât think sheâs really exercised in a long time. She doesnât eat well. She doesnât look after herself. I think what we see with her physically, and also what Carol, our brilliant costume designer, has done, is painted Liz as someone who, although she has strength and a certain type of confidence, she for the last year has not really wanted to be seen. Sheâs kind of minimized herself. Her life has been getting up, putting on makeup, going to work, wearing an outfit. And then when sheâs not there, itâs very much about covering her body, slouching on the sofa, just not really taking care of herself. So delving into that kind of crushed coreâwhich is quite a nice symbol as well for essentially the last year of her life and how trodden down sheâs beenâfelt like the right way to go for her.
AVC: So sheâs got strength, but itâs collapsed?
SC: Yes. And she drags her feet a lot. When Wyatt [Russell] and I would walk to set together, you could hear us coming. We have that very L.A. flip-flop sound, but Dudleyâs walk has a bit more bounce in it. Liz is quite heavy in the foot. She has been dragging her feet through life a bit over the last year or so. And whatâs interesting about season two is that we are seeing her try to pick them up a little more. See what that feels like, and see where her feet take her.
Regular coverage
[The Terror: Infamy]( (AMC, 9 p.m.)
[The Deuce]( (HBO, 9 p.m.)
Wild card
So You Think You Can Dance (FOX, 7:10 p.m., 16th-season finale): Not even the presence of former Bachelorette Hannah B. and the immortal James Van Der Beek can lure us to this season of Dancing With The Stars, so letâs spend some time with the fine people of SYTYCD.
Theyâre all our favorite dancers. We cannot pick just one.
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