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[The Flash races back on the air, plus Allison Tolman on Emergence and her Stephen King fandom](
Oct 08, 2019 12:00 AM
Grant Gustin, Allison TolmanPhoto: Jack Rowand (The CW), Giovanni Rufino (ABC)
Hereâs whatâs happening in the world of television for Tuesday, October 8. All times are Eastern.Â
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Top pick
The Flash (The CW, 8 p.m., sixth season premiere): Remember when The Flash was the fun one? To be fair to Barry and company, the Arrowverse as a whole seems to be gearing up for [Crisis On Infinite Earths]( which seems likely to bring a lot of death with it, so you can hardly blame the folks at S.T.A.R. Labs from feeling a little doom-ish, nor fault this trailer for conveying that mood.
And since Cisco is still here and a new Harrison Wells is arriving, thereâs the promise of at least some levity. There is also the promise of Scott Von Doviakâs recap, always a good thing to have. And last but not least, there is the promise of the Crisis itself, which may not begin until December, but which promises loads of fun stunt casting and [Brandon Routh in both Legends Of Tomorrow and Superman mode]( so we canât really complain.
Regular coverage
[This Is Us]( (NBC, 9 p.m.)
Wild card
Emergence (ABC, 10p.m.): We continue to be intrigued by this ABC drama, which blends elements of family dramas, sci-fi shows, thrillers, and more into its own particular thing. Thatâs all very well and good, but if weâre honest, what weâre most excited about is the castâand its lead in particular.
We spoke with Allison Tolman during the 2019 Television Critics Association summer press tour about what drew her to the show, why she loves twist endings, and the power of Jessica Fletcher.
The A.V. Club: So weâre really excited about this showâ
Allison Tolman: Oh, good! So am I. It is exactly the type of show that I watch. A little bit of a thriller, a little bit of a lot of things.
AVC: Well, letâs talk about that then. What other shows, or books, or movies in this realm do you really love?
AT: Well, in terms of the books I read, I really like a mystery. I feel like I came by sci-fi kind of lateâI feel like the Battlestar Galactica reboot was my first time saying, âOh, I think Iâm a sci-fi girl, I think I like sci-fi, I didnât know!â But Iâve liked horror and Iâve liked thrillers since forever. I think weâre really having success in serializing [those genres], which is incredible. When they first started doing like horror TV shows it was like, âHow is that going to work?â And now there are really successful examples of that.
AVC: And Emergence is an example of that?
AT: I think that for us, the key is that we donât have a super long season, and we have a set season, so we have 13 episodes [in the first season], and thatâs that. You canât build a mystery and then have the network say, âSo weâre going to order nine more episodes,â because the story falls apart if you have to stretch things out that long. I forgot your original question!
AVC: It was about what thrillers and mysteries and things you love.
AT: Yeah, so some great examples. Thereâs this writer, I love her books. Her name is Tana French. She writes a lot of spooky investigative stories, murder mysteries with a spooky bent on them. I just love her. And I love twist endings, anything with a twist. Iâve been an M. Night fan forever. Iâm a die-hard fan. Even his bad ones, Iâm like, âAbsolutely. Go for it.â I just love the twist. I think an ending that seems surprising and inevitable at the same time is such an elusive thing to find, and when you find a good one as a viewer or a reader, itâsâthereâs no feeling like that,.
AVC: So does that mean we should expect some cool Emergence twists?
AT: There are so many twists, and the twists that I thought would be season-long twists areâweâre already reading scripts about those. So itâs going a lot faster than I thought that it was going to, and faster than I think a lot of shows in genre go. Itâs unfolding really quickly. The world is this little town, and then this thing happens and the world gets a little bit bigger, then this thing happens and itâs a little bit bigger. Then by the end of the season, weâre like, âWhoa! This goes all the way to the top.â Weâre doing a really good job of sort of reframing things as the episodes progress.
AVC: It feels very Stephen King in that wayâcharacter driven, a real sense of place, it feels small and like it should be sleepy, but it just keeps getting weirder.
AT: I hadnât thought of it that way, but youâre so right. And thatâs such a compliment. I think heâs, like, the greatest storyteller of our age. Weâve talked a lot about Amblin movies, that kind of cozy family thing, like Close Encounters. A sort of cozy sort of center to an insane story. The way that our show is built is that itâs this thriller, this sci-fi thriller, with a family at the center of it. And my favorite type of thriller is a thriller about ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances. I think itâs the most fun to watch. I love it all, but thatâs my favorite.
AVC: What drives Jo throughout this season?
AT: I think Jo takes her duties as an officer of the law really seriously. I think that she believes in her mission to protect and serve her town and people who live in it. And that is really an interesting twist, because she takes in this child who needs protection and needs someone to help her, and as the season starts to unfold and this kid becomes more and more mysterious and more and more dangerous, the question becomes, âCan she protect this kid and protect her town at the same time?â
Jo is driven by a sense of decency and duty, and sheâs also a parent. Sheâs a mother herself. Thereâs a part of her thatâs thinks, âThis kid needs somebody, and Iâm the only somebody around,â you know?
AVC: One thing thatâs so compelling about your performance is it feels like she shuts doors to focus on one thing, but you can tell that the doors are still there.
AT: I think that she has to be able to do that, because sheâs a highly functioning, very capable woman. And I think the only way to play a character who is able to handle herself, whatever comes her way, in these extreme situations, is to know that sheâs compartmentalizing certain parts of her life. I think thatâs how Jo operates. She puts some blinders on and focuses on the thing thatâs right in front of her, and thatâs how sheâs able to do what she does. In [Fargo]( I played a police officer who was sort of learning how to investigate, and learning how to solve a mystery throughout the series, and kind of getting her confidence up. The interesting thing about Jo is that sheâs a police officer who has this wealth of investigative skills, and has all of these capabilities, and all of this promise thatâs never been tested. Sheâs never needed to use it. And then all of a sudden sheâs dropped into the situation where itâs like, âWell, can you play in the big leagues? Can you really, really operate on another level?â And sheâs like, âYeah man, I guess so, if you need me to.â I love her. I just am a big fan.
AVC: Whoâs your favorite TV detective of all time?
AT: Jessica Fletcher, 100 percent. I grew up watching that show with my family. We didnât watch TV separately. We watched TV together. So everything we watched was a family show, and we watched that shit together. I was always like, âSheâs bad luck! Everyone dies around her!â I just love Angela Lansbury. Sheâs amazing.
AVC: What do you think it is about you that screams âcopâ?
AT: I know, right? And before I played cops, I played nurses a lot. I donât know, because in real life Iâm not trustworthy at all. I will steal from you so fast!
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