AE:
What's up next for you?
JL: I have those episodes of The L Word
coming out, I have an episode of Veronica Mars, and
I’m playing a medical examiner on a few episodes of the
upcoming show Blind Justice, that premieres around
mid-season.
AE:
So have you been on every television show ever?
JL: (laughing) Yeah, I’ve been on a lot
of them. I’ve hit all genres, I think.
AE:
There are actors who play extras on a lot of shows, like Girlfriend
#1 or the Sick Patient, but you actually have fairly prominent
roles on these shows…
JL: Yeah, and I think it’s getting to
the point where if I don’t get my own show, I might not
be able to continue this.
AE:
Because you’re too familiar?
JL: (Laughing) Exactly.
AE:
Do you prefer movies over TV?
JL: Not really. I like them both, and I like
theater. They’re all different, and they require different
kinds of skills, and it’s always fun to exercise those
muscles.
AE:
So if you had to do just one…
JL: Oh, I’d be fine doing just one, too.
I’ve never really planned my career. I don’t really
have a strategy, I’ve kind of just gone with the flow,
and it’s been great. I’ve played a great variety
of parts—all sorts of people in all sorts of shows. I
couldn’t have designed it better.
AE:
How did you like your role on the first season of Arrested
Development?
JL: I loved it! Jeffrey [Tambor] is so great,
and I had such a great time. I am so proud of that, and grateful
that I got it. It was a great role, and a joy to play every
day. Both directors were fantastic, and I would love to do that
show again.
AE:
You tend to do a lot of comedy. Do you prefer that over drama?
JL: I do. But I usually get funny stuff, because
of my roles in the Chrisopher Guest movies [A Mighty Wind
and Best in Show]. But I think if you can do comedy,
you can do anything, because you can pick up the ironies in
life better. It takes a little more investigation into your
own heart with comedy; I think you can get away with a lot more
in drama. I think you’ll find that a good actor usually
does comedy really well. That's
why I enjoy I playing character roles.
AE:
Are you okay with always playing supporting roles? You don’t
want to be the next Julia Roberts?
JL: (Laughing) I think my day has passed. No,
actually, I prefer doing the supporting roles, because then
I can show up in any guise.
AE:
What’s made you as successful as you are at working steadily?
JL: I don’t know that this makes me special,
but I think when my work really became profound, when I began
to think of myself as an artist, was when I began to really
get to know myself better—through therapy, through asking
my friends “Why do I keep doing this?” Living an
aware life as best I can. I then started to translate that into
my work, where I was able to use facets of my self and facets
I see in other people. Anything that’s in another person,
also is in me. We all have everything. I can choose as Jane
Lynch to express it or not express it, but I can always use
it for a character. Very rarely have I come across a character—and
I’ve played some doozies—where I say “I don’t
know where this person lives.” Usually that’s when
the writer doesn’t know, either.
I
just turned down this role, actually, in a made-for-television
movie because the writing wasn’t clear enough, and they
really didn’t tap into something that lives in a human
being. She was a wacky, drugged-out person, but there was nothing
credible about it. As much as I tried—because it was an
offer, not something I had to audition for—I looked at
it and said “Okay, what do I use here?” and there
was nothing I could hook into. In that case, you just have to
say no. Maybe someone else will find something, but I think
it was just bad writing.
AE:
Which character have you played that you most resembled?
JL: Hmmm…nothing’s really coming
to mind. But I did recently play this therapist on Two and
a Half Men who jumps to conclusions too quickly. She listens,
but she doesn’t hear, and sometimes I do that.
AE: If you could go back twenty years ago to when you
were just getting started, what would you tell yourself?
JL: I would say stop worrying, and keep working
on yourself. And when people ask me “How do I become an
actor? How do I succeed?” I just say "there’s
no secret, just keep knowing yourself." You can apply that
to any undertaking in life: the first thing you have to do is
know yourself. Because without it you don’t have your
material, you’re just making shit up.
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