Tag: @tvprogram:367461

  • NBC Won’t Torture Fans, Gives ‘The Good Place’ Early Season 3 Renewal

    THE GOOD PLACE -- "Team Cockroach" Episode 204 -- Pictured: (l-r) William Jackson Harper as Chidi, Jameela Jamil as Tahani, Kristen Bell as Eleanor Shellstrop, Manny Jacinto as Jianyu -- (Photo by: Colleen Hayes/NBC)After the first season of “The Good Place” ended on a major twist, NBC tortured fans for far too long before renewing the show for season two. Now, thankfully, the network has decided to skip that eternal wait, and has handed out an early season three order to the forking hilarious sitcom.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, season three has been confirmed to consist of 13 episodes, just like the first two seasons. There’s no word yet on when it will debut, but it’s likely to once again premiere in the fall TV season, sometime next year.

    “The Good Place” has quickly become one of the most critically acclaimed and audience beloved comedies on television, thanks to its unique premise — a group of four people think they’ve mistakenly been sent to the heavenly afterlife known as The Good Place, when really (SPOILER ALERT), they’re being tortured in The Bad Place — and rapid-fire, ridiculously silly jokes. (Even its gag reel is perfection.) Its success makes sense, considering it stars comedy legend Ted Danson (“Cheers”) and the bubbly and biting Kristen Bell (“Veronica Mars,” “Frozen”), and was created by Mike Schur, who also brought us “Parks and Recreation.”

    NBC also handed out early renewals to hit drama “This Is Us,” and the “Will and Grace” revival series. Looks like “The Good Place” will be in good company next season.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter]

  • This NSFW Gag Reel From ‘The Good Place’ Season 1 Is Forking Perfect

    “The Good Place,” NBC’s heavenly comedy about the conflicted souls inhabiting the titular afterlife, employed a huge twist at the end of its first season, when (MAJOR SPOILER ALERT) it was revealed that the characters were actually being tortured in The Bad Place. Despite sounding like a pretty dark premise, the show is laugh-out-loud funny, and that’s especially true for a new gag reel from season one that’s recently surfaced online.

    The clip, more than 10 minutes long, appears to have been produced for a season one wrap party, and features an intro and outro from Adam Scott, in character as Trevor, a douchey demon from The Bad Place. Trevor assigns point values to various missteps from the cast and crew (Kristen Bell’s burp earns her a negative score, while a crew member falling asleep during a Ted Danson monologue earns him both the actor’s and The Good Place’s admiration), though of course, as Hollywood jabronis, they’re all obviously doomed to The Bad Place.

    There’s also plenty of real swearing this time around, so those watching at work might want to put on their forking headphones. Just prepare to stifle lots and lots of laughter, too (especially with anything concerning D’Arcy Carden’s brilliant turn as Janet).

    “The Good Place” season two is currently airing on Thursdays on NBC.

  • Kristen Bell Saved ‘Frozen’ Co-Star’s Family From Hurricane Irma  

    “The Good Place” this past weekend, by saving the families of two co-stars.

    One of those co-stars was Josh Gad of “Frozen,” and Olaf just thanked Anna for sheltering his entire family from Hurricane Irma’s Florida wrath.

    Kristen Bell was stranded in Florida during Irma while filming a movie in the area. She took shelter at a Walt Disney World Resort Hotel, E! reports.

    Bell not only helped Gad’s family members, she also helped the family of actress Jennifer Carpenter:


    On top of that, Bell performed “Frozen” tunes for kids and their parents at an area middle school that was being used as a shelter. She also found time to start dating a new man, warning husband Dax Shepard that this gentleman is her new “side piece”:

    Dax, you can’t blame her. Check out Bell’s Instagram for more of her warm-hearted Irma activities. She made a lot of new friends!

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  • Dax Shepard Encouraged Wife Kristen Bell to ‘Suck Off Josh Duhamel’s Mustache’ in ‘CHiPs’

    People's Choice Awards 2017 - Red CarpetIf you ask Kristen Bell, her Good Place is working alongside her husband.

    Her previous collaborations with her actor/writer/director hubby Dax Shepard have included her films “When in Rome” and “Veronica Mars,” his film “Hit & Run,” commercials for various Samsung products and that epic homemade African vacation video set to Toto’s “Africa.” And now, Bell’s got a choice, bitchy role in “CHiPs” (out Friday), Shepard’s latest on-screen and behind-the-lens project, playing the indifferent, almost-single-and-already-mingling soon-to-be ex-wife to his motorcycle officer Jon Baker.

    And after a considerably great career year that included the success of solo projects, like her clever new series “The Good Place” and her film “Bad Moms,” Bell reveals that she’d have no qualms if the couple worked side-by-side as often as they’re able for the rest of their careers: for example, he even handpicked the hot, handsome actor she gets to make out with in front of him without batting a jealous eye.

    But, as she reveals to Moviefone, “Dateline NBC’s” Keith Morrison could have a shot … if only his wife were more flexible.

    Moviefone: I want you to walk me through this. Usually, you’ll get a gig, and you’ve got to say to Dax, “I’m going to be kissing this guy in this movie, this is what the director needs from me.” The situation’s is a little different with this one. Did you get to pick the guy you get to kiss?

    Kristen Bell: Sort of. Weirdly, Dax is very disconnected from sexual interactions on camera. He doesn’t really think they count, and, in a way, they don’t. But he very much encouraged me to try and suck off Josh Duhamel‘s mustache.

    We knew we needed a babe. Josh is the No. 1 babe we know. We just called him out of the blue and said, “Would you do a day on ‘CHiPs’? Can we write you in? Because we need a hunk.” He said, “Of course!” We were very grateful.

    Then I just adore him so much, and he played that part so sincerely. That’s why it was so funny, because when you’re hearing Jon moan in the background in pain and Karen is ignoring him, and Josh’s character Rick is like, “Is he OK?” It’s so real, it’s heartbreakingly funny.

    Were you testing Dax at any point to see how far you can go with this and see if I can get any kind of reaction?

    I know for a fact I would never get a reaction. I could have put my hands down Josh’s pants, and the only person I would have surprised — or offended — is Josh.

    Does it work the other way around, when you see him do love scenes?

    Sometimes. At one point on “Parenthood” I was like, when he was making out with Minka Kelly, I’m like, “Oh, you didn’t let me know that this happened.” And he was like, “Am I supposed to just announce it to you?”

    It is a weird, touchy situation because you should technically tell your spouse, but at the same time, you don’t want to make a big deal out of it. But you know what? I think that if he gets a freebie here and there, good for him. Good for him!

    Do you guys have certain rules or philosophies about when you work together, like there’s a professional mode you try to be in?

    Because we’re in the acting world, a lot more slides. We’re allowed to have PDA. Yeah, if we were at an accounting firm or a lawyer’s firm, we probably couldn’t have as much PDA as we have on set. But because it’s a community of artists, a lot more is taken with a grain of salt. We don’t actually separate anything. I married him because I enjoy spending time with him, and I trust him. Those are the same reasons I want to work with him.US-ENTERTAINMENT-GOLDEN-GLOBE-ARRIVALSI think a lot of people in Hollywood are afraid to work with their significant others — they don’t want to appear to come as a packaged deal always, or whatever. Do you guys feel that way? Or would you rather do almost everything together?

    I would do everything together. I’m not sitting in the audience of my life. I’m not watching how I’m being perceived, I’m not tracking how I’m being perceived. I don’t really care. I care if I wake up happy and I go to bed happy. So I could try to keep tabs on this idea of who people think I am, or where they think I fit, but it’s all so meaningless, and it changes with the wind. I just care much more about being happy on a day-to-day basis, so I want to be with and work with my husband.

    What is especially fun about working with him, just him as the creative artist?

    That he creates a dynamic on set where the No. 1 priority is fun. He has a meeting, I guess it’s about once a week, with everybody on set, where he calls everyone to a huddle and he says, listen, “We are here to have fun. First and foremost, we are making movies. Everyone wants to do this. We are the lucky ones, which means we have a responsibility to have fun. If you’re not having fun, come see me, let me know how I can help. If you don’t want to be here, you’re welcome to go. God speed in everything that you do. But let’s accomplish this day with having a lot of fun.”

    It makes me just levitate with pride to see the man I love conduct himself like that, and be an influence of joy over so many people.

    Where do you fit into his world of being a gearhead with cars and motorcycles? Is there any place in there for you?

    No, the blender confuses me! That is not my world. I have no interest. I like that he likes them. I watch a lot of motorcycle videos with him, and I smile, and I nod. I love him so much, and all of his cute interests.

    Are you seeing your kids being drawn into that? As the protective mom, are you like, “Um, hey …”?

    Our oldest daughter just learned to ride a bike, yesterday actually. No, it’s not something I hesitate on, because they wear their helmets. If they’re interested in it, my hesitancy isn’t going to make them uninterested in it. I think you have to follow the kid. They’re not going to do anything too dangerous that I’d ever have to be worried about.

    Do you see little actors in them yet?

    Yeah, they both have a flair for drama. But I think all two and three-year-olds do. But yeah, they do both like to tell jokes, which is kind of cool.

    Are they good at telling their jokes?

    For a two and three-year-old, yeah. Like calling things different names, pulling the one-two switcheroo. Yeah, they’re pretty decent at it.

    What’s the fun of playing a shitty person?

    It’s just so exciting to be that selfish. It also feels very wrong, and very, what’s the word? It feels risky, and a little scary, which is what makes it fun. Because I would never act that way in real life, because I’m too worried about the consequences. But in pretend mode, there are no consequences.

    You had a real high-wire act of doing that on “The Good Place.” But keeping her somebody that we still are invested in, and talk about a payoff. That season was fantastic.

    Oh, I’m so happy!

    Tell me about finding how to indulge in her worst attributes, but still keep the audience invested in her.

    That’s what I love most of all, is seeing someone on paper who is inherently unlikable, and figuring out how I can force you to invest in her. How do I captivate you enough that you’ll root for me, despite doing all these hideous things?

    It’s just one of my favorite challenges, and I think that a lot of it is something I can’t describe, that I can only sort of feel when I’m doing something that is likable, or emotionally interesting, or when I can bate someone to root for me. I can’t really describe when I’m doing that, but I feel like when I’m reading characters, like when I read “[Forgetting] Sarah Marshall,” or I read Eleanor from “Good Place,” I inherently know where to place those things.

    Were you watching closely the reaction to the finale? Were you keeping an eye on social media and that kind of thing?

    A little bit. I looked at it the day after, and I was very, very happy with the response. Because I was worried people would figure it out.

    How much do you know about what’s ahead? Are you at full stop like the rest of us, or … ?

    More than I wish I did!

    Really?

    Mike Schur just pitched me Season 2 and possibly Season 3, then also threw out a couple actual endings of where it could go. I don’t know if ending is the right word. He is an incredibly impressive individual, and it is very exciting to be a part of a show that literally has no boundaries, because you can do anything.

    When we’re having this pitch conversation, I’m like, “How are you even going to show that? What do you even mean?” The ideas are very big. They always relate to a lesson in ethics or morality. It always ties in with something greater. Its heartbeat is still comedic, and I’m just unendingly impressed with our writers’ room for thinking of these weird, weird-ass ideas.

    You mentioned the ethical conundrums that “The Good Place” brings up, and we’re in interesting moment in the world, ethically, where I think we’re all looking at what’s right and what’s not right. What do you think people can draw from looking at a character like Eleanor, who seems like a crappy person on the surface, but has redeeming features? How do we apply that to the world that we’re living in now?

    I believe in second chances. I think that’s what this show also explores. I also believe in symbiotic relationships, and that the world has to be a compromise. And that it’s very dangerous when you put one person’s needs above another’s, because there’s that book they keep quoting, “What We Owe to Each Other.” It’s important and necessary for our survival for us to live a harmonious life, and I think as long as that’s valued, everything can get better.

    But that also requires listening to the people you disagree with, from both sides. My takeaway from the last year of Earth is, I’ve refused to be in an echo chamber. I don’t believe people are inherently evil. I want to listen to people with opposing viewpoints. I want to understand why they believe that.

    Because something we’ve forgotten is that most of us want the same things for our country. We want better education. We want better healthcare. We want everyone to be safer on the streets. So we just have to figure out the best solution. Not tear each other down, while also not accomplishing anything.

    It’s not easy to break out of those echo chambers, because I’ve been actively attempting to do just that.

    It’s still hard. But you have to do it. There is no solution if you don’t do it.

    And “Bad Moms” — when I heard the next one was going to have the Christmas element, I’m like, that is genius on a story level, that’s genius on a marketing level. What gets you excited about putting those characters in the holiday context?

    Yeah! Particularly Kiki, because she’s so easily stressed out, and she’s such a people-pleaser. Those are the two things you need to put to bed in order to survive the holidays. I’m excited just to work with everybody again, but I think that’s the only place it could go. It’s the one thing that’s bigger than the mom drama, is holiday drama.

    Tell me about your opportunity to interview “Dateline’s” Keith Morrison. Everything you hoped for and more?

    Everything! Sweeter than I imagined. Absolutely sweeter, and more nervous than I imagined. He was very nervous, more nervous to be in the seat of the interviewee than I was to be in the seat of the interviewer.

    You were ready — that was apparent.

    But I didn’t feel it. Look at him. I was like, this is the guy to be interviewed by, and I’ve got to flip the script here.

    Where did your Keith fandom begin?

    We love true crime, and I think, over the last 10 years, we’ve watched a lot of television. We stumbled upon “Dateline.” It’s on every night of the week. It used to be our nightly show. That’s kind of morbid, but it was also very interesting, and we just were captivated by this storyteller who his narration was incomparable to anyone else’s, his vocabulary, his smoky pipes. It was just, you wanted him to narrate your life. So it’s no surprise that he’s the voice of Waze now. That’s who you want to tell you how to get where. Yeah, and we just both slowly fell in love with him.

    What was the fun fact that you walked out of there with about Keith?

    That he’s as in love with his wife as I am with my husband. Because we were talking about how lucky in love we are, and how that matters above all else, and he said the sweetest thing: because I’ve said he’s my hall pass before, he said, “You know what my wife said to me as I left this morning?” He goes, “‘Hey, you’re nobody’s hall pass.’” And I said, “God, I respect her so much. That’s exactly what she should say to you. That is exactly what she should say to you.”

    You’re going to take some time off in the fall. Can we expect a new vacation video from you guys?

    If we get on vacation, I will do my damnedest! Yeah, we’ve blown it a couple times, because we’ve gone to places where we were like, “We should have looked up a song to do here.” After we did it, we tried to make a commitment, but we blew it. We blew it.

    You’ve been working so much lately. What do you want to do? What parts of your life to you want to connect more with or expand out with some time off?

    I really want to learn to sew. Probably wasn’t the answer you were expecting, but I do. I’ve been really thinking about how to research to buy a good sewing machine, because I really want to learn to sew. I don’t know why. I just want to.

    I love doing stuff with my hands. I do a ton of crafts with my kids. That stuff makes me happy. I’m feeling my nurturer-gatherer, want to like use glitter and sew at home. I don’t know. I’ll probably have a line of, like, kitten puffy paint sweatshirts on Etsy by the fall. I really want to learn to sew. And we really want to go on an RV trip with our family — like, drive around the country.

    If you don’t shoot that — come on! You’ve got to shoot that.

    Oh yeah, we’ll shoot that for sure, for sure, for sure! Yeah, we really want to take our kids in an RV.

    There’s not much I’m feeling I’m lacking — other than the sewing machine — because we go to the sand dunes a couple times a year, so he gets to off-road. That means we get to live in the motor home, which we love. We travel for work. We see cool places. I get to play dress-up for premieres. The other days of the week, I take my kids to school. So I feel pretty fulfilled.

  • Fork Yeah! ‘The Good Place’ Renewed for Season 2 on NBC

    the good place, season 2, renewed, renewal, nbc, kristen bellFans of freshman NBC comedy “The Good Place” have reason to shout “Fork yeah!” today: The series has just been renewed for a second season.

    While the show, created by “Parks and Recreation” mastermind Mike Schur, wasn’t a ratings juggernaut by any means, it was a critical darling and buzzy fan favorite that stood out among more formulaic comedic fare that debuted this TV season. The high-concept “Good Place” — about a morally bankrupt woman (Kristen Bell) who mistakenly winds up in the titular heaven-like afterlife, and must then convince the man in charge (Ted Danson) that she deserves to stay — recently ended its first season with a major, mind-blowing plot twist that desperately cried out for resolution (and more episodes).

    After making viewers wait an excruciating 11 days for news, NBC finally announced on Monday that it would indeed be renewing the series.

    “Mike Schur has always had one of the most fertile and imaginative minds in comedy, but what he brought us with the first season of ‘The Good Place’ was just extraordinary,” said NBC president Jennifer Salke in a statement. “We absolutely can’t wait to see where these characters go, literally, in season two. A big thank you to Mike, the writers and cast for delivering a series in which we all take such enormous pride.”

    Season two of “The Good Place” will consist of 13 episodes, just like season one. No word yet on a premiere date, but it will likely debut sometime during the fall TV season.

    [via: TVLine]

  • What the Fork?! ‘The Good Place’ Fans Beg for Season 2 After Finale Twist

    THE GOOD PLACE -- "Mindy St. Claire" Episode 112 -- Pictured: (l-r) Kristen Bell as Eleanor Shellstrop, D'Arcy Carden as Janet Della-Denunzio -- (Photo by: Vivian Zink/NBC)Fork yeah! That is how you end a season. “The Good Place” Season 1 had a short run, as far as network comedies go, ending Jan. 19 after just 13 episodes. But holy shirtballs did it end with a shocking bang. Fans will be truly vexed if NBC doesn’t renew the show for Season 2.

    Few viewers saw the big twist coming — that Eleanor (Kristen Bell), Jason (Manny Jacinto), Chidi (William Harper), and Tahani (Jameela Jamil) were all really in The Bad Place, not The Good Place, in a scheme devised by architect Michael (Ted Danson), who wasn’t such a nice guy after all. Apparently everyone in The Bad Place was in on the act, except for the four tortured souls in question. Before Michael reset their memories, Eleanor wrote herself a note to “find Chidi,” and Janet (D’Arcy Carden) helpfully provided the note at the end of the finale. Eleanor — who just got herself a hunky new “soul mate” — doesn’t remember who the fork Chidi is anymore, but it was an exciting place to leave Season 1. Any questions about how they could keep this story going were solved with the twist.

    Here are some of the responses to the finale:

    But will there be a Season 2?

    NBC has yet to officially renew the series, but hopefully the strength of that finale compels them to give the show another season. Showrunner Michael Schur told TVLine that, if the show is renewed, “it would be of a similar length” to the 13 episodes of Season 1. So it’s not like it would be a gigantic investment on the network’s part. PLEASE?

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  • ‘The Good Place’ Star Kristen Bell Ponders Her Own Goodness

    Audiences have certainly sorted House of Lies,” scored a hit comedy film with “Veronica Mars.” Her personal life has also fascinated her fans, from her commitment to veganism to holding off marriage to husband Dax Shepard until same-sex unions were legalized in California to raising two young daughters to her adorable, not-so-mild obsession with sloths.

    But is she a good person?

    The subject of personal goodness lies at the heart of Bell’s adventurous new sitcom “The Good Place,” in which her character Eleanor arrives after a sudden life-ending mishap but soon proves to be a fish out of water, for very good reason, when it comes to fitting in the landscape of expected eternal bliss designed by the chipper afterlife architect Michael (Ted Danson).

    As Bell tells Moviefone, in her own life, she’s doing what she can to stay on a path toward being good, as she defines it — and that includes keeping up a high standard of good work. “I had already been living that way in which my mind spins with every decision I make,” she admits. “That’s not to say I don’t mess up, because I certainly do, and I guarantee you you could pick me apart and find a thousand things wrong. But I’m striving.”

    Moviefone: There was a period in the 1960s when Dean Martin had a hit television show, hit movies and hit music all at the same time. Are you our new Dean Martin?

    Kristen Bell: Oh wow! I don’t know — I don’t think so. I think I’m just having a real lucky streak, and I am going to ride this shooting star until it fizzles!

    It’s got to be pretty nice right now, because you’ve put in the work. You’ve built a nice career, and then to have different things in different directions clicking all at once has to be kind of, is it overwhelming?

    No. Weirdly, it’s not overwhelming because I don’t put a ton of stock into it. I have had plenty of projects that have fizzled. I also treat every project the same, in which I don’t really care that much about its success. I care a lot more about my day-to-day life on that project. I care that I feel like I’m doing good, smart, creative work. I care that I’m putting in effort and a lot of hard work into it. I care that I enjoy the circumstances that we’re in, with both the people around us and the environment we’re shooting in. I care about my sleep at night.

    Once all those things align, I believe that’s the recipe for getting something better — as opposed to sleepwalking or not being present through the whole process and then just waiting to check the numbers or what your stats are. I’ve really been able to unplug from the results business.

    Tell me, then: for this one, there’s a lot of obvious reasons to say “yes” to this project, a lot of great ingredients — working with Mike Schur, working with Ted Danson, working with Drew Goddard — but what was the ingredient that you discovered in the doing of it? Once you showed up to work and you were like, “Oh, this part is really cool, too!”

    Because there was no way for me to know this ahead of time, the comedic way in which Mike explains how to be a good person. It genuinely is two of my favorite things: laughing and exploring what being a good person means. And in action, I think it’s going to be a little inspiring to watch — at least I feel like I would be the perfect audience for this show.

    Also, if you talk about in doing it, things I wasn’t expecting: there are four newer actors. There are four cast members people might not be as familiar with who are incredible, and you hope when you hire someone who doesn’t have the resume of Ted Danson that they are still going to be a firework, and man, did we get lucky!

    Mike is incredibly adept at writing for an ensemble. He has developed each character in “The Good Place” neighborhood quite a bit, and it is just … it’s awesome. It makes me so proud of my new friends, going, like, “You are a star! Holy smokes!”

    Because it can be so easy to do in Hollywood, did you find yourself taking steps where you were like, ‘Am I going down the path of not being a good person?” Did you ever have to check yourself at any point?

    Yeah, I think earlier on maybe I did, because particularly in Hollywood where the carrot dangles above your head around every corner, it’s important to consider the ripple effect you have. And now I feel I’ve done enough research into what my ripple effect could be that it’s more of a gut instinct, because I know how my actions affect other people.

    But sure, earlier on, it was like what anyone experiences in life which is, “I hope I’m navigating this to the best of my ability — particularly if my objective is to be kind.”

    As I try to find my own enlightenment, I have these moments in life where I feel this sort of karmic pain of something I did in the past. Do you have things that haunt you?

    Karmic pain, karmic … just … embarrassment! But I think admitting them … Weirdly there’s, in the 12 Steps of A.A., there is a 4th step where you sort of have to identify everything you’ve done wrong, what your culpability is. I take that advice to heart.

    I think dealing with something is better than letting it fester. Even though every, every, every molecule in your body would tell you the opposite. It’s always better if you just say, “Remember when I stole that gumball out of your lunch 27 years ago? I’m sorry about that. I was being a bit of a bully,” you know?

    Being a parent adds a whole new layer, because you’re not just trying to be a good person yourself. You’re trying to guide little people into growing into good people.

    Yeah. Which is the one objective, is to not raise an a-hole. But it’s also interesting because I am such an optimist, I believed people were inherently good. I thought they’d get sidetracked and they’d get selfish, but at their heart, they’re good.

    Raising two kids, I think I’ve changed my tune a little bit. I think we’re born a little bit closer to selfish little monkeys than I had originally thought. And you actually have to learn cooperation instead of domination. And it’s possible. You know, I think you do have to teach people to be good. Now, that said, when I think when they understand goodness and kindness, it’s very easy to fall in line with it.

    American treasure Ted Danson: Tell me about the discovery of how the guy can do, quite probably, anything and make it look good.

    America’s sweetheart. My sweetheart. It’s hard to articulate Ted because he’s just such a dreamy friend and a dreamy co-star. He’s just joy personified. He makes people feel good. He’s a pleasure to be around. It’s not that he doesn’t have depth and he’s just nice, because as you peel away his layers, sure he can get sassy and it’s adorable. But one of the most important things to me in life is being around people who make you feel good, who have a smile on their face, and he is that person.

    Afterlife-wise, did you take the same approach you take in your career? Do you just want to live life and do it well and worry about that stuff later? Or did you have a concept that you tend to stick with?

    In my real life? I certainly hope it’s like The Good Place. It would be great. I mean, the numbers that Mike has run is that it’s only about one in every 500 who are going to The Good Place. So it’s very difficult to get in there. Yeah, very difficult.

    Everybody is obviously super-excited about a “Frozen 2.” Are you in the loop, or are you waiting to find out just like anybody else? Do they tell you where they are in development and things?

    Yes, well, they’re finishing writing the script. They’re not taking their time to develop the script. They’re just not rushing. They don’t need to rush. They have a creative process that works brilliantly, as proven by the first one. And they don’t need to rush for anything, so I know a little bit about what the subjects are and stuff.

    But we’re just basically on call because they’re getting struck by lightning bolts, and then deciding something is perfection, and committing it to pages in the script, and when they feel like it’s Christmas morning for all of us, we’ll see it and start recording. I certainly hope it’s soon, but I also know they’ve been working on everything “Frozen” for quite a few years, and I don’t want to rush them.

    Why are you excited to return to that role?

    Oh wow! Because Anna is very much my gift to who I was as a child.