Rudnick is the interviewer, Tapert is the creative force behind xena.
RUDNICK:
[105] Having said that, I am obligated to ask you another question about subtext. We know it started out accidentally. People applied that interpretation and it was picked up on, played to, and then dropped. Now it's back with a vengeance. Or is that just audience interpretation again? Is there no more or less attention paid to it than there ever has been?
TAPERT:
[106] As far as the writing is concerned, there's more attention being paid to it than ever before. I think Lucy and Renee did more with it in the past. If you ask R.J. and Chris Manheim, they never really wrote it. It was more in the playing. There was a sly joke here and there. It was never front and center in their mind, I don't think. This season the staff wanted to heal the wounds in their relationship and show the love between the two characters and fandom can interpret that any way they want. This season when you write about the characters it's hard not to have subtext even more in the forefront than we had before. It's a difficult road to walk.
[107] Research has told us so specifically that our audience doesn't want this and people turned it off because of subtext. The really hard-core fans like it, and there may be 100,000 of them, but that's only a tenth of a rating point. The lesbian fans really like it and I appreciate that, I really do, but they aren't the majority of the audience. I sat behind glass windows during research as people in Phoenix and people in New Jersey said, "We want them to have more guys. We like guys. We want Xena and Gabrielle to have boyfriends." I think it would be wrong, having an opportunity like we have with Xena and Gabrielle, to not find a way to make it publicly acceptable and condone that it's OK to have single sex relationships, it's OK to have interracial relationships. We don't want to be accused, as we have been, of pandering to the "pink vote" but you also don't want to lose your show. Joss Whedon did the right thing. He's got his relationships with his C and D characters. I'll be interested to see if Tara and Willow end up on a happy or a sad note ultimately.
Studio Interference
RUDNICK:
[108] Have you had a lot of pressure or interference over the years from the studio trying to dictate what your show should be?
TAPERT:
[109] No. Right now, they're more nitpicky about certain things. There have been a bunch of regimes that have come and gone. They've stated their opinions. "We want Ares and Xena together. We want to see more of that." That's come through a couple of times. I got a call from a guy last week, who said, "I wish you'd do some more comedies. The show's a little dark lately."
I really doubt Joss sits around looking at research and if he does I hope he doesn't pay attention to it. It's interesting that Tapert worries so much about research, it shows on his show, that instead of telling a story, he is busy trying to please everyone.
Also, in the rest of the interview, he mentions that he hasn't decided on all the episodes he will include for the rest of the season. Even more bizzare, he doesn't know how he'll end the series yet, he better figure it out, he's running out of time.
Also by C and D does he mean the non leads? If anything, I saw Willow is a B character.. anyway, what do you all think?
[This message has been edited by xita (edited January 01, 2001).]

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I know the feeling.
