Exclusive

Joan Van Ark – Exclusive Interview

Exclusive Interview

Joan Van Ark interview
“When the camera rolls, if two actors have chemistry and a connection, it just happens. There it is and it’s magic.” — Joan Van Ark on her work with Ted Shackelford
Site note: This interview archive continues the work originally published on ultimatedallas.com. That domain has expired, and dallastvshow.com is now the home for the interviews, guides, and character pages.

Exclusive Interview

Intro

Joan Van Ark is beloved by fans of the Dallas TV series and its iconic spin-off Knots Landing as Valene Ewing, the resilient, heartfelt woman whose tumultuous love story with Gary Ewing became one of the most enduring and emotionally rich arcs in television history. Introduced as Lucy Ewing’s mother in Dallas, Joan’s portrayal of Valene evolved into a cornerstone of Knots Landing, blending raw vulnerability with fierce strength across 14 groundbreaking seasons. Recorded on May 26, 2006—shortly after her acclaimed run in Tennessee Williams’ A Lovely Sunday for Creve Coeur—Joan shares rare behind-the-scenes insights in this exclusive DallasTVshow.com interview: her meticulous character preparation (including collages), the transformative mirror scene as Verna, her chemistry with Ted Shackelford, the evolution of Valene from “Goody Two Shoes” to vigilante, and how Knots Landing transcended the soap genre. A must-read for Dallas and Knots Landing fans celebrating the legacy of Valene Ewing and the Ewing family drama.

DallasTvshow.com: Welcome to DallasTvshow.com Joan, we have had loads of questions coming in from the fans so lets kick off

Joan van Ark: Woa! Hello?

Jason Yates: Hello?

Joan: Oh my God!

Jason: Oh! Joan, I think that's your fax machine kicking in or something.

Joan: Can you redial?

Jason: Yeah, we'll redial. We'll call you back.

Joan: Thank you.

Jason: No problem. Bye.

Joan: OK!

Jason: Hello!

Joan: How are you?

Jason: Fantastic. We've got you! Hi, Joan. How are you doing?

Joan: OK.

Jason: Oh, listen, thank you so very, very much for doing this. Can I introduce James, who's going to be talking to you today as well? James.

James Holmes: Hi, Joan.

Joan: Hey, how are ya?

James: Thank you so much for doing this. It's a real treat for us.

Joan: Excuse me? I didn't hear that.

James: It's a real treat for us. Thank you so much for doing this.

Joan: Oh, that's all right. We've tried - (chuckles) we've made an attempt at this several times. I think it was when the DVD first came out.

Jason: Yeah, yes. But it's so good of you, cos we realise you're busy and you've just finished a play. How did the show go? Really well, I hear.

Joan: Oh my God, it was - you know, I'm still not over her, because it was so intense and she was so different. We would have discussions after some of the performances, and I said, "I built a career on playing Goody Two Shoes!" Helena was the bitch of the piece and not liked by, you know, the audience or the other members, you know, of the company, because she was the villain.

Jason: Yeah. Yes, yes.

Joan: It was, oh, so -

Jason: And you're somebody who - you've said before that you like to please. So how's that -

Joan: Oh! I do! I wanna be as loved madly -

Jason (chuckling): Yeah, yeah.

Joan: - by everybody. And I found that to be very - I knew it would be and that's why I took her, that's why I did her - because I knew it would be scary and I'd have to be brave, and a man actually who is from London, who's part of this theatre, Hartford Stage, which is a very respected theatre -

Jason: Yes.

Joan: He said this was a very brave - he said it was so layered, and on and on, but he used the word "brave", and I thought, "Well, you know what? I'll take that. That I'll take."

Jason: And what was your working process for that? Did you do a collage?

Joan: A collage?

Jason: Yes. Did you do a - did you - how did you -

James: We read that you - we read about that you do the collages for your roles and it sounds really interesting.

Joan: I didn't know you knew. Yes, I always do a collage. I did - well, first of all, Tennessee described her as - I think he put it - "A woman enters with the eyes of a predatory bird."

Jason: Wow.

Joan: So, initially I started - tried to play around with the birdlike qualities, but it gave me such a cartoony, kind of weird - I don't know - it took me somewhere that wasn't gonna work.

Jason: Yes.

Joan: The director sort of knew it too.

Jason: Yes.

Joan: But they also describe her as a snake. So she's part bird, part snake, which is an archioptrix.

Jason: Yes.

Joan: So I did more the snakelike qualities, and sort of used my hips more and bla bla bla, but the collage had peacock feathers for her - for a thing - that gave me an image like her eyes; I had pictures of an archioptrix; the stage manager's six year old son gave me a picture from a book he had of a snake, a poisonous snake striking, getting ready to strike; and then I had pictures of 1930s wardrobe, because the play takes place in the 1930s, and I had this great hat with feathers.

Jason: Yes, we've been sent pictures. It looks fantastic.

Joan: Well, I don't know. It looks so different though. I mean, she's just - she was such a piece of work - and I come home, and this always happens to me - I did a play a year ago at La Jolla Playhouse with this amazing director, who just did JERSEY BOYS on Broadway, and The Who's TOMMY, and he's done a lot of Broadway shows, and he's actually up for a Tony right now for JERSEY BOYS - I come home and I just collapse and I get sick, and I've had this flu ever since I got home, so -

Jason: Oh no! Oh, listen, I'm gonna tell you an old trick that really, really works apparently, is ginger. To grate raw ginger into boiling, boiling hot water and to take it with lemon and a tiny bit of sugar, but loads of raw ginger. Apparently, it knocks a cold out of you. Apparently.

Joan: Cos my head - I finally went to a doctor - my head is so congested, and what I thought it was (chuckles) is in the middle of this play that I just did, an actress, a character in the play, throws a glass of water in my face, because I upset her so much, and she throws this glass of water in my face, and I thought, "Well, maybe-" and she usually hit my ear, cos I think she truly didn't wanna hit me in the face, which I loved cos I think that's what would happen to my character - she would be stunned and it would mess up her make up - but, so she threw it, and it often would go up the side of my face into my ear, and I thought, "Well, maybe I got an infection from just having this water thrown at me - " (chuckles) you know - "and it stayed in my ear," cos this is all in my head, and it - Ugh! Landing here in Los Angeles in the airplane, I thought my head would explode.

Jason: Wow.

James: And when did you finish the play? How long have you been back?

Joan: About two weeks ago.

James: OK.

Jason: You sound absolutely - you sound like you've just been to the moon and back. You sound, you know, electrified. Can I ask you about, you know, having spent so long working in television, how does it feel now to be in the theatre? Do you feel - you know - going back to The Church of Your Work, as I think you called it recently?

Joan: Well, I pretty much do a play every year, or have for the last three years in a row. Two years ago, I did the Kennedy Centre. Last year, I did La Jolla with Des McAnuff, and now this year, I did the Tennessee Williams again. The Kennedy Centre was FIVE BY TEN, which is also a Tennessee Williams character, which the director of this play handed me a book that I'm in, having created these three - two, sorry - these two characters in the FIVE BY TEN at The Kennedy Centre. It's a book put out by Amazon, and I literally created the role of Mrs Fenway, because it was the world premiere of five one act plays that Tennessee Williams had never had presented.

Jason: Wow.

James: Great.

Joan: Yes, so it was very exciting. So I've actually done, you know, pretty much a play a year, at least for the last three years, and I used to go the Williamstown Theatre, etc., so to answer your question, I think they intermix, because to go back to the stage, it is my - when I went to Yale Drama School - I mean, it is my church. It's the ground floor, it's the real deal, the test.

Jason: Yes, yes.

Joan: It feeds me. Both feed - one feeds the other. Because I learn things in working on a stage production, and actually the soap that I did last summer -

Jason: Oh, THE YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS?

Joan: That's exactly -

Jason: Yeah.

Joan: It taught me a new process for quickly getting to the heart and soul of a scene and a line that I didn't realise until I was working on other material, like this play.

Jason: And how did that manifest itself?

Joan: Well, I'll tell you. I would mark - because I always mark my scripts. Dick Benjamin, who I did BAREFOOT [IN THE PARK] actually there in London at the Piccadilly Circus, Dick Benjamin said that looking at a script of Joan van Ark's looks like you're looking at a map, a road map. (Jason and Joan laugh) It has pictures and signals and signs and markings and all that, and I would mark the stress of the sentence and put quotes around key words, and also I learned the power of the verb of the sentence, which I'd never analysed before, but the option of a line is in the verb, of course, and I would never analyse it that specifically, but I've done that and I did it with this Tennessee Williams' play even, because that's the way I marked the soap opera scripts quickly to get to the heart of it and learn it fast.

James: Was there much rehearsal on - I guess there wasn't - on THE YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS?

Joan: There was nothing, and you see -

James: Wow.

Joan: I mean, yes, you'd walk through it at seven in the morning, you'd go to make up and you'd come back on the set and walk through it once with the cameras. You'd tape it and if it was good enough, it was a "print and move on", and good enough is not good enough for me. (Chuckles)

James and Jason: Yeah, yeah.

Joan: I want it to be fabulous.

James and Jason (chuckling): Yeah, yeah.

Joan: I wanted her that I'm playing, which in that case was Gloria, I wanted her to be fabulous, and sometimes you get it on the first take. The producer/director told me on YOUNG AND RESTLESS that my first take was always the most - I don't wanna say dazzling - but, you know, was the most interesting and the best one. That's because, I think, I had done so much homework prior to, you know, shooting it, and that's why it brought me to my knees and I thought, "I can't live with this", because I would absolutely treat those overnight scripts like they were a play.

Jason: Yes, yes.

Joan: You can't go that deep when you're doing something on a daily basis like that.

Jason: Well, that's something I wanted to ask you about, Joan, because what's really, really incredible about you and it's so impressive about you, is that you straddle two worlds of your craft, of acting. You have the commercial pop icon thing of being in a long running, the longest running soap in KNOTS LANDING, and yet you come from a theatre based, you know, training, that you apply to your work, and that makes you almost unique, I think, in terms of any actress who's been on any other soap.

Joan: Well, you know, that's an interesting aspect because my manager for a while, when KNOTS was finished, which was I think '92 or '93, somewhere in there, they were trying to erase the word "soap", because of course that gets a spin on it that, you know, might belie what -

Jason: Well, KNOTS LANDING transcended that. It was a drama series, wasn't it?

Joan: I think it was. I know it was. And look at what's out there now, and KNOTS was a precursor to all of that, and certainly DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES, but it was a - we had more going for us and it was more realistic than anything else, but the word "soap" can throw you off in a different direction, and, yes, my process is very thorough. The director wrote me a beautiful note on this last play saying, "Thank you for getting under her skin." And that's really what I try to do, no matter what the character is. If I'm going to decide to do her, whoever she is, I'm going to get into and under her skin, because I have to - she has to be a living, breathing, absolutely real person to me, and therefore I will do everything I can to make her real to you.

Jason: Well, it reminds me of a really interesting story that the actor who played Danny Waleska.

James: Sam Behrens.

Jason: Sam Behrens said he was doing a scene with you. I think he said it was one of his first days, and it got to about nine o'clock at night, ten o'clock, and basically, you could have gone home, and you stayed and insisted on full make up and full everything, so that he would get the close up that he deserved for the character, and I was - we were gobsmacked. I mean, that's very unusual.

Joan: Well, I know, cos I've been on the other side of it, where the star, and I'm not the - I wasn't the star, but - where the other half of your scene went home because of the time, and so I've been on that other half, but I have to say, the only way for a scene and for a character and for a moment to work is if the partner is there to give you everything, and I would never not do that, and I - Sam and I - I adore him and, you know, I would never not do that, because it can't be real any other way, and you need it to be real.

Jason: Especially in an ensemble show like KNOTS. How did you feel about the evolution of the character? Something occurred to us the other day, when we were sort of talking about Val's arcs in the show, is that around Season 4, when Kevin Dobson comes on the show as Mack, Mack is the first person to sort of bring up this idea that Gary and Val may have a kind of unhealthy obsession with each other.

James: That it's a kind of dysfunctional relationship.

Jason: Relationship.

Joan: I wasn't aware that he brought that vibe in, which is very good of you to pick up on. I did not, because I think, too, if that were true, she's still in that - she's in her own cocoon -

Jason: Yes.

Joan: - and she didn't realise that, so Joan probably stayed in Val's -

Jason: Yes.

Joan: - and didn't acknowledge that. I'll tell you the biggest, hugest change for my character was Donna's coming on, no question about it. Abby - cos that had to reinform and reinvent Valene if she wanted to hold on to Gary. There was no two ways about it. Donna's coming on to the show was a major shake up, which Ted and I, you know, embraced and loved, because in soap and in drama, you only have something wonderful to perform if you've got obstacles and blocks, roadblocks to what your action is and what you want, and Donna came in and, particularly for Gary and Val, you know, messed it up big time.

Jason: Yes, and what was so amazing about that is, when the Abby character first came on to the show, is that you showed that Val was slightly in awe of her and admired her. There was a warmth there. Val initially was warm towards her and -

Joan: Boy, you pick up on stuff! That is so right, yeah -

Jason: And I - so go ahead, yes.

Joan: Well, there was a scene when I was Verna Ellers, where Donna - Abby - came to - where was I? - in Tennessee - to the diner that I was working at as Verna Ellers. We were rehearsing a scene and I serve her - cos she's trying to shake me out of it and bring me back to Valene -

James: Yeah, yeah.

Joan: - and there was a scene where I serve her as the waitress, cos she's sat the table, my table, and (coughs) I - which is right in with what you were saying - when we were rehearsing the scene, I just threw in an ad-lib, "My God, you've got beautiful eyes."

James: Was that an ad-lib?

Jason: That was an ad-lib? Oh wow.

James: Oh, that's wonderful, cos that's a great - that's such a classic moment. That's a classic KNOTS moment.

Joan: That was my homage - Joan/Val - to Abby/Donna, because I think she would look at that beautiful, gorgeous face and say, "Oh my God, your eyes are gorgeous," or whatever - I can't even - I'm paraphrasing - but the thing is, that was - you gotta say and do what you see, and there was an awe that she had about her, because Valene was Goody Two Shoes, who, you know - chores, Monday through Friday - no, sorry - school, Monday through Friday, chores on Saturday and church on Sunday, so -

Jason: And also there was a sense that Valene had never really moved on from her relationship with Gary mentally. When you meet her in DALLAS, there's a sense that -

Joan: With the pigtails and ponytails. When I saw, at Michele's house, some of the early stuff with those pigtails and ponytails - I remember people saying to me, "Joan, what's with the braids? What's with the -", you know, and I didn't know what they were talking about, but boy, I look at it now and I think, "Joan!"

James: I think there's something really interesting. It's almost as though - because I think of all the characters in DALLAS and KNOTS LANDING, Val has the strongest back story, the most vivid story, of growing up with Lilimae - or without Lilimae -

Joan: That's it.

James: - and it all kind of stops, at a kind of - when - after she loses - after Lucy's taken away from her. We don't know anything about her life until she turns up in 1978 in DALLAS, and it's almost as though the character, after her child is taken from her, is kind of frozen in time.

Jason: Time, yes.

James: And all those years, all the sort of social change of the 60s and 70s, Val misses out on.

Joan: That's very accurate, very good, and what I was often working off of was instinct, because I did jump into her so quickly, but it was indeed - that is exactly what it was.

James: And you get Abby coming in, who's so modern and so sophisticated.

Joan: Exactly, and also flashy in a wonderful feminine way, as a man magnet and a zip code that Valene never knew about at all. There's a line somewhere, "I gotta keep my eye on you," and Abby says, "Well, you better because how else are you gonna learn?"

Jason and James: (chuckling): Yes, yeah.

Joan: I love that! Touché, right on!

James: And then there's that moment in that episode we were talking about in Season 6, where she's the floozie, where Val is the floozie, and it's as though she's trying to do Abby.

Jason: Because she says, "Wives don't bother me," to a woman in a bar.

Joan: You're right and, see, that's the writers again being true to, you know, serving us, the actors, with material that makes sense. That all was backed by talking with doctors and people who would advise us about this condition, and it's a real condition. People do it. It's not a form of amnesia, but it's in that zip code, where, you know, you retreat to the person - you become the person you fear, or the one that you're - that is causing this dilemma, and then you also pick a name that has the initials of your own name.

James: There was something very sort of resonant about Val - the fact that she'd lost one child, she'd had Lucy taken away from her, and then the same thing happens again to her with the twins.

Joan: Mmm hmm.

James: And what was so interesting about the Verna character is that she was quite - she was almost a stronger character than -

Joan: Valene.

Jason: Valene, yes. That's the tragedy of it.

James: Yes, she's sort of - there seems to be a thing about Valene that when she's supposedly at her most insane or weak, in inverted commas, she actually finds her strength. She goes her own bizarre way and finds herself.

Joan: Mmm hmm.

James: It's very - it's really fascinating.

Jason: It's uplifting. I think Val is an uplifting character.

Joan: Oh, I do too, and, see, that's what - in Hartford, I was so kind of - the job I just came off of - amazed how many people did watch KNOTS and embrace me when I'm walking around or wherever I'm going. Because of Valene, we have an immediate connection, and it's hard to articulate, but I heard someone do an interview the other day, cos I never watch TV when I'm working on a show because I just stay focused and whatever and it takes me way off somewhere that I don't - and I was watching an interview when I got back home, and they said that the wonderful thing about doing a television character, if that character is warm or connects with an audience, is that you have friends and you get used to it. For a while, it's kind of scary.

Jason: Yes.

Joan: They know you and you kind of wanna hide. Then, for me now, as I go wherever I travel to and wherever I work, there is a connection. It's because of Valene and people really open their hearts to you, and it's a comforting thing instead of a threat.

Jason: Yes, yes, of course. And can I ask you about your working techniques on working on a television show like KNOTS LANDING which is, you know, a daily routine, in terms of how the show changed? You still have to give a very real performance to your character, while the show itself is perhaps changing in the way it's presented to the audience and so forth. You must have to - could you talk to us a bit about that process?

Joan: Well, I think the actor has their own process regardless, because you still have to bring it in at seven in the morning and be ready to go right away, so I don't know that I was aware - yes, I was aware the show was changing from time to time, based on the story line or where it was going, etc., or who they were bringing in, but I think, from the chair of the character, it's always the same, because you can't violate or go outside or elsewhere if your own process is to bring reality, a core reality, to the character.

Jason: Yes. And can I talk to you a little bit as well about departures? Because you're on the show for thirteen, fourteen seasons, and you see people come and go, and sometimes some of those departures must be painful and affect your life - I mean, Julie Harris and Constance, you know, left the show -

Joan: Mmm.

Jason: Times like that that are just really difficult. You must have seen a few of those moments.

Joan: I did. The one that jumped as you were saying this, the one that jumped out to me was Doug Sheehan.

Jason: Yes.

Joan: That one - Julie and Constance, you know, I couldn't believe and of course was upset, but in Constance's case, that exit became probably one of the highlights, if not the highlight of the show.

Jason: Yes.

Joan: It provided Bill Devane with his -

Jason: "Noises Everywhere".

Joan: Yes, his usual stellar, amazing work. It provided all of us - I had a scene with Michele where I blow up at her.

James: Yes, the coffee pot! You break the coffee pot!

Joan: Yes, exactly. So Constance's exit provided all of us with just amazing individual character moments.

Jason: And also she was a part of it too, that Constance was still filming, with the video segments and "The Gift of Life".

Joan: Interspersed.

Jason: Yes.

Joan: So her exit was probably the highlight - but certainly one of the highlights of the entire run of the show. So that one was spectacular. Julie, I always assumed would be back in and out, and I don't believe that ever came to pass. I was thinking she would visit or come back and forth, but that was difficult. But Ben - Doug Sheehan's seemed out of nowhere somehow and I know it did to him too a bit, and I remember sending him - oh, I've never told this, but I sent him - because I'm a big balloon person, for a birthday or a - mostly birthdays, I send balloons and crazy notes to people or whatever - and I sent him a bouquet, a huge bouquet of balloons, and it might have been even with a little basket of goodies or something, with a love note basically, cos I loved him so and felt terrible that he was leaving, and I know he felt not so great that he was leaving, and I sent it and I asked the dialogue coach the next day or two, "Did Doug get my balloons?" and he said, "Yeah, he got it," and then I said, "Well, I never heard from him. What happened?" He said, "He just let them go. He let them go up to the sky."

James: Awwww.

Jason: Awwww. Wow.

Joan: Never forgot that, and I've never told that.

James: That's lovely.

Jason: Just lovely. Isn't that lovely?

Joan: Yeah.

Jason: Just lovely. But you know what's also wonderful is when you - cos you and Doug Sheehan did the most incredible work - I mean, on - you know, on the -

James: They were great. Val and Ben were such a great couple.

Jason: And in terms of your acting, fascinating to watch two people who are so good at their craft, you know, take us on this journey, and I think the fact that that work is captured on celluloid forever and, you know, it's on DVD now forever, is just - it allows people to go back and look at the quality of work that was really going on.

Joan: Well, you know, I'm wondering if - cos Ted and I, before I left for the play, did I'd say a day's worth of work on the first DVD that has come out, I think it was March twenty-eighth, seventh, sixth, and I was already into rehearsals and so I haven't seen the DVD. I mean, I've seen the packaging, but -

James: Oh it's great, it's great. It looks - it looks wonderful.

Joan: Yeah, it's the First - it's the Complete First Season.

James: Yeah.

Joan: Ted and I did commentary on it.

James: We've heard them and they're great.

Jason: Thank you so much for doing the commentary.

James: Cos we know you kind of didn't have to do them, and we're really -

Joan: Well, yeah, it was very complicated. Warner Brothers wasn't gonna pay me until I did publicity, and I couldn't do publicity because we were rehearsing from sunup to sundown on the play, and once I'm deep in that character, to get down to New York, etc. etc., so it was kinda tricky, but Ted did something for ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT that he said he would - this is what I love about him - he said, "I will only do this ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT interview if you include Joan, you know, and pay her too," or whatever. (Jason chuckles) But I'm just wondering if in fact, you know, they will come out with any further KNOTS DVDs, because I think Abby came in the second or third year -

James: Second season, yeah.

Joan: Oh, was it second?

Jason: Second, yeah.

Joan: I think they may do the second year. I'm just - I'll be really curious to see where they go from here.

Jason: Yeah.

James: Well, we really hope so, and apparently, from what I hear, who knows, but apparently the first one has sold well.

Jason: Yes.

Joan: Well, I don't know. I would rather doubt that it would actually, because it was such a long time ago and -

Jason: But I think what's happened is with DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES, even though the shows are completely different shows -

Joan: Yeah.

Jason: - the media have echoed KNOTS LANDING and brought it up quite a lot, and I think it's brought a newer audience to it who perhaps want to see, you know, what the comparison is between the two shows.

Joan: Oh, how interesting. Has that been true over there too, that they compared the two shows? Cos that's what they did when we had the reunion. They said, "How do you feel about being the original DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES?"

Jason: They do, they do.

James: But you were so much better than DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES.

Jason: So much better.

James: The relationships on KNOTS were just so much more specific and made far more sense.

Joan: Yeah, and they -

James: And that's what holds a show together.

Joan: Really. Well now, do you all - is DESPERATE huge over there still?

James: I think so. I'm not quite sure.

Jason: It still gets good numbers.

James: It got a lot of publicity when it started, but I don't know -

Joan: What are some of the other hot shows there that -

James: We get PRISON BREAK. You mean American shows? We get PRISON BREAK.

Joan: Is that a good one?

James: It's pretty good. It's kind of high concept, it's a bit like 24. It's more sort of plot based than character based, but -

Joan: So PRISON BREAK and DESPERATE and -

James: Erm -

Jason: And we get SIX FEET UNDER. That's the best - I mean, that's fantastic.

Joan: I mean, there's something that I - that is, to me - talk about a cast, an ensemble.

Jason: Yes.

James: Yeah.

Joan: Oh my God.

Jason: Yes, yes.

James: There's something about Frances Conroy that reminds me of Julie Harris.

Joan: Oh my God, yes! Absolutely! And Rachel Griffiths is amazing. She's like Anjelina Jolie was at the very beginning of her career. Totally fearless. Just jumps in, whatever you give her. She's there and she's fully committed to executing it. I mean, she is - they're all amazing.

Jason: You loved Karen Allen, didn't you? On the pilot for KNOTS, you loved her.

Joan: Loved her. That's again fearless. That is again fearless, cos she just - you know, I would look at her work and look at her during the scenes and think, "She just isn't afraid of anything. She'll just do it, let it all hang out."

James: I wanted to ask you about Ted, cos we know the story that, because you'd done WONDER WOMAN, you had slight misgivings -

Joan: (laughing): You heard about that?

James: - about him being your husband. When did that change? When was - was there a moment when you clicked and you thought, "There's a connection here"?

Joan: Well, the first season, I think we were all, you know - what's the word? I don't wanna say flying by the seat of our pants, not at all - but you're so busy executing, that you don't reflect. You know, it's very intense, television schedules. More so now, even, that when we filmed KNOTS. I mean, we used to start - we started with eight days per hour show. That's why the soap was two shows in one day, on YOUNG AND RESTLESS. I mean, it was just -

James: Wow, two in one day! My God!

Jason: Two in one day. Good lord.

Joan: Top speed. There was some days, because I was doing the play at the Kennedy Centre, there were some days when I did three different episodes on YOUNG AND RESTLESS.

James (laughing): Oh no!

Joan: Top speed compared to, you know, a nice eight days to do a one hour show - KNOTS's schedule - but, still, you're kind of flying by the seat of our pants, but I do know that I became absolutely - I had a crush on Ted that first year finally, but when I saw how right he was for Gary in his way, because I had filmed with David Ackroyd the scenes in DALLAS -

James: Yeah, and he's great, but very different, isn't he?

Joan: Oh, very, very different, and was unavailable when we - when it came time to film the pilot for KNOTS, so while David was just amazing as Gary, he was night and day from what Ted was doing, and Ted showed me the black sheep of the family, the kind of wanderlust, a kind of loose cannon in a way, in a most charismatic way, what Gary really was to the Ewing family, and I think he, just by nature, executed that, and so I was dazzled by how right he was for Gary in a totally different way. So the first year was really getting used to each other and discovering those two characters. I don't know how or why, because we just became intertwined, you know, completely over the -

Jason: And your work together was so incredible. There's a scene in Season 4 during the Ciji arc when both you and Gary are being held by the police and you're being questioned in Ciji's apartment, and you two meet and there is a physical explosion, and you both just - you're both screaming at each other and it's like watching theatre. It's filmed, you know, captured theatre. Do you remember that?

Joan: I'm trying - vaguely - I remember the Ciji - that whole arc, which was another huge success in terms of story line, and I remember going, you know - taking the - what is the word? - rap, you know -

Jason: Yes. When you were sort of - Valene was being, you know - looked as though she'd done it -

Joan: - taking the heat. But I don't remember the fight.

James: Cos you're both with different policemen, or whatever, and you're both brought separately to Ciji's apartment at the same time -

Joan: Ah, yes!

James: - and the sparks go off between you. You both just go mad! (Laughs)

Jason: Yes. It's electrifying.

Joan: Well, that always would happen with Ted and me, and, you know, you remind me of another scene that is Ted's favourite of all. As Verna Ellers, he comes in a tuxedo with tails to this apartment where she's dressed up in this sort of vintage dress and they do a waltz.

James: Yeah, it's like a dream sequence, isn't it?

Joan: Oh yes. Oh my God. That one was total - cos they did that 180 with the camera where they circle around.

James: Yeah.

Joan: That was a very magic - which we never discussed, we never did anything. It's just when we got together and the camera rolled, there you go. That's true of any successful television show. When the camera rolls, if two actors have chemistry and a connection, it just happens. There it is and it's magic and it happens. I think that was certainly an example of a scene where that was true.

James: So, one thing that interests me - when we spoke to David Jacobs, he told us how you and Michele - how he sort of would have open house for the actors at the weekends to come and talk to him about the scripts.

Joan: Well, that was, you know, that was the true gift, and I realise it in reflecting about the whole journey of the show and the character. That was the gift that we had was that we could go in and talk to David and say this, that and the other. If we had a story line idea, if we had something that was in a script that we didn't feel was the character, we were free to discuss that with David and/or Michael, and what a gift it was. And after the reunion, which was aired last December, David called me and I hadn't seen the reunion and he said the most amazing, beautiful things to me and he said how I had kept it and driven the show and I was sort of the glue that kept the reunion together, and it was because I had homeworked a lot of the moments in the scenes, and I realised, in all of us getting together last summer to film the reunion, that we are so connected, emotionally and spiritually, and that was a lesson that I didn't know until last summer when we all got together again. It's because we shared - what? - fourteen years together and you can't deny that.

James: And would you say that applies to the actors that weren't there for various reasons? Cos, just watching it, you couldn't help - I mean it was great - but you couldn't help but slightly miss the Averys, you know, Richard and Laura -

Joan: Yes, but you see that, and I think that's - I guess it's the family, the family of both actors and the family of the characters, and we were truly a family.

James: So what were the kind of - can you give us - I know it's a long time ago, but can you give us any examples of the kind of things you would see in a script and go to David and say, "I'm not -"? Were there kinds of things that you were protective about, specific things you were protective about Val?

Joan: I was protective about certainly the relationship with Gary and eventually her relationship with the children, with the twins, and protecting them and that that was the priority, which as an actress I hated cos it meant I stayed in blue jeans and a man's shirt or a T-shirt. (Jason chuckles) Nothing glamorous and nothing - more like the Felicity Huffman character in DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES.

James: Yeah.

Jason: Yes, yes.

Joan: It kept me home-bound and kitchen-bound, which I hated, when, say, Karen and Abby and Paige, Nicollette Sheridan, all of them were out there in drop dead Thierry Mugler, Versace suits, or Dolce and Gabanna this, that and the other, (Jason chuckles) and I'm there in a pair of jeans and a man's shirt. You know, I hated that, but I felt that Valene's priorities would be such that she would be there at home and loving it, and there are women like that out there. It ain't the one you're talking to right now. (Jason laughs) That's what the character was, and so I would keep a priority, you know, to be home and gladly so, in that house with those children doing her thing.

James: So was there ever - were there suggestions to try and take her away from that? To try and move her away from that?

Joan: Well, actually, yes, and that was later in the series when the kids were growing up and there's the opportunity for Valene to write and to do the novel and then to do the screenplay, which was one of our - was a story when we did a reunion - that was a story line. So, yes, eventually, then she got back to writing and got into a career and then I got into some clothes. (Jason and James chuckle) Got a chance to get out and strut my stuff! I loved - but it wasn't until it was appropriate to her family to do so.

James: There's an interesting trend, a strange trend, I noticed in the sort of laterish years with Val where she goes through a kind of vigilante phase, and almost every year - it sort of starts with Jean Hackney. If you remember, Jean Hackney is the woman that makes Ben become assassin - the year she's terrorising you and Ben -

Joan: And who was the - were you saying the actress's name or the -

James: It was Wendy Fulton who played Jean Hackney.

Joan: Oh yes!

James: And it's the first time - it's the first of Val's Vigilante Trilogy, if you like, when she goes after her with a gun.

Joan: You know, Valene - if you ruffle the feathers of the centre of the home, the husband, the family - you ruffle those feathers, she's a guard dog, she's a German shepherd.

Jason and James (laughing): Yeah!

Joan: Yeah! So she'll, you know, that'll make the hair stand up on the back of her neck and she will go for it. She can be tough, if it's defending her man or her home. She became stronger and tougher because of that. I had forgotten about that. You know, I have in my office downstairs pictures of, you know, moments, different moments on the show. One that comes to mind is me lying on the table just before delivering the twins, and we filmed it all night one night, and I've got this - the way you're supposed to have a surgical cap on, so your hair isn't showing and stuff, and hardly any make up at all, and it's just me lying down there on the thing and it's just so funny, and I've got all these various moments. I have one of Gary, Val and Lucy running along the beach in the water that was taken on the first -

Jason: That's a beautiful shot. I think it's at the end of the DVD.

Joan: Maybe. Yes it is, yes it is.

Jason: It's beautiful.

Joan: Yes. And I love that and I've got a photo of that, because there are moments that are signature, that are the heart and soul, and I've got so many of those down in the office. I, unfortunately, have to do a call to New York for a speech that I'm gonna do next week and - out here for the American Women In Radio and Television luncheon -

Jason: Oh, OK.

James: Good for you, good for you.

Joan: So I have gotta write this speech this weekend and I need to talk to the woman that I'm presenting the award to. But I will look for this down the line.

Jason and James: We'll send it to you.

Joan: Oh, that's sweet. I appreciate it, if you would.

Jason: Have you seen the Michael Filerman one?

Joan: I'd love to see Michael's, if you have a moment. So Michael was recently?

Jason: We did James Houghton and Kim Lankford, and then Michael and David.

Joan: You know, James Houghton was one of the writers on YOUNG AND RESTLESS.

James: Yeah, yeah.

Jason: Yes, he said, he said. We spoke to him at length about writing for television, and he had some really interesting ideas about how television's changed, and he said some really provocative things about television and the way it's presented.

Joan: Oh, yes. I never communicated with him while I was on YOUNG AND RESTLESS, and wanted to because I think he's spectacular, and I bet he did have some provocative things to say that would really get your mind going about what's going on. And let me say this too, that I've done a gazillion interviews, but you honestly seem to have caught, both of you, things that I did strive for. Whether I executed it or not, you caught it, you got it - which I'm both grateful and impressed with, because I did take it all very seriously, (chuckles) because that's what I was there for and I appreciate your understanding and your -

James: Well, we love it. We just love it, and it so resonates.

Jason: It'll be timeless, because it's so well acted and written, and the ensemble cast is as - it's an incredible piece of television, you know.

Joan: Bless your heart. I thank you for that and I know David and Michael thank you too. Have great day, or night or whatever it is there.

James: Thank you.

Jason: Thanks, Joan.

James: And give our love if you - when you talk to Julie - and if you ever talk to Constance again, cos we've got a soft spot for Constance.

Joan: I will and I do and I absolutely will do that.

James: Thank you so much, Joan. All the best. Take care.

Joan: Bye.