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Home / Entertainment

Elizabeth Olsen on the unexpected challenges of WandaVision

By Sarah Bahr
New York Times·
16 Jul, 2021 07:00 AM5 mins to read

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"Sometimes you don't know when something's going to work, especially if it's a high-concept show," Elizabeth Olsen said. Photo / Rozette Rago, The New York Times

"Sometimes you don't know when something's going to work, especially if it's a high-concept show," Elizabeth Olsen said. Photo / Rozette Rago, The New York Times

Olsen talked about her first Emmy nomination and about why the series exceeded her expectations compared with more typical Marvel fare.

In a year with so much strangeness and uncertainty, WandaVision at first seemed to offer a nostalgic antidote with its tidy suburban setting and its vintage black-and-white aesthetic. That lasted all of two episodes before the writers blasted a colorful hole through the protective wall of static surrounding the fictional town of Westview, New Jersey — and through its viewers' (and its critics') early expectations.

Featuring Elizabeth Olsen, the series' clever mix of classic sitcom conventions and superhero spectacle made it a hit with even those who aren't deeply versed in Marvel trivia. It was also a hit with Emmys voters: This week, the series picked up 23 nominations, including a best actress nod to Olsen for her role as the superhero-in-hiding next door Wanda Maximoff, aka the Avengers' Scarlet Witch. (Olsen's male counterpart, Paul Bettany, who plays her android husband, Vision, was also nominated, as was the show for best limited series.)

WandaVision is finished, but Olsen, who scored her first Emmy nomination for her role, has said her character must still face a reckoning for holding an entire town hostage in order to live out her suburban fantasy — most likely in the upcoming film Dr. Strange and the Multiverse of Madness. "I think she has a tremendous amount of guilt," she said in a recent oral history of the series by Rolling Stone.

A few hours after her nomination was announced, Olsen talked about why she thinks the show was particularly resonant during the pandemic, about being overseas as the show became a pop-culture phenomenon and about whether the Scarlet Witch is Marvel's most powerful Avenger. These are edited excerpts from the conversation.

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Q: Congrats on your first Emmy nomination. Where were you when you found out?

A: I was emptying my dishwasher.

Q: Who was the first person you told?

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A: I didn't tell anyone yet! I got off a dialect coach lesson and started taking these calls.

Q: What are you most excited about for the ceremony?

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A: I didn't have any plans to be nominated! I've never been to one of these shows, so it's all just new to me.

Olsen and Paul Bettany play Wanda and Vision, two superheroes who appear to have escaped into a series of classic TV sitcoms. Photo / Supplied
Olsen and Paul Bettany play Wanda and Vision, two superheroes who appear to have escaped into a series of classic TV sitcoms. Photo / Supplied

Q: Why, of all the comic-book premises, would America in 2021 be captivated by a story about someone escaping into classic TV as a refuge from trauma?

A: We didn't know there was going to be a pandemic when we started telling the story of a woman creating a bubble and wanting to keep her family within that bubble. And we're all in our own bubble with Covid, dealing with this fear of the outside. At the same time, American sitcoms have been our comfort place through the decades, and the show spoke to these two different elements that were happening at the same time.

Sometimes you don't know when something's going to work, especially if it's a high-concept show. But it was just comforting for people. And although the weekly aspect was kind of a scary choice, it ended up paying off because it was paying homage to how we used to watch television and the ritual of it.

Q: The correct amount of prior knowledge to enjoy WandaVision, it seems, is either a comic superfan's worth or almost nothing. Why do you think the show resonated with viewers who never would have dreamed they would be watching a superhero series?

A: I don't know — maybe it's because of the discovery; you want to watch the next thing that happens. Maybe it's the humour or the nostalgia from episode to episode through the sitcoms and the styles. It's kind of like a memory lane to television while dealing with this woman's trauma. I'm not sure. I was remote on a job and wasn't in the United States when all this was coming out, so I didn't get to experience the effect this was having. So I'm still surprised by the reaction, in a really nice way.

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Q: Wanda can be viewed as either a hero or villain, and often as both. What was it like balancing Wanda's caring, motherly aspect with her selfish desire to have the family she has been denied, no matter the cost to others?

A: I hope to approach every character like that. I really love playing not just anti-heroines but also humans whom you want to both question their intentions and root for them. Playing with that line is the most exciting part of my job and hopefully opens up people to seeing different perspectives when they have such strong opinions. We're all multifaceted people and not just one dimensional. I love that even in the comic books, you don't know if Wanda's going to be a hero or a villain. That's what I love most about her.

Q: You've been a part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe for more than seven years now. In all that time, what is the biggest surprise they've thrown at you?

A: Getting to do WandaVision. It was a huge surprise to get to be so challenged by a Marvel sitcom. I mean, they are challenging, technically, for lots of reasons, but this was challenging from every perspective. Doing that show really woke up my body to all different parts of my training as an actor and made me feel like I could utilize so many tools that other projects don't utilize. And I just loved it.

Q: Please set the record straight: Is the Scarlet Witch the most powerful Avenger?

A: I think so. I have to believe that. I think the only person who can hurt her is herself.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.


Written by: Sarah Bahr
Photographs by: Rozette Rago
© 2021 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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