Support for LAist comes from
Local and national news, NPR, things to do, food recommendations and guides to Los Angeles, Orange County and the Inland Empire
Stay Connected
Listen
Podcasts The Frame
Timothy Olyphant might just be the luckiest guy in Hollywood
solid pale red banner
()
This is an archival story that predates current editorial management.

This archival content was originally written for and published on KPCC.org. Keep in mind that links and images may no longer work — and references may be outdated.

Mar 6, 2017
Listen 16:23
Timothy Olyphant might just be the luckiest guy in Hollywood
After getting a fine arts degree from USC, Olyphant moved to New York on a hunch to pursue acting and has been working ever since.

After getting a fine arts degree from USC, Olyphant moved to New York on a hunch to pursue acting and has been working ever since.

Timothy Olyphant is perhaps best known for the character Raylan Givens on the FX series “Justified,” where it seemed that his role as a U.S. Marshal in Kentucky fit him like a Stetson hat. 

But Olyphant is now trying out a very different role in the Netflix comedy series, "Santa Clarita Diet." 

In the show, his wife — played by Drew Barrymore — is a realtor-slash-zombie and must eat human flesh to survive. Olyphant plays Joel Hammond, a husband so dedicated to his family that he’s willing to commit murder.

Olyphant's route to becoming an actor was a circuitous one. Early on, he attended USC on a swimming scholarship where he also majored in fine art. On a hunch he moved to New York to pursue acting and first found work in theater. His first film roles were in “Scream 2” and Doug Liman’s 1999 film, “Go."  Since then, he's played a wide range of characters in both film and TV.

When Olyphant sat down with The Frame's John Horn, he started by discussing how his career in acting got launched.

Interview Highlights:

On starting his acting career and misconceptions about struggling actors:



When I went to New York, I had no acting experience at all. I'd never done a high school play. Nothing. It was a hunch. I took a class after college. I needed some electives so I took an acting class. I had so much fun. I was already an art major and was thinking of getting a masters in painting. They were both absurd choices. I moved to New York and started taking acting classes. I'm struggling, I'm taking classes and I'm waiting tables and bartending. That was already exciting. I'm like, Look — I'm that guy! I'm a cliché! Growing up in Modesto, I never thought I'd be that guy, so this was already pretty fun.



You always hear that only two percent make it [in acting]. So you start talking to all the people you're waiting tables with and bartending with and asking them what they're doing. Most of them you've thought to yourself, That's not going to work! Your plan is not a good one! It's the story that everybody likes to tell — that people are discovered. that these magical things happen. First of all, the story is often not really true. And two, if you think they were trying to become professional basketball players, no one would say, I used to play a lot. I haven't been playing lately, but I have an uncle who knows the guy who's an assistant trainer for the Celtics and he said, there's a chance... I believe that applies, that metaphor.

On getting his role in "Scream 2":



I auditioned for it. As I recall, I think I auditioned for the first one [too]. And it meant a huge amount. It was a big movie and a lot of people saw it. It was a flashy part and I was very grateful they gave me that opportunity. And it led to other parts. The day I met with [director] Doug Liman, he said he had just recently seen "Scream 2" and he was interested in meeting with me about that. 

On early work with Danny Boyle and Holly Hunter:



I did a scene that basically got cut out of a Danny Boyle movie, "A Life Less Ordinary," where I was working with Holly Hunter for the day. Those are moments. Danny Boyle — there was just a way in which he works — an enthusiasm. He makes you feel like everything is wonderful. But watching Holly Hunter was pretty life changing. I hadn't seen that before. We were doing a take and the camera's on her. The wind picked up and she turned her face into the wind. Some noise would happen off-camera and she'd turn and look at it and then look back at me. She had this monologue and at first I kept thinking, She's screwing up [the camera shots]. Then I realized, no she's not. She's actually just completely dialed in to the entire experience and everything that's happening and she's not concerned with getting it right. She's not even trying to get it right. She's interested in the moment and whatever was happening at the moment. It felt fearless and unconscious and I remember flagging that moment — that day — and thinking, Well, that's where you want to go. That's where you want to get to.

On "Santa Clarita Diet" and whether he fits his role on the show:



It's a very traditional, simple show. I play a guy who loves his wife and he wants to protect her, he wants to provide for her. He loves the family, he's trying to keep them together. She's eating the neighbors and that's making it difficult. I'm trying to work it out and keep it together. I was really quite surprised they offered it to me.



I think you could make an argument that in those first two episodes, I'm miscast. You could put a more nebbishy character in there and it would explain a lot. But I think that the wonderful thing about television is that it's a fluid piece. If you get to the fourth episode, I think it's a match made in heaven. I think it's a perfect part for me.

On what it means to be executive producer on Santa Clarita Diet:



Nothing. Producing? It means whatever you want it to. You can stay home and collect a paycheck. On this show, I mostly do a lot of cheerleading. It depends. On "Justified," I — for better or worse — was very involved. On this show, I'm involved, but it's Victor [Fresco's] baby and he really knows what he wants and I'm a little out of my element. But I've been very lucky. My job allows me to still be a student. It allows me to still be a child. It allows me to still find things about it where I know nothing and an opportunity to learn about it. That makes the acting more fun. 

On being an actor and contributing to the production process:



Acting really is — I don't know what people tell you, but it's pretty easy. You say what they tell you to say, you wear what they tell you to wear and you hit your mark. You're really just — as far as I can tell — present and in the moment. It's in between [takes] where you've got all this time [to get] involved in the storytelling ... to think about the bigger picture, the story, where it's going, the opportunities that we're not taking advantage of. The distraction of the two things tend to complement one another.