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Andrea Romano Talks About Casting/Directing Green Lantern

There is no doubt that she absolutely knows what she is doing.

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You can't think about DC's animated features without thinking about Andrea Romano.  Or at least you shouldn't.  She has been a casting/dialogue director for over twenty-five years.  Cartoons she's worked on include Batman: The Animated Series, Animaniacs, SpongeBob SquarePants, The Boondocks and Smurfs.  She always manages to find the perfect voices for the different roles. 

Green Lantern: First Flight
is DC's fifth animated feature film.  The voices she's lined up include Christopher Meloni (Law & Order: Special Victims Unit), Victor Garber, Tricia Helfer, Michael Madsen, Juliet Landau, John Larroquette (Night Court), Kurtwood Smith (That '70s Show), Larry Drake (Darkman), William Schallert (The Patty Duke Show), Olivia d'Abo, David Lander (Laverne & Shirley) and Rob Paulsen.  This will no doubt be the perfect ensemble for this movie.

 Here is a Q & A with Andrea Romano:

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QUESTION:
Did Christopher Meloni’s rave reviews as a detective on Law & Order:
SVU lead you to casting him as the ultimate space cop, Hal Jordan?

ANDREA ROMANO:
Given the age range and the character type, and the fact that he is a
very good actor, I thought Christopher Meloni would be the right
voice. His voice has a nice strength and honesty to it, and his acting
is really wonderful.

This is a role that requires the character to come off as very smart,
but he also gets duped when he probably should’ve have seen it coming.
That’s a tough tightrope to walk, but I found Christopher so
incredibly believable. Every note in his acting was true, and real,
and organic, and believable. He had not done much voiceover, if any,
but he learned so fast that he sprang forth fully formed. He had it
down. I don't think he ever had a technical problem.


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QUESTION:
From Broadway to primetime to major motion pictures like Titanic and
Milk, Victor Garber has quite the resume. What made him right for
Sinestro, and how did you talk him into doing his first voiceover for
animation?

ANDREA ROMANO:
I have known Victor Garber's work since Godspell, and there have been
several connections over the years. Carl Lumbly played J’onn J’onzz
for us on Justice League while he was doing Alias with Victor Garber,
and I tried many times to hire Victor to do an episode with Carl as a
fun crossover – but he was never available. I had met Victor a few
times and I met him again at Diedrich Bader's surprise birthday party.
We spoke about him coming to work for me again, and this time his
schedule worked out.

Sinestro needed to be elegant. There are many, many different Green
Lanterns – some females, some male, some alien, some looking more
human. They’re all different. This particular Green Lantern – Sinestro
– is a bad guy. But we, as audience members, are not supposed to know
that he’s a bad guy in this particular film. So I needed someone who
could seem egotistical and strong, but not tip us off that he’s got an
ulterior motive all the way through the piece.

Victor hit every note perfectly. There was a musicality to his
delivery. You don’t even have to tell someone like Victor Garber to do
that – he just naturally finds the vocal music and brings it to the
character.


QUESTION:
Were you at all worried about casting two actors who had not done
voiceovers for animation, and having them record together?

ANDREA ROMANO:
You would have thought they had worked together for years and years.
They play well together, and it was a dream for me. When you're a
casting director, you never really know how it's going to work out
until you're in the room doing the gig. This was one of those
instances where I thought, “I know what the heck I'm doing!”  I
actually cast exactly the two right actors – they were perfect for the
roles. They knew exactly what they needed to do and they did it. And
they had fun in the process.

We struck this nice combination of Victor Garber playing this sort of
duplicitous, sophisticated, elegant, eloquent guy and Christopher
Meloni playing this kind of not necessarily blue collar, but much more
down to earth, real guy that your everyman can relate to. Putting them
together and having them play off each other was wonderful. Absolutely
wonderful. I sat in that recording session and smiled. They needed me
fix and finesse a few things here and there, and explain certain bits
of action. But as far as the acting beats, I didn’t have to tell them
one thing. For the most part, I just got out of their way – because
they knew exactly what they were doing.


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QUESTION:
Michael Madsen is another voiceover novice, but that voice is made for
character animation. What prompted you to cast him as Kilowog?

ANDREA ROMANO:
Kilowog is an alien Green Lantern, and we really wanted a voice with
texture and character and some edges to it; a voice that sounded gruff
and big and strong, but also smart. I did not want someone who sounded
like a big dopey guy. For years and years, I wanted to hire Michael
Madsen and this was just the perfect marriage of role, actor and
availability.

It’s a lot about availability, and Michael is a great example. He
hadn’t done any animated roles before Green Lantern, and yet when I
finally got him in the room, we found out how much he had wanted to do
it and, now, how much he loves doing voiceover work. He loves this
whole world of animation, and characters like Batman and Superman.

You need an actor who has an enthusiasm for the project, for the role,
and for the process – and Michael was there, in the moment, he
understood, and wanted to do more takes than we needed. That is very
generous and brought some really beautiful texture. I love those
raspy, deep, dark voices – that sound that tells you that there’s been
some life experience there, whether it’s been smoking cigarettes or
drinking booze or just living. I don’t think I’m the only person that
responds to that kind of voice with character. That’s a voice that's
lived.

QUESTION:
You cast Virginia Madsen in Wonder Woman and her brother Michael
Madsen in Green Lantern: First Flight. When was the last time you cast
siblings in back-to-back projects?

ANDREA ROMANO:
Never. Never ever. But that was so cool having both Madsens in
consecutive films. Though not being able to hire siblings hasn’t been
for a lack of trying.  I was seated next to Tyne Daly once and we got
to talking and I asked “Do you want to do voiceovers?” And she said,
“I’d love to do it – my brother (Tim Daly) does it.” And I said, “I
know, he’s my Superman!” So I’ve tried for years to find the right
role for her, but there are not that many significant roles for women.
Wonder Woman was the only one that really had nice, big, beautiful
parts for women. But I'll find something for Tyne – I love her work.


QUESTION:
And how was the final member of your lead quartet, Tricia Helfer as Boodikka?

ANDREA ROMANO:
We really needed Boodikka to be smart, sexy and strong. Tricia Helfer
was interested and available and we were lucky to get her. She is such
a very nice person, and such a good actress – especially for this kind
of piece. She really understands it. She’s big in the Sci-Fi world,
and she gets it. She plays this character so that you never know what
twists are coming. You think it’s very straightforward and then
something happens and you’re surprised because she never tips it off
ahead of time. She was spot on with her performance and I loved
working with her. She was just a joy.



For more information, images and updates, please visit the film’s official website at www.greenlanternmovie.com