CityBeat: Did you read The Walking Dead before you got the gig?
Norman
Reedus: No, I read it as soon as I got the job, but I put it down after
a while, because the show became its own animal. I don’t want to know
the storyline. We all talk on set, so we kind of know where the comic
book goes for some of our characters, but we deviate from that so much.
And I’ve heard that Kirkman is putting me in the comic book at some
point.
Because Daryl isn’t in the comic, the writers have a lot of freedom with him.
Yeah,
they can do whatever they want with me. I could have sex with everyone,
I could be the last man standing, I could be an alien. Anything could
happen.
That also means that things can shift. The difference between Daryl in Season 1 and Season 2 is huge.
The
writers of our show have been very gracious with allowing the actors to
go into the writers’ room and talk about where they think their
characters should go and what they think about certain things. They’ve
let us help develop the characters. I’ve never heard of that happening
before. I’ve never gotten that opportunity. There were early versions of
scripts where I take Merle’s drugs, and where I was more of a hothead,
stuff like that. I told them, straight up, I’d rather be an Al-Anon
member than an AA member. I’d rather be that kid who grew up under the
thumb of the racist big brother and grew up hating it. Now that he’s out
of Merle’s shadow, he’s discovering who he is for the first time, a lot
like a little kid. They allowed me to do that. With movies, which I’m
more accustomed to, you know you’re going from here to there. With
television, you can plant these subtle seeds and hope that people are
paying attention. To their credit, the writers see what audience members
pick up on and what I’m veering towards, and they work with that.
Daryl is used to
going off on his own when things go wrong, so it’s ironic that, in the
face of the zombie apocalypse, he’s forced to be with other people and
to take a look at himself.
You’re
exactly on point. We’ve kind of brought Daryl down to this child
mentality. He has weird relationships with people. He doesn’t want to be
hated, and he wants people to care about him. I’ve always said that
he’s the kind of guy who needs a hug, but if you try to hug him, he’ll
probably stab you. We’ve really run with that.
He’s so used to pushing people away, and now he has to actually deal with them.
Yeah,
and where we’re going, too, he’s going to be given more
responsibilities, and he didn’t ask for them. In some ways, he’s proud
to take it on, and in others, ‘What am I doing? I don’t need people.’
Merle comes back next season, and it’s been brought up by me and [actor
Michael] Rooker, why wouldn’t we just go, ‘Yay! Why don’t we just get
the fuck out of here?’ But now there’s all these different layers and
different meanings to things. Daryl’s kind of trying to find his family
in all this. We can go so many different ways with him, and I’m happy to
make him not just a one-dimensional dude.
The
other big difference between Seasons 1 and 2 was that Darabont left
after the first six episodes. How did that change things?
Season
1, I wasn’t in the writers’ room. I came in later, and everyone knew
each other; the whole cast knew each other. They’d been on this mission
for a while when I showed up. Also, Frank wrote that character
specifically for me, so I came to work for Frank. But once Frank was out
of the picture, [show runner] Glen [Mazzarra], to his credit, stepped
up and really rallied the troops together. He started the writers’-room
thing. Glen was Frank’s number two, so he kept that formula and added
his own flavors to it. In this weird way, it made all the actors get
together and realize that we work our asses off on this show, and we
have the best crew any of us have ever worked with. So we decided to
sink our feet into the sand and keep our heads steady and keep this
rolling, because we really enjoy this job. In a weird way, it brought us
tighter together to fight for what we wanted. It was weird because we
all love Frank. Glen loves Frank. We all love that guy, and we wish him
the best. But it really brought us tighter together, as a family,
because we had to be.
Are you able to step back and have perspective on the character, so you don’t see him as yourself?
I
am. I do watch the show, but I don’t watch advance copies. I wait and I
watch it on TV, with other people. I really like Daryl. I’m invested in
him, not just because I’m playing him, but also because I find him
super-interesting to watch. I’m always curious how he’s going to handle
things, and what other people are going to think of him. He’s a loose
wire and a hothead, but he’s also got this heart of gold at the same
time. I like the differences and the similarities there. I’m very proud
of that.
The new season is about to kick off, and it takes place in the prison. What can you say about it?
I
can tell you that Season 3 is going to blow the pants off of everyone.
What we did last season is not even comparable to what we’re doing this
season. We are going to set records that people have never even thought
of before. I say that with all honesty. Andy [Andrew Lincoln, who plays
lead character Rick Grimes] and I were in our trailer the other day,
reading the scripts, jumping up and down, going, ‘No way, I can’t
believe we’re going there.’ It’s crazy. It’s insane. I can’t tell you
enough. You’re going to freak out.
from