[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=auXjgCLnuE4[/YOUTUBE]
Katie: So excited that The Vampire Diaries is coming back this week. Got any scoop on what we can expect from Elena now that she's flipped the switch?
Well, we can tell you that Ian Somerhalder is definitely enjoying the new Elena. "Now she's a badass and she can crack jokes," he says of Elena with her humanity turned off. "Every time she walks out of the house we're not biting our nails thinking someone is going to come kill her. She can fight for herself."
ETonline: You were on Live with Kelly and Michael this
morning, talking about how you've recently realized TVD is basically a
soap opera. Can you expand upon that?
Ian Somerhalder: My
grandmother was this unbelievably smart, phenomenally cool woman and [soap
operas] were just always on in her house. My foundation is building this animal
sanctuary and youth education facility where she lived so I was there two weeks
ago and those feelings are just so deeply embedded in me that I instantly had
those memories being there. So this morning, that all came to me after watching the clip they
showed. I just realized that I live in a soap opera, and it's awesome.
ETonline: How do you think the show is able to have soap opera elements without veering into the negative attributes often associated with soaps?
Somerhalder: Honestly, I think it's because the writing and the performances are grounded in truth. We ultimately have to find truth in the material, and I think that transfers onto the screen. Obviously there's varying degrees of it, and we don't get it right all the time [laughs], but I think when it feels grounded, it's because we recognize the truth in the material.
ETonline: I think the show has really gotten it right this season
with Damon and Elena's romantic journey. What's been your take on it
all?
Somerhalder: It's been kind of tragic. I mean, Damon finally
got the girl he loves and it's totally tragic that he has this moment of
happiness and clarity only to learn that it's fake. I did a show recently where
they were talking about Catfish. It's something I never realized is
going on, but there's this entire world out there about people falling in love
with one another digitally only to find out it's not real. I could have
sympathized with that before, but through this storyline, I can also empathize
with that. When you go through that emotion on screen you take a piece of it
with you. I have such great respect for the people coming out to tell their
story because it's an awful feeling.
ETonline: It's also got to be exciting as an actor that TVD allows you to play your character at various points in their life. We've seen Damon throughout the decades, and next week shows him circa 1970.
Somerhalder: Yeah, you hit the nail on the head. Our artisans and production design team went in and not only re-built CBGB's but recreated the feeling of the '70s [in Because the Night, airing March 21]. It's so cool because you get to experience so many times in [Damon's] life. Now mind you, because there were so many decades, I think he evolved slower than most. I also love that because we get to go back and romanticize the social happenings of that time, we're really reminded of The United States' deep history and what Damon lived through is just a drop in the bucket compared to the other characters, who can go back thousands of years.
ETonline: That episode also features the return of Lexi, a character
Damon shares a very tumultuous history with. What's it like this time
around?
Somerhalder: What's cool about it is that you see how long
and turbulent their history is. There are just so many different agendas and
egos at play, but at the end of the day, both Lexi and Damon love Stefan, so to
see them interacting throughout an episode where they're not trying to kill each
other or making derogatory jokes to one another the entire time is amazing.
There was a real relationship there, so it was fun to explore.
ETonline: I'd also imagine that this new layer to their relationship
makes the fact he killed her more significant.
Somerhalder: Totally.
I think if you go back to that episode after seeing next week's, the look of
betrayal on her face, the shock of it all, is recontextualized. Which I think is
a great way to elaborate or, at times, strengthen or fix a storyline that maybe
didn't work as well. It's an added bonus to the structure of how our show
works.
ETonline: Looking at what's to come with Damon and Stefan's struggle over Elena's humanity, what are you excited for fans to see?
Somerhalder: I'm excited for fans to see Elena have some fun, which means we don't have to worry about her getting killed every waking moment. She's a lot stronger now, Elena is kicking our asses so it's like the tables have turned a bit. But it's interesting because there's this amazing push/pull between Stefan and Damon as they try to figure everything out. Damon has no desire for Elena to take the cure because it means he'll lose her while Stefan definitely wants her to. Ultimately Damon realizes Elena is a lunatic bitch when she has no humanity, and I don't know if the world can handle her. The problem is, he cares so deeply for Elena yet knows she can't keep going down this path. So it's this tragedy of, "Oh man, if I could just get her humanity back, but keep her a vampire, we could have a great life ... or we could at least run around and eat some people all over the world." But I don't know if that's a real option for Damon any more because he's going to have to give her the cure and Stefan only stands to gain from that.
ETonline: Switching gears for a second, you just came back from SXSW,
where you spoke at several panels dealing with the environment and met Grumpy
Cat.
Somerhalder: Meeting Grumpy Cat was definitely a highlight
[laughs]! I'm so grateful to Warner Brothers and The CW for hooking up that
whole SXSW event -- they saw value in giving people a space for people to
interact. I have to give them kudos for having that foresight and making that
investment.
ETonline: What new Ian Somerhalder Foundation initiatives are you excited
about?
Somerhalder: We're buying this piece of land that will serve
as an animal sanctuary, but will also be a green child education camp. It's a
completely sustainable agriculture farm, which is exciting because our natural
resources are going out the window as we use them at an exponential rate. If you
want change, it has to be generational. The bureaucracy that's already in place
is not going to change, but if you can empower and educate the next generation,
you've built an entire generation of compassionate, activated people who want
sustainability in their world. We're also in the LED business with Go Green
Mobile Power. The company that builds our lights, CREE, just invented an LED
lightbulb that looks like the incandescent we're so used to seeing but uses 84
percent less energy. You get a 10 year warranty on a lightbulb that costs $10.
I'm partnering with them to launch it because I believe in them so much. It's
honestly the coolest invention since the lightbulb. These innovations are
literally going to change the world.
Source:
http://www.etonline.com/tv/131647_Ian_Somderhalder_The_Vampire_Diaries_Interview_2013_Cree_ISF/index.html
comment:
p_commentcount