Kyra Sedgwick is excited to spend âTen Days in the Valleyâ and ready to direct a superhero movie
Itâs been five years since
In her first regular series role since âThe Closer,â Sedgwick returns to television this Sunday in âTen Days in the Valley,â an ABC drama in which she plays Jane Sadler, a successful documentarian and TV producer. Late one night while Jane, a divorced mother, is toiling away on last-minute script changes, her daughter is abducted from their home. Created by Tassie Cameron, the 10-episode series is a serialized portrait of a complicated woman that also vividly evokes a working motherâs worst nightmare.
Sedgwick, also an executive producer on âTen Days in the Valley,â has remained busy during her time away from the small screen. This summer, she made her directorial debut with âStory of a Girl.â Adapted from a novel by Sara Zarr, it follows a teenage girl whose reputation is tarnished by a sex tape. The film, which aired on Lifetime, was a family affair, starring both her daughter, Sosie
Was it difficult to say goodbye to âThe Closerâ?
Brenda Leigh was the greatest thing ever and I just love her to pieces. And Iâm glad that she lives on in reruns. And I love the love that I get from people about her, because I loved her. I gave her my heart and soul and my body. I mean, I gave her everything. So Iâm glad people are appreciative of it.
What excited you about âTen Days in the Valleyâ? Were you drawn to doing something more serialized after starring in a procedural for so long?
Yeah, definitely. I donât think Iâd do a procedural again. Iâve been there, done that. I thought [âTen Days in the Valleyâ] was a really excellent, taut, well-done script and I was really interested in the character, in the idea of having this container of a mystery â a very familiar thing that people can grasp â but itâs really a deep dive into who this person is. We go back into her past even as a child.
And I was really interested in working with women. I think thatâs an incredibly important thing to do. We canât speak about how much we want women to succeed in Hollywood and not make decisions based on that. I wanted to make sure I was putting my money where my mouth was.
The series paints a pretty harrowing picture of being a mom in showbiz. Could you relate?
Itâs really all-consuming, the kind of work that we do, especially when youâre doing a show like âThe Closer,â where out of a 46-page script, you have 42 pages of dialogue and are in 98% of the scenes. Not to quote the Army, but itâs the hardest job youâll ever love and your personal life suffers. I know it was really hard on my kids when I was working so hard.
One of the things that the show explores, which I really love, was this inherent guilt. If youâre going to be a mother, youâre going to feel guilty a lot of the time, it just comes with the territory.
If youâre going to be a mother, youâre going to feel guilty a lot of the time, it just comes with the territory.
â Kyra Sedgwick
The thing I tell young actors now, women who have children, is that I wish I had felt less guilty and had understood that work for me was as important as anything. Freud says you need work and love, and itâs really true. Part of me, even in my 20s and 30s, felt like work is an indulgence that I canât have because Iâm a mother. We did need my salary at times for sure, but there were times where we didnât.
Itâs a really big part of the show, this guilt thing, this mother-work shaming. Itâs interesting because even in the press, people say to me, âIs [Jane] a good mother?â Iâm like, first of all youâd never say, âIs he a good father?â You didnât look at Walter White and say âWas he a bad father?â
Was directing something youâd wanted to do for a while?
My acting career has been preparing me for what I really should be doing, which is directing. Thatâs really the way I feel about it today. Kevin had been pushing me to do it for years. âStory of a Girlâ is a book that I bought in 2007. I wanted to make the movie because I thought it was about real teenagers, and I felt like thereâs a dearth of that and there still is, frankly. Iâd been trying to make it into an independent feature, Iâd hired a writer-director, we got close many times.
I was always one of those people who thought Iâll never direct. It was the perfectionism thing. If I canât be perfect at it, why try? I realized if there was ever going to be anything I was going to direct it should be this because I know this book intimately.
I had the most miraculous time doing it, the whole thing was beyond my wildest dreams. I was really delightfully surprised that not only did I feel confident working with the actors, but I learned that I had a real visual sense that I never really understood that I had. I think thatâs why I kept myself from directing for so long. âWell, Iâll be good with the actors but I wonât know how to tell the story visually,â which couldnât be further from the truth. Itâs given me this confidence and this insatiable desire to start directing something tomorrow.
Are you looking for more projects to direct?
Iâve been working hard, whoring myself around town. Iâm much better at advocating for myself as a director than I ever was as an actor. As an actor Iâm just filled with self-doubt all the time. Itâs not a jolly, fun process for me. I never felt that way as a director, which made the whole process utter joy.
Iâve got books, Iâve got scripts, Iâve got a few writers Iâm working with. Every day itâs a big chunk of my day, working on getting that next thing going. Iâm super excited about it. I did the water bottle tour in L.A. I went everywhere and said I love directing. I did my own film but Iâm happy to be a gun for hire. I want all the experience I can get. Itâs wonderful that at 51 you do something new. My mom has been a really great role model for me in that way because she completely changed careers at 50.
A lot has happened in TV in the years since âThe Closerâ ended. Does the industry feel different to you?
Itâs so limited right now in terms of whatâs available in movies, especially actors like me who arenât necessarily going to be in superhero movies â although I would do that tomorrow. I would also direct one. I just want to go on the record. Thereâs much more opportunity for actors in TV. Itâs really conducive to what we do, which is explore characters. And it is a writerâs medium and writers are really smart now. But it is different. Itâs just harder to get eyes now.
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âTen Days in the Valleyâ
Where: ABC
When: 10 p.m. Sunday
Rating: TV-14-DLS (may be unsuitable for children under the age of 14 with advisories for suggestive dialogue, coarse language and sexual content)
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