Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Scandal’ cast and producers promise ‘satisfying’ finale

- By Yvonne Villarreal Los Angeles Times

Glancing inside stage 12 at Sunset Gower Studios in Hollywood on a recent midMarch day, a person could be forgiven for thinking a phone service ad was being shot:

The smartphone­s are out and in serious use.

But this is what’s it’s like during a lunch break on the set of “Scandal,” which, as the show that helped fuse TV watching and Twitter thumb-tapping, has as deep a relationsh­ip with the personal device as any tech company. And this isn’t an ordinary early spring afternoon — just five days from now, this freight train of a political drama will screech to a halt when filming wraps, forever. As of Thursday’s finale, crisis manager Olivia Pope (Kerry Washington) and her band of cohorts will hang up their white hats.

So it’s little wonder that the cast is intent on keeping its digital scrapbook stocked. Selfies are being taken, and quick videos are being shot.

FINALE

Created by prolific producer Shonda Rhimes, “Scandal” is a thoroughly modern nighttime soap. Centered on Pope, the first black female character to lead a network drama in nearly 40 years (and her heart-thumping love affair with

President Fitzgerald “Fitz” Grant played by Tony Goldwyn), “Scandal” premiered to little fanfare and middling reviews in spring 2012. But the decision to wed whiplash storytelli­ng with the cast’s early adoption of social media, particular­ly Twitter, made the show a bona-fide hit and a symbol of hope for appointmen­t television by the end of the second season.

Often dismissed as a guilty pleasure, the show took twistand-turns storytelli­ng to new heights and prepped viewers for them with breathless tweets. But it also dealt with topical matters, such as election rigging and police brutality.

Thursday nights, which the show has called home since its debut, may never feel the same.

The show’s end also begins the whittling of Rhimes’ 15-year presence at ABC. Although she will have four series (“Grey’s Anatomy,” “How to Get Away with Murder,” “Grey’s” spinoff “Station 19,” and “For the People”) on the network, Rhimes announced last year that her company, Shondaland, would exit ABC Studios for a multiyear deal with Netflix.

Gathered around the show’s iconic OPA conference table, Rhimes and executive producer

Betsy Beers, along with the sprawling cast — Washington, Goldwyn, Bellamy Young (Mellie),

Katie Lowes (Quinn Perkins), Guillermo Diaz (Huck), Darby Stanchfiel­d (Abby Whelan), Joshua Malina (David Rosen), Jeff Perry (Cyrus Beene), Scott Foley (Jake Ballard), Joe Morton (Rowan Pope), George Newbern (Charlie), and Cornelius Smith Jr. (Marcus Walker) — reflected on the show’s run.

Times: Is it ending the way you thought it would?

Rhimes: It’s ending exactly the way I thought it would, which is good because for a while there — it’s not an easy thing to do. So I think we thought, sitting in the writer’s room, are we going to make it in time? There’s only so many exits to get there. Are we going to do it right? And I feel like we got there.

Beers: I didn’t necessaril­y know what was going to happen exactly in the big sense. I had the experience (the cast) had. I try not to read the script until the table read. I thought it was amazing, and I thought in terms of the way — well, you’ll see. But it’s incredibly elegant and at least thinking about where we started, it’s a beautiful way to finish.

Rhimes: I think I should say it’s not as if I knew where we would end seven seasons ago. We ended the way I knew we were going to end when I figured it out a couple of months ago.

Morton: It was very satisfying. I think that was the ultimate feeling by the time we left the table read.

How did you know it was time to end it — when did it all come together for you?

Rhimes: I don’t know if there’s a general answer to that because I have a show that’s still going 14 seasons later. I always knew the story had an endpoint. I also knew that I didn’t want this to be a show that stayed too long at a party, and I wanted to end while we were all still in it, while the story was still being told and told very well and we were all really excited about it. There was an evolution of these characters that you get to see happen and Olivia Pope had a place she was going. And when it was clear that we were getting there, it just felt organic.

Is it hard not to feel nostalgic at this point?

Lowes: I am the person who’s constantly making people remember memories from the pilot and first season. I don’t know why I am doing that! Maybe that’s my personal way of processing. I keep sitting here, having long scenes and saying like, “Kerry, I remember the first time you rang and the phone said ‘Kerry Washington’ … but I keep doing this just as a way to make people cry. (Laughs)

We hear a lot about the “Scandal” pace — it’s infamous. What was it like getting acclimated to that rapid-fire dialogue and storytelli­ng?

Rhimes: I just knew there was a lot to say, and I knew this was a world in which people were busy, and so I remember at the top of the pilot, I think it said that “everybody in this world speaks incredibly quickly,” or something like that. It was written at the top of the first page.

Washington: We had a table read … and at the beginning you (Shonda) made an announceme­nt and said, “I don’t know why, but it works better when you speak faster.” I think because we seem smarter.

This is a show that will be remembered for the way it utilized Twitter and engaged with its audience. What prompted your early adoption of social media?

Washington: I was on social media because I have a friend, Allison Peters, who is a social media consultant but also one of my best friends since high school and she convinced me to go on Twitter and I came across an article before we aired that was like, ‘These were the most buzzed-about shows on social media.”

And because we had a small order our first season — it was seven episodes — I thought, ‘Well, maybe that would help us. I want to be one of those shows.” And she said, “Everyone on the show should live tweet.” But I didn’t want to be like the bossy lead actor, so I said, “Shonda, what if everybody on the show live-tweeted?” And she said, “Yes.”

Rhimes: I had the experience on “Grey’s (Anatomy)” where we had sort of blogged every episode — back in the days when people blogged and people were really intense and insane about it. So we knew that there was an engagement there anyway, and so we told everybody to go on Twitter, and they got on Twitter, and then the press got on Twitter with us, which was the most interestin­g part. Sort of followed along and had conversati­ons and then Oprah got on Twitter with us and it just got really intense.

Newbern: I also thought it would affect the way people saw the character. But it had kind of the opposite effect.

What are you most proud of that the show accomplish­ed?

Young: Contributi­ng to the big conversati­ons in America and the world right now. “The Lawn Chair” (an episode that explored police brutality) being a perfect example … it never was afraid to take on what matters to people. It always tried to remember its audience. The show also realized that America, in particular, is going through a lot right now and it never shied away from being there as a sounding board.

Goldwyn: The thing that has always blown me away is that Shonda and our team of writers, who are amazing, seem to infuse the show in the most entertaini­ng, fun, outrageous roller-coaster ride kind of way, infuse it with conversati­ons that they want to have.

Give me one word to either describe or hint at what we can look forward to from the finale.

Lowes: Fishnets.

Perry: Pillow.

Newbern: Orange.

Morton: Credit.

Smithjr.: Hands.

Diaz: Picture.

Stanchfiel­d: Stone.

Foley: Life.

Washington: Monumental. Goldwyn: Beyond whiskey. Young: Sign.

 ?? Giovanni Rufino ?? Crisis manager Olivia Pope (Kerry Washington) and her band of “Scandal” cohorts are hanging up their white hats. ABC
Giovanni Rufino Crisis manager Olivia Pope (Kerry Washington) and her band of “Scandal” cohorts are hanging up their white hats. ABC

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