The Day

‘Elsbeth’ star Carrie Preston reflects on theater days, path to CBS procedural

- By NEAL JUSTIN

In “Elsbeth,” the most delightful network drama in years, Carrie Preston revives her Emmy-winning character from “The Good Wife,” a bubbly attorney who is not nearly as ditsy as she first appears. But long before the procedural, airing 10 p.m Thursdays on CBS, Preston was a theater actor who made a memorable stop in Minneapoli­s.

In a Zoom interview from New York, Preston, 56, chatted about that experience and her journey to the top.

Q: What do you remember about the 2001 production of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf” at the Guthrie Theater with Patrick Stewart and Mercedes Ruehl?

A: It was amazing. I worked with

Patrick on “The Tempest,” for Shakespear­e in the Park, then we moved it to Broadway. So I made my Broadway debut while Sir Patrick was making his Broadway debut. He and I hit it off so well. So some years later, when they were casting the role of Honey, he put in a good word. When I was an undergrad at University of Evansville in southern Indiana, we thought that if you ever got to be in a show at the Guthrie, you had made it. That was our Broadway.

Q: You’ve been playing Elsbeth for about 15 years. What were your initial thoughts about her?

A: I knew the minute I read the script that it was something extraordin­ary. The character just jumped off the page. The fact they were trusting me with it made me nervous because the writing was so wonderful. They described her as a female Columbo. I hadn’t really watched a lot of “Columbo,” but I kind of understood what they meant. She approaches things in an unconventi­onal way.

Q: The spinoff leans even more into “Columbo.” Did you revisit it?

A: I did go back and watch some of those terrific episodes to get some inspiratio­n. But our show is definitely more of a comedy. It’s basically a circus in the middle of “Law & Order.”

Q: I have a theory that you’re a great student of classic comedy. If that’s true, who were the people that inspired you?

A: Carol Burnett. I know that’s an easy answer, especially since I’m a redhead now. When I was kid, I remember being obsessed with her. I did a scene the other day, and I got a text from our showrunner, Jonathan

Tolins, which read, “That bit with the yoga ball was Lucy level.” It felt like the best review I ever got.

Q: Your husband, Michael Emerson, was in “Lost,” a very different kind of mystery show. But what did you learn from him about what to embrace and avoid when you’re starring in a TV show?

A: Michael always says, you don’t think ahead, you just play whatever is given to you in the moment. On that show, he didn’t know where it was going to go. I think that’s a good lesson for all of us as actors. Be as present as you can.

Q: You’ve been a standout guest star in so many series. What did you observe that you can put to use now that you are top on the call sheet?

A: I know the feeling of walking onto somebody else’s show. So I go out of my way to make sure they feel like they are immediatel­y part of the family. All of them get a tote bag from me just to let them know that I’m excited that they’re there. There are only three regulars, so the guest stars get a lot of juicy material.

Q: And they get to play the bad guy. Who’s coming up?

A: Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Jane Krakowski, Retta, Blair Underwood. Those are the ones I’m allowed to share.

Q: What are the advantages of getting this kind of attention now rather than in your 20s?

A: If this had happened to me when I was 22, I wouldn’t have had the history and the struggle. I’ve had a great career, but for this to land at this part of my life isn’t lost on me. It does feel miraculous.

 ?? ELIZABETH FISHER, CBS/TNS ?? Carrie Preston stars as Elsbeth Tascioni in “Elsbeth,” a new case-of-the-week drama based on the character featured in “The Good Wife.”
ELIZABETH FISHER, CBS/TNS Carrie Preston stars as Elsbeth Tascioni in “Elsbeth,” a new case-of-the-week drama based on the character featured in “The Good Wife.”

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