San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

The stars of “Supernatur­al” face the end of their long run

Stars of beloved sci-fi show discuss what they’ve learned over their 15-year run and what it’s like producing TV in a pandemic

- BY JEVON PHILLIPS Phillips writes for the Los Angeles Times.

‘Supernatur­al” has enjoyed 15 years of masked and madeup characters roaming the set, but in the final weeks of production, a different type of mask was on the minds of cast and crew. “It was weird not seeing the faces that you’ve been looking at for 15 years, because they’re covered with a mask,” says Jensen Ackles, who plays Dean Winchester — a nomadic hunter of demons and other supernatur­al beings — on the show.

“It was unique, but I feel like ‘Supernatur­al’ has been through a lot. Writers’ strikes and network changes and characters dying and characters coming back and families and births and deaths,” says Jared Padalecki, who plays Dean’s younger brother and fellow hunter, Sam. “‘Supernatur­al’ is used to change, so let’s embrace it.”

One last change looms: “Supernatur­al’s” final seven-episode run began Oct. 1 on the CW, with the finale scheduled to air Nov. 19. When the show began, the CW was still the WB Network, and after the series airs its finale the completed 327 episodes will make “Supernatur­al” the longest-running sci-fi/ genre show in the history of American prime-time broadcast television. (There’s still a certain doctor to contend with in the U.K.)

We caught up with Padalecki and Ackles via video conference as they prepare to say farewell to their career-defining roles. (The interview has been edited for clarity and condensed.)

Q: How are you both doing during the pandemic?

Padalecki: It was a pretty big change. Going from the show where you’re around a hundred something people every day and you’re seeing thousands of people on the weekends with convention­s and things — I’d just done a marathon — and then it’s like, “Hey. It’s you and your wife and your kids and you’re at your house. And you can’t leave. And you’re not filming. And you’re not waking up and getting your hair cut and stuff like that.”

Ackles: It was weird, the fact that the show got put on pause. I came home. Spent the most time I’d ever spent uninterrup­ted with my wife and kids. And then they call us back to work and I immediatel­y have to go quarantine for two weeks and then have to go film for four weeks — so six weeks go by, which is the longest time I’ve ever spent away from them. Living our quarantine Zoom life.

Q: What were your emotions going into filming this last season, given the times we’re in?

Padalecki: A lot of the unknown. I felt like, we have been going in to shoot a TV show for 15 years in “normal times,” and now it’s like, “Hey, we have some regulation­s.” There are lanyards that have different colors and only certain people can be around certain people so we can contact trace if, God forbid, somebody contracts COVID-19. There’s a taped-off entrance and a taped-off exit so we can keep it one-way. All of the food is individual­ly wrapped and there’s no browsing at craft services.

Between action and cut, it was business as usual. You’re with your director and your cameramen and women and your cinematogr­apher and with your fellow actors and actresses. And you’re like, “Got it. This is comfortabl­e. This is like a warm blanket.”

Ackles: The good news for our industry is that you’re capable to be still working and utilizing these protocols to stay inside and stay healthy. I know that Jared and I, we take our cues from the reactions that we get from our crew members, which is essentiall­y our audience. Our audience is the two dozen people that are onstage with us. The guy holding the mike, the guy behind the camera, the one pulling the focus. We know that if we can make them laugh or make them cry or get some kind of emotion out of them, we’re doing something. And that got taken away. So that was interestin­g. We just have to rely on our instincts and on each other to tell each other, “You hit it, you nailed it, you got it.”

I miss shaking hands. I know that sounds weird. I just miss giving someone a bro hug. I know that sounds trivial, but that contact is an important part of what we do on a daily basis in terms of the tone that we set on our set.

Q: The show’s research on mythologie­s is impressive. Was there anything you learned over the years that you’ll take with you?

Padalecki: Cold spots, flickering light bulbs, and if that happens, salt circles. I think Jensen and I are like, if a spirit or unwanted visitor decides to come visit, we can just wake up and go, “Bitch,

I’m Sam Winchester.”

Ackles: You picked the wrong house!

Padalecki: It’s like breaking into a Navy SEAL’S house or something. We’re the Navy SEALS of ghost hunting.

Ackles: I would hate to see what would happen if he and I had worked on a medical procedural. We’d be like, “You got a heart problem? Don’t worry. Lay down. I got this!”

Q: Was either of you particular­ly religious going into the show, and how has that been affected by the show?

Padalecki: I was not a religious person as far as organized religion goes. I’m a very spiritual person. I believe a lot of what religion teaches — you know, be kind to others, honor your elders, work hard, be grateful, sacrifice, remain discipline­d and dedicated. I tell this story. I remember meeting an actor one time who was giving me lessons when I was in high school. He said, “Hey, if you’re eating an apple in a scene, you’re not saying Jared loves apples. You’re telling this person’s story.” On “Supernatur­al,” even though we’re one of the only shows in history to have God and Lucifer and angels and demons as a regular part of the show, it never really seemed like a religious show. We weren’t trying to proselytiz­e and say, “Hey, go to church” or, “Hey, don’t go to church.” It was just, here’s a fictional story about these two guys trying to make the world a better place.

Ackles: My grandmothe­r, who’s not with us anymore, she was the religious head of our family for the longest time and thought she had a white courtesy phone next to her that went straight up to the man upstairs. When she would watch the show, she would call me and give me her take on it, and I often had to remind her that this was a fictional story. We’re not trying to tell the story from the Good Book, we’re telling a story that is loosely based on a variety of items. Loosely based in witchcraft and loosely based in folklore and loosely based on the Bible. Let’s take it all and put it in a big stew pot.

Q: You guys beat out Harry Potter as the top fandom in pop culture back in 2016. How has your understand­ing of fandom changed by being on a show as popular as “Supernatur­al”?

Padalecki: No way! I had absolutely no idea. To be mentioned in the same sentence is really a testament to just how talented our writers and crew are, and just how wonderfull­y and passionate­ly supportive our fandom is. Behind the scenes, we refer to “our fandom” as “The #Spnfamily,” as they have become a family of their own. They’ve spent countless hours spreading the word about the show and showering us with the love and support that we certainly needed and felt during rough times. Being on the opposite side of that, I’ve realized just how much good people can accomplish together. A lot of them have made best friends, visited various cities, and raised an incredible amount of money and goodwill for assorted charities. It’s been an honor to be a part of it.

Q: It seemed that, during many previous seasons, the show could’ve ended. Now that it has, was your walk into the sunset what you imagined?

Padalecki: Let’s just say, our last scene — we don’t know if they’re alive or dead, but the last scene that I filmed as Sam Winchester, both as Sam and as Jared, I could not be more happy.

For the first several seasons, and that’s the nature of TV, it’s written to where it could end or it could stay around because you don’t really know for a couple of months whether you’re going back to work or not. I would say that probably when Mark Pedowitz came into the network and said he believed in the show, that’s when I was like, “OK. Let’s make the show that we only can do with the support of the head of our network.”

Ackles: I feel like this was the version that needed to happen — that needed to exist. There could’ve been other ways of maybe getting to there, but I think the finality of this is right. I also think that this could’ve been done a long time ago. To be fair, Eric Kripke, who started the show and created the world, said he had five years and he stuck to it. That could’ve very easily been the whole run of the show. The fact that he left that door open and we were able to go through it and find another 10 years of story was just a testament to what a great world he built and what great characters he created. Q:

What kept you around for 15 years?

Ackles: There’s an old adage in Hollywood, “You want to see an actor complain, give him a job.” Well, that wasn’t going to happen with me. The last thing I wanted to do was sabotage a good gig just to go back and find another one. I was super stoked right off of the bat with the story and this character. It’s the kind of character I always loved seeing in movies.

When it comes down to it, why did I stick around all these years? Because I truly loved it.

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 ?? KATIE YU THE CW ?? Jared Padalecki (left) as Sam and Jensen Ackles as Dean in a scene from “Supernatur­al.”
KATIE YU THE CW Jared Padalecki (left) as Sam and Jensen Ackles as Dean in a scene from “Supernatur­al.”

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