To talk to Elizabeth Olsen youâd never presume sheâs a star. Sheâs content to discuss her flourishing garden and how much she loves to grow berries. When sheâs talks about the popularity thatâs come from her emotionally resonant performance as Wanda Maximoff in the Disney+ series, âWandaVision,â she said itâs not something to which she necessarily has an attachment. Itâs a response thatâs powerful, unique, and not unlike the character of Wanda herself.
Thereâs an interesting dichotomy for Olsen in looking back at her time filming âWandaVisionâ because it seemed to feel saner than what was going on in the world with regards to the pandemic. â[It] felt kind of profound that we were in this situation where we couldnât see people [and] weâre like hundreds of people trying to figure out how to make this thing work thatâs all about maintaining a bubble and a family nucleus,â Olsen told IndieWire.
There was certainly a lot to live up to, not just with the character herself but considering âWandaVisionâ would be the first Marvel series put out by the new (at the time) Disney+ streaming service. âI was already working with Facebook [on âSorry For Your Lossâ] at the time, which was a new service for scripted,â Olsen said. âI was nervous to be part of [another] streaming service.â But, that being said, Olsen credited Marvel President Kevin Feige as the one who kept those nerves at bay. âI felt I was in good hands,â she said.
âYou canât control peopleâs experiences and you never really know why something catches,â Olsen said, so her bigger pressures were to please a fanbase that cares deeply for the Marvel brand and Wanda as a character. Itâs something sheâs certainly used to since her first appearance in âAvengers: Age of Ultron,â especially when it came to her accent. She said people started making their opinions known on the subject starting around the time of âCaptain America: Civil War.â When it came to âWandaVision,â Olsen knew people would be commenting on it and she appreciated the showâs attempts to draw on those critiques.
In the moments where Wanda was deep into the American sitcom universe, such as the 1950s, she wouldnât have the accent, according to Olsen. âAs much as sheâs trying to keep this reality together sheâll have the American accent,â she said. âThen, at what point does her Sokovian come back and we get to make a comment on it when it happens?â Olsen said she got a big kick out of the moment where Kathryn Hahnâs Agatha mentions Wandaâs accent, as it was a direct call to those who online who had been questioning it.
âWandaVisionâ
Disney
The cast and crew knew where the structure of the story would go from moment one, engaging in a two-week âsitcom bootcampâ that didnât just lay out the world but allowed the cast to aid in strengthening the story. âIt was remarkable with us getting together as a company,â Olsen said. âWe went in knowing what were the things we maybe wanted to figure out and storylines that needed a bit more meat on the bones.â
For Olsen, that boot camp helped shape where Wandaâs head is at between the various decades. Olsen wanted to constantly hook into the rational elements of Wanda, the moments where she is actively seeking to control what is going on. âWeâre trying to modulate the audience discovering whatâs happening, as well as her discovering whatâs happening and her consciousness of the entire situation,â Olsen said. Before the series, Olsen had always seen Wanda as a character with immense power but no idea how to harness it.
âThe most powerful moments come from her being an emotive, empathetic, deep-feeling person as opposed to someone who deals with trauma and bottles it up, and becomes stoic,â Olsen said. Wanda gets to accept who is as well as her power, finding a great sense of accountability and using that to move forward. âThere are so many things that happened to her in the movies and now sheâs steering the ship,â Olsen said.
âWandaVisionâ is not just creating a foundation for its heroine, but also set out to look at the tropes of the sitcom world. For the first time since high school Olsen went back and rewatched episodes of âThe Mary Tyler Moore Showâ and âThe Dick Van Dyke Show,â capturing Mooreâs ease in a way that felt modern. Olsen also did sitcom research to look at the elements of the world they were going to be upending. Where so many sitcoms of the 1950s and â60s perceived women as just wives and mothers, Wandaâs biggest desire is to be that when she physically canât.
Olsen was similarly struck by how sitcoms of the past often worked hard to ignore the pertinent issues bubbling up in the times they aired. âJust thinking about the actual history of whatâs going on in the United States when these sitcoms are coming on-air and how the â50s really pushed this family nucleus on us aggressively as a culture and we are still reacting from that effect,â she said. âThinking about the Vietnam War while âThe Brady Bunchâ is on TVâŠ[that] not showing up on television.â
The experience also helped her change up how she approached acting in a way that was reminiscent of live theater. âMy comfort space, as a kid, was on stage,â Olsen said. âAnd going to college you forget, as an actor, how to use your whole body.â It was something all the performers, including Paul Bettany and Hahn (both who have theatrical backgrounds as well) had to utilize, especially in the 1950s episodes that utilized live taping with an audience and didnât have close-ups.
âEverythingâs physical,â Olsen said. âIt just felt so good to exercise those muscles again.â She said it opened her up to wanting to see roles that are more âphysically nested.â âIt kind of shifted me to a different gear which I appreciated,â she said. Thereâs hope that we might see more of that physicality when Wanda returns in âDoctor Strange and the Multiverse of Madness.â Till then, we can go back and watch Olsen flex those muscles on âWandaVision.â
âWandaVisionâ is streaming now on Disney+
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