‘Bones’ Star Emily Deschanel Was a ‘Wreck’ After Being Reprimanded in Season 1
In a recent interview on David Duchovny’s “Fail Better” podcast, Deschanel recalled struggling to keep up during the first season of “Bones.”
“We were working insane hours, longer than just a normal series,” Deschanel said. “You’re working 14- to 16-hour days, and then I had to memorize the lines. So I’d be staying up late night memorizing lines. I would go home and just cry in a bathtub every night because I was just so overwhelmed.”
She added, “I’d come to set and I would be trying to remember the lines that…I got no sleep and trying to remember the lines that I had memorized the night before and then I had them in my head and couldn’t remember them.”
Offsite Linkby Anonymous | reply 42 | July 16, 2025 4:57 AM
|
At the peak of the anxiety, an accident in Deschanel’s commute caused her to arrive 30 minutes late to set. The incident resulted in a stern talking to from series creator Hart Hanson.
“Hart knocked on my trailer door, which was not a usual thing, he wasn’t knocking on my door often,” she remembered. “He took me aside and says, ‘The studio has concerns about your work.’ They said that I was late and unprepared. That to me — I get emotional just thinking about it now because it was probably shame.”
“I mean, I was a wreck. I took it so hard,” she added. “I was such a fragile person at the time. I got hardened up doing that show for so long. I was not sleeping, I was so stressed out. I was already, I’m an emotional person, so I was just beside myself.”
Deschanel said that afterward, she made sure to always be on time. And luckily, the day after the conversation, she learned the show had been picked up for additional episodes. Hanson also helped his lead actress going forward, getting her a bigger trailer and more time to run lines.
“Hart helped me find ways to be better, get my job done in terms of learning my lines and remembering them,” Deschanel said. “A lot of it was having downtime or having some scene that I’m not in, etc. He’s just a good one. We were so lucky.”
by Anonymous | reply 1 | July 14, 2025 5:29 AM
|
Sounds like utter hell and one of my worst nightmares.
by Anonymous | reply 3 | July 14, 2025 5:34 AM
|
I would be a horrible actor.
I could never memorize lines.
I'd need cue cards the entire time.
by Anonymous | reply 4 | July 14, 2025 5:47 AM
|
I have never heard a professional actress talk about being terrorized by lines so much. I wonder if she has some learning, reading disability that she was hiding, still hiding.
Memory is like a muscle. The more you use it, the stronger it gets. I went to drama school and had to memorize huge chunks of dialogue. After a while you just absorb it like a sponge. And the shit stays.
by Anonymous | reply 5 | July 14, 2025 5:54 AM
|
She wouldn’t have lasted a day on a soap opera.
by Anonymous | reply 6 | July 14, 2025 6:01 AM
|
Was this a show about the doctor on Star Trek?
by Anonymous | reply 7 | July 14, 2025 6:26 AM
|
It’s about morning wood, Rose.
by Anonymous | reply 8 | July 14, 2025 6:34 AM
|
[quote]R5 I have never heard a professional actress talk about being terrorized by lines so much. I wonder if she has some learning, reading disability that she was hiding
She played an anthropologist solving crimes with the FBI, so her lines went something beyond, “Oh, honey, you’re home!” It included technical jargon.
I think something that would be hard about a weekly procedural show would be the slew of new names and locations each week. (“Did you spot the Averys… the IVORS, at the Sheraton? I mean, the Sherry-Netherland?”)
by Anonymous | reply 9 | July 14, 2025 7:59 AM
|
She was TERRIBLE in the first season. It really showed.
by Anonymous | reply 10 | July 14, 2025 11:45 AM
|
My heart fuckin' bleeds for her.
by Anonymous | reply 11 | July 14, 2025 2:00 PM
|
[quote]I went to drama school and had to memorize huge chunks of dialogue
At night after you worked a 14-16 hour day, r5?
by Anonymous | reply 13 | July 14, 2025 6:29 PM
|
I’m glad they eventually aloud the chemistry of the program to unfold orgasmically. My family were fans from the get go. I stopped watching after they dumped the gay actor. It’s fortunate that Emily wound up being the star of a hit that she can live off of her salary and residuals and not have to stress out for the remainder of her natural life. Amen. I certainly haven’t seen her since “Bones”.
by Anonymous | reply 14 | July 14, 2025 6:49 PM
|
What sucks about these shows is that you don't get delivered the next day's script until nighttime after working an incredibly long day. If you're in almost every scene, it's not like you have oodles of free time on set to learn your lines on the go. And each new take you force everyone to do because you haven't mastered your lines means that much longer on the set for everyone.
So yeah, while this would seem whiny and privileged to say, someone working 14-16 hours of hard labor, it's still incredibly taxing.
by Anonymous | reply 15 | July 14, 2025 6:51 PM
|
What about Jennifer-Love Hewitt? Was “The Ghost Whisperer” as big a hit as “Bones”? I’ve seen scant trace of her since that series folded and it seemed like a turbulent production with frequent cast overhauls. My family were fans of it from the get go. I almost stopped watching several times, but especially after they killed off her original friend. Jennifer and Emily should do a show together, perhaps entitled “Wooden”.
by Anonymous | reply 16 | July 14, 2025 6:58 PM
|
[quote]At the peak of the anxiety, an accident in Deschanel’s commute caused her to arrive 30 minutes late to set. The incident resulted in a stern talking to from series creator Hart Hanson.
One of the smartest things I ever did when I lived in NYC was move across the street from my job (at a hospital). The 5 minute walk across the street was PRICELESS. If you are working 12 or more hours a day and you've got the money, especially if you are earning millions a year like she was, there's no reason at all to be making a commute, especially a 30 minute commute. Move, rent an apartment. Do something, but don't be driving 30 minutes each way.
by Anonymous | reply 17 | July 14, 2025 7:02 PM
|
[quote] What about Jennifer-Love Hewitt? Was “The Ghost Whisperer” as big a hit as “Bones”? I’ve seen scant trace of her since that series folded
Seriously???
She's been on Ryan Murphy's 9-1-1 for over five years.
That's been her regular gig.
And now she's also in the film reboot of "I Know What You Did Last Summer."
Jennifer is still a busy actor.
Offsite Linkby Anonymous | reply 18 | July 14, 2025 7:04 PM
|
I stayed with “House” even as the stench began to arise from cast member unhappiness. It ultimately ruined the charm and logic of the production. But it was a sizable hit and it seems it’s cast are all happily retired.
by Anonymous | reply 19 | July 14, 2025 7:05 PM
|
[quote] So yeah, while this would seem whiny and privileged to say, someone working 14-16 hours of hard labor, it's still incredibly taxing.
Let's not go there. It's not hard labor. Not even close. They have down time half the day. Go try working in a factory even for just 8 hours a day. And come back and tell me about hard labor.
by Anonymous | reply 20 | July 14, 2025 7:06 PM
|
Jennifer was so good in ‘Munchie’. I’m pleased to learn she’s still hot property.
by Anonymous | reply 21 | July 14, 2025 7:08 PM
|
[quote] an accident in Deschanel’s commute caused her to arrive 30 minutes late to set. The incident resulted in a stern talking to from series creator Hart Hanson.
Did she actually drive herself? I thought the studios get actors a driver who picks them up from home early in the morning so that they are not arriving late. Is that not a thing anymore?
by Anonymous | reply 22 | July 14, 2025 7:15 PM
|
That still sucks R22. Wasting 30 minutes each way. Not when you are working 14 to 16 hours a day.
by Anonymous | reply 23 | July 14, 2025 7:17 PM
|
R20, I think you read that wrong.
by Anonymous | reply 24 | July 14, 2025 7:17 PM
|
[quote] Did she actually drive herself? I thought the studios get actors a driver who picks them up from home early in the morning so that they are not arriving late. Is that not a thing anymore?
I think she got stuck in traffic because someone else had an accident, and not Emily.
Someone else's accident tied up traffic and made her late.
by Anonymous | reply 25 | July 14, 2025 7:19 PM
|
In Manhattan. the lousy buildings are hospital-adjacent. Transient nightmare
by Anonymous | reply 26 | July 14, 2025 7:21 PM
|
I'd hardly consider Emily or Jennifer to be wooden, r16.
by Anonymous | reply 27 | July 14, 2025 7:29 PM
|
R20 I'm curious what you actually read in that sentence, because it says precisely what you are saying.
by Anonymous | reply 28 | July 14, 2025 7:32 PM
|
Right, R9, and I recall Rory Cochrane saying similar in a few interviews--that, coming from a mostly-film career, then being cast in CSI: Miami as a criminality was extremely difficult. And it wasn't just the pacing--it was the insane amount of very specific technical jargon had him shook. He lasted only two seasons before bailing.
by Anonymous | reply 29 | July 14, 2025 7:37 PM
|
[quote]Did she actually drive herself? I thought the studios get actors a driver who picks them up from home early in the morning so that they are not arriving late. Is that not a thing anymore?
I question whether she was a big enough name that first season to be making demands or spending money on a home closer to the studio. Besides, half an hour in LA IS living nearby.
by Anonymous | reply 31 | July 14, 2025 7:39 PM
|
She did have a trailer if the commute was that big an issue. Hardly ideal, but people work away from home during the week or for extended periods for far less money than even a first year lead actor on a major network series earns.
by Anonymous | reply 32 | July 14, 2025 8:18 PM
|
Do today’s TV actors ever get so fed up with a commute that they’ll virtually move into their dressing room, and sleep there? Does insurance allow them to sleep on the lot?
Some actors (Jane Fonda in KLUTE, Winger and Nolte in CANNERY ROW) will move onto a movie set for some Method Acting bond/verisimilitude. Joan Crawford moved into her dressing room while shooting TORCH SONG, but that’s mostly because she was a desperate freak.
by Anonymous | reply 33 | July 14, 2025 8:26 PM
|
[quote] Joan Crawford moved into her dressing room while shooting TORCH SONG, but that’s mostly because she was a desperate freak
Did she ask the crew to tear down that BITCH of a bearing wall, and put a window where it OUGHT to be??!!
Offsite Linkby Anonymous | reply 34 | July 14, 2025 8:30 PM
|
I will say that she got better as the show went on
by Anonymous | reply 35 | July 15, 2025 10:37 AM
|
[quote]I’m glad they eventually aloud the chemistry of the program to unfold orgasmically.
Oh dear!!!
by Anonymous | reply 36 | July 15, 2025 11:55 AM
|
I think that it would be so much better to be a minor actor in an ensemble cast.
I'm watching old episodes of "The Walking Dead," and in some of the later seasons, the regular cast was between 20-50 people, on any given episode.
I never realized how few lines certain cast members had in every episode.
Most of the dialogue was given to the four or five main cast members. Everyone else had one or two lines, here and there throughout the episode.
I think that would be fabulous.
You're on a hit show, you still get the name and face recognition, but you don't have to remember too many lines.
Sign me up!
by Anonymous | reply 37 | July 16, 2025 3:13 AM
|
R33 - I had the same question. Her getting a "bigger trailer" in my mind didn't mean that it was because she planned on sleeping in it overnight (not on a regular basis anyway!).
by Anonymous | reply 38 | July 16, 2025 3:52 AM
|
R16 Jennifer was better in GW than Emily was on the early seasons of Bones.
by Anonymous | reply 39 | July 16, 2025 4:11 AM
|
Emily had a trickier role, r39.
by Anonymous | reply 40 | July 16, 2025 4:25 AM
|
I gave up on Bones after several seasons. I watched mostly for David Boreanaz. He's pretty damn lucky having multiple consecutive long-running series.
by Anonymous | reply 42 | July 16, 2025 4:57 AM
|