Fox’s ‘New Girl’ Enlists Lizzy Caplan

Fox’s New Girl is going from partying at weddings to Party Down.

The freshman hit has enlisted Party Downstar Lizzy Caplan for a three-episode arc in which she’ll play Nick’s (Jake Johnson) love interest Julia Baker.

Julia is described as a highly educated young woman with a master’s degree in art history and a highly cultured manner. She meets Nick — who took the first steps toward getting over his ex, Caroline, in Tuesday’s episode – at an art gallery opening.

Nick is immediately taken with her seeming perfection and worries that the seemingly perfect woman will be disgusted by his roommates when she joins the guys in celebrating Schmidt’s (Max Greenfield) 29th birthday. However, Nick’s intimidations are cooled when Julia admits she has anger management issues.

Caplan, whose credits also include HBO’sTrue Blood, is the second high-profile guest star booked for New Girl. The Fox series, which was the first freshman series to earn the full-season order of the year, booked Justin Long for a three-episode arc as a love interest for Zooey Deschanel’s “adorkable” Jess.

Caplan is repped by CAA and Mosaic.

Source: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/new-girl-lizzy-caplan-fox-244556

‘New Girl’: Lake Bell ‘can’t think of a smarter group’

Lake Bell is about to begin another season of her own show, but she’s happy to be a guest on one of television’s top new hits, too.

The actress resumes her role as finding-her-way Rachel in the HBO comedy series “How to Make it in America” Sunday (Oct. 2) … then two nights later, she turns up in the third episode of FOX’s Tuesday ratings smash “New Girl,” playing a co-worker and romantic temptation of Jess’ (Zooey Deschanel) less-than-confident roommate Nick (Jake Johnson).

“Oh, that’s great!,” Bell tells Zap2it upon being informed her “New Girl” stint is about to air. “Liz (Meriwether, the show’s creator, who also wrote the Bell-featuring movie ‘No Strings Attached’) and that team of people are such good friends, and I love Zooey. I’m just happy for them. It makes me so pleased, because I can’t think of a smarter group. That’s the kind of comedy I feel should be succeeding.”

Bell says she became “fast friends” with Deschanel on the show’s set. “I had never met her, but it was immediately like, ‘Let’s exchange e-mail addresses.’ We became pals, but most of my scenes were with Jake. Working with him is so effortless, it was great to play with him. I had already known him from ‘No Strings Attached,’ but this was the first time we got to interact. And we really interact in this episode.”

The “How to Make It in America” schedule is compact, the first season having run just eight weeks, and that suits Bell’s packed itinerary. She also appears in Adult Swim’s “Children’s Hospital”; she writes and directs her own projects, her short film “Worst Enemy” having been in this year’s Sundance Film Festival; and her background as a racetrack owner’s daughter has led her into an added job as a car columnist for The Hollywood Reporter.

“HBO has the luxury to shoot a smaller [series] season, so we pack it all into a couple of months in New York, which is a joy,” Bell reports. “I don’t work every day, so I can be writing on my ‘off’ days, which I do take advantage of. I went to Maine and shot a thriller called‘Black Rock’ with Kate Bosworth and Katie Aselton and Mark Duplass right after production on these episodes was done, so yes, this is incredibly favorable to going and doing other things.”

Thanks to HBO and Cinemax, Bell also can be seen — a lot — these days as Alec Baldwin‘s reasonably younger, self-involved wife in writer-director Nancy Meyers‘ 2009 movie comedy “It’s Complicated.” She reflects, “Working with Meryl Streep is on every actress’ bucket list, and you’re lucky if that ever happens. And working with Meryl and Alec and Steve Martin and Nancy Meyers all in one fell swoop was kind of overwhelming.

“Once that sort of settled in, I could actually enjoy it. It was monumental for me, and truly an honor. I was so excited and such a fan of Meryl, it was hard to be b****y to her [as the character]. I will forever remember that experience as epic.”

Source: http://blog.zap2it.com/frominsidethebox/2011/09/new-girl-lake-bell-cant-think-of-a-smarter-group.html

Episode 1.4: Cece Crashes

Jess becomes convinced that Nick wants to be more than friends; Schmidt tries to seal the deal with Cece.

Original Air Date: Oct 12, 2011

- description from tvguide.com

‘New Girl’ premiere review: Has Fox overdosed you on Zooey Deschanel already?

Watching the debut of New Girl, you may have been thinking, “I’ve heard these jokes before.” Oh, right: It was in the 21,875 commercials Fox offered in promoting the show, revealing punchline after punchline. Is there such a thing as too much promotion — specifically, promos that give away the best gags? Only the ratings will tell, but even if you hadn’t already downloaded it on iTunes or watched it on Hulu, I’ll bet a lot of you thought you’d seen much of this half hour well before it aired.

Not that Zooey Deschanel can or should be blamed for any of this.

She and show creator Liz Meriwether are clearly trying something different: a portrait of an eccentric as the lively center of a series. In another, less imaginative show, Deschanel’s Jess would be the wacky sidekick, the comedy-boosting help for the glammier star of the sitcom. Meriwether and Deschanel have moved that kind of person — smart, quick, cheerfully silly, unafraid to make a goofball of herself — front and center.

Read more at http://watching-tv.ew.com/2011/09/20/new-girl-zooey-deschanel/

Zooey Deschanel on her ‘New Girl’ role: ‘If I had read this character in a movie script, I would’ve jumped on board immediately’

If you were five-alarm charmed by Zooey Deschanel in (500) Days of Summer, there’s one day on the fall calendar you might want to circle: Sept. 20, when New Girl debuts on Fox. (For the more impatient, you can download the first episode from iTunes for free right now.) The blue-eyed indie film vet stars as Jess, a freshly dumped but adorable she-nerd who moves in with a trio of dudes, and it turns out everyone has a lot of learning to do about the opposite sex. EW spoke with Deschanel and series creator Liz Meriwether about their twentysomething comedy.

On signing on to the show

ZOOEY DESCHANEL: “I don’t think there are that many awesome roles out there, whether we’re talking about movies or TV. It’s rare that you read something this funny and well-written. And if I had read this character in a movie script. I would’ve jumped on board immediately, anyway…. [Liz] can write this character and I can play this character. We both get this weird girl who’s not exactly like your average woman. I grew up the type of person where I always thought I was being normal and everybody else would think I was being weird all the time. I like that [Jess] is completely herself and unabashedly emotional, but not in an obnoxious way. She means well but she just messes up sometimes…. It felt really like a very easy decision to say yes to.”

Read more at http://insidetv.ew.com/2011/09/14/zooey-deschanel-new-girl/

‘New Girl’ co-star Johnson puts cards on the table

Jake Johnson often spends his 45-minute drive home from shooting Fox sitcom “New Girl” talking on the phone with co-star Zooey Deschanel.

“When we have a big rehearsal or big table read, we call each other, figure it out, talk about it,” says Johnson, who plays Nick, a bartender whose life changes when a girl (Deschanel) moves in with him and his roommates.

This commitment to craft means once people work with Johnson, they want a repeat. “Girl” executive producer Liz Meriwether first met him when he played Ashton Kutcher’s best friend in the 2011 feature she wrote, “No Strings Attached.” But first, after Johnson appeared in David Mamet’s 2008 film, “Redbelt” the director cast him in TV’s “The Unit.”

Johnson has had small roles in everything from “Curb Your Enthusiasm” to “Get Him to the Greek.” “I’m drawn to comedy,” he says.

He studied acting and writing at New York U., and then he and a friend toured the U.S. with a two-man stage show. He landed in Los Angeles in 2005 with $1,500 and an old Hyundai Accent. For cash, he played cards at Hollywood Park Casino.

Placing his bets on an acting career has paid off. Besides “Girl,” Johnson voices a character in the new Fox animated series “Allen Gregory,” appears in three movies coming out in 2012 and recently sealed a deal to co-create and write a politically themed sitcom for 20th Century Fox.

Johnson feels lucky to have played varied roles. “I’m not a stand-up; so I don’t have a ‘thing,’ a go-to bit. Whatever the writer thinks is funny, I try to do that and then add my two cents.”

Source: http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118042125

Justin Long to play Zooey Deschanel’s love interest on ‘The New Girl’

Adorable hipster Zooey Deschanel just gained an adorable hipster love interest on The New Girl. Justin Long (Going the Distance) will recur for three episodes on the new Fox comedy, playing Paul, a music teacher and and a suitor for Deschanel’s character Jess. It seems like a match made in heaven, but Paul may have some heavy competition from Jess’ three male roommates. The show will focus on the recently jilted Jess as she transitions from life in a serious relationship to life in an apartment with three random guys, so Paul will probably have issues if he wants some alone time.

Source: http://insidetv.ew.com/2011/09/01/justin-long-zooey-deschanel-the-new-girl/

‘New Girl’ Zooey Deschanel melts grumpy critics, Damon Wayans Jr. stays in the pilot

The mood at the Television Critics Association summer press tour is decidedly nonplussed. Perhaps jaded by years of writing about new series, only to see them tank two episodes in, skepticism lingers in the Beverly Hilton ballroom like a snarky fog while most presentations pass by with nary a clap.

Most presentations don’t have Zooey Deschanel.

Promoting her new FOX comedy, ”New Girl,” Deschanel reduced the hard-nosed crowd into a fawning group of schoolboys and schoolgirls, where actual questions included, “When did you first realize you were adorable?” (She seemed too embarrassed to recall.)

Amidst the laughter and collective blushing, we did gather some news from the series about a recently dumped oddball (Deschanel) moving in with three bachelors — namely about how the series will introduce Lamorne Morris as “Winston,” who replaces exiting Damon Wayans Jr.who was committed to Season 2 of ”Happy Endings.”

“We were really happy with the pilot,” says executive producer Brett Baer, explaining how it won’t be re-shot. “We thought the chemistry that was there was what we wanted to show. [With Morris], we just wanted to bring in a new character that would bring in a new energy to show.”

Wayans’ “Coach” is being written out in a nondramatic way, befitting, as creator Liz Meriwether insists, of the late-20s fluidity to the characters’ lifestyles.

“We wanted it to feel as real as possible,” says Meriwether of Winston’s episode 2 introduction. “[Coach] was subletting from Winston. Winston was in Latvia, playing Latvian basketball.”

Producers also dodged the racial Catch 22 of replacing one African American character and actor with another, admitting that Morris had been originally considered for a role on the series until he had another commitment.

But back to that Zooey. The actress says that while the role of Jess may appear indiscernible from her own public image, it wasn’t made for her.

“I’d like to think it was written for me, but I don’t think it was,” she says, laughing. “I obviously need to play this part, it’s me — or a part of me. A secret part… If there’s any character I want to play forever and ever and ever, it’s this one.”

Deschanel’s sister Emily has been playing a character for the television-equivalent of forever (seven seasons) on another FOX series. So when one of the less-swoony critics brought up the ”Bones” actress, he asked Zooey if her sister had given her pointers on how to deal with “the idiocy” of the network.

“She gave me hints on how to deal with the delightfulness of FOX,” Deschanel responded over a roll of laughter and gasps.

Adorable and diplomatic.

Source: http://blog.zap2it.com/frominsidethebox/2011/08/new-girl-zooey-deschanel-melts-grumpy-critics-damon-wayans-jr-stays-in-the-pilot.html

Zooey Deschanel Pens Theme Song for Her Fox Sitcom

Singer-actress Zooey Deschanel will combine her two occupations this fall on Fox, having written and recorded the theme song to the show she will star in, “New Girl.”

Deschanel, known for music-centric films such as “(500) Days of Summer” and “Almost Famous” and who is one half of She & Him, plays a newly single woman who moves in with three guys eager to meet her friends. An overly emotional sort, Deschanel’s character sings whenever she is overwhelmed.

“It’s just a part of how she expresses herself,” Deschanel told the Television Critics’ Association Friday in Los Angeles during Fox’s panel on the new show. “They’re songlets — they come spontaneously” to the character. The songs she sings are written into the script.

Deschanel says her singing will have a wide stylistic range, from jazz standards and a hefty Ethel Merman vocal style to heavy metal and “a ghoulish voice.”

Promotional clips for the show feature the “Dirty Dancing” track “(I’ve Had) The Time of My Life,” both the original by Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes and by Deschanel and her new roommates who find her alone in a restaurant after she has been stood up.

Read more: http://www.billboard.com/news/zooey-deschanel-pens-theme-song-for-her-1005306562.story#/news/zooey-deschanel-pens-theme-song-for-her-1005306562.story

 

Episode 1.3: Wedding

The guys are invited to a wedding, and Nick is fearful that he’ll run into his ex (Mary Elizabeth Ellis), so he asks Jess to be his date. Meanwhile, Winston takes his role as usher very seriously, and Schmidt catches the eye of two women (Katie Cassidy, Natasha Lyonne).

Original Air Date: Oct 4, 2011

Guest Cast:
Natasha Lyonne: Gretchen
Mary Elizabeth Ellis: Caroline
Katie Cassidy: Brooke

- description from tvguide.com