ML - Boston Common

2014 - Issue 2 - Late Spring

Boston Common - Niche Media - A side of Boston that's anything but common.

Issue link: http://digital.greengale.com/i/292443

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 97 of 131

say, 'My God, I can't believe I pulled that one off,'" she says. "Now that I'm older I can see that as being a really valuable part of who I am." But she didn't question it when she was growing up and splitting her time between her prosecutor father in West Roxbury and her MIT administra- tor mother in Wayland (her parents divorced when she was 15 years old). "It was a nice experience," she says—Friday night pasta dinners in the North End, jaunts through the Arnold Arboretum, eating eggs Benedict at Mel's Commonwealth Café in Wayland with her mom, and hitting Red Sox games at Fenway Park with her dad. The experience that would someday change her life happened when she was 12 years old, and cast in a middle-school production of Fiddler on the Roof. "I don't even know why I did the play," she says. "But I remember walk- ing home from the audition and just thinking, Oh, that's what I'm going to do. And I just knew it." Not that she knew how to go about doing it. "I thought the closest thing I could do was go to a TV station and see what they do there. I don't know what I was thinking," she says of the internship she took at WCVB's Chronicle her senior year. "I loved it. It was awesome," she recalls. After graduating from Wayland High School in 2002, Schilling earned a degree in acting from Fordham University and then completed two years toward an MFA in acting at New York University before dropping out. "I had nothing lined up when I left school, I just knew that NYU wasn't mak- ing sense to me anymore. I felt done," she says. "And it was scary to leave, but it felt like following my gut, my intuition." It only took four months to be rewarded for following her instincts, when she landed the lead role in the NBC medical drama Mercy as the tough- cookie nurse Veronica Flanagan Callahan. "It was baptism by fire —such a wild experience. It was the first television show I had ever been in, and I was number-one on the call sheet and in most of the scenes," she says. "I did not know what I was doing at all. But I've always had this thing where I just do it, I don't even think. It was the same part of me that decided to go to New York or drop out of school or become an actor." Mercy was canceled in 2010 after just one season, but Schilling quickly made the switch to films, including a role as Zac Efron's love interest in the syrupy-sweet Nicholas Sparks rom-com The Lucky One. She also landed a role in Argo, as Ben Aff leck's wife. "He's such a great guy," she gushes. "But they had to cut my part almost completely. I was so bummed when that happened." T hat was 2012, and Schilling was a bit burned out, pining for a vacation. So she escaped up to her beloved grandmother's house on an island in Maine, simply looking forward to decom- pressing over scallop dinners. But her agent was begging her to read the script for Orange is the New Black. Schilling was reluctant. "I really didn't want to do television again," she says, thinking back to the frantic, overwhelming shoot of Mercy. Still, she curled up on a hammock and paged through the script. "It was amazing," she says. "I read it with my grandmother and I was like, This is really special. It was so cool to have my first experience with the script in Maine because I really, really love it there; it's such a special place to me." Plenty of actresses might have run screaming from playing such a complicated character—variously called an "emotionally manipula- tive narcissist" and a "wide-eyed ice-princess uptight thing" by fellow orange-jumpsuited women on the show—but Schilling's gut, once again, told her to go for it. "I was really blown away by Piper, how dynamic a character she was and how she had so many places to explore," Schilling says. "She was driving her own story, and that feels so rare to me in the scripts I read. Her function is not to f lesh out a male protagonist's emotional life. She really was there because her own story was important, and that really meant a lot to me." And while mum's the word on any plot direction for the upcom- ing season, Schilling promises we'll get to peer even deeper into the prisoners' former lives. "The thing that I love about this show is the idea that everybody is kind of a breath away from prison. None of us are angels, and looking back at my past I think, My God, I can't believe I got away with that," she says. "It's like the what-if scenario gets played out every episode of the show. This season that happens a lot more clearly with a lot more of the characters, so we really get to see where people are coming from and why they're there and what happened to them." W hat's happened to Schilling is that she has exploded into a bona fide star with an instantly recognizable face. "It's alternately exciting and terrifying for people to know me all of a sudden," she says of the legions of fans who stop her on the street. This year's Golden Globe nomination was just the icing on the cake. "I can't really wrap my head around it. It totally blows my mind," she says of the honor. "It's such a fun group of girls and we have a great time, and then to have people respond to that so well… It's like a dream come true." Schilling doesn't know when filming will commence for the third season, but she does know that she's hoping to get back as often as she can to New Bedford, where her father now lives. "I love going there; it's such a cool place," she says. In an interesting art- imitating-life mash-up, her dad is currently working on the legal staff for the Department of Corrections, trying to redirect kids from prisons to various programs. "I'm in the Hollywood version of the prison system, and my dad really works with people who would be incar- cerated," she says. "He talks about how the show has brought more awareness to the population he works with, and more respect for those kids. He loves the show." And so, of course, do we. BC " Piper has to figure out how to play by her own rules. That's a journey people go on whether or not they're in prison. " 96 BOSTONCOMMON-MAGAZINE.COM 094-097_BC_F_Coverstory_LSpring14.indd 96 4/4/14 2:48 PM

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of ML - Boston Common - 2014 - Issue 2 - Late Spring