Robert Sean Leonard Q&A Interview

I can hardly imagine a fan of House who isn’t equally interested in Wilson, and now that his role in the show is growing, it’s about time people get the chance to know him (and Robert Sean Leonard) a little better. This is especially true considering we just had the episode named for the character. After talking to Robert, it’s also especially true considering his views on the character, and I’m actually quite interested to know what people think about Robert’s take on Wilson.

house_03-rsl-ad_0303_djrV1smI have to confess, that I have seen Wilson as somewhat darker than most people seem to for quite a while. There’s something about the way Wilson tries to get House not to do things that has long struck me as though he were perhaps secretly hoping that House would go ahead and do whatever it is.

The Q&A was a lot of fun, and (as you’ll see) Robert was not shy about talking. Enjoy the interview, and then please do let me know your thoughts on Wilson and/or the Wilson episode.

By the way, there is much of this that I might normally trim, but it was too much fun here.

Moderator                   The first question comes from the line of Matt Mitovich with FanCast.com.  Please go ahead.

Matt                            Hey, Robert, thanks for your time today.

Robert                         Hey, no problem.  How are you doing?

Matt                            Congratulations on your self-titled episode.

Robert                         Oh, no, it’s my worst nightmare.  Are you kidding?  When I read this pilot, I was going to—the other pilot I was considering was Numbers, when I first got out here five years ago, and I read Numbers and thought, well this is way too many scenes.  Its way too hard, and I’m not interested.  And then I read House, and the guy was, Wilson was in about three scenes a show, and I thought this is perfect.  You know, I’m the Carlton the Doorman of my show.  I’m not the most ambitious guy.  I like playing the best friend.  It’s good to be the lead of a show for a week, but I wouldn’t spread it all around too much.  I like my role the way it is.

Matt                            Well tell us how Wilson is different in this episode, and why.

Robert                         Well, he’s not different; he’s just examined more.  You see my assistant you’ve never met.  You see the oncology floor, you see where I work.  My office next to House’s is just my office, so there’s a whole floor where I work in oncology.  I have my own patients, my own assistant, my own day that doesn’t include House, so you basically follow Wilson around for a few days and see what his life is like.

Matt                            And this case hits home for him?

Robert                         Oh, yeah, Josh Malina, this great guy that was on West Wing, who played Will Bailey on West Wing, is the patient, and he’s an old friend of mine, and he gets into some trouble and I have some moral decisions to make throughout the show, and yep, it’s a personal case for me.

The girl who plays my assistant is great.  If you look you can find her name.  She was so great.  She came in and just nailed it.  But, yeah, it was a lot of fun.

Matt                            And there’s a followup.  There was a rumor that House and Wilson were going to go apartment hunting sometime soon.  Is that going to happen, and how does it go?

Robert                         That is correct.  He has a deal with his psychiatrist that released him from his care, it was kind of dependent on him having someone to look after him, that he didn’t live alone.  So, I think we’re in Felix and Oscar mode a little while longer.

Matt                            Okay.  Thanks again, Robert.

Moderator                   The next question comes from the line of Alice Chapman-Newgen with Times Currier.  Please go ahead.

Alice                            Hi, Robert.

Robert                         Hey Alice, how are you?

Alice                            I’m doing great.

Robert                         Where are you calling from?

Alice                            Well, I’m in Atlanta.

Robert                         Well, my goodness.  Okay.  Well, you know, I won’t mention Sherman.  General Sherman—I was never a fan.

Alice                            No, that would be taboo.  That’s taboo.

Robert                         I know, I’m not a fan.  I was Confederacy all the way.  Go ahead.

Alice                            Okay, well cool.

I was wondering, what’s it like on your average day on the set, and is there a technique that you use to get ready to play your role of Wilson?

Robert                         Well, my average day involves me not going to the set; which is why I like the role so much.  You know, Hugh Laurie is on that set 15 hours a day.  I’m there about one or two days a week, usually.  Lately it’s been more because we, our characters have been living together, so you see me a lot more than you used to.

A typical day for a TV actor on House is you get up, well I get up at four o’clock because I’m living an hour north of LA, because our call is six.  So, I get up at four, and I’m out the door by about ten to five, and I’m in the makeup chair by six, and hopefully we’re done by 6 p.m., but usually it’s a little later than that, and then the week goes on.  It’s 12 to 14 hour days, and it’s a lot of filming. I’m used to being on stage, so it’s a long, tedious day for me.  But having said that, I’m massively overpaid and over praised, and it couldn’t be a better gig.

Alice                            Well, is there like a certain ritual, or something, you do to get revved up for the role?

HOUSE:  Wilson (Robert Sean Leonard) asks the team for help diagnosing an old friend and former patient in the HOUSE episode "Wilson" airing Monday, Nov. 30 (8:00-9:00 PM ET/PT) on FOX.  ©2009 Fox Broadcasting Co.  Cr:  Michael Yarish/FOX

HOUSE: Wilson (Robert Sean Leonard) asks the team for help diagnosing an old friend and former patient in the HOUSE episode "Wilson" airing Monday, Nov. 30 (8:00-9:00 PM ET/PT) on FOX. ©2009 Fox Broadcasting Co. Cr: Michael Yarish/FOX

Robert                         No, no. I mean, I learn my lines.  You work on the scene the night before, usually.  You know, you’re shooting one page at a time, so it’s not like you’re doing King Lear; the lines aren’t the problem.  You can always learn those the night before, the morning you’re there, or before shooting.  You have so much time on the set.

I’m not a big technique person.  I think from stage I’m used to pretty much just walking on and getting it done.  You know, there are things you need to learn.  If your character juggles, if your character has a limp, if your character has an Irish accent, there are things to work on.  But if your character doesn’t juggle, limp, or have an Irish accent, you just have to break the scene down as far as motivation and what your character wants, and all that stuff, but that’s almost secondary after 26 years of doing it.

Alice                            Well, do you enjoy the difference?  I mean between the stage and being on the set of course, just for a change?

Robert                         It is different.  I prefer stage work as an actor; it’s somewhat more, um, I’m not very ambitious.  I’m pretty lazy, and I like the hours.  You know, you get to the theater at 7:30 and you’re home by 11:00, and for me that’s nice.  That’s a good day.

Getting up at four in the morning and getting home at 7:30 at night is, you know, unless you’re William Randolph Hearst, it just seems a little excessive to me.  I have a daughter and my wife, and my dogs, and I like reading, and I like the hours of stage a lot better.

Alice                            Okay.  Well, thank you very much.

Robert                         You’re welcome.

Moderator                   The next question comes from the line of David Martindale with Hearst Newspapers.  Please go ahead.

Robert                         I just—William Randolph.  Well, I reference him often. Go ahead. …

David                          I love the show.  You’re really wonderful in it.

Robert                         Thanks so much.

David                          Anyway, there’s something I’ve wondered for a long time regarding the movie posters in Wilson’s office…

Robert                         Oh, thank you for asking.  I enjoy that topic very much.

David                          …Vertigo, Ordinary People.  Did you have any input regarding which movies would be enshrined on the Wilson wall?

Robert                         I didn’t at first.  It was originally Touch of Evil and Vertigo, I think, were behind me.

David                          I believe that’s right, yes.

Robert                         I then, my friend Carl, who lives in Vermont, and I—our favorite movie is Ordinary People, so we were having a press conference and somebody mentioned that and I said, “You know, I don’t have any say.  I walked in the set and Vertigo and Touch of Evil were up there, and I think they’re fine movies, and that’s cool.”  The news reporter said, “Well, what movie would you want if you could pick?” and I said, “Oh, I don’t know.  If I walked into an oncologist’s office and Ordinary People was on the wall, I’d feel very good.  I’d like that.  I’d like the guy who had that on his wall.”  My producer was there, Katie, and the next day she said, “Were you serious about Ordinary People, and I said, “Yeah, it’s my favorite movie.  Donald Sutherland and Mary Tyler Moore, Redford’s directorial debut,” and she said, “Let’s see what we can do.”  We had to get permission from every actor except Judd Hirsch, because they all appear on the poster.  The poster is a picture frame of three little frames of Sutherland, Moore, and Hutton.  And then the brother that died, you don’t see him.  I think that’s right, or maybe it’s just the three.  Anyway…

David                          What does that say about Wilson with those posters on his wall?

Robert                         Well, I think it says a lot.  I think that movie, to me, is a fascinating study of human relations and familial relations and human interaction, and the complexity of the difficulty of facing what’s going on inside you and admitting it and letting it inform your relations with other people.  I don’t know.  I think if you deal with death every day, and people who get the news of their own death; you know, it’s not like plastic surgery.  It’s a different kind of life day to day.  I mean, you know, whatever.  It doesn’t matter what poster’s behind me.  One out of a hundred people would notice, and apparently you’re one of them.

David                          Okay.  Well, I have movie posters in my house, and…

Robert                         Oh, great.  Which ones do you have?

David                          The Candidate

Robert                         The Candidate?

David                          If I was the right Candidate to know—

Robert                         Oh, I thought you said The Candidate.   I was going to say, “Redford, again?  What Redford?”  What are the posters you have?

David                          What are the posters I have?  You want to know this?

Robert                         Yeah.

David                          Casino Royale; Star Wars; The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly; The Bourne Identity; The Big Leb—

Robert The Bourne Identity.  That’s interesting.

David                          Yeah, so.

Robert                         Do you sort of change them a lot, or is it just—

David                          I rotate them a lot, because, you know, you have to a wall that you like to see.  I’m sure nobody else wants to know this—

Robert                         All right.  Go ahead.

David                          If you knew somebody like House in real life, would you be his friend?

Robert                         Well, it’s tricky.  Probably not.  Maybe when I was 20, but at 40, no.  I think House is an incredibly intriguing guy–I mean the character–he’s incredibly funny.  He’s, I imagine, great fun to be around; I mean, he’s extremely smart, self-deprecating, sarcastic; what’s not to like?  The only thing is he’s self-involved, and has agendas often, and gets you in trouble and screws you over sometimes.  I think when you’re 20 that doesn’t matter so much.  At 40, I don’t know.  I have a wife, and a daughter and two dogs; I hardly have time for people I like, so I don’t know if, myself, I would hang out with him very much, or be close.

But Wilson, Wilson is a very strange man.  People seem to overlook this.  They seem to think he’s this normal, teddy bear of a guy.  He’s very strange.  He has three ex-wives.  He lives alone, well now he lives with House.  He deals with death every day.  He has a schizophrenic homeless brother.  God only knows what his parents are like.  I think he’s a really strange, dark guy.   That’s my take on him.

Moderator                   The next question comes from the line of Erik Wilkinson with givememyremote.com.

Erik                             Good morning, Robert.  How are you?

Robert                         Good.  Where are you calling from?

Erik                             I’m calling from Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Robert                         All right then.  Lucky you.

Erik                             Yep, blizzard one day, sunshine the next; it’s lovely.

Robert                         It’s fantastic.  I’m from New York, and I’m not happy here at all.  This place is deadly.

Erik                             Not many seasons, huh?

Robert                         It’s just a soulless, bleached-out pit, that’s what it is; no offense to LA.

Erik                             Sounds like the occasional patient on House—the soulless pit.

Robert                         Soulless, bleached-out pit.  Yeah, yeah.  Probably.   I envy your geography.  How are you?

Erik                             I’m good.  I have a question, sir, about the material in season 6.  There’s been quite a bit of discussion about medical ethics in the show in general, and your character, specifically.  I’m wondering, as an experienced actor, whether that’s really fruitful material for you to dig your teeth into and really get a lot out of for a performance, with the upcoming episode with Josh Malina, and also your conference tape scenes that you had with House.

Robert                         Sure.  Anytime that the character has a moral quandary, it’s interesting.  That’s been true from the Greeks on down.  The character, what makes a scene interesting is struggle, difficulty, and something to overcome; so yeah, I don’t often on the show get to do very much.  A lot of the time I’m sort of the side man to Hugh, and I’m the guy who says, “Let’s go get a burger” and “What’s wrong with Cuddy?” and then I go home.  So, yeah, it’s always much more fun to play a scene where there’s something at stake, or a question that hasn’t been solved yet that you’re burning to find an answer to, so those things are always more interesting for me.

Erik                             Sure.  And, my readers would be very upset if I didn’t ask—the scene you got to do with Hugh Laurie at cooking class.  The scene was probably the comedic highlight of the season.  Was that one of the 12-hour days, because you were breaking, or was that an easy day because you two work so well together?

Robert                         I’m trying to remember.  That was on location.  We had to go on location for it.  No, the scene was easy.  Working with him is very easy for me.  Laughing is a problem.  We do have a big problem keeping a straight face, but it’s not for reasons you would imagine.  It’s usually something simple.  The other day I had to ask… fungus balls, which I think even before we did the scene, Olivia Wilde said, “Okay, before you even start, I’m having trouble with this.  I’m laughing before you even say it.”  So, you never know what’s going to crack you up, but Hugh and I often find ourselves in great difficulty having to not laugh.  Aside from that, everything’s great.

Erik                             You’re a huge favorite on the show and for everyone who reads our site, and I appreciate your time this morning.

Robert                         Thanks so much.  I appreciate the interview.

Moderator                   The next question comes from the line of Dan French with Digital Spy.  Please go ahead.

Dan                             Hi, Robert.  How are you doing?

Robert                         Good.  Where are you calling from?

Dan                             I’m from London.

Robert                         Oh, you’re in London now?

Dan                             Yeah, yeah.

Robert                         So, what is it, about 2 there?  Oh, no, I’m in LA.  I keep forgetting.  So it’s eight hours ahead.

Dan                             Yeah, exactly, it’s 5.

Robert                         Well, enjoy your evening.  How are you?

Dan                             I’m good.  Thank you. I know there’s a lot of Huddy fans out there, but what do you think about a possible Wilson and Cuddy hookup?

Robert                         I think that wouldn’t work.

Dan                             Why not?

Robert                         The problem with all of this speculation to me is who is Wilson?  People seem to know who Cuddy is, and people seem to know who House is, but I get very different descriptions of who Wilson is from people.  I think people project on him a lot.  I think they, I don’t know, maybe this episode next week will help a little bit, but I think Wilson is a very weird guy.  I think he’s dark.  I think he’s very lonely.  Hugh and I have a joke of one day that I’ll be sick in the hospital dying of something, and basically I send him on a mission to get all the porn out of my house, that has been hidden in the basement, and he comes back with like boxes and boxes of porn, and I look up and say, “Where’s the rest?  Where’s the German stuff?”  That’s my joke with Wilson.  I think he’s a dark guy.  He has three ex-wives, he lives alone, he deals with death every day, his best friend is House; I mean, he’s very odd.  He’s not Mr. Rogers—that’s a reference that will go over well in London—he’s not the guy next door.  I think he’s a very dark, strange guy.

So, in my mind, when I think about him with Cuddy, it doesn’t work; but I think in general people have a view of him that he’s kind of warm and fuzzy, and he’d be kind of an easy guy for Cuddy to boss around, and that might actually be the relationship.  I don’t think Wilson would stand it very long.  I think he’s a strange man.

Dan                             Okay.  And when do you think we might see him with a new love interest?

Robert                         Oh, God, I’ve done that.  I got to date and do that with Amber for six episodes.  You don’t get any luckier than that.  I’m not going to press my luck.

Dan                             Thanks very much, Robert.

Robert                         Thanks.

Moderator                   The next question comes from the line of Marc Eastman with areyouscreening.com.

Marc                            Hi Robert.

Robert                         Hi Marc, how are you?

Marc                            I’m good.

Robert                         Where are you calling from?

Marc                            I am going to go out on a limb and say I’m uniquely calling from Bangor, Maine.

Robert                         Bangor, Maine.  Fantastic.  This play is called, Our Town.  Fantastic.

Marc                            I just actually have a couple of quick questions, I guess.  Actually, several things have kind of been covered, but first I wanted to ask with all the talk about working on TV, if when House finally ends, do you think you would maybe be looking for TV, or—

Robert                         Not in a million years.  I am so, let me tell you, I’ve been very lucky.  I started on stage in New York, and that’s all I wanted to do.  I had no desire to be—I didn’t know.  I didn’t ever think I would make a movie.  I didn’t really think.  I didn’t want to.   I didn’t dream, it wasn’t a big thing I wanted to do.  I wanted to do stage, and be in New York.  I did Dead Poet’s Society, and now I’m doing House, which is great because the money is fantastic, and I have a family now.  Also, it’s an incredibly good gig.  It’s a very good show, and I’m proud of it, and I like the writing a lot.  I like the actors, and I got very lucky.  But, I’m not a film actor.  I don’t enjoy getting up at four in the morning.  I don’t like working 15 hours.  I’m very lazy, and I don’t have a publicist.  I’m not a very ambitious guy.  I’m ambitious when I have a role to play, you know, being good at it, but I’m not career ambitious.

So, no, I have a daughter, and I’m so looking forward to skate keys and homework and driving her to soccer and being back in New Jersey, and just being home; and now House, financially, has given me the position to do that.  So, no, this ain’t my home, and as Neil Diamond once said, “LA’s fine, but it ain’t mine no more.”  Oh, no, was it, “LA’s fine, but it ain’t home?”  “New York’s home, but it ain’t mine no more.”  Well, I’ll just keep quoting “I Am, I Said” as we move on through the interview.

Marc                            Okay.  Are you going to maybe get a bit of a break, or are you locked in now to lots of time?

Robert                         You mean, like as far as a weekly basis, or sort of like a year?

Marc                            Well, I guess a year.  Is Wilson just—

Robert                         Oh, I see, I see.  No, no.  It comes in waves.  Wilson (I’m) in every scene of next weeks’ show, so that was hard.  It wasn’t hard.  Digging coal is hard.  It was just long hours.  And in the next show, you know, House and I are sharing an apartment, once you start getting into the next few episodes, so you do see me more than usual.  But, right now we’re shooting an episode that is all about Cuddy, and I think I’m in three scenes, so it ebbs and flows, except for Hugh Laurie.  There is no ebb or flow for Hugh Laurie.

Moderator                   Thank you.  Our next question comes from the line of Carina Mackenzie with the Los Angeles Times.  Please go ahead.

Carina                          Hi, Robert.  Thank you so much for joining us today.

Robert                         Well, here we are in LA.  You, know, LA is a lovely town.  I didn’t mean to say it was a bleached-out pit.

Carina                          I’m a New Yorker.  I feel your pain.

Robert                         Okay, then it’s a bleached-out pit.  How are you?

Carina                          I’m great.  I was just wondering—you guys have had a stable cast for a long time and over the last couple of years things have been shaken up a bit with Jennifer Morrison’s exit, and I was wondering your thoughts on that, and people sort of coming and going from the cast, and whether it’s changed the environment on the set at all.

Robert                         It always does, but I do like it.  I think I like that about our show—I remember one day when they first told me Kutner was going to go by suicide, I was as shocked as everybody else; maybe as much as Kal Penn.  And I thought, “Okay.  That is the way it happens in life.  People surprise you.”  I like that about David Shore and Katie Jacobs, our producers.  I like that Kal had to go.  He said, “Look, I love your show, but I’ve got to go, and I don’t have much time.”  And I like that our writers said, “Okay, you’re going to kill yourself.”  It was just so shocking and so daring, because I even heard people thought it was insulting.  It’s an easy way out.  It took more complex issues.  I mean, you just can’t use that angle in storytelling as a device, and I thought, “I don’t know.  I think you can use anything human beings do.”  I agree that there are devices.  You have to be careful as writers.  I like our show.  I like how people come and go.  I like how people are fired and then don’t seem to leave, and then strangely disappear in other ways.  I find it kind of amusing.

Carina                          With Kal’s exit, I thought it was interesting that they never really felt the need to give too many reasons for his suicide.

Robert                         No, no.

Carina                          Because that’s how it is in real life.

Robert                         I know.  The other night I was watching, and you know, there’s a scene where Jessie’s character Chase, you know, Jennifer has left, and Taub, Peter Jacobsen’s character invites him to Thanksgiving dinner, and he says, “What, are you worried about me?  I’m not Kutner, you know.” Or whatever, and I thought, Oh, God, right.  Of course.  And Taub says, “No, you’re not, but he always turned down my invitation, as well.”

It’s like, Oh, God, that reference.  Of course. House is a weird show.  It’s a weird, weird show, but I really like it.

Carina                          Because of the sort of the format that you have, the cast, you guys have to work with new guest stars every week, and I was wondering if there was anyone in particular that you would love to see guest star on your show?  If there are any actors that you really would love to work with?

Robert                         Well, I want Julie Christy to do the show, but that’s mostly because I think we should get married.  Aside from that, and also so we can just talk about “Heaven Can Wait” and “McCabe and Mrs. Miller” for the rest of my days.  But no.  (Pause)  My dad’s visiting.  And my wife just rode by on a horse.  I’m in Hidden Valley.  This is something I see in the morning is my wife riding by my window on a horse.  It’s not something everyone sees every morning.

There have been guests on the show that I’ve never met.  James Earl Jones would be one of them, unfortunately.  My character rarely interacts with the guests, so I don’t actually—I’m probably the last guy to ask that question of.

Carina                          I guess that’s true.  Thank you so much.

Robert                         Take it easy.  Thanks.

Moderator                   The next question comes from the line of Gina Dinunno with TVGuide.com.

Gina                            Hi, Robert, how are you?

Robert                         Gina, good.  How’re you doing?

Gina                            Good, good.

Robert                         Where are you this morning?

Gina                            I’m in New York.  I know you love it.

Robert                         So, it’s this afternoon.  Oh, I envy.  I envy where you are.  Okay.

Gina                            Well, your wife just rode by on a horse, so I envy you.

Robert                         She did.  That’s true.  You don’t get that in New York.  I mean, she just literally rode by the window, like she rode on our front lawn past my window on a horse.

Gina                            That’s impressive.  I’m jealous.

So, just a couple of questions about this upcoming episode and we obviously, from last night, we know House is struggling with the whole Cuddy/Lucas thing, and now that they’re moving to the next step in their relationship, is Wilson going to have to step in and kind of play mediator again, or is he ever going to reach his wit’s end with this?

Robert                         Well, I am contractually obligated not to say, but yes, any time House has trouble with Cuddy or Lucas, Wilson is going to be around to referee, certainly.  Also, we’re sharing an apartment, so we have the Felix and Oscar thing going on, so that’s always there.  Yeah, I’m finding there’s a lot more this season than there used to be.  That’s obviously because of the living situation, I think.

Gina                            Okay, great.  And also, one thing I noticed about what you were saying before about how you find Wilson to be kind of not normal, and he’s a lonely kind of guy.  You did say that Wilson did get lucky when he was with Amber, but are we going to see him kind of move forward.  I mean, I know he had coped with her death, but he hasn’t really kind of gotten out there.  He’s living with House and that sort of thing.

Robert                         Well, I don’t know.  You know, I know a lot of people in my life, and when you say, “move forward”, does that mean a wife and a house or a child?  For some people that is forward, but I don’t think it is for everybody.  I don’t know if Wilson is cut out for that.  I know it sort of goes against—everyone seems to think he’s, you know, Fred McMurray, —the early Fred McMurray, not like Double Indemnity—I just don’t see Wilson as the fuzzy dad in a suburban household.  I just don’t.  I think he’s—it may never affect anything else, so I don’t know.  For him, I think moving forward is getting a bagel and going to work.  I don’t know if getting married and having children would be his nirvana, so for him I’m not sure what moving forward would really mean.

Moderator                   Thank you.  The next question comes from the line of Virginia Rohan with The Record Newspaper.

Robert                         Oh, The Record?

Virginia                       Yes, The Record.

Robert                         Hey, Virginia.  How are you?

Virginia                       How are you?

Robert                         You’re calling from Bergen County.

Virginia                       I am, indeed, and that’s what I want to ask you about because you grew up in Richwood, right?

Robert                         Yeah.  Where are you calling from today?  Where are you?

Virginia                       Actually, our office moved from Hackensack to Woodland Park, which used to be West Patterson.

Robert                         Yeah …

Virginia                       Yeah, that’s where I am.

Robert                         Yeah, I grew up in Ridgewood.  Everyone—my family, my parents live in Waldwick, my sister lives in Allendale, my brother lives in Midland Park.

Virginia                       Oh, that’s terrific.  Did you feel, growing up in Bergen County, did you feel at home, or did you not really feel at home until you got to New York City.

Robert                         No, no.  I loved Bergen County.  We’re moving back.  When I’m done with House, we’re moving back the Jersey.  My wife and my daughter—I have a new daughter, born in January.

Virginia                       Congratulations.

Robert                         Thank you.  No, we’re very much looking forward to heading back to Jersey.

Virginia                       That’s wonderful.

Robert                         That’s where we’re going to be after the show’s over.

Virginia                       To Bergen County.

Robert                         I’m not sure.  We’re looking at—I like Mount Clair, but only because of the train line.  They’ve got that great train line.  I wish Bergen County—the train has to stop in Secaucus, this is probably fascinating for the other—the train lines, all of them change in either Secaucus or Hoboken to another train to New York, except that line from Mount Clair.

Virginia                       Exactly.  Exactly.

Robert                         I don’t know why the other trains can’t follow whatever track they’re on.

Virginia                       I agree.

Robert                         Let the other trains use it, because it cuts about 15 minutes off.  The Mount Clair, the train is about 26 minutes to New York, so—

Virginia                       You can’t beat that, you know.

Robert                         So, since I’m going to be doing theater, hopefully, for the rest of my days, we’re looking around Mount Clair because it just really would help.  Once you get involved in winter, and stuff, having a train nearby is just great.  Anyway…

Virginia                       That’s wonderful.  Well, I hope to get to interview you when you get back home.

Robert                         You sure can.

Virginia                       Thanks a lot.

Robert                         Come knock on the door.

Virginia                       Okay.  Bye-bye.

Robert                         Take care.

RU?

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View Comments to Robert Sean Leonard Q&A Interview
  1. Koah
    December 1, 2009 | 11:02 am

    Thank you a LOT for this Q&A interview.

  2. Koah
    December 1, 2009 | 7:02 pm

    Thank you a LOT for this Q&A interview.

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