Melinda Clarke has made a profession out of enjoying sturdy, succesful, and decided ladies on tv, bringing to life icons like The OC’s Julie Cooper, CSI’s Lady Heather, and even a fictionalized model of herself, Melinda, on Entourage.
Guest starring on Fantasy Island Season 2 Episode 7 as Island visitor Amber, she portrays a seemingly extra typical spouse and mom whose solely want is for her household to be blissful.
But the Island has a approach of digging deeper, and TV Fanatic had the alternative to perform a little digging, too, talking with Clarke about the position and how the story is one so many individuals can determine with.
Connecting with us from her residence by way of Zoom, Clarke acknowledges that she is usually forged as memorable characters with extraordinary powers and talents.
“I always think it was interesting some of the roles that I got that were either sci-fi or fantasy or… they weren’t your girl next door, put it that way. You were Goddess of Chaos… or a dominatrix. So there’s something in me that I guess has a little bit of an edge.”
FOX’s Fantasy Island is a revival of the unique collection that aired from 1977-84. Clarke was a fan of the present as a toddler, however her connection to it’s much more private.
“I used to be a toddler in the Seventies. I watched the present. It was such an exquisite escape, y’know, for folks to point out up and have these great fantasies.
“Then, in 1994, I actually did an Aaron Spelling show called Heaven Help Us with Ricardo Montalban. I worked with him. It was his last series as a regular.”
“It was called Heaven Help Us, kind of based on [the 1950’s show] Topper, and he played the angel that helped John Schneider, and I help people because we were angels ourselves.”
“So I had a very deep connection to [Fantasy Island]. It was really fun and rewarding to get back to being on FOX. The FOX family, as we say!”
Every visitor who visits Fantasy Island is there with a objective. However, that objective usually masks a secret want. Island magic serves that want in the guise of offering the fantasy the visitor requests.
Clarke finds loads to narrate to in Amber.
“I immediately had a connection because, I don’t know about everyone else, but I took the pandemic to do a lot of self-reflection. If nothing else was going on in the world, what can we do except to focus on how can I better myself right?”
“Reading this script, I so connected with it because what’s interesting about her is she comes from this classic traumatic, chaotic childhood, that very unstable family life. We only get a few words of her describing that.”
“She comes to this island for a fantasy to make her family happy. Ultimately, she’s operating out of fear, not love.”
“When we try to control people or the world and [thinking], ‘It’s only going to work if I make it work my way,’ that’s not out of love, that’s out of fear.”
“She’s created this standard of what she thinks is important for her, and she’s not letting her family just be human beings on their journey exploring the world. She’s judging the fact that she thinks they’re not happy, and she’s thinking, ‘I’m failing them. And I’m bringing them secretly to this island to make them happy.'”
“So she suffers from the affliction of self, which a lot of us do. Human beings can be, at our core, narcissistic, but we’re also survivors.”
Amber’s preferrred for her household’s happiness relies on the good household photographs she posts on social media. The want she expresses to Elena Roarke is that her household is as blissful as they give the impression of being on-line.
Clarke is aware of this isn’t an uncommon want for folks these days.
“This #Happy. It’s so true. We look at Instagram every day, and we see… I post amazing, beautiful photos, but you didn’t see the one right before it. So yeah, she’s flawed in that way.”
“I very much connected to [her situation] because my daughter’s now twenty-three, and I had a teenage daughter. I used to take it so personally if she was having a bad day.”
“She slams the door on me! *gasp* ‘Why can’t you be happy?’ So I understand that, right? ‘Cause I’m a teenager! And you don’t know what happened to me at school, Mom!'”
As we study extra about Amber, we notice she’s filtered and curated how she seems to be to the world simply as she selects the photographs of her household she presents on-line.
Clarke connects that to the chaos of Amber’s childhood.
“When we first see her, she’s very put together and perfect. Perfectionism is such a terrible character flaw because it’s just so hard to attain.”
“She even described her childhood as chaotic, and she said, ‘I self-soothed by doing times tables, and I always knew where the exit was,’ because [then] she could run away from her problems.”
“She could run away from her parents fighting. She could run away as opposed to facing it, leaning into it, learning from the pain. So she’s doing everything she can. Exit means, ‘I’m doing everything I can to get away from something instead of facing it.'”
Amber’s journey delivers a message about our funding in social media and its impact on our lives and perceptions. Clarke acknowledges there are a number of angles to the problem.
“It’s such a complicated thing. I’ve only had to really get into social media recently since the pandemic. It’s something that we, as actors, use to control our narrative of what we put out there.”
“It’s a business. We’re promoting something. We want people to see certain things. I grew up in an age where – for instance, just talking about beauty or perfection and such – we lit women beautifully with make-up, and you touched up photos.”
“That was the way I was brought up, but now there’s this movement of no filters and show the pores and the wrinkles and such,” Clarke shares.
“It’s something that I’ve been like, ‘But I like that filter… because it gave me [for example] red hair.’ Y’know? Because it’s fun.”
“But there’s something to be said for art and real life. And I think it’s a huge comment on society itself that we are always judging everything.”
“There’s a voice in my head that’s judging what I’m saying to you right now if I let it. Or there’s a voice in my head that’s judging the way I look on Zoom right now. Or judging other people for how they look and then actually commenting, which is a really fascinating thing.”
“Now that I’ve put myself out there as myself by doing a podcast, people comment on what I said or how I said it, and I’ve just learned there’s a lot of empowerment in saying, It doesn’t matter.’ You know, who cares?”
“They’re just words. Things only have meaning or power if we give it that power, so one of the things I worked on personally in the pandemic is I used to apply a lot of judgment or negativity to things, but I still have the power to apply positivity to things as well.”
“I do think that social media is a powerful tool, but it certainly can be a dangerous thing. I can sit on TikTok sometimes late at night, and I’m like, ‘Why am I still scrolling?’ It’s a very interesting thing that it gives these little bits of dopamine for entertainment purposes.”
“But #Happy… look, happiness can be a choice. Like I said, I can apply a negative or a positive to any situation in the world, right? And it’s not about me controlling the world.”
“It’s just because the world’s just going to happen. It’s only about how I react to it. That’s the only thing I can control.”
#Happy takes Amber and her household to the darkish, unfiltered fact of her want for perfection, making it one of the most haunting narratives the collection has introduced.
“The darkness of the show, or that place… we were actually in this hotel in Puerto Rico that had been damaged and demolished by Hurricane Maria, so the writers were very brilliant in writing a script for the location that they were shooting out there. We were really in that hotel.”
“That represented her mind and the darkness. So even though she’s presenting to Elena that she’s this put-together person, that was what was going on in her mind. And I think people can relate to that.”
“Not everybody has as traumatic of a background as Amber, but I think it is important to accept that what happens to us in life, especially trauma, isn’t necessarily our fault, but it is our responsibility to heal from those things.”
“Sometimes we don’t do it until we get to this age.”
Clarke is sincere about her personal studying, which parallels Amber’s.
“I try not to ‘should’ on myself, like ‘You shoulda done this, ‘or ‘What if?'”
‘What if…’ is an intrusive thought. But I’ve discovered these issues by going by means of some tough occasions.”
“One of the things that I tried to do as a parent with my own daughter is I’ve learned that I can tell her all kinds of things, but she has to go through something to learn it.”
“There are times when I want to judge something that she’s done, but she’s an adult on her own, and I just remind myself she’s on her journey, and I’ll say, ‘Hm, that was an interesting situation you just went through. Maybe we should take notes. And remember.'”
“I was reflecting on [Amber]. She wants her family happy.”
“She has literally one day where they go snorkeling with her, and she’s like, ‘That was the best day ever!'”
“And then all of a sudden, just within one day, she’s like, ‘Wait a second, this isn’t real. It feels weird.’ And it does get dark.”
“Eduardo Sánchez was one of the directors of the Blair Witch Project, and he directed this episode, so it definitely had that feeling, that kind of raw dark… Yes, it was very dark.”
To finish on a lighter observe, we requested Clarke what fantasy she’d wish to expertise if she have been to vacation on Fantasy Island.
“The first thing that popped into my head is that I turned down Dancing with the Stars back when I was on The OC [laughs]. I know! I was like, ‘Oh no, I can’t do it!'”
“But then I just jumped to doing a fabulous Broadway musical.”
“I did it when I was young, but I didn’t do Broadway. Some fabulous show like The Music Man. On Broadway. Let’s say that.”
You heard it right here first, Fanatics! Seeing Melinda Clarke star in a Broadway musical would certainly fulfill many individuals’s fantasies. Come on, universe, let’s make it occur!
What position would you like to see her sort out on stage? (Call me loopy, however I believe she’d be incredible in Wicked.)
In the meantime, remember to catch Clarke as Amber tonight on Fantasy Island, 8 pm ET on FOX, and as herself, on the weekly podcast she co-hosts with Rachel Bilson, Welcome to the OC, Bitches!
If you miss the present tonight, keep in mind you possibly can watch Fantasy Island on-line and then head proper again right here to take a look at our assessment!
This interview has been edited for size and readability.
Diana Keng is a workers author for TV Fanatic. Follow her on Twitter.
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