Tag Archives: Suzuki Ingerslev

New Set Designs on True Blood

New Renovations for Season 4:

Production Designer Suzuki Ingerslev sat down and answered a few questions about the inspiration used to create the new home designs that have made their appearance this season on True Blood.  Not only have Sookie’s homes’ former Maenad-inspired decorations been replaced, but King Bill’s home has also seen many major changes!

One of the first questions asked during the interview was, “Sookie’s house looks new.  How did it get that way?”  Ingerslev’s response:

Eric repainted the façade a warm yellow color with Navajo White trim and touched up the landscaping.  Eric kept her house the way he knew she liked it best, which is how Gran originally decorated it.  We updated a few electronic appliances, such as a microwave and a big screen TV, which are actually gifts for Sookie from Eric.”

The remainder of the questions asked involved the new layout and design of Bill’s residence.  “Bill Compton’s house really got the extreme makeover, from shabby to unbelievably chic.  Why does it look so contemporary?”  Ingerslev replies:

“When we first meet Bill in Season 1 he inhabits a worn-down antebellum home that was inherited by ancestors who, over the years, had performed various remodels but had left it in ruin. It did have a Victorian feel, but that style wasn’t necessarily an indication of Bill’s taste. We chose a modern style for him because we felt he had been around for a long time and had traveled the world. There are antiques and treasures from other countries and time periods he might have accrued through his adventures.”

“The formal entry to the home really sets a tone. What are the key design elements?”

“Like all the rooms in Bill’s house remodel, it has a nice mix of old and new elements. The zebra rug is a nod to the hunting trophy rooms of the past. The chandelier, like the one in Bill’s study, takes the traditional element of a crystal chandelier and amps it up by encasing it in a rusted wrought iron sphere. Once we cross Bill’s threshold, we want audiences to feel his worldliness and quiet power. We want his house to reflect how he rules Louisiana with an understated but iron-fisted elegance.”

Foyer in Bill Compton’s home Season 4

“His office has a Hollywood Regency vibe, normally a somewhat frilly style. But it reeks of sex and power, doesn’t it?”

“It is meant to be his lair. We wanted the room to be extremely masculine and authoritative and could be a place from which King Bill could stage his power plays.”

Eric in Bill’s office Season 4

Bill’s office Season 4

“How would you describe King Bill’s living room?”

If I had to name a style I would say it’s in the vein of old Hollywood meets Southern plantation. The goal for the living room was to create a tranquil, formal room in which Bill could greet and entertain guests. We see less of Bill’s individual personality here, but something that is much more formal, although still relaxed and intimate.”

 Bill’s living room Season 4

Want to read the entire interview?  Click here!

So what do you all think about the new set design?  Do you like the new changes or did you prefer the old layout?  (By the way, am I the only one curious as to what Eric’s lair looks like?)  Let us know what you think about the renovations in the comments below!

Sources:  Los Angeles Times – ‘True Blood’ Set Design Sees Changes on the Home Front

(Photos: HBO, Inc.)

Production Designer Suzuki Ingerslev Nominated for an Art Director’s Guild Award

True Blood Recognized for Production Design

True Blood, as we all know, is set in both the fictional town of Bon Temps and the real life city of Shreveport, Louisiana. But as we have seen in seasons two and three, vampires, shape shifters, and werewolves aren’t just confined to Louisiana but also to other parts of the South such as Dallas, Texas, and Jackson, Mississippi. In reality, the show is actually shot in and around Los Angeles, CA. So who is responsible for bringing the South to Southern California? The production designer of course!

Production designer Suzuki Ingerslev has recently been recognized by the Art Directors Guild (ADG) in the form of a nomination for Excellence in Production Design for Television for the season three episode entitled “Trouble.”  In addition to working on True Blood for the past three seasons, Ms. Ingerslev has also been the production designer for In Treatment and Shark. She also collaborated with Alan Ball on the series Six Feet Under serving as both production designer and art director.

Creating the World of True Blood: A Production Designer’s Job

What does a production designer do exactly? On True Blood, Ms. Ingerslev is in charge of how everything should look and feel on every set or location. She decides what the floor of Merlotte’s should look like, what’s behind the bar at Fangtasia, and how Lafayette (Nelsan Ellis) has designed his house for example. This includes picking out furniture, deciding on wall colors, and finding things that a character might own. Together all of these carefully designed details make up what we the viewers have come to know as the world of True Blood.

We here at TBN would like to offer our sincere congratulations to Suzuki Ingerslev and hope that she wins for the fantastic work she did in “Trouble!” The winners will be announced on February 5, 2011.

To learn more about what Suzuki does on the show be sure to check out the interview TBN conducted with her here.

Sources: The Art Director’s Guild– The Art Director’s Guild Award Nominations 2010
IMDB.com– “Suzuki Ingerslev”

(Photo Credit: IMDB.com)

Edited By: Taylor Usry aka LoveEric

Queen Sophie-Anne’s House For Sale!

Reduced! The Estate Is Now On the Market For Only $34.5 Million

Vampire Bill (Stephen Moyer) & Queen Sophie-Anne (Evan Rachel Wood) in a natatorium that has a pool, glass ceilings and walls lined with more than 500,000 seashells

Wouldn’t you love a chance to spend a night or more—it has rented monthly for $250,000—living it up in Queen Sophie-Anne’s (Evan Rachel Wood), very True Blood-style, 8-acre, Malibu oceanfront estate?

If you answered yes, then you should hear (and see) some neat details of this totally unique mansion, ‘La Villa Contenta’, that makes it truly ‘fit-for-a queen.’

The centerpiece for many of the True Blood scenes was in the breathtaking, gilded natatorium with it’s striking glass ceilings and eye-popping half-million shells-lined walls. A total dream house for both fangbangers and vampires!

Queen Sophie- Anne's mansion now a Malibu listing for $250,000 per Queen Sophie- Anne's mansion now a Malibu listing for $250,000 per month Queen Sophie- Anne's mansion now a Malibu listing for $250,000 per month

The estate is on the market for $34.5 million with a 1.52-acre parcel (but if you want the entire 8-acre parcel, it will cost $75 million). The three-story home features 11,500 square feet of space, 4 bedrooms, 8.5 baths, a screening room, two maid’s houses, a guesthouse, a gym and nine fireplaces.

Not only does the home look like a Hollywood star’s palace–it actually has been in a number of films and television shows besides True Blood. La Villa Contenta can be seen both in Adam Sandler’s comedy ‘Funny People’ and in Paul Rudd’s ‘I Love You, Man.’

One must admit though, the home truly got a ‘star turn’ when it was featured in multiple episodes of True Blood as Queen Sophie-Anne’s ‘palace.’

Of course, for Truebies the best part was Queen Sophie-Anne’s famous daylight natatorium, which True Blood Production Designer Suzuki Ingerslev says took her breath away:

After all the location scouting I have done over the years, in my opinion, nothing even comes close to the amount of detail that went into this pool house. We all just stood there and took the room in the first time we went there, and pictures don’t even begin to do it justice. The statues, chandeliers, chair rail and ceilings are all made out of a variety of various sizes of seashells and corals. It is astounding, and we could never accomplish this on our budget, and time frame. It is truly breathtaking and exquisite.

You can view more photos of the home below:

'La Villa Contenta,‘ Queen Sophie-Anne's former abode, just 250,000 per night

'La Villa Contenta,‘ Queen Sophie-Anne's former abode, just 250,000 per night

'La Villa Contenta,‘ Queen Sophie-Anne's former abode, just 250,000 per night Photo: Chris Cortazzo/Coldwell Banker

'La Villa Contenta,‘ Queen Sophie-Anne's former abode, just 250,000 per night Photo: Chris Cortazzo/Coldwell Banker

You can also read TrueBloodNet.com’s exclusive two part interview with True Blood’s Production Designer Suzuki Ingerslev by clicking here for part 1 and here for part 2.

Sources: Zillow.com — ‘True Blood’ Home on Market for $75m

WSJ.com – (slideshow)

(Photo Credit: Chris Cortazzo, Zillow.com, HBO Inc.)

Decorating the True Blood Sets

Thanks to Mandi Bierly of PopWatch, we learned some very interesting and fun details of how many of the sets on HBO‘s True Blood were decorated.  In addition to shopping on eBay, a lot of the decoration items were donated by crew members.

Production Designer for the show, Suzuki Ingerslev, described some of the details and inspirations for Fangtasia, the homes of Sookie, Jason and Lafayette, Bill’s house, Merlotte’s, Russell Edgington‘s mansion and Lou Pine’s bar.

Starting with Merlotte’s, Suzuki said they wanted to maintain a homey, Southern atmosphere.  The bar top consists of resined, old-fashioned coasters.  We probably haven’t noticed it, but the doorknob to Sam‘s office is the face of a dog.  She said the actors get a kick out of it.  “We even have a picture of Alan Ball and Charlaine Harris behind the bar.”

Knowing that Eric is capitalizing on the draw of vampires, there is a souvenir stand in FangtasiaSuzuki said they hired an artist to paint some of the crew members on velvet, and they hung a picture of the Last Supper that lights up.  She said it adds to the “anti-religious artifacts” that would make sense in a vampire bar.  In Eric‘s office in Season 1, her decorator put hot sauce on his desk as a joke – vampires do not eat.

When decorating Lafayette‘s house, “we started with a leopard carpet and some foiled wallpapers that we found in an in-stock book here in the ofice”.  As a resource, a book titled Bachelor Pads was used.  Lafayette, evidently, believes in a variety of deities and there are religious items around that represent all of them.

Decorating Jason‘s house was pretty simple.  “This is the house he grew up in, and he hasn’t done anything to it — so that’s why it’s that kooky wallpaper.”  Making him the stereotypical bachelor, beer bottles and pizza boxes are staples.  And, have you noticed he has black satin sheets on his bed?

For Bill‘s house, she wanted the look and feel to be very old and neglected.  So the peeling paint on the outside adds to the romance without having it look haunted.  Asked why Bill hasn’t upgraded his “daytime quarters”, rather than continue to sleep under the house, Suzuki explained.

“I guess it goes back to their instincts, and they do like to bury down into the ground, so even if he’s a gentleman, he has that animal instinct to go down and hide.”

Regarding the bowl of water and the sponge by Bill‘s front door, which we saw in last week’s flashback, this was a traditional way to warn visitors that sickness was within.

Talking about Sookie‘s house, Suzuki said they spent a lot of time with it.  “The house was so delicate and beautiful and represented grandma.”  A construction worker’s wife donated her deceased mother’s dishes and crochet covers.  Lois Smith, who played Gran, added her own youthful photos and the show’s creator, Alan Ball, provided photos of his own family.  “Everybody in the crew has donated stuff, so it feels like everybody’s family has something in there.”

Sookie‘s kitchen sink was very difficult to find.  It’s an old “farm-style” sink, and although they searched all over the country, they ended up having to rent it as a prop.

The prop master came up with an idea for the table lights in the werewolf bar, Lou Pine’s.  They’re made from “silver doggie bowls and cheap plastic domes”.

Moving on to the mansion owned by Russell Edgington, vampire King of Mississippi, Suzuki said she and her art director found a treasure in Natchez.

“Longwood, a National Historic Landmark and the largest remaining octagonal home in the U.S., which she [Suzuki] was told had never been filmed before for TV or features.  “The interior was never completed.  After the Civil War, they walked away from it,” she says.  “But we just needed it for the exterior, because there’s nothing like it in the whole world.”

They studied plantation homes to get the flavor for the furnishings and they found a wallpaper for the king’s dining room that depicts Mississippi, complete with Spanish moss and alligators.

Decorating the dining room table was rather interesting.  Suzuki said they realized they couldn’t use silverware because silver is harmful to vampires. They instead used gold flatware.  And regarding the crystal, “Waterford was kind enough to loan us some pieces because apparently, they’re fans of the show.”

The last bit of decorating discussed was Maryann‘s “12-foot statue of steel, meat, live bugs and snakes”.  Because Alan wanted authenticity, $500 in meat and vegetables were purchased every couple of days.  Fortunately it was outdoors because the stink was authentic!  But unfortunately, security guards had to be placed around it to keep wild animals away.  Even bug wranglers were involved in ensuring the snakes and bugs didn’t burrow too far into the sculpture.

As for the constraints Eric used on Yvetta in last week’s sex scene, Suzuki couldn’t believe they had a conversation over whether to use ropes, metal or chain.  She said that building that set was pretty strange.  Actually, she used the word crazy.

“We started with brand new metal, brand new concrete, and then we aged it all down.  And then we do a wet-down [before shooting] so that it seems even more dank and disgusting.  When you’re in that set, you feel like you need to shower afterwards.”

So now, when you watch the episodes for the 3rd and 4th times, you can start paying attention to those quirky decorating items you didn’t notice before.

You can also read TrueBloodNet.com’s exclusive two part interview with True Blood’s Production Designer Suzuki Ingerslev by clicking here for part 1 and here for part 2.

Source:  popwatch.ew.com

(Photo credit – popwatch.ew.com)

Alan Ball Shares Details of Set Design on True Blood

As fans of True Blood, we get so immersed that we may forget that, just like in other television shows, they have to create sets and fill them with props. Executive producer Alan Ball took a break from a busy day of writing, editing, and filming to show New York Magazine around places on set.

According to Alan, if he weren’t a writer, he would want to be in the art department. He works closely with production designer Suzuki Ingerslev to give True Blood a real sense of down-home, Southern decor. She researches and finds fabulous pieces that Alan says will usually fit in somewhere.

The Stackhouse home is meant to feel like it’s been lived in for 150 years, so the cabinets are a bit crooked and the floor tiles worn and dirty. Bill Compton’s house is uncluttered, but it seems musty and old like he hasn’t fixed it up since he moved in.

Merlotte’s reflects your typical Southern dive bar, complete with animal parts mounted on the walls. The kitchen in the back is fully functioning so that it can be incorporated into action. Alan remarks that the Merlotte’s interior was set up to allow a Steadicam to follow the actors through their scenes.

Fangtasia, where Alan says “we’ve been filming a lot this season, has the cold, creepy basement and the red and black vampire hangout upstairs. On the wall hangs a portrait of a vampire, which is actually a depiction of producer Gregg Fienberg.

Sookie’s room, at the time of this visit, had clothes and blood scattered across the floor. Alan would only make a cryptic comment about the meaning of this for Season 3:

“We’re putting people in more situations where they have to fight for what they want or for survival.”

It’s easy to forget how much thought must go into this stage of putting the show together, but Alan says it’s crucial–he’s got a great cast, and they need a real atmosphere to develop their characters. They’ve got to have “stuff to play with, not just like, ‘Go get ’em!’ … ‘Watch out!’ … ‘Incoming!’ ”

Nevertheless, as fun as True Blood is to make, especially after a dark, thoughtful series like Six Feet Under, Alan reminds himself that it’s only a TV show:

“It feels like I’m closer to the ideal of relative sanity, rather than a person who’s consumed by what is ultimately not real.”

That doesn’t mean that he’s not going to try to make their pretend feel as real as possible, and a large part of that is due to the amazingly intricate sets.

SOURCE: nymag.com

(Photo credit: Jaimie Trueblood/HBO)

True Blood’s Kevin Alejandro Presenting At The ADG Awards

The Art Directors Guild is preparing for their 14th Annual Excellence in Production Design Awards. These awards celebrate the accomplishments of production designers and art directors in film and television.

The nominations for 2009 include our favorite show, True Blood! Production designer on the show, Suzuki Ingerslev is up for an award in the Single Camera Televsion Series, for the episode entitled, “Never Let Me Go”.

Another True Blood tidbit that the Art Directors Guild informed us about is that one of the award presenters at the ceremony will be Kevin Alejandro. Kevin will be playing Jesus Velasquez and Lafayette’s new love interest on the show in the upcoming season 3.

The awards ceremony will take place on Saturday, February 13th at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles, California. We wish Suzuki Inglerslev and True Blood the best of luck!!

SOURCE: Art Directors Guild

(Photo credit: HBO Inc.)

TrueBloodNet.com Exclusive: Suzuki Ingerslev Interview Part 2!

True Blood Sookie Stackhouse Front Porch Suzuki Ingersol

Suzuki Ingerslev is the production designer for HBO‘s True Blood. We interviewed her a while back [Editor’s Note: Part 1 can be read HERE] and she gave us so much material we had to break it into two articles! Since the original interview Suzuki and her team have been nominated for an Emmy for their work on True Blood.  We contacted Suzuki to congratulate her on their nomination and in an exclusive statement to TrueBloodNet.com Suzuki replied:

“Thank you, we are all very excited about the  nomination.  It is the last opportunity I will have to win an Emmy with my decorator, Rusty Lipsomb, with whom I have done the last 3 out of 4 shows.  She has retired and we all really miss her.  It would be a fabulous ending to her already amazing career.”

In a very telling aside to us Suzuki says:

I would love to add a THANK YOU to my entire crew, who work so hard and are so talented and dedicated.  They all have an amazing work ethic, and I could  never take on such a large scale show without their support and help.  I am really fortunate to have them all in my life as well as on the  show.

We now bring you part 2:

TBN.com:  What is a typical day for a production designer?

Suzuki:  It depends. Usually, I am an episode ahead of the shooting crew. When they are shooting the current episode, I have to be out scouting and prepping with the new director, for the  following episode. Which means that I am constantly in a scouting van looking for prospective locations, working with the directors to bring them up to speed, and introducing our stage sets to them. It gets a little tricky because I am also still involved in the current episode that we are shooting, although my crew really helps me out with that. I also have to figure in time to design new sets that need to be built for the upcoming episode, and allow time for the working drawing to be completed, and then built. What is great about working with Alan Ball and his writers, is that they get the scripts out ahead of time, so that we can always stay ahead, and really focus on the design. I really appreciate that.

It is so difficult when one has to design something in less than a day, it doesn’t give them the time to work out the design and research it correctly. I have had to do that many times on other shows, and unfortunately, I think that is more the norm for our Industry. We are incredibly spoiled.

TBN.com:  With you getting the sets built, does it play a part in the shooting schedule or is it the other way around, or is it give and take?

True Blood Merlott's Bar Suzuki IngersolSuzuki:  It is give and take. I usually work with the assistant directors, and ask them if they can arrange to have the new sets shoot towards the end of the schedule. Sometimes that works and sometimes we get an answers like: “ We can’t because this actor is out of town” or “this location is only available on this day.” Usually, I find that everyone tries to be accommodating, but there are many things that can’t be controlled. It is like a jigsaw puzzle putting together a shooting schedule. There are so many variables, and I am thankful that it is not part of my job description.

TBN.com:  When there are changes made in the scheduling does that affect you?

Suzuki:  Yes, tremendously. They just changed our schedule the other day on short notice. There was a set  that we were not counting on shooting quite as soon in the schedule, that got moved up to play the next day. We had to scramble, pull our crew off of another location and make sure that the new set was ready to be shot. That entailed bringing many crew members back from a location that was an hour away. Yes, the situation is frustrating when that happens, but it is unavoidable. It doesn’t happen on True Blood too often, but in this business, you have to be flexible and think fast on your feet. Half of our job is problem solving.

TBN.com:  If you are given notice at the last minute how are you able to prep the set or stage?

Suzuki:  We just have to do our best. We own a lot of the furniture in our basic sets, so when one of those gets moved up,  it is not as big a problem for us. It is just a matter of cleaning it up from when they shot it last, or making sure that they get what they need for that particular scene. It is hard on everybody. It is hard on the prop master. If someone is bringing in flowers that day, then the prop department  has to run out and get fresh flowers. Nobody really enjoys changes,  but usually it is doable and people are understanding if something falls short. (laughs). We are pretty organized actually. I have meetings with my department based on the episodes so that everyone knows what’s going on. I’m not the type of production designer that thinks information is power. Everybody knows what is going on, and they step up to the plate.

TBN.com:  That leads to my next question. Season 1 you had to start from scratch but now for season 2 a lot of sets have already been built and have already been set up. So, how much work had to be done before the season began?  Or does each episode require a little bit of tweaking?

Suzuki:  The start of Season 2 was exceptional because we had to change studios. We had to take down all the sets from Hollywood Center Studios and bring them to a new location. All those huge sets like Merlotte’s, Sookie‘s House, and Bill’s House had to be packed and moved. We started 8 weeks before everyone else. We set them back up, and then we had to re-paint them because they needed touch up after they had been sitting on a truck and in storage. They did hold up relatively well, thanks to the efforts of my construction coordinator, Mike Wells. He definitely builds things to last and believes in quality.  We also had some new sets that we had design and build as well. With Alan Ball, you can pretty much count on there being new sets every season. (laughs)  New sets and many, many new locations. We are even busier than we were the first season in many aspects because there are so many new twists and turns going on story wise, with many new sets and locations. We are also constantly re-vamping things. [Editor’s note: we all had a good laugh at the re-vamping comment].

TBN.com:  Which set would you say is your favorite and why?

Rusty Lipscomb and Laura True Blood Set DecoratorsSuzuki:  My favorite set would be Sookie’s house. I just feel that it encompasses so much of who Gran was, and her sensibilities. Our decorator, Rusty Lipscomb, really captured the time period in which Grandma lived and also the feel of the South. Also, the crew ended up donating a lot of their personal family heirlooms and photos which added to it being special. Even Alan Ball included several family photos of his parents, uncle and he and his brother. Our construction coordinator’s mother-in-law had passed away right before we started the pilot, and she had such an assortment of items that indicated a bygone era. He and his wife donated a lot of these items to the show, like beautifully crocheted doilies, pill bottle caps and needle point wall hangings. She is a definite part of that set and it feels like her memory is still alive.  There is something about those items, and the love that Rusty put into the decorating of Grans that makes it very comfortable, and homey. It was interesting, we had a lady visiting from Louisiana who walked into that set, and she started crying because it reminded her of her Grandmother’s house. There is no bigger compliment than that.

TBN.com:  In regards to Bill’s house, what type of mood or theme are you trying to convey with the decor?

Suzuki: With Bill’s house we took the direction that he had just inherited that house, and that it was not maintained for years before his arrival. He had just moved back in at the beginning of our story, and we learn that he has no electricity. We start with lanterns in there and then Sookie arranges for him to get an electrician. Now we have electricity and beautiful light fixtures in there, but not much else has changed yet. Our show takes place within maybe 2 months so far. So no time has really passed, and he has apparently been very busy. (laughs)  It’s not like he is spending time fixing up the house. So, we decided to leave it in a kind of “faded glory”. That also represents who Bill is. I think it gives  the set a magical feeling, and it’s also different from our other sets. We weren’t trying to go for the old, scary vampire house but instead a more romantic feel. We  also figured vampires do not have too many personal artifacts, and they are not as emotionally attached to objects as humans are. So, he really doesn’t have a lot of furniture or objects in the house.

TBN.com:  Plus he has the books we notice. And the only personal item is that in one episode he has a photograph.
Suzuki:  Yes, and that is something that we got from episode five. That is when we learn about Bill‘s past life during the Civil War, and the mayor of Bon Temps hands Bill the photograph of his past family. We figured that It was a great detail to include that photo into our set from that moment forward.

TBN.com:  How are you going to re-create the outside of Bill’s house since you cannot use the property anymore?

Suzuki:  We are looking to shoot a plantation called The Oakley on the outskirts of Baton Rouge. It is currently a museum and it has a very similar look to Bill’s house. We would try to play it off as the back of his house from now on, and I think it could evoke the same feeling. Or, if worse comes to worse, and we have to shoot a lot of the exterior, we will end up building it somewhere in Los Angeles. Just like we ended up building  the exterior of Sookie’s house on an empty dirt lot. We couldn’t find the look we wanted and it ended up being much easier to just build it.

TBN.com:  So just rebuild it based on the photographs and the film?

Suzuki:  Exactly.   We have measurements and we can just fill in the rest with our imaginations. It is costly, and it takes time, but it is worthwhile if we see a lot of it. It took us 5 weeks to build Sookie‘s.

TBN.com:  That’s amazing because it looks like a fully functional house when we looked at the photographs that you showed us from the side and front.

Suzuki:  We just finished the fourth side [of Sookie‘s house] because the fourth side was never finished. We are very happy that it is a completed house now, at least from the outside. It just makes it more flexible for directors to shoot, as well as providing variety for them. The inside of the house only has the completed foyer down stairs, so that we can have actors enter the set. Sookie‘s bedroom is actually designed into the upstairs there as well, because we ran out of stage space.

Lafayette Livingroom True Blood Suzuki IngersolTBN.com:  One of the more lavish sets is Lafayette’s. How did you decide to create the interior of his home that way?

Suzuki:  We just thought that we could have fun with his flamboyant character. We did some research, and found some great books on crazy interiors. We started with a country style guest house for a location, and turned it into a wild space, complete with 1970’s foiled wallpapers, leopard carpeting and a panther coffee table. To further create Lafayette‘s space we thought it would be fun to have these wild lighting in there that lit up the space as well as the main focus of his home, his shrine. Lafayette‘s religion is not just one type of religion, but instead encompasses many branches of religion. His shrine has Jesus, Buddha and many other religious icons, I think our set dressing crew had fun with that. The actual location is a very small, tight space, but we feel like we were able to bring Lafayette‘s eccentricities into it, and capture who he is.

TBN.com:  What energizes you the most when you are creating a set?  Do you like it to be challenging?

Suzuki:  I do like challenges. I like  projects interesting and creative. Last season our challenge was how to create Louisiana in an arid climate, which I had never done before. I really had to learn the ins and outs of creating the feel of older houses, lush vegetation, and at the same time incorporating the dampness that exists in a humid climate. Again, the ultimate compliment that we have received is that a lot of the audience, and Industry people, think that we shoot the entire series down in Louisiana.Lafayette Livingroom True Blood Suzuki Ingersol

TBN.com: When I had the opportunity to do the tour of the True Blood set I noticed that there was extra furniture in the dining room at Sookie’s house. Do you do that to make room for lights and cameras in a different room?

Suzuki:  Yes, we move stuff out of the way of the shooting crew, and then restore it as need be. They will store items in different rooms to get them out of the way, and then they will have quick access if they need to restore it. For instance, If they are not shooting in the dining room and the camera does not see into it, they will probably move the furniture out, so that the crew can move around with equipment a lot easier. We have a position on set called an “on set dresser” who is in charge of moving all of the furniture and keeping track of it.

TBN.com:  How do you keep track of where everything should have been?

Suzuki:  Lots and lots of good pictures. (laughs)  We have our little bible, or what we call our set  reference books. Also, when the on set dresser moves something, he will take a picture of how it was set, and document it. Then, when we go back into that room, we will know exactly where everything was. It is particularly difficult on episodes where we are shooting a scene that is not completed until the following episode, he has to remember how everything was set. The script supervisor and the prop department will also help out with continuity.

TBN.com:  So every time they finish a scene they take a new set of pictures?

Suzuki:  Absolutely, it is the best way to keep track of things.

TBN.com:  There is an incredible amount of detail that goes into the décor. Do you have a check list of things to go over?

Suzuki:  No, every space is different. I work with the decorator to try and create a feel and look for every character. It is fun to try and incorporate details that may not be obvious to the audience, but help the actors get into character. My art director found a door knob online that has a dog’s head on it, and we incorporated it into Sam’s office. Also the picture in Sam’s office of a little girl and a dog was a great omen. It was fortuitous that my decorator found the print in an antique store. We also went on eBay and found a lot of those old beer coasters, and we laminated them into the bar top. Details like that are fun and give the sets character.

Bill Compton Livingroom True Blood Suzuki IngersolTBN.com:  It is interesting that in Bill’s house the bathroom, bedroom and hidey-hole aren’t really there.

Suzuki:  Well the hidey-hole is kind of in there. (laughs)  You can open the door and you can go down into it a little because since our set is raised up on platforms. But yes, when we do the shots inside there, the set is on a different stage. We would never be able  to get cameras underneath our house. Also, bringing cameras up stairs is less than desirable, and so on two-story sets, we create the rooms somewhere else on stage. We just pretend to have the actors go upstairs and then we cut and pick them up somewhere else. That applies to Bill‘s bedroom and bathroom.

TBN.com:  Are they setup in another soundstage?

Suzuki: Sometimes, they can either be on the same stage if there is enough room for them or another stage with more space. Currently, we do not have Bill‘s bedroom and bathroom set up because they were not in the story lines and we needed the space for other  sets. If we don’t need the set, but we need the stage space, we have to strike the unnecessary ones and store them. The really big sets like Merlotte’s, and Sookie‘s always remain standing because they are too large and complicated to take apart. It would not be cost effective.

TBN.com: Do you store them in large pieces?

Suzuki:   We do. They all break apart somewhat easily, again depending how well they are built. They always need to be retouched when they come out of storage, and usually we need to redo the flooring.

TBN.com:  Besides your team, who do you work with most close on the set?

Suzuki:  I would say the executive producer, Greg Feinberg, this season. I work pretty closely with him, as well as Alan Ball. Also, the obvious being my department.

TBN.com:  You said Greg Feinberg this year. Was there someone different last year?

Suzuki:  Last year we had different producers.

TBN.com:  Did the writers and producers ever consult with you for your input on how they are writing or thinking about the script?

Suzuki:  Yes, they actually do. We will work together to make a scene work based on the limitations of our sets or how complicated a particular scene is. Once in a while, we will get a script where the writers and director have trouble making a scene work, and we will brain storm together to find a compromise. Which will either result in the changing of an action, or part of the dialogue, or we will add something onto our sets. There is always a way to make things work and usually with a little give and take we can correct the situation. Our writers are all amazing and they really understand our sets.

Sookie Stackhouse Livingroom True Blood Suzuki IngersolTBN.com  Are there any unusual aspects to working on True Blood compared to the other projects you have worked on and what are they?

Suzuki:  I think the craziest thing is all the destruction. (laughs). You have all these beautiful sets, and one of kind pieces from antique stores, and you have to be aware that at some point they may get destroyed. Chances are pretty great that some fate will come to the furniture pieces in our sets, like blood spilling onto them, or an explosion. We end up fixing quite a few pieces or replacing them. When we did the pilot, we didn’t realize that there was going to be this much destruction. Had we realized it, we probably would have purchased easier items to replace. (Although then we would have lost a lot of the character)

TBN.com:  Do some of the producers and directors give you some more input. If so how much leeway does Alan Ball give you?

SuzukiAlan Ball, since we have worked together before, gives me quite a bit of leeway. On major sets I like to share our design ideas with him and get his feedback. I try to get everyone on the same page, which includes the director and all the producers, and writers. We have an art department meeting for every episode where we go over all the new sets and location. The meeting is open to everyone and that way everyone can be informed.

TBN.com:  Are these meeting once every 10 days?

Suzuki:  Yes, for every episode we meet. Our episodes are approximately 10 days long.

TBN.com:  Is that challenging?

Suzuki:  I find it more liberating than challenging. I feel better once we have covered every topic and I feel like we know what direction we are headed.

TBN.com:  Do you ever get frustrated and why?

True Blood Merlotte's kitchen Suzuki Ingersol

Suzuki:  The only thing that frustrates me, and luckily it is not bad on True Blood, is lack of communication. I just don’t like surprises, and I don’t think there is any excuse for leaving people out of the loop. I find that the more everyone knows, and the more people I tell something to, the easier it is to accomplish.

TBN.com:  What other productions have you worked on?

Suzuki:  As a production designer I did “In Treatment”, “Six Feet Under”, and “Shark.”

TBN.com:  What was your favorite production that you worked on so far and why?

Suzuki:  I think it is “Six Feet Under” because it was five years of my life and it felt like a family. There were a lot of talented people on that show and it was well run. The show itself was also something to be proud of, especially the final episode. True Blood is second, definitely (laughs). It may even be up there with Six Feet by the time I am done with it.

TBN.com:  If you could be a character on the show, who or what would you be and why?

Suzuki:  I think I would be closest to a vampire. My crew seems to think I would be a better fairy, (laughs, as her crew is yelling “no” to a vampire for her in the background). The fairies come out later in the book series but, I still think I would prefer being a vampire. It would be great to be a vampire and enjoy the power. (laughs)  I think it would be pretty great not to deal with the mundane parts of life.

TBN.com: Thank you so much for your time.

Suzuki:  Thank you.

(Photo credit: HBO, Suzuki Ingerslev and Kasandra Rose)

HBO Answers Brooklyn Museum Blogger’s

hbo_birdlady_frontSuzuki the set designer for HBO’s True Blood answers questions for Madeleine Cody’s Brooklyn Museum blog.  In the blog Suzuki and Cat Smith say:

“We looked at many different types of ancient images including Mycenaean, Etruscan, and Minoan examples. Entering search terms something like “Egyptian female statues,” they came across our very own “Bird Lady.” Alan Ball, True Blood’s Creator, was immediately drawn to the figure of the Bird Lady; in their words, “seeing something so elegant, beautiful and perfect in her form that she became the obvious choice.” The statue is atypical for Egyptian art because of the lack of detail and smooth modern lines.

In terms of the show Suzuki said it worked, “In representing Maryanne’s character using it helped to emphasize that her character is timeless.”

The Blog also talks about the interesting history of the ancient Egyptian “Bird Lady” figure and how HBO created their “Bird Lady” figurine. I love in True Blood how all the characters are fleshed out and how Suzuki and Alan Ball work together to weave true-to-character, folk lore into the mythological beings in the show.

To read more about “The Bird Lady” and HBO’s creative team’s answers:
brooklynmuseum.org

The photo above is HBO’s version of “Bird Lady” made for the series by artist Cindy Jackson from a mold she created and casting plaster.  Image courtesy Suzuki Ingerslev.

TrueBloodNet.com Exclusive Interview with True Blood Production Designer Suzuki Ingerslev – Part 1

The detailed work that goes into creating the imaginary world of Alan Ball’s hit HBO TV series True Blood is the result of the creative genius of Production Designer Suzuki Ingerslev and her team.  It is Ms. Ingerslev and her team’s astonishing talent in recreating a world that seems so real that viewers easily find themselves escaping into the rural Northern Louisiana backdrop where humans are trying to deal with the revelation that vampires exist and are trying to mainstream into society.  Her painstaking attention to detail has not gone unnoticed as she received a nomination by the Art Directors Guild for the Excellence in Production Design Award for her work on True Blood for Season 1 Episode 7  “True Blood — Burning House of Love” in the category of One hour Single-Camera Television Series.  This nomination is just one of the many she has received including an Excellence in Production Design Award nomination in the same year as True Blood in the category of Half-hour single-camera TV series for her work on HBO’s “In Treatment” on the episode “Sophie Week One.”   Her dedication and hard work has earned her 7 Emmy nominations for her various projects including HBO’s “Six Feet Under”, “Shark,” and “Tracy Takes On.” Recently Kasandra Rose and Ollie Chong from TrueBloodNet.com had the great pleasure of speaking with Ms. Ingerslev regarding her background and the remarkable work that her and her team do in order to bring the imaginary world of True Blood to life. To enjoy the wonderful photos from Suzuki Ingerslev please click to enlarge.

Maggie Smith: Art Dept Coordinator, Tom Kilbourne: Art Dept. PA, Cat Smith: Art Director, Bob Thompson: Construction General Foreman, Macie Vener: Asst. Art Director, Daniel Bradford: Set Deisigner, Suzuki Ingerslev: Production Designer, Mike Wells: Construction Coordinator, Tom Wilson,: Lead man for Set Decorator, Billy Budd: Paint Supervisor.
Maggie Smith: Art Dept Coordinator, Tom Kilbourne: Art Dept. PA, Cat Smith: Art Director, Bob Thompson: Construction General Foreman, Macie Vener: Asst. Art Director, Daniel Bradford: Set Deisigner, Suzuki Ingerslev: Production Designer, Mike Wells: Construction Coordinator, Tom Wilson,: Lead man for Set Decorator, Billy Budd: Paint Supervisor.

TBN.com:  Thank you Suzuki for taking the time to do this interview with us today.  We have been looking forward to speaking with you and we have many questions to ask you about your background and your work experience. So we would like to first start off by asking about your background.

Suzuki is a very unusual name meaning Bell Tree.  Did your parents live in Japan?

S: My dad when he was younger, used to travel and play tennis and he did live in Japan.  He does like the Japanese culture, so that’s how I ended up with the name Suzuki.  He’s actually from Austria and my mom’s from Germany.  A lot of people are really surprised when I tell them that.  Of course, in college my roommate was Japanese and her name was Jill!

TBN.com: What is your background and how did you become interested in being a production designer?

S: I actually took a round about way of doing that.  When I went to college I went in as a civics major and ended up studying architecture.   I had a boyfriend in college who’s father was the graphic artist at NBC.  He used to do all the ‘Laugh-In’ girls, he’d paint their bodies and do all that.  And he always told me that I was wasting my time doing architecture that there’s no money in that and I should become an art director.  Not knowing what an art director really was, I practiced architecture for about six years, I actually worked in Los Angeles and also in Vienna, Austria.  I came back, and I was disillusioned with the field and the lack of respect that people get.  So I said, What about that interview to perhaps become an art director and he set me up with Chip Docks over at “Day’s of Our Lives”, the soap opera.  I interviewed for it and got the job as a drafts person.  From there on, I worked my way up.  I stayed there for a couple years then started getting some other shows, and I got into the union.  I did all types of genre’s, basically sit-coms, I did soap operas, I did assistant art director work on features.  So I’ve been all over the place.

Outside Merlotte's bar
Outside Merlotte's bar

TBN.com: How would you describe your career evolving?
S: A lot of hard work and, I know it sounds crazy but on a soap opera you basically go to boot camp and learn a lot very fast because you do one hour productions in a day.  You know, here on True Blood it takes us ten days to do an hour episode.  A soap opera you do one hour a day.

TBN.com: So you have to have everything set up for that day, and every day it’s changing?
S: Yep!  There are crews that work around the clock.  People come in at night and set up all the sets in the evening, then you come in the next morning and start shooting again.  So that’s definitely a boot camp and you learn really fast.  Which is great!  I’m a firm believer in working your way up because I think it only makes you better when you know many aspects of the job.

TBN.com: What years were you doing all that?
S: I started in 1992.

TBN.com: How did you become involved with Alan Ball and True Blood?
S: I was on another show and I got a call from a friend of mine at HBO who said that there’s a great new show, and it was going to be a hit, and that they needed some help in the art department over there, and that I should go over there and take the job.  So I interviewed with the production designer and then made up my mind to leave my other job, which was winding down for me.  And that’s how I ended up on “Six Feet Under” and I stayed there for five years.  At some point in that process, the production designer left and I was moved up into the production designing position.  So that’s a bit of dumb luck in a sense too, but it’s always so random.  You always get offered a few shows and you have to make that decision on which one you want to do, which one is going to be good.

TBN.com:
If you have to make those types of choices, what helps you decide?  Are you more interested in something that will help you expand your knowledge, doing something new or because you think it’s going to be a good show or..?
S: Definitely what influences me is, not money, it’s about what the script is about and what interesting things we can create and do.  And it’s also important that it is a pleasant show, that everybody is nice.  It makes a big difference when you’re here that many hours a day.  Recently we were on a different show and there were a lot of people that weren’t that friendly.  It wears down you after a while because we’re here a lot.  We put a lot of effort into the show.  Working with Alan Ball has always been fantastic because he really does care and he has that vision and you can sit down and talk to him about that character and where the show is going.  He cares.  You don’t hear that line that you often hear on some networks, “oh the audience doesn’t care.  Nobody cares about that.”

TBN.com: Which leads into the next question: How much information do you get from Alan and the writers and how much is left to your imagination?
S: It is definitely a group effort.  We usually get detailed scripts from the writers describing a particular scene or place.  These descriptions are just a basis for us to start thinking about the direction to go for each character and their particular environments. Creatively, there is still room for interpretation and new ideas. We then start to do our own research,  and slowly develop some concepts. Once we feel comfortable with an idea, we will go to the writers, producers and director and present our ideas and see if we can bring all our visions to the screen.  It is very important early on to make sure that everyone is on the same page because we do not want any surprises on the day of the shoot.   You often hear stories of people saying, “Oh that’s not what I wanted!” That is the last thing you want to hear once you have put 30-40 thousand dollars into the design of a set.  So, we work very hard at trying to communicate all those ideas to everybody.  When we go to Alan Ball with a concept, he is usually very receptive to suggestions, and he is a great sounding wall for us.  He really cares about the look of the show, and he is incredibly astute, and can always add something unexpected.

cemeteryfc
Cemetary Set Up in Malibu

TBN.com: Do you find the locations or does someone else do that?
S: We have a location manager, Alex Reid, who will go around, after we give him ideas of what we’re looking for, and search for the ideal location. He will either go online or go driving in certain areas of Los Angeles looking for options.  Then we try to narrow it down to 3 or 4 choices, if we are lucky enough to find that many!  It is very difficult finding Louisiana here in Los Angeles, so we don’t usually have the luxury of that many choices!  Once we selected our choices, we will show them to the director and producers and see what everyone thinks.  Then we will start going through the logistics of each location.  How many hours can we shoot there, where in the city is it, and can we afford it? Once we have narrowed down our choices, we will go on what is called “a location scout” and see each property in person. Everything always looks better in pictures, so we need to see for ourselves what we are up against. Unfortunately, neighborhoods are getting more and more difficult to shoot  because people are tired of the inconvenience that filming may impose on them.   They enjoy the income, but don’t want the headaches. Which is probably one of the reasons why production in leaving the state, which ultimately will be very detrimental to the entire city and state. The entertainment industry is one of the main industries left here and we can not afford to lose it.  On True Blood we usually end up shooting on the outskirts of Los Angeles because the inner city is too congested, is lacking in greenery, and has too many high rise buildings .  We’re always looking for properties that have more expanse and greenery around them.  So, we always end up in areas like Long Beach, Pasadena, or Malibu… which couldn’t be further apart if we tried.  Unfortunately this means a lot of driving for the crew, and we always hear “Can’t you just find that location by the studio?” The answer is “no”!

TBN.com:
Does that add additional challenge to the project besides just the time to get there?
S: It does, because sometimes we’ll be shooting in 3 different locations over a couple of days, which means our crew has to go out in every which direction and start prepping. My art director and I, also try to be out there in case the crew may need additional information or direction, although that is not always possible. We have an assistant art director, Macie Vener, who spends a lot of time in her car trying to get to all these locations in Los Angeles traffic. She will go out there and take progress pictures for us when we can’t  be there, as well as give the crew direction. It really is a challenge to oversee everything that is going on throughout the area of greater Los Angeles, so having a great crew that I can trust just makes my life a lot easier.

TBN.com:
Are you given a budget for each set that you create or as a whole for the complete series.  How does that work?
S: On network television you do usually have an episodic budget, and you have to stick very closely to that.  However, here at HBO, we usually turn in budgets once we have read the script and decided what to build.  That budget can vary according to the complexity of the script.  We usually will then talk to the producers and let them know where we are financially. They can either choose to build everything or they can talk to the writers and decide to move scenes into existing sets that we already have. Another option to deflect costs would be if a set were re-occurring over several episodes then we could divide the costs over several episodes.

Side of Sookie's house built on the set lot
Side of Sookie's house built on the set lot


TBN.com:
So if you come up with something great are they flexible?
S: They really are.  That’s what’s been great too!  It helps because sometimes if you want to do something spectacular, and it costs more money, they are usual as excited about the ideas as we are and they will support us in taking a set to the next level. We are all big sticklers about details.  Even for the actors, the details and the reality help them feel and become their characters.  My art director, Cat Smith and I, will sit down and do research on the internet, and try to find the real locations, and we will incorporate the details we find into our sets.  Thank God for Google Images!

TBN.com: We are very interested to hear how a particular set on True Blood was developed from the beginning to the final product.
S: Let’s take Sookie‘s House for example.  When I interviewed with Alan Ball, I came into the interview with a notebook full of ideas which I felt best depicted a Southern Grandmother’s old farmhouse.   I pitched a bunch of ideas, and he liked them. This, in turn,  got Alan inspired and he went out and bought several books on interior design.  He then put post it notes on a couple of pages and ideas that he liked to let us know the direction he was going.  I took his ideas and my ideas and created a design that best combined all the concepts.  I don’t usually use storyboards or anything like that.  We come up with our own ideas, and to present them we do some renderings, or color drawings of each set.  Whatever we can do to get everyone on the same page, the better.  When I design a plan for a particular set, I can’t just draw a pretty house, I have to think about how each wall can come apart so that we can ‘wild‘ them to get cameras into them.

TBN.com: Wilding?
S: The term wilding walls come from the ability to have a wall on set pull out in order to give the crew more room to shoot and/or provide a shot for them which they would otherwise not be able to get because the wall is in the way. We usually try and make all our walls wildable, and we hide the fact that they have a seam by stepping them back, or adding a pilaster. We don’t want to reveal that this wall comes apart by having an unsightly seam.  Also, once you have a permanent set, the crews get really bored inside them and everyone wants a new and innovative shot.  So we try to have as many entrances as possible, and views into other rooms so that they can have different things happening.  Also depth, that’s what make our sets seem like a real location. We try to have archways that look into other room, and many different entrances into a space.  In Sookie‘s house we definitely tried implement the everywhere.  In the living room, I added a sewing room behind the back of the living room so that you are not shooting into a solid wall and it doesn’t feel flat. It is more interesting to see into another room, and also it helps establish the character of Gran.  This room definitely gives you a peak into Grandma’s life and what her interests are. When I designed the room which I like to call the “bonus” room because it wasn’t in the script,  I told my decorator,  Rusty Lipscomb, about it and she said, “What is it?” Good Question, and I said, “I don’t know!” She was very clever and came up with the concept of Grandma’s sewing room.  They put all her old patterns, embroidery,  and knitting back there and it took on the personality of Grandma.

Sookie's dining room
Sookie's dining room

One other thing that was important, we didn’t have a lot of money on the pilot so we went to a local salvage yard and were able to incorporate a lot of cabinetry and fireplace surrounds that we found there.  They were definitely unique pieces that already had an aged and timeless feeling to them.  It saved us a step buy not having to build everything from scratch and then try to age it down and make it look old.  We do have an amazing painter, Billy Budd, that can age everything down for us by using techniques that he has perfected.  Bill Compton‘s house is a good example of that.

TBN.com: Which set on True Blood was the most challenging to create and why?
S: I think the interior of Merlotte’s was the most challenging to design.  There were so many important features to incorporate and so little time.  For instance, you had to see where Lafayette works in the kitchen and interacts with the waitresses, as well as Bathrooms, a Dining Area, Bar and Back bar, Pool Room, Service Area and Sam’s office. We designed it so that a Director of Photography can use a steadicam and follow actors throughout the entire set seamlessly, while still having depth and interest.   Also, incorporating the high ceilings into the set in such a way that the crew can still light the set and not have the ceilings block their light was also challenging.

TBN.com: When you design for the cameras to go through, do you always leave extra space in hallways and doorways wider?

S: We do.  Behind the bar is a lot wider than it would probably be in real life, but it makes sense to get the camera back there as well as the crew.  That goes for rooms, and corridors as well. The rule of thumb is to make a set 25% bigger than it would be in the real world.

Behind the bar at Merlotte's
Behind the bar at Merlotte's

TBN.com: So it looks and feels like a real bar?
S: Yes, people have gone into it and said, “My God this looks so real!”  I have had several people tell me that they thought we really shot this at a real location and not on stage. We also have worn down floors, vintage beer coasters laminated into the bar top, and ripped, worn down booths. Even the beer taps work, they just have non alcoholic beer in them.

TBN.com: Do you change the set to create an new feeling or mood or does someone else add little day to day touches?
S: I have a set dressing crew that is in charge of the interior of the set.  They will usually go in before the crew films, and make sure it is clean and reset, as well as add the dressing that the director and/or actor may need for that particular episode.  Also, the prop master will take over the set once the dressing crew has finished, and he will make sure the beer taps work, the food is being cooked and any items that an actor holds in the scene are available. A food stylist will often assist the property department, when there are big kitchen scenes, and that not only gives the kitchen the extra layer of texture and busyness that we like, but it also provides the background food for sets like Merlotte’s. It should really look like people are ordering and eating there in the background.

TBN.com: How much information do you get on the character and how does it influence the design of the set? For instance, Lafayette?
S: Huge influence!  Basically I read all the books to this series, so I learned about  the character of Lafayette from the books.  But then I also went to Alan Ball with a bunch of ideas on how eccentric I could make make him.  I also take my queues from wardrobe, and see how outrageously they are dressing him.  When I first saw him I thought “Wow, this is somebody we can have fun with and make it completely unique.”  I try to make all the sets feel different from one another.  That way, when you’re in close ups, which you generally are on TV,  you know you are at a particular location just by the feel or color of the walls. Lafayette‘s House was a lot of fun, the decorator and I worked with Alan and picked his brain.  We went to town on that character.  I mean, how often do you get to use all that leopard carpeting and 1970’s foil wallpapers?

Lafayette room before and after
Lafayette room before and after

As you can see, character is really very important to me, and if it’s not described in the script,  I will go to Alan Ball and ask about the character and what his thoughts are. He is excellent in developing characters

TBN.com: How do decide on the color scheme for the various sets? They are all very attractive yet they are all very different.
S: When I did “Six Feet Under” there was a color palette for each family.  The Fisher’s were more in the greens, and Brenda was more the blue.  For this show, it’s the same thing, I try to keep everybody a little bit separate.  Bill‘s house has a more blue, old patina look to it.  While Sookie‘s house displays more colors, but each color has been muted with age.  While there is color in her set the overall vibe of that set is white, old and bright.   Merlotte‘s is all the wood and stone, more natural, while Lafayette‘s is flamboyant with purple walls and black and silver foil paper.  I try to purposely select colors that I haven’t chosen already so that we just feel like we’re in a different environment, it’s a quick read.

TBN.com: How do you come up with the ideas of all the details to be placed on a particular set and where do they come from?
S: Books, a lot of books.  I have a huge library of interior design books.  And I go through magazines and the internet, and try to find inspiration in many different ways because there’s no way one person can pull all that out of their own mind.  When you see inspiring things it just ‘hits’.  Also with the decorator, they will go out and shop.  They get inspired by certain things that they may run into in prop houses or stores. The decorator will then come back after a day of shopping and we will go over the photos they took and look for interesting items they may have found.  Sometimes inspiration hits and we say “Wow, that would be so cool if we could have that in their house.”

Bill's staircase
Bill's staircase

TBN.com: We know True Blood shoots at night a lot.  Do you work on the set at night?
S: No, that’s the luxury of being in the art department!  Most of our work has to be done in the day because all the vendors and stores are only open during the day time. We will, however,  take turns and represent the Art Department on set at the beginning of their day by doing what we call “opening” the set.  By that we mean that we will make sure the crew has everything they need from our department, and that there are no problems. Once they get their first shot off, we leave.

TBN.com: How is each set prepared.  Is there a team of painters that goes from set to set or is there a team for each set that handles everything?
S: I have one large team and we all work together to achieve a certain look.  It start with my art department, which includes an art director, an assistant art director and a set designer. Together we will figure out how best to execute the concept.  I will pick the colors, and wallpapers and then design the general floor plan to get the momentum going.  Then the art director will oversee that it’s being designed and built the way that I have envisioned it.  My crew is free to add their own details to the sets as well-  I am always open to suggestions.  And then the drawings go to my construction co-coordinator and he bids them, gets the set organized,  and orders the materials.  And then his crew takes it over and starts building it.  Once the set has been constructed, the paint and plaster crew move in to complete the finishes. Only after they are done do the set dressers and decorator get to bring in their furniture, artwork and accessories. Once we’re done with all that, we hand it over to the lighting and grip departments and they can create their magic. Lighting makes a big difference in each set and I can’t emphasis enough how important it is.  We have two great DP’s on the show, Matt Jensen and Romeo Tyrone.  They do such an amazing job making our sets feel real.  Lighting can either make or break you.  You could design the best set in the world and if they light it badly it still looks fake!  So I’m very appreciative of them, I think they’ve given the show a really great look.

Stay tuned for Part 2 and information on Suzuki’s team.

(Photo credit: Suzuki Ingerslev and TrueBloodNet.com)

True Blood Nominated for Excellence in Production Design Awards Update with Comments and Photos

suzukiThe Art Directors Guild have announced their nominees for the Excellence in P

roduction Design Awards and Production Designer Suzuki Ingerslev from Alan Balla??s successful hit HBO TV Series a??True Blooda?? has been nominated. Suzuki Ingerslev has been nominated for Season 1 Episode 7 of a??True Blood a?? Burning House of Lovea?? in the category of One hour Single-Camera Television Series. The other nominees in the category are a??Mad Men a?? The Jet Seta?? (Dan Bishop), a??Pushing Daisies a?? Bzzzzzza?? (Michael Wylie), a??Tudors a?? Episode 210? (Tom Conroy) and a??Ugly Betty a?? When Betty Met Yetia?? (Mark Worthington). The Excellence in Production Design Award are awarded to members of the Art Directors Guild (IATSE Local 800) to recognize the highest achievement from within their own ranks in the area of art direction. The awards ceremonies will be held on February 14, 2009 at The Beverly Hilton Hotel where honorary awards this year will include the Outstanding Contribution to Cinematic Imagery Award to George Lucas presented by Ron Howard and the Lifetime Achievement Award to Oscar-winning Production Designer Paul Sylbert. Also as part of the ceremonies for the evening the Art Directors Guild will induct into their Hall of Fame, production designers Ted Haworth, Mac Johnson, Romain Johnston, John Meehan and Harold Michelson.

Suzuki Ingerslev has also been nominated for a second Excellence in Production Design Award this year in the category for Half-hour single-camera TV series for her work on HBOa??s a??In Treatmenta?? for the episode a??Sophie Week Onea??. A graduate from U.C. Berkeley with a B.A. in Architecture Suzuki Ingerslev turned her attention to film and television and worked as an Assistant Art Director on various projects such as a??Saved by the Bell,a?? a??The Replacement Killers,a?? a??Teaching Mrs. Tingle,a?? a??Mad TVa?? and a??Days of Our Lives: Winter Heat.a?? Later on she became Art Director for a??State casino online of Grace,a?? a??Tracey Takes Ona?? and a??Six Feet Undera?? mobile casino and has had the pleasure of working with Alan Ball, Mark Wahlberg and Brian Grazer. Suzuki Ingersleva??s workmanship has been recognized by the Academy earning her 7 nominations for an Emmy for her various works including HBOa??s a??Six Feet Undera??, a??Shark,a?? and a??Tracy Takes On.a??

I had the honor to speak with Suzuki Ingerslev regarding her casino online and her team”s nomination for the Excellence in Production Design Award for their work on “True Blood”. Ms. Ingerslev stated:

“We are really excited and honored to be doing this show and being nominated.” “It is wonderful to be working with everyone and with Alan Ball.” “I must say this is perhaps one of the most interesting shows I have ever worked on.”

We wish Ms. Ingerslev and her team the best of luck at the Award ceremony on February 14, 2009 and win the award. Ms. Ingerslev and her team”s dedication and hard work behind the scenes in creating the details necessary in developing the imaginary world of True Blood is truly an amazing feat.

Ms. Ingerslev was gracious to exclusively provide to Truebloodnet.com photos from the sets of “True Blood”. These photos are the property of Ms. Suzuki Ingerslev provided exclusively to Truebloodnet.com.

Stay tune more features and exclusives to come. Click on each image to enlarge.

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Merlotte's Bar Before and After

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Merlotte's Bar Interior

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Sookie's Kitchen

cemeteryec
Bon Temps Cemetary

Bill's Fireplace

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Bill's Bathroom


SOURCES:
Art Directors Guild unveils nominees
Art directors name their nominees
IMDb: Awards for Suzuki Ingerslev
Yahoo:TV a?? Suzuki Ingerslev
An Interview with Alan Poul and Suzuki Ingerslev
FanDango: Suzuki Ingerslev
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