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   alt.tv.buffy-v-slayer      Show about girl power, written by a dude      152,792 messages   

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   Message 151,057 of 152,792   
   David to All   
   =?UTF-8?Q?=E2=80=98Buffy=E2=80=99_never_   
   04 Feb 15 17:06:47   
   
   From: daviderl31@yahoo.com   
      
   http://www.star-telegram.com/entertainment/arts-culture/article9133445.html   
      
   ‘Buffy’ never grows old, says Emma Caulfield   
      
   Emma Caulfield’s stint as Anya Jenkins on Buffy the Vampire Slayer ended   
   more than a decade ago. But like Star Trek and The Brady Bunch, the program   
   is more popular now than it was during its original run.   
      
   “We were on a low-rated, not-even network,” Caulfield says of the show,   
   which aired from 1997 to 2001 on the WB and from 2001 to 2003 on UPN. “It   
   wasn’t this huge show like Lost or something. It was a small group of people   
   that grew and grew.”   
      
   Caulfield, who tickled viewers’ funny bones as a former vengeance demon,   
   credits a certain streaming service for Buffy’s staying power and its   
   growing status as a cult classic.   
      
   “Netflix has a lot to do with it,” Caulfield says. “Netflix is   
   responsible   
   for a lot of shows that didn’t have necessarily the best go at first."   
      
   Caulfield has a great deal of affection for Buffy the Vampire Slayer,   
   calling her former co-workers “the best crew I’ve ever worked with,” but   
   she   
   “only saw the show once during its run” and hasn’t watched it since.   
      
   She knows that Anya, one of the quirkiest characters on the program, has a   
   place in pop-culture history, but she has moved on to other projects.   
      
   “The fans know so much more about Buffy than I do,” Caulfield says.   
   “When I   
   go to a Comic Con or someplace where the groups gather, then it hits me   
   that, yeah, I am totally a part of this cultural icon.”   
      
   Caulfield’s next stop on the convention circuit is Dallas Comic Con Fan   
   Days, which will be Saturday and Sunday at the Irving Convention Center.   
   She’ll   
   be barraged with Buffy questions, of course, but she’ll also be happy to   
   field questions on her work in films, including a sci-fi rom-com hybrid   
   called TiMER (2009), which, like Buffy, has devoted fans and is currently   
   streaming on Netflix (it’s available on DVD as well).   
      
   “TiMER was in theaters for maybe two weeks, and it just came and went,”   
   Caulfield says. “It is a small indie movie that a handful of people saw, and   
   then it got on Showtime and then Netflix, and it grew like crazy, like   
   watching a Chia Pet grow. It now has an enormous cult following. I’m very   
   proud of TiMER.”   
      
   “TiMER was in theaters for maybe two weeks, and it just came and went,”   
   Caulfield says. “It is a small indie movie that a handful of people saw, and   
   then it got on Showtime and then Netflix, and it grew like crazy, like   
   watching a Chia Pet grow. It now has an enormous cult following. I’m very   
   proud of TiMER.”   
      
   In 2014, Caulfield appeared in three films, including Back in the Day, which   
   also starred Morena Baccarin, of V and Firefly fame, and Michael Rosenbaum,   
   best known for playing Lex Luthor on Smallville.   
      
   “Michael and Morena and I hadn’t met, but they were both involved in the   
   past on cult shows, so we ended up gravitating together,” Caulfield says.   
   “Back in the Day is this very fun coming-home comedy, and we had a blast   
   filming it. I think I laughed the whole time.”   
      
   Dallas Comic Con Fan Days will be Caulfield’s first trip to North Texas, but   
   she says she probably won’t have time to visit the Stockyards in Fort Worth   
   or the Sixth Floor Museum in Dallas.   
      
   “When I do these conventions, I never see anything,” she says. “You’re   
   in   
   the convention hall until the show closes. You’re tired, you go get   
   something to eat, you get room service, and you go to bed. And you do it   
   again the next day, and then you leave. All I see is the inside of the   
   convention hall.”   
      
   Despite the lack of time for sightseeing, Caulfield says she enjoys   
   traveling to different cities, meeting and greeting fans.   
      
   “Everyone’s always  nice,” she says. “People are just happy to be   
   there and   
   happy to meet you. It all goes by very quickly.”   
      
           Self-professed nerd   
      
   For Caulfield, a self-professed nerd (she says she knows every episode of   
   Star Trek: The Next Generation by heart), one of the perks of working the   
   convention circuit is schmoozing with fellow actors.   
      
   “It’s always nice seeing people you haven’t seen in a while, or people   
   you’ve   
   wanted to meet,” she says. “That’s always cool. You kind of fan-girl   
   out.”   
      
   This weekend, at Dallas Comic Con Fan Days, Caulfield and everyone else can   
   “fan-girl out” in the presence of such celebrities as Stephen Amell, who   
   plays Oliver Queen on Arrow; Melissa McBride, who plays Carol on The Walking   
   Dead; and Billie Piper, who played Rose Tyler on the new Doctor Who.   
      
   Other guests set to appear include Nichelle Nichols (Star Trek), John   
   Barrowman (Torchwood), Chris Sarandon (The Princess Bride) and Terry Farrell   
   (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine). Most celebrities charge an extra fee for   
   autographs and photo ops.   
      
   Caulfield spends most of her time at Comic Cons behind her table, she says,   
   but this weekend she hopes to make time to browse the convention floor,   
   where attendees can shop for comic books, super-hero T-shirts, action   
   figures, trading cards and other geeky memorabilia.   
      
   “I’ve always been a nerd,” Caulfield says. “And I’m fine with it. I   
   like it.   
   I don’t know any other way to be.”   
      
      
   http://daviderl.com/EmmaCaulfield.html .   
   http://daviderl31.blogspot.com/   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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