![]() ![]() It wasn’t the first time she’d dealt with that level of secrecy - as one example, “Mad Men” was equally tight-lipped - though in the case of “Westworld” she was even more in the dark, since nothing had premiered yet. For, at this point in the show’s history, there was very little knowledge about what the show was really about.Īnd that didn’t really change for Weatherup all during filming she never received a full script for the episode, and was told very little about the character and the world. Weatherup came to the set a day early for wardrobe fittings, which proved to be “detailed and precise,” she said, with three different layers to her costume, including a bustle that was basically just “a pillow with strings attached.” More importantly, it was seeing the wardrobe department in action that gave her first indication of how massive a production this was. READ MORE: ‘Westworld’: Why We Need to Stop Obsessing About Fan Theories “It really put you in the world as an actor, seeing the world outside bustling by you.” “The scope of it was like nothing I’ve worked on before,” she said, but for Weatherup and the other actors on the show, that attention to detail was incredibly helpful. Since the scene took place inside the Mariposa Saloon, that meant those horses went completely unseen on screen - but were there for every take. The best way Weatherup could describe the attention to detail brought to “Westworld” on a production level? For her scene, there were countless extras on set… including six horse extras, who walked back and forth on the street. In Weatherup’s case, it was just one day - her big scene was shot over a year ago, in mid-July 2015. The level of role defined as “co-star” is above being an extra but below “guest star,” and isn’t usually more than a day or two of work. Everything to Remember About ‘The Gilded Age’ Season 1 ![]()
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