![]() How did you feel when you first read the scripts from season 2 that they were going their separate ways? Keeley and Roy is a storyline for this season that people are obviously very invested in. I kind of love the idea that she’s always overdressed for things where you should be more underdressed and then vice versa. A huge part of that is staying true to her gorgeous, mad look that she has going on. It’s empowering that Keeley steps into the CEO role and doesn’t change who she is from top to toe, because a lot of women have faced pressure to do so. It’s still the Keeley that we know and love, right? Even if she’s in a position of power, she doesn’t think of it that way. There were conversations of like, if she’s stepping into this new position of having her own company, what kind of changes would that make? And I was like, “Well, I think she still has to be as quirky and pink and fluffy as Keeley has always been.” And everyone agreed. ![]() I have such fun collaborating with Jacky Levy, our costume designer, and Nicky Austin, our hair and makeup designer. A big inspiration for Keeley and her company this year was Legally Blonde, which is totally one of my favorite movies ever. I trust the writers implicitly, but I contribute to wardrobe. Were you able to give any character notes this season? Or do you mostly leave that to the writers? As long as you play each moment like you are living it for real and going along with your character’s trajectory and always remembering who your character is and where they come from, that’s what you always have to remember. You’ve got to really exist in what’s going on right then and there. We get the scripts as we go along, so you can’t be thinking too far ahead in the future. How do you navigate that as the person portraying her? You don’t want them to leave because you’re going to miss the hell out of them, but at the same time, you’re like, baby bird’s ready to start spreading their wings.Ĭourtesy of Apple It’s a huge period of change for your character: new job, new relationship status. My mom always said that when you have kids, the hardest but also the most gratifying day as a parent is when your kids move out into their first apartment. When you’re mentoring somebody, you hope that at some point, they’re going to go forth and prosper. You’re right, it’s going to give Keeley opportunities to grow because she’s not going to be able to go to Rebecca all the time.įor sure. It seems like she may have also been there too. The surprise attack of tears, she handles it so brilliantly. But I love that also, Rebecca’s blouse gets ruined and she just doesn’t care. Rebecca isn’t always there when Keeley needs a beautiful bosom to cry on. That’s such a great moment because so many people can relate to that. Have you ever had a moment like that in your career?Īlmost weekly, I would say. I loved that moment in the first episode when Keeley was putting on this facade of “I’ve got it together” and then as soon as she shut her office door, the tears came. I would have put my foot down to that, I think. I don’t think they could grow apart, really. Keeley’s going to get things right and she’s gonna get things wrong. I don’t think it means they grow apart from each other at all because what we see happening at the end of season 2 for Keeley is something that Rebecca is so proud of, and throughout this season, she’s going to be a guidance for Keeley. ![]() Do their characters grow together or apart? This season sees Keeley and Rebecca working separately, when they had that lovely working relationship at AFC Richmond. In an interview with Cosmopolitan, Juno spoke about navigating all of that coming into season 3, why Legally Blonde inspired her arc this season, and what we can expect from Keeley and Roy. And her relationship with Roy, which had quickly become a fan favorite, was maybe, potentially, completely over? And Juno made sure the character handled it all in her distinctly hilarious and optimistic way. She got an offer to start her own PR firm and put in her notice at AFC Richmond. But at the end of last season, she was at a major crossroads. Throughout seasons 1 and 2, the influencer turned PR expert grew so much that it’s almost easy to forget audiences met her as Jamie Tartt’s (lovable) WAG. In a show that’s basically predicated on people being rays of sunshine, Ted Lasso’s Juno Temple takes her character, Keeley, to another level.
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