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July 1, 2009

HBO’s True Blood team kindly answers our “Bird Lady” questions!

Madeleine Cody @ 10:01 am

Many thanks are due to our faithful community. Their tweets helped us get in touch with @TrueBloodHBO, the official True Blood twitter feed and they set up a coast-to-coast conference call Tuesday evening between Suzuki Ingerslev, Production Designer for the show, Shelley (who has seen every episode), and me (who has read the books and will now go out and rent Season 1).

Getting to ask Suzuki our questions directly was incredibly exciting and the answers we got were pretty thrilling too! How cool is this…

How True Blood found the “Bird Lady”

The script for Episode 1 of Season 2 called for “a primitive piece of art; like a dancing girl” to be placed on the character Maryann’s coffee table. Suzuki and Cat Smith, Art Director, went to Google to look for images that fit these requirements, hoping to find something that inspired them. They 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.” They printed out a selection of appropriate images and presented them to Alan Ball, the show’s creator.

He was immediately drawn to the “Bird Lady,” seeing something so elegant, beautiful and perfect in her form that she became the obvious choice. As Suzuki pointed out, though she is not the first to do so, this ancient figure looks both modern and primitive at the same time. In terms of the show, she said using it helped to emphasize that Maryann’s character is timeless.

We also found it interesting that Suzuki said they looked at a lot of Egyptian images and chose this one precisely because it is not a “typical” ancient Egyptian representation. This was precisely the thinking behind curator James F. Romano’s choice of the “Bird Lady” as the signature image for the reinstalled Egyptian galleries, which opened in April 2003. As usual, he wanted to get people to stop, look and think twice.

How True Blood created their “Bird Lady”

As part of Alan Ball’s vision for the show, which involves going the distance to add a level of authenticity, an artist was hired to make a version of the “Bird Lady” based on renderings off the web. Cindy Jackson made three statues in case one got broken during filming. Suzuki wanted a base that let the figure float and emphasized its sense of movement. So the artist drilled a rod into the bottom of the statue that connects to a flat base. We explained that we obviously couldn’t do that to a 5,500 year old object but we do have a special mount that safely produces the same floating effect.

HBO_BirdLady_Front.jpg   HBO_BirdLady_Back.jpg

HBO’s version of “Bird Lady” made for the series True Blood by artist Cindy Jackson from a mold she created and casting plaster.  Images courtesy Suzuki Ingerslev. 

Lastly, a few final bits of “Bird Lady” and True Blood trivia.

One of the characters refers to the statue as “Mycenean or something.” Maryann intentionally raises her arms in the same pose during the episode; this gesture was directly inspired by the choice of the “Bird Lady” for the statue. And yes, the “Bird Lady” can be read as a clue to Maryann’s eternal nature, but no, there is not necessarily any further connection.

Many thanks to HBO’s True Blood team for responding so quickly and warmly to our questions. We are glad you love the “Bird Lady” as much as we do.

8 Responses to “HBO’s True Blood team kindly answers our “Bird Lady” questions!”

  1. Nina Kuriloff Says:

    Very, very cool!

    :-)

  2. Ellen Belcher Says:

    As we have often discussed, figurines manage to speak to us in ways that few other ancient artifacts can. It could be because it invokes ourselves because we too have the same body.

    And as I am often heard saying, if you want to understand a figurine, strike the pose!

  3. True Blood’s Production Designer Answers Bird Lady Questions : True-Blood.net – News, spoilers, photos and more! Says:

    […] some light on the mystery of the “Bird Lady” statue featured in the season premiere. She spoke with the Brooklyn Museum, where the original “Bird Lady” statue is on display, to describe how Maryann came to […]

  4. Adrianne Russell Says:

    That’s awesome! I love the show and when I saw that figure, I wondered if it was based on an actual art object. And I’m sickly green with envy that you talked with the show’s production designer! :)

  5. brooklyn museum artifact replicated for true blood « CrapWeLike! Says:

    […] Bernstein had the honor of talking to the production designer about the statue. Read the interview HERE. And another BK Museum blog entry HERE. ps. i just learned from the brooklyn museum blog that […]

  6. brooklyn museum artifact replicated for true blood | Crap-We-Like! Says:

    […] Bernstein had the honor of talking to the production designer about the statue. Read the interview HERE. And another BK Museum blog entry HERE. ps. i just learned from the brooklyn museum blog that […]

  7. Brooklyn Museum: Community: bloggers@brooklynmuseum » Season Finale of True Blood - We'll be watching for the Bird Lady! Says:

    […] Soon after, the awesome people at HBO got us in touch with Production Designer, Suzuki Ingerslev, who answered our questions about why this object was selected and they gave us some subtle hints as to the significance. […]

  8. Ten (Long, Illustrated, Rambly) Reasons Why I Love “True Blood” « .hellagood. Says:

    […] There are dozens if not hundreds of small touches like this one – blink and you might miss them. One I totally would have missed was the Bird Lady statue, which was based on an exhibit in the Brooklyn Museum and hand-crafted for the show. […]

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