TV Interview!
Interview with Tatyana Ali, Justin Bruening, Carolyn Hennesy and Treach of “Vanished: Searching For My Sister” on Lifetime by Suzanne 1/10/22
This was an intriguing movie with many different actors. The panel was for Lifetime with quite a few panels that day. This was the only one where I didn’t get to ask a question. It’s okay, though. There were many great questions asked. I enjoyed seeing this great cast. Jasmine Guy is also in the movie, and she’s fabulous. I was just happy to see Justin Bruening again (as he was great as Jamie on “All My Children“) and Carolyn Hennesy (she plays Diane on “General Hospital“). Tatyana does a fine job with her dual role as sisters Kayla and Jada. Also, I didn’t know that “Treach” was the leader of the rap group Naughty By Nature. Please also see my one-on-one interview with Carolyn Hennesy!
MODERATOR: Hi, everyone. Welcome to our âVanished: Searching For My Sisterâ panel. Today we have Tatyana Ali, Justin Bruening, Carolyn Hennesy and Treach. Thank you guys all for being here.
CAROLYN HENNESY: Thank you.
MODERATOR: Our first question is an email question, and it comes in asking for the entire cast how was this movie standout compared to other projects that youâve all acted in?
TREACH: Well, for me, I had the honor of working with a legend like Tatyana right there. Iâve grown up, I was watching her. You know the history so just to have the pleasure of getting on there is really when you know Jasmine Guy and Justin, these great actors, you got to understand youâve got to really come here prepared, because they are legendary these guys here. So it was just a whole different vibe with just knowing that you were in great hands. You know when you step on a set with production and everything, you see how itâs rolling youâre like, yeah, this is one of them right here.
CAROLYN HENNESY: Well, for me, it was really cold in Atlanta, so there was that. My trailer had no heat so that was fun, but it was all the more exciting to get inside when we did have those scenes inside. Yay! And be able to work with Tatyana, and Tatyana on this panel is the only one that I worked with, because my scenes were with her and Jasmine pretty much primarily. And so Jasmineâs just everything you would expect her to be. Sheâs a hoot-and-a-half, and sheâs so, sheâs a consummate professional as is Tatyana, but Tatyana was not quite as funny, because she was threatened with sheâs going to be killed at any moment, her character. So she was very, very serious, and we were kind of coming at her with donât do what we all know youâre going to do and that is double as your sister. So it was really a tremendous amount of fun to keep it fun and light on the set, and then when the cameras rolled we were just in it, but I was pretty much cold all the time, so that was me.
(Laughter.)
JUSTIN BRUENING: I didnât have that problem but working with Tatyana was amazing. Watching her transform into two different, entirely different people was just phenomenal. I mean, there was even a moment when she did her whole transformation into Kayla, and we were sitting across from each other, and like we had on masks on and stuff, but I didnât know it was her, because Iâd never seen her. I mean, I just worked with her twenty minutes before that, and I was like sitting across from this woman. Iâm like, âWhoâs that?â
(Laughter.)
JUSTIN BRUENING: âThey just let anybody in on this set. Itâs just strange.â
TATYANA ALI: I remember that. We had such a rapport during the whole shoot, and I was like, âWow, is he having a bad day? Like what, why are you staring at me that way?â
JUSTIN BRUENING: Iâm shy. I was shy. I didnât know who that was. Itâs a new person. Nobody introduced me. I felt bad. Yeah, it was great.
TATYANA ALI: For me, what was different about this one, the cast is so amazing, and the crew, and I just had an incredible time working with everybody. Treach, there was a point when it was one of the scenes in the trailer when you kind of grip me up in the club, and I donât even know if you noticed, but I had to take a moment afterwards, because you are scary. When you want to be. Youâre so like kind and wonderful, and you just scared the bejesus out of me, like, for real. Yeah, just working with everybody was amazing. Especially, I was so excited when I read the script, like the fact that itâs based on a true story and that this really happened, that a woman really went undercover as her twin. All of that was so exciting. I love the notion of not allowing your loved one to remain a statistic or not be cared about; that someone would fight so hard to make sure that her sister, who has been through addiction, been through all these things, that her life mattered. I really loved that and so into it, and then right before I started working I was like, âOh, my God. What did I get myself into?â But yâall saved me, so thank you.
(Laughter.)
MODERATOR: Thank you, everybody. Our next question is from Rick Bentley.
QUESTION: Thank you very much. Tatyana, do actors when they start their career think, âOh, boy. I hope one day I get to play a twin?â Or âOh, my God. I hope I donât ever have to play a twin?â
TATYANA ALI: (laughs) Maybe, âOh, my God. I donât ever have to play — I hope I donât ever have to play a twin.â I, actually, no, it was really a wonderful sort of like experiment, and especially in the kind of truncated schedule that we have there were days when I went back and forth between the sisters, and it can make you feel a little bit crazy. Like our makeup and hair department and costumes, they were really like a refuge for me on those days. But itâs fun. You kind of have to use literally like everything you know or think you know or might guess at to, not just create two people, but then also a relationship, the relationship between them, the history between them. That was really fun, actually. Itâs kind of like you might not hope to do it, but it could be a dream to be able to do it.
QUESTION: A quick follow-up. Did you color code your script or did you put markers to who you were for the day?
TATYANA ALI: Iâm super anal. I always color code my script even if itâs one person.
(Laughter.)
TATYANA ALI: So, yeah, I keep a binder. Iâm not at the iPad script yet phase —
JUSTIN BRUENING: Yeah.
QUESTION: Thank you very much.
MODERATOR: Thanks, Rick. Our next question is from âRight On! Digital.â
QUESTION: Hello? Can you hear me?
TATYANA ALI: Hi.
TREACH: Hi.
JUSTIN BRUENING: Hi.
QUESTION: Okay. Hi. My question is for Tatyana. Weâve known about your work for years, and weâve publicized you many times in âRight On! Magazine.â You talked about the fact that it can make you a little crazy playing two characters in one. What was it like actually preparing for a role where youâre actually playing two people, because thatâs an enormous amount of responsibility to have that much dialogue. So what was your secret to actually preparing?
TATYANA ALI: Just, you know, itâs similar to the way I prepare for just playing one role except you just double it. They both have their, theyâre sisters, so they have their shared pasts, and theyâre sisters, so they also have things that only the two of them know that the rest of the world donât know. They both have their own wishes and desires and hopes and dreams, and so itâs all itâs the same, itâs just more. And so even with when I was kind of prepping for it and doing my own rehearsals like I just tried to kind of schedule the time, so thereâd be like days working on one, and then days working on the other so I didnât have to get confused. And then their style, like, for me, once I start, once I am in their hair, in their clothes, and then all of the things, their walk or their body language, all those things that I tried to –I always work on those things but just with twins itâs like I was trying to differentiate them a little bit more, but once all those pieces come together then itâs kind of like they kind of, it meets somewhere. I felt that I guess thatâs how it happened.
(Laughter.)
QUESTION: All right. Well, thank you. Hi, Treach.
TREACH: Hello.
QUESTION: And one —
MODERATOR: And — Oh, sorry.
QUESTION: May I ask Treach a question while we have him?
MODERATOR: Of course.
QUESTION: Okay. Treach, hi.
TREACH: Hello.
QUESTION: Cynthia from âRight On! Magazine.â What was it like on the set? Is there a fun fact you can tell us about, something that we wouldnât know because we werenât there?
TREACH: Yeah. I mean, thereâs certain times you get into stuff, like youâll have a scene. Like, for instance, I was rolling upon a motorcycle. Iâm not even half good on a pedal bike.
(Laughter.)
TREACH: So I got to really show my acting skills. I had to find, okay, the clutch and when I do should I look (audio glitch @ 00:38:07), but I know people that ride motorcycles and stuff, so I had to do what I knew they do without doing nothing.
(Laughter.)
TATYANA ALI: You look good on that bike.
TREACH: Thank you. But the movie magic makes things happen. So I know, like, certain, like I said, it was certain things that I naturally donât do at all. When I do a movie itâs so fun to me because I got to really make sure they think I know what Iâm doing.
QUESTION: Okay. Thank you.
TREACH: Youâre welcome.
MODERATOR: Thank you. Our next question is from Abbie Bernstein.
QUESTION: Sorry. It took me a second to find my unmute. Good morning. Thank you all for doing this. Question for anybody or everybody whoâd like to take it. Is there any difference between doing a Lifetime thriller and a different network or an indie film with thriller subject matter and the same schedule and budget? Is there anything specific to working for Lifetime?
CAROLYN HENNESY: Thereâs a lot more blood on an independent.
(Laughter.)
JUSTIN BRUENING: Yeah.
CAROLYN HENNESY: Itâs the truth. Itâs the absolute truth.
JUSTIN BRUENING: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
CAROLYN HENNESY: And the things you can get away with on an independent thriller, um hm. Yeah, the Lifetime audience would pass on that, so.
JUSTIN BRUENING: Yeah.
CAROLYN HENNESY: But (audio glitch @ 00:39:33).
QUESTION: Is there —
TREACH: You know, for this type of movie, like, everyone goes to Lifetime to watch these types of movies, but the masses, one thing thatâs beautiful about Lifetime, the masses is going to tune in.
CAROLYN HENNESY: Yeah.
TREACH: They have a long list of anything that like what comes on Lifetime Iâm here. So itâs just a honor to be on Lifetime, because you know that following, that cult following is goinâ be there for you.
JUSTIN BRUENING: Well —
QUESTION: Is there any — Oh, sorry.
JUSTIN BRUENING: I was going to say thatâs a tough question, because I think our Director Tim Woodward sort of filmed it like an independent, like I think he went for that.
CAROLYN HENNESY: True.
JUSTIN BRUENING: So I think thereâs some stuff that ended up on the cutting room floor, speaking of blood.
(Laughter.)
JUSTIN BRUENING: There was a little bit, but — a lot — but, yeah, I mean, I think that — I think he really — that I think he set that as his benchmark, and he went for that, but I think that we had to tone it down for Lifetime, for that audience, but I think we filmed it the same way we would film an independent film.
TATYANA ALI: Yeah. Iâve worked with Lifetime many times now, and I always feel really supported by the network and by the executives. Thatâs always a really good feeling, and they stay in communication while youâre filming and thatâs awesome but to also know, itâs true, thereâs this very wide audience, and thereâs something about Lifetime. Like I always think about my cousins and my family because I know theyâre going to be watching it. Like I canât, I got to make them proud. Like they are (audio glitch @ 00:41:09), everyoneâs going to be texting me while itâs on, and thereâs something about that thatâs actually really special.
CAROLYN HENNESY: I think also with it being Lifetime — very often in an independent you donât get the justice that you want at the end. Things are left unresolved, and sometimes you can leave the theater or whatever youâre viewing it on unsatisfied, thatâs not going to happen with a Lifetime thriller. Things are going to be wrapped up. Everyoneâs going to be happy and vindicated, and youâre going to end up being thrilled during the movie, but all will be well at the end pretty much, or maybe not this with this one. I donât know —
QUESTION: Does it affect your performances in any way?
CAROLYN HENNESY: Say that again?
QUESTION: Iâm sorry. Does it affect your performances in any way either knowing there isnât going to be that much blood or that everything is going to be resolved at the end? Do you play with more fervor and less frustration? Or do you perform it the same way you would perform a more ambiguously ended material?
CAROLYN HENNESY: Whatever is honest for the character is how you go.
JUSTIN BRUENING: Um-hm.
CAROLYN HENNESY: So it doesnât matter if itâs a soap opera.
TATYANA ALI: Thatâs right.
CAROLYN HENNESY: Or a Lifetime or a Darren Bousman âSawâ franchise films. Itâs all, for me, for me. I mean —
JUSTIN BRUENING: Yeah, I agree with that.
TATYANA ALI: Yeah, ditto.
QUESTION: Thank you very much.
TREACH: Youâre welcome.
MODERATOR: Thank you. Our next question is from Luaine Lee.
QUESTION: Tatyana, which twin was more difficult to play and why?
TATYANA ALI: Huh, you know, I guess I would have to say Jada, because I certainly get to play her more, but often during the film, and it sometimes led to a little bit of confusion when we were filming, I spent a lot of time playing — I spent a lot of time — Iâm sorry. Did I leave? I spent a lot of time playing Jada pretending to be Kayla, and those were probably the most challenging parts, playing someone you love, kind of Jada putting on Kaylaâs wigs, going out into Kaylaâs world which, you know, sheâs heard of but never really participated in, just the longing to know whatâs happened to her sister and to find her. I think Jada pretending to be Kayla was the most challenging, for sure.
QUESTION: Were you scared to do it?
TATYANA ALI: I was excited at first and then as I got closer and closer, yeah, I was scared, but that, Iâve come to learn that thatâs — If Iâm not intimidated by what Iâm trying to do then Iâm almost like not that excited about it, so nerves to me are like a good sign that Iâm stretching myself. So, yeah, I was.
QUESTION: Thanks.
MODERATOR: Thank you. We have time for one more question and thatâs going to be from Noah Wilson.
QUESTION: Hello, everyone. Itâs so great to be here with you guys. Tatyana, I do want to ask you, taking on two roles could you ever see yourself doing it again?
TATYANA ALI: (laughs) I had a lot of fun doing it. I would love to do it on a project where we had more time. It was hard to switch on the same day. That was really hard to go back and forth on the same day, and when I was prepping for it I saw a lot of films where actors played multiple characters and twins and sisters and even read a lot of interviews of the process, but we had three weeks, so. I would. I would try it again. I thought it was — I was exhausted when it was done, but it was thrilling, and I really liked playing a character like Kayla, even for the short period of time that I do in the film. Iâve never really, Iâve never been able, given the chance to play somebody like her, and she really stole my heart.
QUESTION: Yes. Well, I enjoyed you in âA Picture Perfect Holidayâ and I cannot wait to see you in âVanished: Searching For My Sister.â Thank you so much, guys.
CAROLYN HENNESY: Thank you.
TREACH: Thank you.
JUSTIN BRUENING: Thank you.
MODERATOR: Thank you so much to all the panelists and everyone that attended. Please tune in to âVanished: Searching For My Sisterâ on January 22nd at 8/7 Central. Thanks you guys.
TATYANA ALI: Love you, guys. Good to see.
TREACH: Thank you.
CAROLYN HENNESY: You too, honey.
JUSTIN BRUENING: Thank you.
TREACH: Love yâall. Peace.
TATYANA ALI: Bye.
JUSTIN BRUENING: Happy 2022!
Check out our one-on-one interview with Carolyn Hennesy!
MORE INFO:
Twins Jada and Kayla (both played by Tatyana Ali) could not be more opposite: Jada being the mild-mannered sister with an office job, and Kayla the wild child. Recently divorced from her husband Warren (Justin Bruening), Kayla asks Jada to watch her daughter while she sets up her new apartment.  But after a few days with no word from Kayla, Jada begins to worry and reports her sister missing. With no leads and the police investigation at a standstill, Jada takes matters into her own hands. She disguises herself as her sister and gets pulled into a world of drugs and deceit in order to learn the shocking truth about what really happened to Kayla.
Vanished: Searching for My Sister also stars Jasmine Guy, Carolyn Hennesy and Anthony âTreachâ Criss.
The film is produced by Big Dreams Entertainment and Leslie Greif serves as executive producer. Tim Woodward Jr. directs from a script written by Christina Welsh.
Proofread and Edited by Brenda