The trailer for WandaVision, the highly-anticipated Marvel miniseries, showed a picture of marital bliss: Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen) and Vision (Paul Bettany), the two halves of the titular couple, smile in black and white, she with her coiffed curls and taffeta dress, he in suit, tie, and glistening android sheen. Itâs soon clear that our central conceit is not so typical, and neither is their universe. What seems to be a farcical 1950s domestic sitcom explodes into a genre-bending, decade-jumping, technicolor superhero mystery.
A continuation of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, WandaVision is the first series from from the studio and is now streaming on Disney+. An homage to both classical television genres and Marvelâs own established cinematic language, the series invites viewers to jump headfirst into what Bettany calls a âbeautiful little puzzle box,â at their own peril. Some months before the seriesâ January premiere and shortly after the U.S. presidential election, the onscreen couple caught up on the news and tested their offscreen chemistry with a revealing game of Newlyweds. After all, how well can you really know someone until you know how they cook their eggs? âSARAH NECHAMKINÂ
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PAUL BETTANY: Lizzie, how are you doing?
ELIZABETH OLSEN: Iâm good. Where are you? Are you in the city?
BETTANY: Iâm in Brooklyn. I was thinking about you and wishing you had been in the U.S. for the [presidential election] results.
OLSEN: For the celebrations?
BETTANY: The screaming in the street. It was amazing. You knew [the result] immediately because the people were out banging pots. Iâve been watching television for about 23 hours a day, and my wife [the actor Jennifer Connelly] is furious at me. Sheâs like, âCould you just stop watching television for five minutes?â So I did. And she got on the treadmill and turned the TV on, and she went, âOh, they just called it.â
OLSEN: Everyone checked their phone at the exact same time. People just were cheering and screaming. I remember that from Obama.
BETTANY: Yeah. Iâve got to say, I was here for Obama, and New York felt different. This felt like relief as well. There were people dancing on cars with Obama, but Iâm talking every taxi driver in New York City honking a horn at the same time. It was really something. What was it like in England when you got the news?
OLSEN: Well, itâs bonfire week. There are fireworks going off every single night.
BETTANY: Yeah. Thatâs when we like to burn effigies of Catholics.
OLSEN: We were streaming CNN or MSNBC or something yesterday, and they were putting up images of international reactions, and for London it was a bunch of fireworks. And I was thinking, âWell, it was bonfire night.â Apparently there are fireworks until New Yearâs.
BETTANY: Exactly. Fake news.
OLSEN: But it was interesting to see how British friends reacted. Do you remember Sarah Shepherd, the dialect coach? She was like you. She was like, âI can name every single county in North Carolina, in Georgia, in Pennsylvania. I can put all the states in order on a map.â I guess as a British person working with so many Americans, she just felt incredibly invested.
BETTANY: I think people really did feel invested. I think people understood what a danger this was. You just felt like, four more years of this would be the end of NATO, and the end of the Western alliance, and whatever you think of the Western alliance, itâs a working piece that weâve had since the second World War, and I think if felt like there was a lot at stake. And so, the relief is just fantastic. Over here, the whole thing feels so much lighter. Everybodyâs really chipper and nice to each other on the streets, which is really weird in New York City.
OLSEN: The thing I enjoyed is reading all the different international leadersâ statements, lots of not-so-subtle hints to Trumpâs endeavors of creating lawsuits.
BETTANY: The mayor of Paris tweeting, âWelcome back, America,âwhich I thought was so naughty. I think it would be great to take the heat out of the rhetoric. That would be good.
OLSEN: Yeah. Thatâs what Iâm excited about. Iâm tired of reading something crazy that happened every day.
BETTANY: Yes. I feel optimistic because I think if anybody can take the cruelty out of the rhetoric, Biden can. I do think that itâs very difficult to look at family members in the eye when you think of kids kidnapped from their parents versus tax breaks. I think it got to such a pitch of awfulness, itâs really hard to understand how 70 million people seemed okay with that, or could hold their nose and vote that way. And I donât hide my disdain for being okay with that.
OLSEN: But I would argue for people from other peopleâs points of view, they would say that was also happening during Obamaâs administration.
BETTANY: The cages were built, but they werenât separated from their parents. So the argument is a serious one, but for me itâs more a practical matter, which is, there are 70 million people that did choose to vote the way they chose, and theyâre going to vote again in four years time, and if you donât start a more civil dialogue with each other, itâs just going to be an arms race of who can register more voters.
OLSEN: Right. And to start with understanding other peopleâs needs, and their whys, and to start having a true dialogue. For us, talking about it is a double-edged sword. You have this platform where you have certain moral standards, and you want to vocalize it because itâs important, and at the same time, you also donât want to ridicule others for having different types of policy beliefs, or certain religious beliefs that would make them have reasons to have different points of view. So itâs a strange position having a conversation like this for Interview magazine, and I think itâs something that social media has made even louder. Maybe we did push the dial in a certain way this time, but it certainly didnât work for Hillary, and it had the same kind of power behind it from a media standpoint.
BETTANY: Thatâs the other thing thatâs extraordinary about this year in American politics, is the amount of engagement. The percentage of eligible electorate that actually voted is really extraordinary. So I think a conversation has started, and hopefully it can become more civil. But it would be impossible to ignore it.
OLSEN: I think whatâs incredible to come out of it is this awareness of the functioning aspects of government. When you look at how everything functions, youâre like, how the hell have we been doing this for so long? There are so many flaws in the system. And no checks and balances, actually. Itâs what youâre taught in school. Itâs how the whole thing works, but itâs not, really.
BETTANY: And right now, the thing that feels really different is that you feel like youâre banging your head against a brick wall. You canât imagine how 70 million people have come to a totally different conclusion than you have. Part of that is because we have two different sets of facts. I think a really interesting thing in the next four years will be how we take on big tech and social media in the world, so that maybe we can get back to one set of facts that we can all agree on.
OLSEN: You go to school learning about propaganda during World War I or World War II, and meanwhile we just live in a perpetual cyber land of propaganda. Itâs no longer something you study in school. Itâs what our country has actually become. It just depends on whatever your algorithm is, to see what kind of propaganda you want.
BETTANY: And the algorithm is desperate to make you think more, and more, and more like yourself, so that it can quantify you and sell you things.
OLSEN: But the real question, Paul, is how do we get all the algorithms to get people to watch WandaVision?
BETTANY: Probably not by talking politics for 40 minutes.
OLSEN: Yeah. I donât think thatâs helping.
BETTANY: I think we can forgive ourselves for pontificating about politics for too long. So, youâre in London. I know you were desperate to get there, because you love it. Is it living up to it?
OLSEN: It is. It really is. The lockdown, I feel like, has been how I live my life anyway, when we were finishing our show. So that doesnât bother me at all. It wasnât like I was really enjoying my life going to restaurants beforehand. So I feel exactly the same, except for the weekends. Weâre right by the river, and no one wears masks. There are crowds and crowds of people gathering, and not social distancing, and ordering their takeout food. Real true crowds of people! I saw three masks the other day, and I walked for three hours.
BETTANY: Wow.
OLSEN: Robbie [Arnett, Olsenâs fiancĂ©e] and I were masked up, and people just stared at us. We definitely felt like tourists. The only people wearing masks were German or French.
BETTANY: I had no idea.
OLSEN: Yeah. Iâm analyzing how quickly weâve all gotten used to something that felt so foreign, so fast, and we all just became comfortable with it, and it became the norm. But here it really isnât, at least outside. If youâre going into a store, sure, but not if youâre just outside, even in a queue. Iâve got some weird pandemic anxiety, but Iâm happy to be here. Iâm happy for the rain, Iâm happy for the cool. And thereâs no pollution here.
BETTANY: No forest fires, nothing.
OLSEN: Yeah, no forest fires here. But every time I smell burning wood, which is everywhere here, part of me thinks somethingâs on fire. My first response is assuming thereâs a fire nearby, because it smells exactly like what L.A. smells like. How are you? Have you had time to decompress, or are you just so excited to talk to me all the time, every week?
BETTANY: Super excited to talk to you all the time, and deal with all of the technical issues that have happened literally every time we try to talk to each other. But I have a question for you: Do you think WandaVision is a step forward in female-driven storytelling? And what do you hope it adds to the cultural conversation?
OLSEN: Yes, I think it is. I think anything that is a female-driven story that is true and authentic to anything elseâs experience is a step forward. I also think there is something really interesting that, thematically, is in our show about parenting, and the desire to control and create a bubble that I think was burst out of [director] Jac Schaeffer, and is this larger metaphor and experience of what it means to be a parent. Like, how much you would want to actually expose your child to, and when, and what age, and how quickly they grow up. I think there is something very maternal about it, as well, which is what I love. Even her birthing this creation from Greece. I donât really know how much to talk about this show, to be honest, without spoilers. Sorry. What do you think?
BETTANY: I do. I think itâs also so nice that this has been born out of films in a genre that is quite testosterone-driven, and has a smattering of estrogen. And now we have a show made of estrogen with a smattering of testosterone in it, and it felt really good. This is a terrible pun that wasnât intended, but I do marvel at what Jac managed to create, and it feels like a beautiful little puzzle box. Iâve rewatched the trailer, and I was imagining, for other people looking at it, it looks insane. But for us, we realize that all of these, each layer and episode, is going to be revealed, and each layer stripped away. Thereâs a beautiful, elegantly drawn puzzle box that is being revealed. And Iâm so excited to see it.
OLSEN: I am too, because I also think that itâs so bonkers, and it was filmed over 115 or something work days, and over a year of doing it, and Iâve never really done more than one project besides when Infinity War and Endgame did that. But those were for two features, and this is one show, and it feels disjointed in my memory, and I really canât wait to see it all pieced together. Iâm having this in-between anxiety of, am I giving myself enough decompression time, or do I even do that? Do I just keep moving forward? And at what point do we let our minds wander? Because I truly believe that having that quarantine time of nothingnessâwith the exception of everything happening politically, and the country burning in many waysâI felt like my brain was able to read books, and then be shocked by certain books and how they would create ideas. That time for rest was the most nourishing time. Do you know what I mean?
BETTANY: I think I know exactly what you mean, and I have wondered what it must be like. Itâs one thing to go on to something different. But for you, itâs a continuation of the story that we were just telling. And [the pandemic] did feel like a particularly brutal way for that to happen to you. But there it is.
OLSEN: I think what I feel most grateful about for our show, was us getting the opportunity to just really be able to answer every single possible question that could be asked of these characters. I feel like I understand both of them so much more, and I feel way more capable of being shuffled around the Marvel Cinematic Universe after the experience. Which is whatâs so beautiful about Marvelâthey allow you to bring your experiences with you. And that hasnât stopped. So whatâs next for you, Paul Bettany?
BETTANY: God, I really donât know. Gainfully unemployed. Right now itâs just lovely hanging out with the kids, but at some point Iâm going to actually have to think about paying the mortgage. Iâm going to have to find a job at some point. Or Iâll just send Jennifer out. Iâll just toss around at home.
OLSEN: Are you writing? I was looking at these newlywed questions hereâwhat do you think the other person would do for vocation if they werenât an actor? And I was thinking writer or journalist. Am I completely off by that?
BETTANY: No, I think thatâs a really good answer. I think itâs the only other thing I could have done. I was also looking at these questions, and I was thinking about, if you could have a superpower in your personal life, what would it be? And I was thinking, god, we get asked that all the time, and I always answer a really dull way, which is flying. And of course Iâd like to fly, but I would also really like to be able to make any surface really slippery, becauseâ
OLSEN: Thatâs what you came up with instead of flying?
BETTANY: Yes. So here I am, and Iâm standing, and somebody is about to attack me, or whatever, and Iâd just make the ground really slippery. Or if thereâs somebody whoâs an asshole on set, or a politician that you didnât like, you could just point your finger and make the ground really slippery and theyâd slip over. I think itâs a really good, minor superpower. When we were doing the first episode, we shot it in front of a live studio audience over two days, and itâs a very farcical 1950s sitcom, so thereâs a lot of running through doors and into kitchens. I slipped over behind the counter, and the audience thought it was part of the thing, and I didnât get up. So maybe youâve already got that one.
OLSEN: Do you remember what I always say in interviews when they ask that question?
BETTANY: I feel like itâs flying, too. Or is it invisibility?
OLSEN: No, it was always the power to heal. It was so sincere. Some kind of physical manifestation of compassion.
BETTANY: Thatâs a lot of power. What if thereâs somebody that you really shouldnât heal? Dun, dun, dun.
OLSEN: I think everyone deserves to be healed, even if they are not grateful afterwards, because isnât that the act of generosity? To give, even if the receiver is not a deserved recipient? You donât agree with that.
BETTANY: Thatâs terrible. I feel really resistant.
OLSEN: Oh, you know what that was, itâs a Marilyn Robinson quote. It was in the New Yorker. Marilyn Robinson is being interviewed for a profile on her and her book, and sheâs talking about the act of generosity being the impulse for art, for art actually being the act of generosity. It makes me think of Dave Chappelle. Did you watch SNL on Saturday?
BETTANY: I didnât watch it, no.
OLSEN: So he finished it, basically, by saying, âDo kind things to others, regardless of if they deserve it or not.â And he was specifically talking about Black people. Heâs always been such a moving and brilliant storyteller, and has so much heart, and he always is able to give a joke within it, but he doesnât need to. Heâs one of the best truth-tellers in the States.
BETTANY: Itâs quite a gift. He is extraordinary. I think we can really deal with these questions. Like, whoâs the neatest? Definitely you.
OLSEN: Yes, Iâm pretty neat, but I wouldnât consider you messy, either.
BETTANY: I am not messy because itâs been drummed into me by my wife. I think, if left to my own devices, I trend pretty untidy. And just through a massive need to please my wife all of the time, I have learned to be tidy, but I donât think itâs in my nature.
OLSEN: Isnât that awful that weâre better people, instead of just for ourselves, for having responsibility to our partners?
BETTANY: Yes. And also because I have no personal resources of my own, and need somebody else to focus. Whoâs the best cook? Itâs you. I love to cook, but nobody loves to cook more than you.
OLSEN: Yeah, but I havenât had your cooking, so I couldnât answer this question honestly.
BETTANY: Whoâs the most likely to deal with a spider? I think both of us would be fine with spiders.
OLSEN: You are. I hate spiders. Thatâs on you.
BETTANY: What is your worst habit?
OLSEN: Iâm going to let you answer that. Thereâs plenty.
BETTANY: I have two. Occasionally smoking small cigars, which are disgusting, and interrupting when I get excited. Even if I donât know enough about the subject, I still interrupt.
OLSEN: I would say your worst habit is your Diet Coke drinking.
BETTANY: Oh, my god. My Diet Coke drinking is out of control, but itâs mostly out of control when Iâm on a show.
OLSEN: Iâm sure. But I will say that when I walked into a trailer that was filled with Diet Coke, I knew you were in that trailer before me.
BETTANY: At least it wasnât vodka. What would be your last meal? Iâm going to guess that you would have a very big glass of red wine with a spaghetti bolognese.
OLSEN: That could be a possibility. Part of me also would like to have a very specific meal catered by il Buco. il Buco has always been my last meal destination my whole life, which is very close to what you were imagining, because itâs Italian. Your last meal, I think, would be a big gin and tonic to start.
BETTANY: Yes.
OLSEN: You know what? Iâm not sure what you would eat. I just know that it would be carbohydrates.
BETTANY: But you knew the booze absolutely perfectly. This is speaking volumes.
OLSEN: I also think weâd both really love some caviar during our last meal, because, why not go out with some of that?
BETTANY: What would be the other persons dream job? I think that you would be a great designer. Maybe like, high architecture.
OLSEN: I would love to go back to school for architecture or design. Well done, Paul. But Iâd have agricultural hobbies in the meantime. I could get into horticulture. I canât quite answer that question until people stop hiring me as an actor. How do you feel about being an actor forever?
BETTANY: I donât know. At some point I think Iâm going to be ready to hang up my acting tights and do something else. I think I could putter. Putter around antique shops, and then pour myself a gin and tonic, and then mess around in the garden a bit. But I do think that in quarantine, we all thought we were bakers for a while, and then I was really glad that ended, because Iâd put on 20 pounds, and I was really glad that we got into growing arugula. How do you like your eggs cooked?
OLSEN: I think it depends on location and mood.
BETTANY: Yes. But I think youâre over-easy. I donât think youâre going to like a rubbery egg, or rubbery scrambled eggs, but I can also see you with a soft poached egg, given the right morning.
OLSEN: I like eggs every which way possible. I love eggs. And so I donât really know how to answer the question, honestly, for myself, because it depends on if Iâm just having eggs, or if thereâs smoked salmon involved, because I could eat smoked salmon underneath my fried egg.
BETTANY: What celebrity would you like to be stuck on an island with?
OLSEN: I canât think of a single celebrity I would ever want to be stuck on a desert island with.
BETTANY: It wouldnât work. Two celebrities just talking about themselves endlessly. I need somebody whoâs going to listen to me intently. It would be a lot like this interview.