Q&A: “Breaking Bad” star Anna Gunn

There’s been a backlash against Skyler, something she has in common with women characters on a variety of big dramas about men who tend to behave much worse than they do. Do you have a sense of why this happens? Does it faze you at all?

Some of it is still the double standard in our society – that it’s more acceptable for a man to be this antihero badass doing all these things that break the law or are really awful. People watching want to be Walt, or they identify with him. He doesn’t have to answer to anybody. He does what he wants. There’s a fantasy element to that, I think. I also think that in some ways, there’s kind of a sexism to it, honestly. Sometimes . . . [pauses] I’ve been told particularly, how do you say . . . non-flattering or just really vicious – you could use the word vitriolic – angry stuff about Skyler, or about other female characters on other shows. The hatred and the vitriol and the venom and the nastiness and the attacks are so personal sometimes that it feels like, “Oh gosh, OK, I get that you don’t like Skyler, you like Walt, you’re on his side, but it just feels different.” I don’t feel like that stuff would be written about a male character.

I interviewed Anna Gunn about last night’s episode of Breaking Bad for Rolling Stone.

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3 Responses to Q&A: “Breaking Bad” star Anna Gunn

  1. Hob says:

    Oh man, I so want to read this, but I just started season 2 so I’d probably better wait. So far, I’m a fan of this character and what Gunn has done with her.

  2. Chris Ward says:

    You’re my hero.

  3. James Gotsulias says:

    Did the exact same thing on Netflix! Such an addicting show. All caught up now.

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