

#Rose mciver code#
What is it that makes Trevor the kind of guy who’s willing to break the Bro Code when the others won’t? Grodman revisited having that exact conversation with Port and Wiseman: Trevor may seem to fit in perfectly with his Wall Street co-workers, but we eventually come to learn that he’s willing to step up when necessary. RELATED: The 'Bodies Bodies Bodies' Cast Really Played the Game and All Agree on Who Was the Most SusĪs for Grodman’s Trevor, we do get some opportunities to see the kind of guy he really is earlier on in the season, but it isn’t until Episode 16, “Trevor’s Pants,” that we really get a sense of who he is and what he stands for. “I feel like my company all has impeccable taste, so if it feels like we’re delighting one another, I think we feel like we’re on to something good.”

If you’re looking for the secret sauce to nailing tonal shifts mid-scene, it was Wisocky who might have revealed it: Because yeah, I think the death of the show is when it gets too saccharine and you don’t want any moments like that.” But at the same time as a performer, I think we do try to get together a lot of times in those big group scenes and understand what’s the fun thing we want to play with and then also, at the same time, try to find that rhythm or that musicality, Rebecca’s favorite word, in order to make sure that those beats are hit. A lot of times we’ll just sort of do coverage and you’ve just gotta hit that one line and it’s our editors that do such a great job of being able to find that balance of tone. “I think that there’s an instinct to not want to make it too saccharine, right? So you want to undercut it. Jones offered a little insight into how they accomplish that by highlighting some priorities when tackling such scenes: Those ghosts include Asher Grodman’s Trevor, a Wall Street bro who died in 2000, Danielle Pinnock’s Alberta, a Prohibition-era jazz singer, Brandon Scott Jones’ Isaac, an American Revolutionary officer, and Rebecca Wisocky’s Hetty who’s actually one of Sam’s ancestors.Īgain, Ghost does jump from the sweet and sensitive to hilarious antics often, but this particular scene does feel like a masterclass in successfully making those leaps. One day, she falls down the stairs and when she comes to, she realizes she can see the ghosts of people who have died on the property. Rose McIver leads as Sam, a woman who moves into a home she inherits with her husband Jay ( Utkarsh Ambudkar).
#Rose mciver series#
Just in case you’ve yet to jump into this joy of a show, Ghosts on CBS is an adaptation of the British series of the same name. It’s the show's ability to switch from deeply emotional moments to laugh-out-loud one-liners on a dime.

It’s got an A+ behind-the-scenes team led by showrunners Joe Port and Joe Wiseman, but there’s one particular standout quality of the series that just plain old doesn’t work without spot-on casting. Ghosts is hands down one of the most delightful new shows.
