<![CDATA[io9: shirley manson]]> http://tags.lifehacker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/io9.com.png <![CDATA[io9: shirley manson]]> http://io9.com/tag/shirleymanson http://io9.com/tag/shirleymanson <![CDATA[Why Was This Freaky Scene Cut From Tonight's Sarah Connor?]]> When Shirley Manson went on Last Call With Carson Daly the other day, she showed this weird clip from Monday's Sarah Connor Chronicles. It answers some of your questions about CEO Catherine Weaver's relationship with her "daughter," and it doesn't look like Catherine is in line for mother of the year. But this scene wasn't in the DVD of the episode which I watched the other day. Maybe that final shot of the floor squicked the network? What do you think? Update: This clip is from the Oct. 20 episode, a Warner Bros. rep tells io9. [Clip from Sarah Connor Society]

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<![CDATA[Shirley Manson Talks About Playing The World's Worst Boss]]> How does Shirley "Garbage" Manson put the right amount of steely menace into evil CEO Catherine Weaver on Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles? She channels a little bit of Margaret Thatcher, the former U.K. prime minister, she told reporters in a conference call today. Also, we asked Manson whether she would be terrorizing any more of her underlings, and her response was... interesting. Spoilers ahead, especially if you missed the season opener.

It's not that Manson thinks Thatcher was an evil liquid metal robot from the future, bent on bringing about the apocalypse, exactly. She explained: "She was really a very powerful and seemingly unassailable character when I was growing up, and I really didn't think very kindly of her. So she was a great inspiration for a CEO of a company who didn't have the kindest and warmest of hearts. My character is nothing like her but she definitely informed me."

"I am the boss from hell," Manson laughed when we asked her about her management techniques. We were excited by the sequence in Monday's episode where Manson not only revealed that she was a Terminator, but also put an unruly subordinate in his place in the men's room. I asked her if she was going to be terrorizing any more employees soon, and she gave an intriguing answer: "There's a really nice surprise coming up for my character, which i obvously can't reveal. I am a woman from hell, let's put it that way." So it sounds as though Manson's next act of workplace inappropriateness relates to her being a woman in particular?

I asked her about being an evil CEO who's also a robot, and she said there may just be a theme relating to abuse of power in there, possibly.

So why did the Terminator CEO choose to turn into a urinal before killing one of her troublesome employees? Producer Josh Friedman wanted to hit men where it hurts, said Manson. "It was every man's nightmare, sort of a male bastion of security in the urinal. He liked the idea of a woman who had already irritated this particular man being able to infiltrate someplace where he felt safe, and that was a true terror." She couldn't really explain the difference between her T-1001 and the T-1000 played by Robert Patrick in the movie, except that it's a bit of an upgrade in some ways.

All of the actors who play Terminators on the show would like to have their characters meet and possibly throw down, but it hasn't happened yet, Manson says. And it doesn't sound as though she's had any real fight scenes. Her personal trainer has gotten her doing more boxing just in case, but she's worried that her model of Terminator is so advanced, she won't ever have to get her hands dirty.

She was reluctant to sing the song at the start of the episode, "Samson And Delilah," because she didn't want to remind the audience that she was a singer when she was trying to play this very different role. But producer Josh Friedman plied her with wine and talked her into doing it as a favor to him.

Manson also said she's given a lot of thought to playing a robot:

She is embodying a human being, so she has stolen the identity of Catherine Weaver, so that in itself is interesting to me. So she is physically a human being but she is unable to bring what is human to the table. It's a sort of rumination on what it is like not to have emotions and to have necessarily logical thought. The whole time I'm on set, I'm trying to imagine what that is like, and so that's a discipline for me. And it's harder to be a robot than one would think. You realize they would be probably very economical with their movements. I've tried consciously to be as undemonstrative as possible. And that's been a challenge in itself... I think it's very interesting that this is a woman who is very unassailable because she's a Terminator, and she's a successful CEO. I find it amusing, in a way, that she is on top of everything and everyone, so it is very interesting to play.
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<![CDATA[Manson Is A Method Actor, Of Sorts]]> Wondering what gives Shirley Manson the experience to be able to pull off playing a hard-ass CEO in the new season of Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles? Apparently, very tenuous logic, according to the former lead singer of Garbage: "You know, she's the CEO of a corporation that develops technology... As a musician, we're dealing with technology all the time nowadays so it's not such a stretch." Well, it was that or "she's a woman, just like me." [Comic Book Resources]

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<![CDATA[Shirley Manson Rocks Out For Skynet]]> Shirley Manson, lead singer of Garbage, will join the cast of post-apocalyptopera Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles this fall, but what's really shocking is the role she plays. She'll be Catherine Weaver, the CEO of a high-tech company (which I'm guessing has something to do with the development of the show's future cyber-dictator, Skynet.) Here's hoping her character is an out-and-out computer geek, and not just a business weenie. Television needs more rockers-turned-nerds. Image by Harsha Gopal/WENN. [Reuters]

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