The stars of Imperfect Women continue to break the TV status quo

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The stars of Imperfect Women continue to break the TV status quo

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Kerry: One thing that our showrunner, Annie Weisman said, which I really loved, was that one of the things that drew her to the project was this idea that your women friends, you’re so close to and it’s so beautiful because it’s so vulnerable, but also because you’re so vulnerable, you can get more hurt. And so that idea that the people you love the most are also the people you’re most open to being hurt by is, I think, part of what the show is about.

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Glamour: The series also really captures the ways in which female friendships can get toxic, often due to societal pressures and expectations of women…

Kerry: The three of us have all played these iconic women who take on these big systems, like advertising and journalism and the White House and the army. And in this show, the pressures are much more internal. There’s this quiet strength that we’re exploring and trying to find. And I think that’s exciting for all of us too to get to do that kind of work.

Kate: I like that we’re playing people that are… I mean, everybody’s flawed, so that’s not unique at all. But it’s fun to be able to play characters where you really are showing their flaws very intensely, all of us… I really was attracted to playing somebody who’s so desperate to appear to be one thing on the outside, but really internally, she is so many other things and she’s just too scared to show that side of herself.

Glamour: Considering the name of the TV show, do you guys believe that there is a pressure on women to be or appear perfect?

Kerry: I was thinking about today that I’ve never thought about before is that we all kind of take on a different avatar of female perfection. There’s the perfect mother, the perfect wife, the perfect professional working woman. I think in society we get pressured to do all the things and they too are struggling. In the place where they’re excelling, they’re struggling with the other parts of themselves. And so it is a lot about the pressure to kind of be everything, do everything.

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