Photo: Greg Gayne/NBC
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On NBC’sAmerican Auto,Ana Gasteyerplays Katherine Hastings, the car industry’s first woman CEO who’s determined not to fail at her mission of rescuing declining giant Payne Motors.
Creator Justin Spitzer previously co-produced a workplace comedy classicThe Office, but what drew Gasteyer to this project was thatAmerican Autozigs whereThe Officezagged.
“Justin made it clear from the beginning that she’s not stupid, [she] isn’tMichael Scott,” theSaturday Night Livealum, 55, tells PEOPLE of her “flummoxed leader.”
“Actually, she’s got an MBA, she’s come up through the ranks … she just has no experience with, or history, or knowledge about cars — and she doesn’t care,” adds Gasteyer. “She truly is one of those management managers that’s like, ‘Well, I’m good at managing people. I don’t have to know the product,’ which is just inherently kind of funny. She literally doesn’t know how to drive or care. She really cares about her stock options.”
Ron Batzdorff/NBC
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Throughout its 10-episode first season,American Autofound plenty of fodder for comedy in corporate America — especially when it came to the flawed way decisions are often made in the C-suite. “I haven’t seen a show taking a crack comedically at the C-suite at the corporate level,” Gasteyer notes. “There’s a whole lot to be made fun of up there.”
In “Commercial,” Gasteyer’s favorite episode, Payne’s executives find themselves entangled in what the actress describes as a “horrific, domino fiasco” after the company attempts to “virtue signal” its values of diversity and inclusion when casting an ad.
For Gasteyer, the episode reached a comic peak when the company’s in-house lawyer Elliot (Humphrey Ker) begins “maniacally covering himself” in sunscreen at a completely absurd — but subconsciously telling — moment. Gasteyer says she “couldn’t look at [Ker]” while filming and still laughs today thinking about the character choice. “I just assumed that was a metaphor for his whiteness, like, in the midst of this conversation about [trying] to be colorblind and inclusive on every level,” she explains.
The whole thing, she notes, embodied “this runaway train of people-pleasing poorly balanced with a corporate bottom line — which I think is what the show essentially does incredibly well. I really do feel like that is what makes it a 2022 show.”
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Looking ahead to the show’s next season, Gasteyer teases that viewers will see a bit of a different side to Katherine as her “core competencies come to play” in moments of crisis.
And given that Gasteyer is a Broadway alum, she and Spitzer are contemplating whether Katherine should show off her pipes in the next set of episodes — though Gasteyer admits she’s “really torn about it … it just seems odd like I don’t see this MBA lady as being a really good singer.”
Still, she says, “Could be, you never know!”
NBC
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BeforeAmerican Autoreturns for its second season, all season 1 episodes can be streamed on Peacock or the NBC app.
source: people.com