TV Guide Magazine: Emma has always been the show's hero. Has she switched to full-on domestic mode now?
Morrison: She's a little softer around the edges. She's been raising Henry for a year in New York, making breakfast for him and playing video games — the real things people do — not fighting off giants and witches. But obviously that can't last forever for the sake of our storytelling.
TV Guide Magazine: Speaking of that: How will she and Henry reconnect with the others?
Morrison: Emma will be shaken out of her memory loss sooner than Henry — she gets pulled out of that and needs to go find her family. We'll spend a lot of the second half of the season trying to track down who caused the new curse and why.
TV Guide Magazine: Sounds like the handiwork of the Wicked Witch of the West (played by Lost's Rebecca Mader).
Morrison: She's possibly the most terrifying villain we've ever had because her desires and intentions are very unclear. The show has begun to feel eerie, in a great way. I read the scripts and go, "Oh, God, what's coming next?"
Morrison: She's a little softer around the edges. She's been raising Henry for a year in New York, making breakfast for him and playing video games — the real things people do — not fighting off giants and witches. But obviously that can't last forever for the sake of our storytelling.
TV Guide Magazine: Speaking of that: How will she and Henry reconnect with the others?
Morrison: Emma will be shaken out of her memory loss sooner than Henry — she gets pulled out of that and needs to go find her family. We'll spend a lot of the second half of the season trying to track down who caused the new curse and why.
TV Guide Magazine: Sounds like the handiwork of the Wicked Witch of the West (played by Lost's Rebecca Mader).
Morrison: She's possibly the most terrifying villain we've ever had because her desires and intentions are very unclear. The show has begun to feel eerie, in a great way. I read the scripts and go, "Oh, God, what's coming next?"
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