How the ‘Hacks’ Showrunners Created Ava – ELLE

Posted: June 5, 2022 at 3:08 am

In Elle.com's recurring feature Character Study, we ask the creators behind our favorite shows to go deep about what went in to creating their memorable characters: the original idea behind them, how they were tailored to the actor and elements of them we might not see on the screen.

Minor spoilers for the Hacks season 2 finale below.

Ahead of the second season finale of HBO Maxs Hacks, we spoke to showrunners Lucia Aniello, Paul W. Downs, and Jen Statsky about series co-lead Ava, a zennial comedy writer played by Hannah Einbinder whos fired after posting a poorly-received tweet and forced to move to Las Vegas and write for Jean Smarts veteran comedian Deborah Vance.

When they were first conceiving the show, the trio wanted to explore a specific generational conflict. The idea was originally about Deborah and the idea of women of a certain age in the arts, but specifically in comedy, who just never had their due, and how younger people who wouldnt have had the opportunities they have if it werent for the older women, says Aniello. That was kind of the idea of the origin of Ava... we knew that we wanted her to be somebody who had a lot to learn.

Ava has a sharp wit and tough edges and over the course of two seasons, she changes and grows: Her humor remains but her understanding of others and ability to connect with them gradually flourish. People seem to have such little empathy for a young woman whos figuring it out. I think that thats really sad, Aniello says. Sometimes theres male characters who are, I think, a little bit less dimensional, [but] are able to be kind of blindly beloved in a way that I wish people could feel about [Ava], as well. I hope they do.

The three creators spoke with ELLE.com about bringing Ava to life.

Courtesy of HBO Max

Aniello: Thats part of the reason that we wanted to, over the course of the series, explore more of her backstory and her home life, especially her relationship with her mom. We learn in the pilot that she, financially at least, supports or supplements her parents living. In that way, she not only has to get a job, but [we] also wanted to just say this is somebody who has a relationship, with especially her mother, that is fraught and she is disconnected from.

We also wanted her to be somebody who was lonely and I think we've also said in the past that she wasnt very cool in high school. Somebody who really felt like a loser until she got into the cool comedy clique for a while and started being liked by those people. She really drank the juice of that. And it went to her head, and it went too far, and she kind of became an entitled-ish kind of person that eventually gets sent off into the outskirts of Las Vegas. I think that its an interesting place to meet her, as somebody who still had a lot to learn about the world and herself.

Courtesy of HBO Max

Statsky: I think you can definitely trace a line from her getting wrapped up in Deborah, and becoming so involved in that person's world, which, granted, is something that happens a lot with famous people in their ecosystem, in general. Thats something we wanted to explore. But I think you can trace a line from Ava becoming so enveloped in Deborah's world to the fact that she is someone who grew up with not a super strong home life and not a family connection that grounds her.

Karen Ballard/HBO Max

Aniello: Her style is kind of in between my style and Jens style.

Statsky: Our costume designer, Kathleen Felix-Hager, does a terrific job, but there are a lot of things throughout the course of the series that either are mine or Lucias, that Ava has worn. I think she falls in the middle of the two of us, which, there isnt even that far of a gap, anyway.

Aniello: I dont know. You wear more high-waisted pants.

Downs: We got what we wanted, because we wanted, when we were first talking about her, to feel a little bit hard. And also to be really in contrast to Deborah Vance, who is all about animal prints and dressing that feminine way. Obviously, Ava has a more androgynous look, I guess more gender-neutral look, and that has to do, partly, with her generation and gender expression. She has a very different idea of what gender is, as a construct, than Deborah does. We wanted that to be reflected in her style and her mannerisms.

Downs: Hannah vaped in the audition, and I think that that was one of the reasons we incorporated so much vaping. We were like, That's rad.

Statsky: In the scene she auditioned with, shes opposite Jimmy, [Downs character] and complaining about this situation shes found herself in. After a very, kind of sad, woe is me line, she hit her vape really hard and it made us all laugh so much. It was just something that Hannah brought to the audition. So yeah, theres countless things that Hannah has brought to the character and the mannerisms.

As far as tweaking, Hannah has such a specific cadence and speed at which she speaks. Guys, correct me if Im wrong, but maybe we thought Ava would speak a little bit faster than she does. But Hannah has such a unique timing that it really made the character so specific and unique.

Jake Giles Netter/HBO Max

Downs: The history of the character is that she got plucked off the internet and basically didnt finish college because she got a job writing on a cool TV show. And I'm sorry, I don't remember the rest of the question. One of the things that I think is most autobiographical about the show, Ill speak for myself but I think Lucia and Jen will agree, is that comedy was the thing that made us feel connected to other people. When we were able to make sketches or make jokes with people, Ill just say for me, as a little weirdo, it was something that really enriched my life and made me feel connected to people. We wanted to give that characteristic to both of these women, because in the end theyre both very lonely and its their sense of humor that turns the other on and really connects them.

Aniello: I don't think that they were super deep. I think that they were a little bit based on the IMDb STARmeter. I think that is part of what made her so superficial, especially when we first meet her, is that she didnt treat people super well and I think had a reputation for it. The reason she gets canceled for a tweet isnt really true. She wasnt the best person, and people didnt really want to deal with her anymore. And so, something like that happening gave everybody an excuse to say, Great, now we dont have to work with this person anymore. Because, shes always looking over our shoulder to see who else is in the room whos cooler than us. I think while she does say how she feels all the time, shes willing to be vulnerable. Thats something I think she grows into as the series progresses.

Courtesy of HBO Max

Aniello: Redhead. Just kidding.

Statsky: Cool clothes.

Downs: Impulsivity.

Statsky: I think shes very honest. I think shes an honest person and pushes other people to be honest and seek that out.

Downs: I think she has a sense of what's right. She has a strong sense of what's right, at least to her.

Aniello: Whether shes right or wrong all the time is debatable, but I think generally, she falls on the side of right. We love her.

This interview was edited and condensed for clarity.

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How the 'Hacks' Showrunners Created Ava - ELLE

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