“I don’t think that’s her priority right at this
minute. She has just come into herself. She’s just
returned to Gotham. She has so much trauma
going on. She’s lost her mom, she’s lost her sister,
she’s trying to discover what she wants to do in
her life,” Rose said.
“She was kicked out of the military so it’s like
she’s starting from square one, and then when
she discovers a purpose and that purpose is to
become Batwoman.”
Rose, however, would love to see it happen to
give the character some levity.
“I said to Caroline (Dries) the writer, ‘Let her have
some happiness. She deserves happiness. I want
her to be happy and in love.’ Caroline was like,
‘Yeah, it doesn’t always work out that way for
superheroes or for people who have to keep this
secret identity’ but we’ll see.”
As for the Batwoman costume four-time
Academy-Award winning costume designer
Colleen Atwood designed the cowl and cape
Rose says the fittings were an extensive process.
“It got to the point where I was like, we’re doing
a body scan and we’re doing a 3-D scan, we’re
doing laser, stand in a room and there’s 150
million characters that are going to catch every
single angle of you doing every face and I was
just like, ‘Goodness gracious, this is wild,’ and
then when you get the suit, you really realize
why,” she said.
“It fits me like a glove in every single area, in
every movement. It feels like a second skin so
when you put it on you really kind of feel like
you are unstoppable and bullet-proof and faster
and stronger and all these things that you’re
actually not.”
“Batwoman” premieres Oct. 6 on The CW.
wang
(Wang)
#1