Ali Wong Explained Why Filming The Finale Of “Beef” Was “Wild,” “Terrifying,” And “Uncomfortable” For Her

    "I totally didn't understand that that's what was happening."

    In a recent episode of Variety's Actors on Actors, Ali Wong sat down with Jason Segel and talked about why she got into acting from comedy; her experience working on Beef including filming the finale episode; and what about the series she’s most proud of.

    Close-ups of Jason and Ali

    Before they got into Beef, Jason, who also comes from a comedy background, asked Ali if she had always wanted to “parlay” into acting. “Not really,” she replied. “I just wanted to tell jokes for a living.”

    Close-up of Ali

    However, Ali explained that she had been working as a temp for a long time and that she began acting in sitcoms in order to justify doing unpaid stand-up sets at night.

    Screencap of "Are You There, Chelsea" picturing Laura Prepon as Chelsea, Chelsea Handler as Sloane, Ali Wong as Olivia

    As the two began talking about Beef and its escalating feud, Ali revealed that Beef’s script was still being written as they were shooting, adding that she didn’t even know about the finale while filming.

    Close-up of Ali

    As Jason then described, the finale episode “so clearly crystallizes the theme that these two people are essentially the same. There are even moments where [Ali’s character Amy and Steven Yeun’s character Danny] switch voices and [are] like, ‘I am you.’”

    Close-up of Steven carrying Ali piggyback

    “And I totally didn't understand that that's what was happening,” Ali said of the voice switch. While the series' creator and finale director, Lee “Sunny” Sung Jin, had Ali memorize Steven’s lines in addition to her own, he didn’t tell her why — only to trust him.

    Close-up of Lee “Sunny” Sung Jin holding a microphone onstage

    “Have you ever filmed in a forest for a week?” Ali then asked Jason before describing the experience of filming the finale, calling it “wild.”

    Close-up of Ali

    Because they filmed parts of the finale for Beef at 2 a.m., Ali and Steven had to run around in the dark. Though Ali acknowledged that it looks cool on camera, she said that in reality, it was terrifying and uncomfortable. “I felt like Shelley Long in Troop Beverly Hills,” she commented.

    Steven and Ali sitting under a tree

    Unlike Ali, Steven wasn’t fazed by the location or timing. “Steven had been on The Walking Dead for seven years in the suburbs of Atlanta at 3 in the morning, running away from the zombies,” Ali said.

    Close-up of Steven from "The Walking Dead"

    In fact, during rehearsals, Steven fell out of Danny's truck (which had just crashed over a hill) onto his shoulder and crawled through the dirt three times. “I was like, ‘You really like doing it?’” Ali told Jason. “And then [Steven] looked at me and was like, ‘I love it.’”

    Close-up of Steven looking stressed

    Referencing Jason’s latest work, Shrink, Ali then joked that she’d much rather play a character like Harrison Ford’s Dr. Paul Rhoades — sitting for most scenes and cracking jokes.

    Close-up of Ali pointing

    Later in their conversation, Jason asked Ali what about Beef she’s most proud of, and she said the cast — particularly because Beef has an all–Asian American cast. “I do think that when you have an all–Asian American cast, which is rare, then the people get to be people,” she said.

    Lee Sung Jin, Ali Wong, and Steven Yeun attend the Los Angeles Premiere of Netflix's "Beef" at the Tudum Theater

    “Because now, when people refer to people in our show, they use other descriptors to describe the characteristics of the person rather than their race,” Ali explained. “Instead of saying, ‘Oh, the Asian husband,’ they’ll say, ‘Oh, the guy who has the sick cardigans, who's really positive and rides the bicycle.’”

    Close-up of Ali

    Check out the entire episode of Actors on Actors here:

    View this video on YouTube

    Variety / Via youtube.com