The Daily of the University of Washington

The Daily - University of Washington NewsThe Weekender Section of the University of Washington's online newspaper The Daily conducted an interview with one of their former pupils - Mariana Klaveno -  on 3rd June 2010 as part of their Artist Spotlight feature.

Kristen Steenbeeke talked to Mariana about her life growing up on an Eastern Washington farm, her move to Los Angeles and, of course, her role as Lorena on HBO's True Blood.

Some of Kristen's interview with Mariana is reproduced below, with kind permission from Kristen and The Daily. You can read the rest of the interview on the UW Daily Site by clicking on the link at the bottom of the article.

Artist Spotlight: Mariana Klaveno

By Kristen Steenbeeke
June 3, 2010

Years ago, on a farm in Eastern Washington, a young Mariana Klaveno, who now plays vampire Lorena on HBO’s popular vampire series True Blood, was creating screenplays in her head, acting them out alone in her bedroom. With no outlet for her acting talents, due to a small school without any art programs, this was the only way she could practice for what she planned to do in the future.

Mariana Klaveno“I kind of always knew I wanted to act, but I was pretty secretive about it because it was so out of the realm of possibilities where I grew up,” Klaveno said. “I don’t know anyone who went to pursue a career in the entertainment industry. I was a little embarrassed about it [at the time].”

Though she enjoyed living in Eastern Washington, she knew it was time to move onto a bigger city with more opportunities for success in acting. With two brothers and a quality theater school at the UW, Klaveno knew what her choice would be, and by her sophomore year as a Husky, she was a “drama major in earnest.”

“I got to do some really off-the-wall, absurdist pieces, and I also got a lot of classical pieces under my belt,” she said. “That’s stuff that you don’t get to do a lot once you move out into the world.”

The world she speaks of is Los Angeles — the atmosphere of which “cannot be replicated,” she said.

“It’s a very fascinating place, and I’ve learned to really love it. It’s endlessly amusing, but it’s kind of a circus in a lot of ways,” she said, laughing. “It’s a unique, eccentric place to live, but especially when you’re going into Hollywood, it can be very scary and overwhelming.”

Klaveno, however, was almost shockingly level-headed about the change. Even through the second season of True Blood, the budding actress kept a job as a hostess — just in case.

“I didn’t want to feel desperate or feel like I had to depend so much on any one job that if it ended then I wouldn’t have any income to live off of,” she said.

Though she eventually decided to quit because it was interfering with her job on set, this practicality was what got her through many years in L.A., along with support from those around her.

“I think everyone there is either trying to be a musician or trying to be a writer or an actor, which is wonderful, actually,” she said. “You can vent to each other and commiserate and lean on each other.”

After doing a variety of cameos and one-episode acting jobs, Klaveno finally received the call from her agent, telling her that she would be a series regular on True Blood.

“It was incredible,” she said. “I still remember the phone call. I was in Whole Foods, at the salad bar, and my manager called. It was a good day. It was very exciting. I wasn’t expecting it, either.”

While reading the books on which the series is based helped her understand the style and character of Lorena, Klaveno said that costumes are what really make her get into character.

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