![]() ![]() “That’s why you see this incredible togetherness as a band. “The point of band camp was to make it feel that you guys saw each other every day, worked together every single day and that’s what an actual band does.” “But to then do a real live performance for the first time was a whole different ballgame.”īut their first performance wasn’t possible without the help and direction from Pine, who insisted the actors partake in their very own “band camp.” We’d been playing for each other for months,” said Keough. “Going up on stage and performing for people was a very different experience. Before filming and outside their intimate rehearsals, the group had to perform for the first time as a band for the series’ executives and Claflin cheekily remarked how it caused a wave of nerves to hit the performers, leading him to request music supervisor Frankie Pine to “run to the liquor store” before their official debut. While fans - and the cast members’ friends and family - may not believe it’s really the actors-turned-singers performing each song, it was revealed they attended band camp for months in preparation. The limited series follows the fictional 1970s rock band, Daisy Jones & the Six, as they wrestle with the tumult of Southern California rock ‘n roll, engage in vicious fights, complicated love triangles and affairs, all while they rise to meteoric fame that abruptly comes crashing down. Keough’s co-star, Sam Claflin elaborated on how the confusion often transferred to the audience too, “No one really understands or believes that it is us playing - and that we can.” Keough and Claflin shared how as actors they trained for months to become the fictional star-crossed musicians, Daisy Jones and Billy Dunne, from the TV adaptation of Taylor Jenkins Reid’s “Daisy Jones & the Six.” ![]() “As an actor to have people come up and say ‘I listened to your record,’ is very bizarre,” Riley Keough said at the recent Prime Video “Daisy Jones & the Six” FYC panel in Los Angeles. ![]()
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