On Review, Megan Stevenson’s A.J. Gibbs Plots Her Ascent
Photo by Jesse Grant / Getty ImagesMegan Stevenson didn’t enjoy kicking Andy Daly in the groin.
She had to do it many more times than appeared in the final product—a recent episode of the Comedy Central series Review with Forrest MacNeil—because her spiky heels were cumbersome and she had trouble nailing the precise leg movement. Each jab at both Daly and his stuntman was more painful and challenging than the last. Plus, she likes Daly, she adds. She didn’t want to inflict pain upon him, even if her character secretly did.
“A.J. had a ton of fun, but Megan Stevenson was not a fan,” Stevenson recently told Paste.
But numerous groin kicks are among the unusual requirements for Stevenson’s role as A.J. Gibbs (which stands for “just A.J.,” Stevenson says) on Review, which wraps up its second season tomorrow night. Her co-star Daly plays the title character, who inflicts pain of all kinds on his family, his co-workers and innocent passersby alike as he embarks on a fervent quest to review life experiences for a TV show. A.J. is Forrest’s co-host, the Vanna White to his Pat Sajak, the Kelly Ripa to his Regis Philbin.
Or at least, she would be, if the character was written and played as a straight homage to that trope. But over two seasons, Stevenson has grown A.J. Gibbs into something more complex. A.J. appears increasingly driven by an ambition to take center stage, perhaps at Forrest’s expense, and she doesn’t hide her revulsion at the heinous acts Forrest commits in the name of his show. And yet, despite her obvious disapproval, A.J. doesn’t quit. Stevenson, who’s had guest appearances on 30 Rock and Suburgatory but few regular TV gigs, sympathizes.
“Even though I’ve never been a co-host in a TV show, I can just imagine it’s just so hard. On one hand you’re happy you have a job, but on the other hand of course you want to do more. You’re just sort of sitting there and waving off the person that gets to do all the fun.”
Developing much of the show was easy for Daly and his team because they were working from source material: the Australian sitcom Review with Myles Barlow. But that show didn’t feature an analogous sidekick character, so they had to make one up from scratch.
Daly said in an email that his team was looking to cast someone who would play A.J. as a frustrating and irritating thorn in Forrest’s side. Stevenson brought those qualities and something more.
“There was a classic Goldie Hahn quality there, sweet, silly, and she could sell the most ridiculous lines with total sincerity. But then this other element crept into the character. As Forrest’s behavior became more reckless and idiotic, AJ developed into this weird voice of reason and Megan really excels at that too. Watching her balance her professional on-camera function with her real feelings toward Forrest is so much fun,” Daly wrote.
At first, A.J.’s principal character trait was an almost manic bubbliness. But Stevenson said she and the Review team started noticing that the tone of her studio bits clashed with the segments “in the field.”
“When we came back for the second season, it really felt like it was clear who A.J. is and what she wants and there’s so much going on behind her. She’s even faking the role that she plays for Forrest because she really is the audience perspective.”
Stevenson also thinks A.J. has too much respect for Forrest to walk away.