The gals who play the 2 Broke Girls are cracking each other up.
As their interview takes place in July last year, Beth Behrs and Kat Dennings can count a grand total of one week spent working together. That was when they filmed the pilot for 2 Broke Girls — and that was in April.
But joining a reporter for breakfast, they share laughs and a chemistry that seems years in the making — just as they do on their sassy new comedy as struggling waitresses at a Brooklyn greasy spoon.
While waiting for production to resume in early August, they solidified their friendship.
Dennings: "We've been checking in with each other every few days."
Behrs: "I'll randomly text Kat about something I'm watching on TV in the middle of the night: ‘You need to see this!'"
Dennings: "Like, Extreme Makeover did what?!"
No actorly exchanges about process or technique?
"Oh, no!" Behrs laughs. "We don't talk about work at all."
"Should we?" poses Dennings, her eyebrow raised.
Orders are taken. Behrs chooses an omelette and hash browns. Dennings calls for wheat toast and, more urgently, a cup of coffee.
"Nectar!" she rejoices when the coffee arrives. "And it's not bad."
"I like diner coffee," Behrs agrees as her cell phone sounds off.
"Oh, gee," she sighs after checking the number displayed. "This guy has been calling me all morning. I don't say my name on my message, so maybe he thinks I'm someone else. He keeps leaving these intense, long messages."
"Let me do it, let me do it!" says Dennings:, eagerly snatching the phone and, in the guttural tone of a longshoreman, growling into it: "What! Who is this? Wrong number! Never call again!"
They both dissolve into laughter.
"That makes me so happy!" Dennings giggles.
On 2 Broke Girls, their characters will form a similar bond. But not instantly. First, they have to size each other up.
Dennings plays sarcastic, street-wise Max Black, who, to make ends meet, must work two jobs, one of which is the night shift at the downtrodden Williamsburg Diner.
Behrs plays chic Caroline Channing, whose ritzy Upper East Side lifestyle has abruptly come undone after her money-manager father got busted for financial shenanigans. Like Max, Caroline is now broke, too, and is seeking refuge at the diner waitressing alongside Max, who warily receives her not only as a co-worker but as a flat-mate, too.
Fish out of water
So not only is 2 Broke Girls a buddy comedy, it's also a fish-out-of-water sitcom, with Caroline the Brooklyn-beached fish.
The dialogue is snappy, befitting the show's topflight creative team: Michael Patrick King (Sex and the City) and Whitney Cummings (TV's comedy It girl).
But beyond its writing, the charm of 2 Broke Girls comes down to its two leading ladies.
In playing their roles, they both speak of trying to avoid stereotypes.
"Caroline is a girl who used to walk out of her New York high-rise with a car waiting and someone there to hand her a Starbucks," says Behrs. "For me to play her, I had to find the entitlement without being a b****."
"Caroline's really sweet and innocent and adorable," Dennings declares. "I think that's a fresh approach."
"And she's smart," Behrs adds. "She went to Wharton business school. I don't think Max would have taken to her if she weren't smart."
"Max is more and more impressed with Caroline as she gets to know her," Dennings agrees.
"And because Max takes a liking to Caroline, it shows she's more than a tough cookie," says Behrs.
Both actresses are 25 and hail from Pennsylvania. But there are distinct differences.
Behrs, whose credits include theatre as well as the feature films American Pie: Book of Love and the upcoming indie comedy, Serial Buddies, is a whippet-slender blonde with an unexpected past playing competitive soccer in school.
Dennings is a curvy brunette with smouldering eyes and alabaster skin. Her list of films includes The 40-Year-old Virgin and Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist, and, a decade ago, she played Bob Saget's teenage daughter on his short-lived TV comedy Raising Dad.
Despite the sexy Mutt-and-Jeff contrast they strike, the two women, curiously enough, stand about the same height.
"I'm 5 foot 5 inches," Behrs says. "But the shoes make me 6 foot. Those beautiful Louboutins! But when I was wearing them it was really hard not to hang on to Dennings, 'cause I'm really clumsy."
"I'm just under 5 foot 4 inches," Dennings says. "But Beth and I are on such different scales: She's on a Barbie scale, and I'm on a G.I. Joe scale. My head is like two times the size of her head!"
"Your head doesn't look any bigger to me than my head," Behrs insists.
Dennings was already signed for 2 Broke Girls when she and Behrs met last winter for what was the last step of Behrs's audition process.
"My final test was to appear with this one," says Behrs, gesturing toward Dennings, who at the time was filming Renee, an indie drama in which she stars as a teen who battles addiction and depression.
"She was so great!" Beth says. "She flew out from Florida where she was filming her movie for literally two hours, just for my audition, and then flew back."
"But they had already sent me all your tapes," Dennings recalls, "and I watched them and thought, ‘Do they really need to test her? She's obviously the person. Just hire her!'"
"Later that day," says Behrs, "I got the call."
Except then they had to wait to see if CBS would pick up the series.
"The more days that went by, the more doubts I had," Dennings says. She was back in Los Angeles and at the wheel of her car when she got the good news from Whitney Cummings.
"She texted me," says Dennings, "and I pulled over and cried because I couldn't drive and cry."
"I cried, too," Behrs says. "I still had my baby-sitting job, and I was moving to a new apartment and was carrying a box when I texted Kat."
And just like that, Dennings and Behrs were poised to be two break out sitcom stars.