These days, Wednesday nights are doubleheaders in the Smulders-Killam household. Thatâs when âStumptown,â Cobie Smuldersâ new show, is preceded by âSingle Parents,â starring her husband, Taran Killam, on the ABC lineup.
Not that they were going for a matching set. Or that the network was banking on their relationship to reel in viewers.
âItâs very bizarre, a total fluke,â she said, laughing. âI donât think that theyâre believing in our marriage so much that theyâre going to skew their whole schedule.â
Smulders â who recently ended two seasons of Netflixâs âFriends From Collegeâ after nine on CBSâ âHow I Met Your Motherâ and a recurring role as Maria Hill in a string of Marvel movies â wasnât even shopping for a series when âStumptownâ came her way.
But she couldnât get Dex Parios, an Army veteran turned private investigator in Portland, Oregon, who uses drinking, gambling and sex to numb her PTSD, out of her head. Adding to the allure: âStumptown,â based on the graphic novels by Greg Rucka and Matthew Southworth, is both action-packed and comedic.
âWhen you decide to do something as long term as this could potentially be, you have to be really excited about the character and how that person could evolve,â she said. âThe great thing about our show is that it isnât just a drama. Iâm getting a lot of really great fight scenes, and itâs also really funny. Itâs this combination of all the things I like to do.â
Plus â and this is huge â it allowed Smulders, 37, to shoot close to home in Los Angeles, where she and Killam are raising two young daughters.
âWeâre asking a lot of our children, and that is my top priority and his, too â and making sure they know that theyâre a priority,â she said of the struggles of acting parents who have often found themselves working on opposite ends of the country. âI just feel so grateful to be able to be working and living in the same city with my family on a project that I love to do.â
These are edited excerpts from the conversation.
Q: Iâve reached you on the set today. What are you up to?
A: Iâm literally strapped into stunt gear, like pads and a backpack, in a really weird seated position on my couch. We are doing a pretty intense fight thatâs taking place in a kitchen. Itâs always a fascinating thing when youâre on a series and every week you have a fight sequence. I do all the hits and the kicks â anything but where Iâm getting thrown somewhere at a very high velocity where something could go very wrong.
Q: That helps answer the question, Are you doing a lot of your own stunts?
A: Yes, I am. I have an amazing stunt double, Marie [Fink], who certainly does a lot of it, but itâs sort of half and half. I get a little bit controlling. [Laughs] I get really like, I want to do it â put me in there! Marie usually has to do the really big hits that legally, because of a liability issue, Iâm not allowed to do because it could shut down production. Forever. So she gets thrown into a lot of walls. Today sheâs getting slammed onto a chefâs table.
Q: Dex is an Army veteran with PTSD, and one of the ways she copes is through sex. In the graphic novel sheâs bisexual. How about in the show?
A: This is a woman who does not want to label herself as anything â she doesnât really adhere to social norms in that way. Sheâs more of the type of person who, if sheâs going to be attracted to anyone, itâs because sheâs at the bar super late at night and itâs whoever is left.
Q: What kind of research did you do for the role?
A; Iâve been lucky enough to play women who have been in the service more than once, and Iâve met a lot of women who were in the service. We had this wonderful woman [Dr. Barbara Van Dahlen, a clinical psychologist] who worked during the Obama administration â specifically with people who are dealing with PTSD and trying to get legislation passed. She was a really great source. But I found when I really got into it that everybody is suffering from some kind of PTSD. If youâre human and you have feelings, at some point in your life you have experienced trauma.
Q: It also brings up the issue of health care for veterans.
A: One of the greatest things about this show is being able to portray somebody like that, and hopefully weâre going to see her face that demon and get help. The way that we treat our veterans is quite appalling. Itâs an opportunity to shed some light on that.
Q: It seems like all the classics are getting reboots these days, and every so often we hear wishful thinking about âHow I Met Your Mother.â Would you be game?
A: Iâve literally not ever had a conversation about it with anybody. I would love to work with everyone again. I just feel like weâre all off doing our own thing. It also doesnât feel like that long â though I guess it is becoming a long time since it has been on the air. Yeah, of course I would, I would love to. I would definitely not just say no.
Q: And what about more of Maria Hill, your Marvel character? That post-credit scene in âSpider-Man: Far From Home,â in which she and Nick Fury are revealed to have been portrayed throughout the movie by the Skrulls Talos and Soren in disguise, seems to beg a sequel.
A; Itâs an interesting phase for Marvel. I love playing Maria Hill so much. And Iâm always ready and willing to be a part of a project. I donât have anything on the horizon right now that weâre discussing, but of course should they call, I will do everything to make it happen.
Q: This summer at Comic-Con, you were on a panel called âWomen Who Kick Ass.â Do you find yourself searching out that kind of character?
A; No, I gravitate toward the opposite of what I have been doing, just to keep myself always learning, really. Iâm lucky enough to be approached with these strong female roles because I think itâs such a wonderful thing to put out there in the world for young girls to see. When I started on the first âAvengersâ movie, it was Scarlett [Johansson, as Black Widow], and that was it. Just to see that thereâs an appetite out there is definitely an exciting time, and I want to ride that wave for as long as possible.
Q: So does kicking ass help you vent some kind of deep-rooted aggression?
A: Itâs just not really who I am in my real life. [Laughs] Iâm a pacifist. Iâm a Canadian, for Godâs sake.
This article originally appeared in
.