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Q & A with Genevieve Cortese

Genevieve Cortese, star of the hit television series Wildfire, took time to talk with Horse Illustrated’s Kimberly Abbott about life on the set.



HI: With Wildfire being your television debut, how did you become Kris Furillo?



GC: I read the script probably in 2004 and was immediately attached to it because my character, Kris Furillo, rides up Mount Diablo, and it’s about the Bay Area. I grew up riding up Mount Diablo. I really got the geography and got where she was from, and she reminded me of my mom. My mom is a really cool, independent, free spirit. I understood where [Kris] was coming from. So I started immediately getting back on horses and training before I even knew I had a chance. It was a long process because they started auditioning, and then I had to wait a month. I went back in for ABC Family and read there, and I think a day or two later I got a phone call saying ‘they love you,’ and this was on Friday, ‘but it’s between you and another girl, and you won’t know until Monday.’ It was like the worst feeling ever, but it ended up working out because it was between me and Nicole [Tubiola], and Nicole got Dani.

HI: What did you need to learn when you first started?

GC: It was basically warming up the muscles again because I hadn’t ridden in a while. I find it very much like yoga. It’s so Zen, and you center yourself, and you learn to breathe with the horse and become one with them. You feel very grounded.

HI: What do you like most about working with horses on the set?

GC: I really love riding Houdini. Our trainer would make me close my eyes, and I wouldn’t use the reins. He would use his hand motions to get [Houdini] to canter and to do crazy eights and for me. It just felt like a really wonderful bonding experience. I don’t know if Houdini felt it, but I did.

HI: How do you film a stunt in which someone is supposed to get hurt?

GC: There are a couple of ways. In one episode, I’m racing and the horse does a somersault. We used footage from an actual race, and we used my stunt double for the racetrack sequence. The fall was actually me, but we didn’t do it from a horse; I stood on a ladder and jumped.

HI: What happens when you or Wildfire or any of the horses have a bad day?

GC: There have been situations where things happen. Nana [Visitor] did a stunt, and she was kicked in the head by the horse, and she got a concussion. She was supposed to get hurt [in the episode] and was just in the wrong spot at the wrong time. With horses you just can’t tell what’s going to happen.

Tricks sometimes don’t happen the way that we’d like them to, but I can’t say that there’s ever been a really bad day. We’ve been really fortunate to have everything go as planned. We have one horse that I use that’s less fiery than Finder, so if for some reason he’s not giving us the right attitude then we’ll use Finder. So there’s always a plan B.

HI: When and where is Wildfire filmed? What is the filming schedule like?

GC: [Wildfire is filmed] in Albuquerque, N.M. It’s about a five-month period, and we’ve shot from June to September, and September to December, and then we had a hiatus until July. It just changes all the time. Normally, if you’re on another network show, it would probably take eight days, maybe more. We shoot it in seven days, and then there are usually about two six-day episodes a season. That’s just a way to save money, and we do our best to contain it. We also have to go in and do the voice-over work. If a horse whinnies during our line, we have to go back and do that, and then there’s post-production where everything’s been shot and completed. 

See the full interview in the April 2008 issue of Horse Illustrated. 

Kim Klimek

Kim Abbott Klimek first got involved with horses as a junior in high school, then went on to earn her Bachelor of Science degree in equine studies with a concentration in communications from Centenary College in Hackettstown, N.J., in 2005. After college, Kim worked for model horse company Breyer Animal Creations, writing copy for products and helping to write and edit for Just About Horses magazine. In the fall of 2007, she joined the Horse Illustrated team.

View Comments

  • I loved the interview! I have been a fan of WildFire since the start of Season 3 when I first realized it existed. Since then I have watched every episode and went back to watch the two seasons I missed. I look forward to watching this show all the time. I have even had comments from my friends that tell me my horse looks like wild fire. They also say the two of us share a similar bond compared to Kris and Wildfire on the show.
    I love watching WildFire and I hope it is around for several more seasons!

  • I absolutely love Genevieve Cortese as well as Wildfire. At the time it came out, I was unable to watch it due to personal reasons, but now that I am older I've gotten a chance to really get into the show and I absolutely love it. My parents still have a problem with it, but it's about horses and I.. just feel like I have a lot in common with the show. I cannot wait to receive the April '08 HI to read the full interview. So excited!

  • Hi I love your show and I think you and Jr are realy cute together You and Jr are my fav I have a Q I hope you can Answer Before the show have you ever riden a horse before and how are you like Chris and do you realy like Jr in real life and Do you realy love horses in real life.

  • I don't really watch the show, but now it seems really cool. I'll probably start watching it.

  • Genevieve and wildfire had great communication with each other, she knew him and he knew her, that what made it more interesting to watch.

  • This news is truly unbelievable for me that actually the dozen video ranked abc family as the flop one. But these all points will be clear after visiting to the dozen media which is really an advanced site.

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