'Wednesday' star Emma Myers went to 'werewolf boot camp' for the Netflix series: 'I've never done so much parkour in my life'
- Emma Myers plays a young werewolf called Enid Sinclair in Netflix's "Wednesday."
- The show sees Enid struggle to fully transform for most of the first season.
While the world is currently obsessed with Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in Netflix's "Wednesday" series, Emma Myers also shines in the series as Enid Sinclair, the hero's peppy roommate at Nevermore Academy.
Enid comes from a family of werewolves, though she has difficulty transforming completely during the first season. But Myers recently explained that she had to go to "werewolf boot camp" for the role.
The 20-year-old actor told Jimmy Fallon on Wednesday's episode of "The Tonight Show" that she went through lycan training with the actors playing her family in "Wednesday" to help them get in touch with their animal side before episode six.
Myers said: "We did this werewolf boot camp one time because there's episode six, where the parents come and the families comes, and I had four or five brothers, and they really had to get them into the werewolf spirit."
The star joked that she was a little confused by what werewolf boot camp would look like.
She added: "So they asked me to come in and do, you know, werewolf boot camp, and I was like, 'OK, what does this mean?'"
Myers went on to explain that the boot camp involved doing a lot of parkour, while also hunting stuntmen pretending to be sheep.
She said: "I've never done so much parkour in my life. It was me running on the floor on all fours, jumping over things… We had these stunt guys pretending to be sheep, and we would crawl around them in a circle."
Myers definitely saw the funny side of all the preparation, as she pointed out that anyone looking in at the boot camp would've been very confused.
She added: "I think anybody who was walking past was like, 'What is going on in there?!'"
Netflix hasn't confirmed whether "Wednesday" will return for a second season, but Al Gough, a co-creator, told The Hollywood Reporter that producers are already looking at what future storylines could look like.
He said: "We want to sort of explore and sort of complicate all of those relationships going forward. The school was closed when they left, which gave us the most possibilities for season two, and I think that's something that we're excited to explore."
Gough added: "We're excited to explore now that Wednesday's dipped her toe into the friendship pool, what's that going to look like?"