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We Could Spend ‘Eternity’ Watching This Cast Make Pizzas
Elizabeth Olsen, Miles Teller and Da’Vine Joy Randolph came by the New York Times kitchen studio to make their ultimate pizzas.

Welcome to the Pizza Interview, a new series from New York Times Cooking where the Q&A has a catch: Our guests have to make pizza.
The upcoming movie “Eternity” is a romantic comedy set in an afterlife where souls have one week to decide where they want to spend, well, eternity. Elizabeth Olsen stars as Joan, a woman who has to choose whether to pass the afterlife with her husband of 50 years, Larry (Miles Teller), or her first love, Luke (Callum Turner). Da’Vine Joy Randolph plays Anna, an afterlife coordinator who helps Larry navigate a tumultuous week.
Watch the full video below (or on YouTube), and read ahead for excerpts from the interview and outtakes, which have been edited and condensed.
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Have you ever made a pizza before?
DA’VINE JOY RANDOLPH Yes.
ELIZABETH OLSEN [Nods yes]
MILES TELLER Does Boboli count? When I was a kid, we would do Boboli Friday.
OLSEN What does that mean?
TELLER Boboli is, like, this crust you would get in the supermarket, and then we would just add the tomato sauce and cheese and pepperoni.
You’ve never made it from scratch?
TELLER This will be my first time.
OLSEN Really? I really didn’t expect this to be your first time.
TELLER Yeah, I mostly order pizza.
Do you like to cook?
RANDOLPH Absolutely.
OLSEN Yes. So much.
TELLER Yes, yes I do.
What’s everyone cooking?
RANDOLPH Everything.
OLSEN I’m cooking fish all the time. And congee.
TELLER I like doing a lot with baked chicken thighs — skin-on, bone-in. I think they’re often overlooked, but very juicy. And I went into a Thai phase as well, cooking-wise, where I was cooking a lot of Thai food.
Do you have a favorite pizza place?
TELLER John’s on Bleecker, when I’m in the city. Absolutely.
OLSEN One of my favorites in Los Angeles closed down, Gorilla Pies. But I really love Bianco pizza.
RANDOLPH I like Prince Street Pizza.
TELLER And Angelo’s in Philly. Killer pie.
Growing up, what was your family’s pizza order?
OLSEN D’Amore’s, cheese.
TELLER Pizza Hut pan. Bacon, pepperoni, sliced banana peppers.
VICTORIA CHEN Do you still mess with Pizza Hut?
TELLER [laughs] I do, yeah.
RANDOLPH It’s delicious. It’s absolutely perfect. I love it. The Veggie Supreme is good. The meat Supreme is good. Regular cheese. Extra pepperoni.
OLSEN Domino’s thin crust. That’s one of my preferences.
What’s one of your best, earliest or fondest memories of food?
OLSEN My mother’s “nu-nus.” I didn’t know how to say “noodles” as a kid, so “nu-nus” is what we called them. And she would just put butter and Parmesan, like the premade Parmesan, Kraft, on them. That was my favorite thing as a little girl.
TELLER I used to ask for a kitchen appliance every year for Christmas. I think one of my favorite ones was a milkshake maker. I used to love making milkshakes.
Have any of you had to learn a specific cooking skill for an acting role?
RANDOLPH I did, for “Holdovers.” It was something that I asked the director, to make sure that was something implemented, because I wanted to show that she actually was very talented at it. That it was a career choice as opposed to being just the help, being real.
OLSEN I think I learned how to sharpen a knife on camera, but that was because I was about to stab someone with it. For a period drama — no one needs to watch it.
Have any of you ever worked in the food service industry?
OLSEN No, I got my real estate license.
RANDOLPH Really, when?
OLSEN That was my 19-year-old career job. I think I was going to be really bad at doing something with customers because I have a hard time when people are rude. I don’t really like it.
TELLER I worked in a couple of restaurants. I worked at a steakhouse. I worked in a seafood joint, and they always put the new guys out on the deck. And this was in Florida, so it was like 102 degrees, just slinging tartar sauce. And then I made salads for like $8.50 an hour.
If you were a food dish, what would you be? Can you answer for each other?
TELLER Lizzie would be something, like, ideally where the ingredients are fresh. It’s nourishing. It’s comforting. Something cozy and familiar.
RANDOLPH Like, banana bread. See, that’s funny that you say comfy and cozy.
TELLER And Da’Vine’s would be something, like, high-low. Delicious but not pretentious. And has a nice zest to it.
OLSEN Like an ice cream sundae with really beautiful toppings. Like the nicest granola or like the most beautiful homemade sauce.
TELLER Now do me!
RANDOLPH Miles is like meatloaf.
OLSEN Meatloaf or, like, a Philly cheesesteak. You talk a lot about the bread in the Philly cheesesteak.
RANDOLPH Once you’ve had it, you’ll understand.
TELLER Amoroso rolls.
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