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At age 9, she broke news of a killing. Now 13, she interviews the TV star who plays her

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In the Apple TV+ series “Home Before Dark,” Brooklynn Prince (“The Florida Project”) plays a fictionalized version of Hilde Lysiak, the young journalist who broke news of a local homicide through her self-published newsletter, Orange Street News, at the tender age of 9.

Now available to stream, the 10-episode, family-friendly mystery drama begins with fictional Hilde Lisko and her family moving from New York to her father’s (Jim Sturgess) small Washington hometown after he loses his job in journalism. It quickly becomes clear there’s a mystery that haunts the town, and Hilde’s father. And it’s not long before she’s putting her investigative skills to use in pursuit of the truth, canvasing the neighborhood on her bicycle and piecing clues together in her email newsletter.

Dismantling expectations and limitations placed on young girls — both in life and in the fictional portrayals often available to them — was a driving force for co-showrunners Dana Fox and Dara Resnik.

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“The idea that there was a little girl who was standing up for the truth and saying that the truth has to matter — that, for us, was at the core of everything in the beginning,” Fox said. “And we knew that we had never really seen something take a little girl as seriously as we wanted to be taken as little girls and as seriously as we wanted the world to take our little girls.”

“We both have girls, and we’ve been forced to watch a lot of stuff with them that was not particularly interesting to us,” added Resnik. “I grew up watching ‘Stand by Me,’ ‘E.T.’ and all of the things that had boys at their center. ... We wanted to show that girls can be at the center of those kinds of stories and it can be appealing to everyone.”

Prince, 9, and Lysiak, now 13, think it’s the sort of show everyone needs right now.

“The show has such an ability to really inspire not just kids, and not just girls, but people,” Lysiak said. “It tells a story of Hilde and her reporting, but really her fearlessness and her persistence. And I think that people can learn a lot from that.”

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The Times recently caught up with the two girls over video conference. Lysiak has been hard at work updating her newsletter with local news related to the coronavirus — not to mention breaking news Tuesday night that Linda Tripp was seriously ill before her death on Wednesday — and spending her off-hours reading books such as “The Catcher in the Rye.” Prince, too, is using her time at home to hit the books: she’s tackled the first book in the “Harry Potter” series and is now on “The BFG” from Roald Dahl. (“I’m a little bit scared of the second one because the cover has a huge bloody snake on it,” she said. But Lysiak urged her to give it a try: “Oh, you should read that book. It’s really good.”)

On a recent morning, at The Times’ request, Lysiak took a break from crime and local news reporting to dabble as an entertainment reporter. And Prince was ready for her questions. Here’s their interview:

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Lysiak: Let’s just acknowledge how weird this is. You play me reporting in the TV show and I’m interviewing you. It’s a whole thing.

Prince: It’s complicated. This is going to be the hardest interview. I’m just kidding. [laughs]

Lysiak: After you did “The Florida Project,” I’m sure you had a lot of opportunities. You can pretty much do any acting roles you want. Why did you decide to do “Home Before Dark?”

Prince: Well, Dana sent me the script. And I absolutely fell in love from the beginning. And then I did research on you and that made me really want to do it. So I was like, “Mom, can I do it? I really want to do it!” I just fell in love with the whole thing and that you are a real person. And you were just like a Wonder Woman to me. So I was like, “I really want to portray her.”

Lysiak: Brooklynn, you’re a Wonder Woman to me. You’re so inspirational. OK, so the character is inspired by me. But after getting to know you a lot and watching the first few episodes, I realized that you’ve kind of added a lot of Brooklynn Prince to it, if that makes sense. Can you talk about what you added to the character?

Prince: Well, it’s really complicated. Because you’ve got to take your truth a little bit. I basically have to take you and add me onto it. I had to take stuff from you, like details from you, and add onto the Hilde I created in my mind. And I wanted to make it almost as real as possible but also not too close to you, because that can make it a little bit confusing.

Lysiak: The show focuses a lot on the relationship I have with me and my dad. And you and Jim [Sturgess] do such an amazing job portraying that and it’s realistic. And I’ve gotten to know you and your family and that you’re really close to your dad too. I was wondering if having a close relationship with your dad made the role easier for you.

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Prince: It made it a lot easier because I took a lot of love I had with my dad and put that in. And I also had a lot of love with Jim too. He was almost like another dad to me. I associated that with a little bit of what Hilde and Matt have. But also, my dad and me, we have a unique friendship like Hilde and her dad. They like to talk about journalism; they don’t talk about silly stuff like going outside playing or doing an obstacle course. That’s how me and my dad talk. Not about journalism, but about other stuff.

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Lysiak: In “Home Before Dark,” the Hilde character — it’s weird to say that — is really underestimated a lot. Do you think that you’ve been underestimated too, Brooklynn?

Prince: Yes. Because I want to direct my own feature film. Sometimes I can tell people, “I want to direct my feature film” and they’re like, “Oh yeah, cute” when I really want to be taken seriously. And I feel like when people underestimate me I kind of say thank you to them: “Thank you for giving me more drive.” If no one underestimated you, it would be like, “Oh yeah, I can do this, easy.”

Lysiak: From spending time with you, I would think that you’d make a great reporter, Brooklynn. You’re curious, persistent and you have this way about yourself that really gets people to open up and talk. Do you think in the future you might consider reporting?

Prince: Actually, I might want to do one story here and there. I don’t want to become a full-time reporter, but maybe I really want to do a movie about reporters too. That means I would have to be well-versed in reporting too.

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Lysiak: Could you talk to me a little bit about who Brooklynn Prince is other than all of the amazing roles you’ve done?

Prince: She loves being a sister and she loves being around her family and she’s actually pretty weird. She is very weird. She loves to bake. She loves to watch drama sort of shows that are really juicy. She loves cooking shows where people fail. And she doesn’t dress up a lot. When I do put the effort in, I style these crazy outfits.

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