Dean Cain reveals whether Teri Hatcher is difficult to cooperate after rumors

Dean Cain Rumors about his previous ribs Teri Hatcher It is said that it is difficult to cooperate with the on-site.
On the episode of the “You're Inside” podcast on Tuesday, May 6, host Michael Rosenbaum Cain, 58, shot time when they filmed with Hatcher, 60, on screen Lois & Clark: Superman's New Adventure.
“[After I was cast, we had a chemistry read]. The last one they said was Teri. They left, “Teri wanted you to go with her.” Cain recalled, “No other girl asked me to run the line. She was in this room and she left, 'You don't like me, right? We were on the internet together. You never talked to me. You didn't say hello to me.'”
Cain said his first interaction surprised him, adding, “I'm leaving, 'You didn't say hello to me either. I just wanted to get a job. They never paired us. I have no reason to talk to you.” But that's the relationship between Louis and Clark.
Reflecting on the show’s legacy, Cain admitted that Hatcher was the “best” option to play Lois Lane. Rosenbaum, 52, then asked Cain if it was easy to use when filming the superhero series from 1993 to 1997.
“sometimes [it was] The greatest thing in the world is sometimes more difficult. Sometimes we have good chemistry. Sometimes, it’s just the easiest thing in the world,” Cain notes. “I’m a team person. I'm really simple. Fit me and let us go. I'm doing this as fast as possible here. ”

According to Cain, he used a different shooting method than Hatcher. Rosenbaum questioned whether Cain was “excited there, sometimes maybe she wasn’t.”
“I think it might be that way. And, it seems like I just want to end and go home. I almost feel like she doesn't.” “Sometimes I feel like, 'I don't think she wants to go home because she's worried about this little thing that has nothing to do with what we're doing. It slows us down for two and a half hours. Like, I don't get it.'”
Cain explained that Hatcher had a specific focus on the details, adding: “It's the way someone does something or does it. I guess it makes sense. She did her own makeup in the trailer. Her makeup guy couldn't touch anyone else. [Meanwhile] I and everyone there were in the trailer. I don't care. I have nothing. ”
Cain, although it is different, makes it clear that Hatch “carried the show.”
“I'm just going to get rid of her reaction. It worked. It's a great pairing,” he said excitedly. “She is an idol and I still think – there is no crime against anyone else's Louis Lane – but I still think she is the best Louis Lane ever.”
Cain continued to clarify that there is currently no problem between him and the incubator.
“We are still very friendly. We don't have big ones [falling out]. “Not like “I'm not talking to her,” he said. There was a time when she didn't talk to me for a short time. But I'm an athlete, man. If there were a lot of people on my football team, we'd put it in it so we could still play together.”
Elsewhere in the podcast episode, Cain tells the anecdote that was intended to show that he did not fully understand Hatcher, but regarded her as a rib.
“We were taken for the fifth season. So we went in [to Warner Bros.] There are also two huge large-screen TVs. We were told, “Congratulations, we've been in the fifth year, and it's a gift for you.” Teri doesn't like having television,” he shared. She's like, 'Give me something to use. I'd rather [have] Something I can use. ”
Cain continued, “So she left after a moment, turned around and walked away, 'I'll take that TV. If she didn't want it, I'll take these two.'”
The actor’s comments about working with Cain are rumors that surfaced among actors before. Desperate housewifeHatcher took it Lois & Clark.
Since then, Longoria has questioned the narrative, sharing on the “Armchair Expert” podcast in November 2023, “I still remember it was a narrative about women. Because there were all these performances aired with men, and no one was like, “They were fighting! ””
The actress expressed her gratitude to her ribs.
“They all have a better reputation in that narrative. I'm like,'[People] Say we are fighting. They were like, “Well, that’s just their narrative of women because we’re over 40 on TV.” I was like, “Yes.” I didn’t even understand that wisely,” Longoria continued. “What happens outside of the show, we’re like, ‘What? 'We can never have air to really get out of it. We're just on the scene. …I remember the noise outside us. We were in trouble with the crew and the bubble between us. ”