Cast news

At the Shotglass we like to keep up with what our favourite Losties are getting up to. Interviews with cast members about Lost or other side projects will be posted as and when they are released.

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  • Friday, January 16, 2009

    Dominic Monaghan: 'I'd Go Back To 'Lost' In a Heartbeat'

    Not many actors could go from playing a sing-songy hobbit in the fantastical "Lord of the Rings" trilogy to playing a sing-songy heroin addict in the fantastic "Lost," but Dominic Monaghan has never been comfortable with being boxed in.

    Photobucket

    For his next act, the 32-year-old is starring in the low-budget/high-concept 18th century-set thriller "I Sell The Dead," premiering tomorrow at Slamdance. In the film, Dominic plays Arthur Blake, a graverobber who spent years chasing creatures that refused to accept their place amongst the dead.

    The hilarious, scary, stunning -- and in Dom's own words, "tickling" -- film is just the latest project for the actor who will soon be starring in "Wolverine" and promises that Charlie will be retuning to "Lost" if he has his way!

    PopWrap: What first attracted you to "I Sell The Dead?"
    Dominic Monaghan: I get involved with projects based on three parameters -- the script, the actors involved and the director. Now I'm fortunate enough to be in a position where I read quite a lot of scripts and I felt that this was one of the strongest I've read, in terms of voice, in ages.

    PW: The dark humor of it?

    Dominic: You don't get to read many scripts with the kind of Celtic black humor that Glenn [McQuaid] had written into it. It has a very British feel to it, in the sense that when bad things happen people tend to laugh at them and be sarcastic and have fun with it. I think that's quite unique.

    PW: I was amazed, based on the European look of the finished film, that you filmed in New York.
    Dominic: We did a lot of work in New Jersey, too, over Christmas. Bitterly cold. One of the coldest shoots I've ever done. It was pretty grim to be honest, but it all worked to be honest because we're supposed to be poor, unable to afford good clothes and we don't have enough food to eat and we can't light a fire.


    PW: It was like mother nature made you a method actor.

    Dominic: Exactly. I think they made the film, which cost less than $1 million, look like a $2 or $3 million film. I was very impressed, but I don't get involved with films based on their budgets -- if it has a fantastic script and $50,000, we'll find a way to make it work. I had so much fun on this shoot, shivering in a little dressing room with Larry Fessenden and taking little nips of Jameson's whiskey from a hip flask to keep us warm at night. That was the charming part of the film, and I wouldn't have changed it for anything.

    PW: You went straight from filming your last episode of "Lost" to shooting this film, that must have been quite a culture shock.

    Dominic: It was quite cathartic for me, too, because when I let go of a character who was sympathetic and endearing as Charlie was, I grieved that passing. So it was nice to immediately jump into work and not have time to feel too sentimental about it.

    PW: Plus, your character Arthur couldn't be more different from Charlie

    Dominic: Yes, Arthur is quite proactive in his actions, and quite a strong character -- obviously not physically, but he stands up for himself. And it was nice to literally put on a new costume.


    PW: Glenn not only wanted you for this role, but he postponed shooting for two weeks until you became available; that's got to feel quite nic
    e.
    Dominic: It's a place I've been trying to get to in my career since I started. If a director is holding up production because of the value of your cooperation, it just makes you work harder and harder. It's hugely complimentary.

    PW: Did playing a graverobber bring to mind any of the terrible jobs you had prior to acting?
    Dominic: When I was at college, I worked in a department store called Brit Home Stores, which is a pretty lackluster department store, selling clothes for middle-aged women. My job was to walk the floor and find anything that was damaged, take it to the store room and log it. Quite a lot of menial labor and I was treated in that regard, so that wasn't the greatest job I ever had. But I've been quite lucky with jobs and I try to approach any job with as much positivity as possible because then you get a positive thing out of a negative situation.

    PW: Since I'm sure you can't get out of any interview without the subject of "Lost" coming up, I won't mess with tradition -- any chance Charlie will pop up in the
    final two seasons?
    Dominic: The way I answer that question now is to say that unfortunately it's not up to me, it's up to Damon [Lindeloff]. I've been such a fan of Charlie -- the way he entered the show, the way he exited the show, the way he came back in season 4. They've treated him with a great amount of respect and tenderness. If it was up to me, I would revisit that character a dozen times if they gave him the same sensitivity they've given over the years. Obviously it's down to the writers, but I would go back in a heartbeat.


    charlie pace Pictures, Images and Photos
    PW: Are you just as curious as the fans as to where the show is headed?
    Dominic: I am. I've known Damon long enough now to understand how intelligent he is as a writer and how respectful he is of the project he's crafted, so I'm just excited to see what's going on in his brain. I don't have any doubts he'll finish it off with a huge shebang. But I'm like everyone else, a huge fan of the show and I want to see who's going to survive and what the ultimate cliffhanger is going to be.


    PW: You are also a part of the upcoming "Wolverine" movie; how did that come about?

    Dominic: One of my favorite films of the past 5 years is "The Fountain" -- it's just a work of a brilliant mind. So I've managed to sit down with [director] Darren Aronofsky over the years and tell him how much I enjoyed the project. I've done the same with Rachel Weisz. Hugh Jackman was the one person missing from that equation. So, I'd become friends with a guy at Fox who happened to call me one Thursday saying there was a part for me in the "Wolverine" movie and to call him on Friday after I'd read the script. So I called him Friday morning saying I loved the part and he called me back at 1 p.m. asking if I could be on a plane at 4 p.m.

    PW: Just like that!

    Dominic: Yep. I flew to Sydney, was there for about nine days of filming. I'm actually going back to do another 10 days in Vancouver at the end of January. It's a very exciting project. I'm a big fan of Hugh and I think the film will be a great thing to sit back in the cinema and strap on your seat belt and watch this huge beast of a movie explode.

    PW: Are the 10 days reshoots or adding in new scenes?

    Dominic: We're doing a bit of both, more than anything else, it's an additional scene which I would get shot in the head if I told you anything about. But my character features in a huge set piece with Hugh and Liev [Schreiber]. I think the best thing I can tell you is that it's a flashback scene.

    PW: Between reshoots and going to Slamdance, it sounds like 2009 is going to be quite busy for you.

    Dominic: I've got a hectic schedule, but I wouldn't have my life any other way. I'm really excited to see the audiences reaction to "I Sell The Dead," and to spend some time with the boys again.

    PW: Will tomorrow's premiere be the first time you've seen the film with an audience?
    Dominic: It will. My friend and I watched it the other day and my mom and dad have seen it. I think the best reaction I've heard is that people are tickled by it. It's a very cheeky film with endearing characters and it has a really unique voice that you haven't heard before.

    Source: Popwrap

    LOST - HOLLOWAY SLOWED DOWN AFTER TEENAGE CAR CRASH

    LOST bad boy JOSH HOLLOWAY won't be joining his castmates caught speeding in Hawaii - he drives too slow.
    Former show regulars Michelle Rodriguez and Cynthia Watros and longtime star Daniel Dae Kim have all been charged with speeding offences on the island, but a bad car crash in his teens has left Holloway driving like an old lady.
    He explains, "When I was 17 I fell asleep at the wheel one morning. The car was destroyed going end over end, and all I got was a cut on the back of my neck from hitting the roof multiple times.
    "Since then I've slowed down a lot, so people cut me off because I'm kind of a cruiser."

    Source: contactmusic

    Wednesday, January 14, 2009

    Jorge Garcia Interview

    Not much, predictably, has been revealed about the fifth (and penultimate) season of the cult ABC drama Lost, but one thing is certain: Jorge Garcia will still be amusing audiences as the laid-back Hugo “Hurley” Reyes. The 35-year-old actor, whose demeanor matches his character’s, has provided much of the notoriously convoluted series’s humor as a man who has been plagued by bad luck ever since winning $114 million in the lottery. We recently spoke to Garcia as he shopped for bread and eggs in Hawaii, where the show is filmed.

    Time Out New York: Dude.
    Jorge Garcia: [Laughs] Yeah.

    TONY: Is Hurley required to say that at least ten times per episode?
    Jorge Garcia: Oh yeah. Anytime I have a line, they need to put dude somewhere.

    TONY: Did you use that word a lot before you took the role?
    Jorge Garcia: I did say “dude” before but not as much as Hurley does. At first I was trying to say “dude” less than I normally do, just to keep some separation. But I really don’t care anymore. Now if it’s an appropriate moment, you know, I’ll just let the dude fly.

    TONY: So, how does the series end?
    Jorge Garcia: Good question. I don’t know. But I think at some point there’s gonna be a big, giant fight for the island. Probably gonna be pretty awesome.

    TONY: Sounds like you’re genuinely into the show. Are you as big of a Lost nerd as all the other Lost nerds?
    Jorge Garcia: I’m pretty close. I mean, I don’t spend too much time on the Internet trying to figure things out anymore. I let them write the show and whatever gets revealed, I enjoy it. But I do download podcasts about the show, because they tell me what the fans are talking about in a nutshell.

    TONY: What’s your weirdest fan experience so far?
    Jorge Garcia: I came to L.A. a few years ago, and I went to this late-night taco stand called Benito’s, like, around midnight. And there was a guy there. Later, as I’m picking up my food—’cause you had to wait around and stuff—that same guy showed up. After he’d already left. He had run home and printed a picture of me from the computer. And then he asked me to sign it. To actually go through all that effort!

    TONY: It must never cease to surprise you how incredibly rabid some fans are.
    Jorge Garcia: Yeah, it never does. A lot of times when I’m shooting the show, I have them in the back of my mind. Sometimes I go, “Wait a minute. We gotta fix this continuity-wise, or else they’re going to be posting on the Internet about this, I know it.” But every now and then there’s some things you’ve just got to be like, “Well, it’s a TV show.”

    TONY: Like when?
    Jorge Garcia: Like when we were building our campsites. There were a lot of tarps. And so, yeah, there’s apparently a shipment of tarps on the plane. There are boxes of them that we now have access to. [Laughs]

    TONY: I wish it had been a shipment of doubloons, because doubloons is one of my favorite words.
    Jorge Garcia: You a big fan of the pirate movies?

    TONY: Well, only if they employ the word doubloons.
    Jorge Garcia: I hear you.

    TONY: Or pantaloons.
    Jorge Garcia: That’s harder to work in, I think. Because (a) you never seem to be wearing pantaloons, and (b) that’d be something you’d only bring up if you’re making fun of someone’s short pants, like, “Those are borderline pantaloons, I believe.”

    Absolutely. Bigger show shot in Hawaii: Lost or Magnum, P.I.?
    Jorge Garcia: It depends on how you measure it, I’m going to say.

    TONY: In the geek factor, obviously, Lost wins. But not so in the mustache factor.
    Jorge Garcia: Yeah, I bet. I actually have a Magnum, P.I. T-shirt that I like to wear around the pool. There’s no picture of him on it, though. It’s just, like, the car.

    TONY: Cheech Marin plays Hurley’s dad on the show, which can only mean that Tommy Chong is going to have a meaty role this season, right?
    Jorge Garcia: I don’t know. [Laughs]

    TONY: Can we please start that rumor?
    Jorge Garcia: Sure. Chong is in negotiations.

    Source: timeout

    Josh Holloway: Break-In Still Gives Me Nightmares

    He plays the unflappable Sawyer on Lost, but Josh Holloway says he is still rattled by a brutal 2005 home invasion, which he vows will "never" be repeated.

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    "Having a gun held to our heads when we're naked in our bedroom at four in the morning is never going to happen to my wife and me again," the actor tells Playboy in its February issue, on stands Jan. 16. "I took the FBI training course. I have home protection."

    While at their Hawaii Kai home in 2005, Holloway and his wife Yessica were rousted from bed at gunpoint by a man who took cash and credit cards and then drove off in Holloway's Mercedes-Benz, which police found abandoned a short time later. Last June, Ruben Royce was sentenced to between 13 and 30 years in prison for his three-week crime spree.

    "It still gets me," says Holloway. "The guy was a crackhead who had hit 22 people in two and a half weeks. He took an 80-year-old couple and duct-taped them up. He also attempted to murder another guy. I had a nightmare about it last night."

    Still, there are dangers to increased home security, says Holloway, who announced last month that he and Yessica are expecting their first child later this year. "Of course, there's also the statistic that owning a gun increases your chances of being shot by 300 percent."

    Holloway, who returns for Lost's fifth season on Jan. 21, also sounded off about another brush with Hawaiian law: his 2006 speeding ticket. "It's an island, very easily patrolled, and we are the only big celebrities who stay there all the time," Holloway says of filming Lost in Oahu. "I was going around 50 in a 35 zone, and that's embarrassing. I should have been going faster."

    Source: people.com

    LOST - LOST CREATORS RAVE ABOUT FOX

    LOST creators CARLTON CUSE and DAMON LINDELOF have given the show's star MATTHEW FOX the greatest references as he gets set to wrap up the desert island drama - they're convinced he'll be an Oscar nominee within four years.
    Both feel sure the Vantage Point star will turn his back on TV and concentrate on making challenging movies.
    Cuse says, "He has that cocktail of dangerous and charming. He has a leading man's good looks, and heroic qualities as an actor."
    And Lindelof tells Details magazine, "He has the potential to be a leading man, but I think he's interested in those quirky transformative roles.
    "Three, four years from now I can see him getting a Supporting Actor nomination... He wants acting to be hard, to be torture. He does not want to ski the bunny slope."

    Source: contactmusic

    Matthew Fox: Lost's End Will Be a "Relief"

    As Lost nears the start of its fifth and penultimate season, Matthew Fox is greeting it with a mix of reverence — and a readiness to leave island life behind, literally and figuratively.

    "Personally, it's a relief," he told Details, as he reflected on the ABC drama's nearing conclusion. "I owe this show a great amount, and I think it's exceptionally good...[but] I am looking forward to the freedom that comes with not working on one project professionally." Lost's fifth season kicks off Jan. 21 on ABC (8 pm/ET).

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    Fox, who plays Dr. Jack Shepard, opened up about what he envisions in his Lost-free future — both personally and professionally — starting with his plans to move from Hawaii to the mainland when the show ends. "My major motivation is to be closer to family," he said. "My brother is there, my mother is there. We're hoping to break ground [for a house] in March, and it will be completed right around the time we're finishing the last season of Lost in March 2010."

    The actor's new home will plant him far from the spotlight in rural Oregon, but close enough to Portland and Seattle to find city life easily with his wife and two children. "I really miss that kind of wide-open space," he explained, "and there's a big part of me that wants the kids to live in that mountain air."

    While Fox envisions a secluded home life, he's also candid about what he wants in his very public working life. "I don't have control over what will come my way, but if the opportunities I get excited by keep coming, I'm going to continue working in this business." Lost co-executive producer Damon Lindelof was more specific: "[Fox] has the potential to be a leading man, but I think he's interested in those quirky transformative roles," he said. "Three, four years from now I can see him getting a Supporting Actor nomination."

    Yet, Lost isn't over just yet, and Jack still has some serious challenges to face. "When it's all said and done, you'll be able to look at the six seasons of Lost and see a pretty amazing character arc," Fox said. "Jack has been evolving, and not necessarily into a good place. We started the show with him being this hero who had no concept of what that required, sort of trying to live up to the expectations...and then finding the way to redeem himself."

    Where Jack's arc will ultimately end, however, will likely remain a mystery until the series' final moments. "This show started with a plane crash on an island in the South Pacific, and it's going to have a very global and epic ending."

    Source: tvguide

    Monday, January 12, 2009

    Mr. Enigma: Michael Emerson of ‘Lost’

    In 2001, he won an Emmy for playing the perversely charismatic serial killer William Hinks on The Practice. Apparently, perverse charisma is Michael Emerson’s calling; he’s since earned two Emmy nominations playing the prevaricating and perversely charismatic cult leader Benjamin Linus on Lost—a character that was never intended to be full-time, but, as viewers have come to learn, there’s no denying Ben Linus. Emerson talked with Michael Alan Connelly about the new season.

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    What’s changed for Ben in Season 5?
    He now operates in the other world, off the island. He is less secure and less well fortified, so he has fewer resources. The stakes of his activities may be higher because of the desperation factor, and the quality of having to improvise. He’ll carry on what seems to be his calling or his life’s work or his war, whatever it is—I’m not sure exactly what it .is

    That makes two of us. Do you feel the show loses any power now that the characters are off the island?
    I think we had a smaller definition of the island than the writers meant. When the island disappeared, everywhere became the island. They’re playing around with the island as some kind of portrait of a thing, but not the thing itself. Wherever we go, it goes also. [Laughs.] Boy, that’s kind of a squirrelly answer. Maybe this is a better overarching image for the season: There’s a great push to reunite—to try to put things and partnerships back together that have fallen apart.


    The Others stole away to a place called the Temple. Will we be seeing more of them and learning about the Temple?
    Yes and yes. I think we’re going to find them to be less malevolent as time goes by.


    If you could get the writers to answer one burning question, what’s at the top of your list?
    I’d ask the same big question everyone has: What’s the real deal? Where are we really?


    Ben is often reading or quoting authors. Do you take the time to read the books he does?
    There are no accidents in the world of props on Lost—the books are carefully chosen. This season, there’s a scene where I’m reading Ulysses by James Joyce. It’s on my winter reading list.



    You came to the show late. Did you fit right in?

    Not really. It’s a tight-knit cast. The show has generations of actors—I think I’m the third generation, which is Ian Cusick, Elizabeth Mitchell, and me. We hang out a bit; ours is a more shared experience, not being one of the original lovable Lost-aways. I’ve had a solitary time in Hawaii [where the show is shot], which is consistent with my character.



    What TV shows do you watch?

    Battlestar Galactica, which, like Lost, balances science fiction, adventure, and metaphysics in a good way. And I was thrilled by Deadwood. I love shows where language isn’t just a medium of communication. Deadwood’s was more brutal than any I’ve heard on TV, but it was also more lyric.

    Source: nymag.com

    Sunday, January 11, 2009

    Smokey unleashed

    Finally, we get the scoop on our beloved Smokey

    Smoke Monster....

    Unleashed!


    Visual effects Supervisor Mitch Suskin reveals to The Official Lost Magazine, the challenges of bringing Smokey out to play in series four's episode The Shape of Things to Come.

    The Shape of Things to Come really gave the audience its first long look at the smoke monster and what it's truly capable of doing. What were your marching orders in terms of how to portray it?

    Well, for this episode the producers were pretty upfront from the beginning that Smokey, as we call it, was going to be in your face and we’d be seeing him. We had the cover of night, which we've never really done before. So we were more concerned, not about how much we were going to see him, but how we were going to make him visible – a blackish, smoke monster in the dark, in the forest, is tricky to see.

    How much creative leeway did you have on establishing the details of Smokey's big entrance?

    Jack Bender was fairly precise about what he wanted out of this. We scouted locations at several times and we talked about where Smokey might be entering from and what he might be doing. The script was clear on what was supposed to happen in the scene and it was clear that you had to see things. Sometimes we all have rough ideas and it's an evolving process. In this case with the script, what Mr. Bender requested and what he got, we had a strong idea of what to do but how to get there was hard. I mean its just smoke!

    What was the most challenging shot?

    The one shot that was most subject to interpretation was the shot where Smokey first appeared over the trees. We didn’t know what direction he was going to come from or how much interaction there was going to be, so that evolved over time. It just so happens the way it was shot there was a hole in the trees that made a nice place for him to coil into the shot.

    It's a very menacing entrance, so did that evolve or was that clear from the start?

    We tried a couple of different ways for him to enter but it wasn't clear if he was supposed to be pouring through or looking around, more cat-like. Then it was very clear from Damon and Carlton that they wanted it to come in like a rollercoaster or a freight train. They wanted it to be forceful and somewhat frightening. We had to spend a lot of time trying to get the smoke to look like something other than smoke in the sense of it moving and how it was lit. A lot of that was just trial and error. That shot, as far as performance, gave us the most to play with and the other shots were a lot of shots of him in the forest.

    How were the forest shots different to create?


    We were trying to strike a balance between how much we wanted to see him and how much we didn't want to see him and which was going to be scarier. A lot of those shots we were shooting in the forest at night with nothing out there, so there were lots of branches and leaves and we were trying to figure out how to put Smokey in the background. In this case, we didn't use digital trees. We used real trees from the forest. We spent a lot of time trying to come up with ways to separate the leaves and the branches from the background so we didn't have to paint mattes for every single leaf so we could put the shot together. The compositor came up with some mercifully clever techniques that allowed us to put Smokey way in the background. The digital tools we are using are getting better and better and we did do a little bit of rotoscoping [where animators trace over live-action movement frame-by-frame] to separate them, but there was more compositing magic to separate the trees and the branches. It's all about trying to define the foreground and putting Smokey in the background.

    Source: sky1.com

    Saturday, January 10, 2009

    'Lost' Star Donates to Toy Drive

    The holiday season is the perfect time to help out the less-fortunate, and Lost's Daniel Dae Kim knows just how important that is. Along with his wife, the Korea-born actor aided the Marine Corps' Toys for Tots Hawaii Program with their donations.

    With the shortfall in much needed toys for children, the Marines have been wishing for a bit more generosity until the last minutes before Christmas. They're hoping many others follow Daniel Dae Kim's example. A few days ago, he and his wife donated 500 toys for the Toys for Tots campaign at Kahala Mall.


    The Marine Forces Pacific spokesman, Chuck Little, said that the need for toys has been met for every age group except for two. There haven't been enough contributions for boys and girls ages 8 to 10, as well as boys and girl 11 years and older.

    “We're about 1,600 toys shy of being able to meet the need,” Little explained. “We're really concerned about making sure that everyone that requested donations gets something this year.”

    Chuck Little continued to say that a collection point for the Marines, managed by the Salvation Army, will remain open until noon today. With just a few hours before Christmas, they're setting it up on the Costco side of Dole Cannery.

    Little also shared a few words regarding the involvement of the Lost actor. “To say that (contribution) is overwhelming is a gross understatement,” he said. “That will go a long way toward helping meet the remaining need this year.”

    Just this year, the Toys for Tots program collected about 30,000 toys. Thanks to Daniel Dae Kim and his wife, needy kids will benefit from their charity work. If these busy actors can do something as selfless as that, maybe us normal folks can find opportunities for that too. Besides, Lost won't be returning until January. This has to be a better use of our time, rather than watching reruns during the break.

    Daniel Dae Kim has been known to appear in recurring roles on several sci-fi and fantasy shows. He has been seen on Star Trek: Voyager, Star Trek: Enterprise, Angel, and Charmed, as well as CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, The Shield, Seinfeld, NYPD Blue and even ER. And even if his character doesn't speak enough English on Lost, Daniel Dae Kim sure knows the language of the Christmas season.

    Source: buddytv

    Jorge Garcia Glad That Show Isn't 'Lost' On Fans

    Comedian and actor Jorge Garcia is indebted to his fans, and is keen to appreciate the variety the audiences come in. He's even pleased that Lost is a big hit among the music crowd, especially members of the bands Metallica and Anthrax.

    Though the series is returning on January 21 with a clip special to boot, the actors know how rabid the viewers still are. It's just a little surprising how rock stars and soul singers can also get a little weak-kneed when it comes to seeing their favorite actors.


    “One of the biggest things for me was when we were at the Golden Globes,” Jorge Garcia admitted. “Seal came up to me, Daniel Dae Kim and Yunjin Kim and asked to get a picture with us. Holy cow! That's awesome.”

    It seems as though anyone from the realms of heavy metal to R&B can be fanboy or a fangirl, especially with shows like Lost on television these days. Garcia, who plays the character Hurley Reyes on the series, went on to explain why he thinks the acclaimed ABC series is a hit with musicians.

    “Because we're a very good DVD kind of show, I've run into a lot of musicians who are fans because they watch it on their tour buses and things like that,” the actor exclaimed.

    Well then, they have a lot to look forward to. With ABC releasing Lost's fifth season in less than a month's time, there's no doubt the network will be plagued by fans once more. Sources reveal that the program will air uninterrupted, with a three-hour premiere consisting of a clip show and two new back-to-back episodes.

    “This season, I think, is going to run straight through,” Garcia said. “Last season, they skipped a week before the finale and had a clip show, so we might do that. But for the most part, it should run straight through.”

    Source: buddytv

    Jin Returns, kind of, well maybe, ish

    Los Angeles, CA (CNS) - "Lost," ABC's show about the islands of misfits, will return soon for its fifth season and many fans are wondering about the whereabouts of Daniel Dae Kim, better known as Jin. When seen on last year's season finale of "Lost," it looked as if Jin was blown to pieces.

    Celebrity News Service is just as anxious to see if Jin survived the explosion. Was all that screaming -- and darn good acting by the way -- of his TV wife Sun for naught? Sun is played by Yunjin Kim.

    Word in Hawaii, where the show is filmed, is that Jin will reappear in the February 11 episode. Since it is "Lost," however, we won't know for certain if he is alive, dead, in a flashback, a figment of our imagination or possibly reincarnated. In a recent interview Daniel Dae said fans hoping for a Jin-Sun reunion shouldn't hold their breath. Remember when Sun went to Jin's grave with the baby and Hurley? It seems that is the only place she will see Jin for a while.

    In real life, Daniel Dae is busy getting ready to star as the King of Siam in Rodgers and Hammerstein's "The King and I." He will make his theatrical singing debut in London at the Royal Albert Hall for two weeks in June.

    Source: allheadlinenews

    Jorge Garcia talks LOST...again

    The final finale of "Lost" isn't expected 'til 2010, but already things are heating up on ABC's one-of-a-kind series, which begins airing its fifth season Jan. 21 with a three-hour premiere. Jorge Garcia -- aka Hurley -- reports that the cast did a lot of guessing about the mysteries surrounding their characters and their strange island surroundings "during Season 1, but after that it slowed down. Last season, when they announced there was going to be an ending, we started guessing again. There's definitely a sense of pacing that is going toward something on the show. We're excited, like Season 1."

    According to him, "The stories are crazy this year. This one definitely takes it to another level." As for himself, the challenge in playing his lottery-winning, formerly institutionalized character remains "to try and make Hurley's craziness come from a real place. That has been a big challenge for me as an actor, along with some of the physical stuff. You have no idea how hard it is to march with purpose in sand in tennis shoes when you have to do it over and over again."

    Source: National Ledger

    Josh Holloway to be a dad

    Josh Holloway, Lost’s Sawyer is expecting his first child with wife Yessica reports TV Guide’s senior editor Will Keck exclusively in his column,What the Keck?!

    Josh Holloway, who is currently on location in Hawaii
    filming Season 5 of the hit show, confirmed that he and Yessica will be welcoming a little Sawyer or Sawyerette in 2009.

    Source: thebosh

    Naveen Andrews's Custody Case Weirder than 'Lost' Episode

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    In a story almost as twisted and confusing as an episode of "Lost," actor Naveen Andrews, who plays Sayiid on the show, has been granted custody of his son--under circumstances that involve talk of poison and witchcraft. This actually sounds better than an episode of "Lost"...witchcraft always trumps polar bears.

    Andrews was granted custody after the mother of his child broke the arrangements of their custody agreement by taking their son Naveen Joshua out of Los Angeles County, and by preventing Andrews from seeing his son. A courtroom battle went down, during which Elana Eustache, the mother of the child, made all sorts of allegations, including that Andrews had tried to poison their son and that Andrews's longtime girlfriend Barbara Hershey should be kept away from the little boy because she practiced witchcraft.

    What the eff?

    Not surprisingly, it was requested during the hearing that Eustache undergo a psychiatric evaluation.

    Naveen Joshua had been brought to court with his mother, but left with his obviously saner father. Andrews was granted permission to bring the boy to Hawaii where the new season of "Lost" is currently in production. Neither Andrews nor Hershey seem to have struck the court as particularly poisonous, or witchlike, as both were granted permission to care for the boy.

    Andrews and Hershey split briefly in 2005 and Andrews later admitted to fathering a child with Eustache during that time. After reuniting with Hershey and learning about his son, Andrews released a statement saying that he had "every intention of assuming appropriate responsibility" for the child and "acting "with all integrity." Which may or may not involve boiling rabbits in black cauldrons while his girlfriend wears a pointy hat and rides a broom. Only time will tell.

    We wish little Naveen lots of days of happiness in the Hawaiian sun. Also, if he's able to pick up any secrets that solve some of the greater "Lost" mysteries under the guise of just hanging out on the beach and building sandcastles with Evangeline Lilly, we would appreciate him leaking them to us promptly.

    Source: actressarchives.com