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Post by Denisa on Jun 24, 2008 15:19:14 GMT -5
i didnt know where to post this so here we are: Wentworth Miller Fans Unite for CharityTue, 24 June 2008 There is just about a week left of the Wentworth Miller charity project to raise funds for UNICEF. Thank you to everyone who has donated so far! There have been thousands of dollars raised for a very worthwhile cause. Wentworth has said of this project and its organizers, “It’s my privilege to be a part of the entertainment business, an industry that has reached out to and touched the lives of billions of people around the world. It gives me tremendous pleasure to think that many of those same people have been motivated to reach out to others in turn.” For more information on how you donate, visit WentworthMillerFansForCharity.org. This project will run until this Monday, June 30. Congratulations to everyone who has worked so hard on making this project a success!
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hodaharb
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Post by hodaharb on Jun 24, 2008 15:39:08 GMT -5
thanks Dee for posting this & BTW I copy your post to the Wentworth Miller Charity topic I wish that's ok
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hodaharb
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Post by hodaharb on Sept 3, 2008 8:00:58 GMT -5
Translation
Where is the new BRAVO?
With hat/cap and sunglases Went in Los Angeles. He is searching for new Magazines. Maybe he will find the new Bravo….
Picture one
Oh no, no more Bravo
Picture two
The Prison Break Star in his private-look (with shorts, etc)Credit nadine Excomm
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Post by genpop40 on Sept 3, 2008 12:09:34 GMT -5
Why oh why does such a beautiful man want to dress like he's 80?!
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hodaharb
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Post by hodaharb on Nov 9, 2008 12:22:20 GMT -5
WEM is featured in The Prestige - Hong Kong. A PRESTIGE HONG KONG EXCLUSIVE THE CEREBRAL SEX SYMBOL
WENTWORTH MILLER IS AN INTELLECTUAL IN AN INDUSTRY THAT USUALLY REWARDS BEAUTY OVER BRAINS. OF COURSE IT DOESN'T HURT THAT HE'S ALSO A HANDSOME DEVIL. JOE YOGERST INTERVIEWS THE ACTOR WHO PLAYS THE EINSTEIN-ESQUE MICHAEL SCOFIELD ON THE HIT TV SERIES PRISON BREAK
The times are a-changing, sang Bob Dylan, and so is the definition of ethnic and cultural identity. Barack Obama was born in Hawaii to parents from Kenya and Kansas and was partly raised in Indonesia. Tiger Woods is half Thai and half southern California black – and his wife is a blue-eyed, blonde Swedish model. But maybe the most extreme example of the 21st-century everyman is actor Wentworth Miller, star of the hit television series Prison Break and someone who personifies the term "melting pot" when it comes to genealogy.
It would have been enough to claim that he was born in England, was largely raised in Brooklyn and continues to linger a finger in both the Anglo and American pies with dual citizenship. But Miller's heritage is far more complex than that. His mother descends from Russian, Arab, French and Dutch immigrants to America; his father mixes Jamaican, German, British and African-American genes. If that doesn't define "citizen of the world," what does?
Miller is also a horse of a far different colour when it comes to Hollywood – a bone fide intellectual in a town (and industry) where success is normally determined by good looks rather than the combination of gears whirling inside your skull. He attended one of America's top 100 high schools, Midwood in Brooklyn, and then went on to distinguish himself at Princeton, where he studied English literature and drew political cartoons for the student newspaper.
It was at Midwood that he got his first taste of the stage lights as a member of SING!, a highly competitive musical theatre programme started by New York City schools in the late 1940s. Barbra Streisand, Neil Diamond and Paul Simon are among those who cut their teenage acting teeth in the programme, so Miller was in good company. From SING! it was a natural progression to joining the Princeton Tigertones, an all-male a cappella group. "Stinky" (that was Miller's nickname) sang baritone in their live performances and on a Tigertones album called Cheers released in 1994.
A year later he was in Los Angeles, trying to break into showbiz. His first gig was working part-time in the development department of a production company that made TV movies. But within a couple of years he was snagging on-screen parts. His first TV acting job was playing a humanoid sea monster on Buffy the Vampire Slayer in 1998. After playing bit parts in several unheralded (and largely unwatched) shows, Miller finally hit the big time with a starring role in the 2002 television miniseries Dinotopia, a dazzling mix of live action and special effects that earned five Emmys.
Miller didn't get a chance to really test his acting chops until 2003, when he auditioned for the film version of the best-selling Philip Roth novel The Human Stain. The central figure in the story is erudite college professor Coleman Silk, a light-skinned African-American who has spent his whole life passing himself off as white rather than face racial prejudice. Given his own ethnic make-up, it was a role that fit Miller to a tee. And it came across in the audition. "When I was done, [the casting director] was in tears and I was in tears," he told The New Yorker magazine. There was no small irony in the fact that the movie's producers made him prove his own ethnicity by showing them family photos.
The film got mixed reviews – The Times of London dubbed it "sapping and unbelievable melodrama." But Miller generally drew praise for his portrayal of the young Coleman, while Anthony Hopkins played the older Silk. In some respects, he trumped the Oscar-winning Welshman. The review in Variety raved that "Miller, who gives a strong, muted performance, convinces as a light-skinned African-American in a way Hopkins never does."
In intellectual terms, there wasn't much of a leap from Coleman Silk to Michael Scofield, the brilliant young structural engineer who Miller plays in Prison Break, a fact that no doubt helped him land a starring role in the groundbreaking television drama. The basic premise of the show is simple yet daring: younger brother gets himself thrown into prison to help older brother accused of a crime he didn't commit. But much like Miller's own background, both Scofield and the ongoing plots are much more complicated than they may seem at first glance.
For instance, Scofield is afflicted with a neurological condition called "low latent inhibition," which prevents him from blocking out and selectively processing the countless stimuli that engulf people every day. Combined with a high IQ, this gives Scofield a superhuman ability to diagnose and evaluate his surroundings – a handy skill to have when you're trying to break out of prison and battle the shadowy political-corporate conspiracy that put your brother on death row.
Miller's multilayered take on Scofield earned him a 2005 Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor in a Drama Series and is cited as one of the main reasons why a show that seemed destined to last only one season is into its fourth year on US network television. Despite its critical acclaim, Prison Break has always been a modest success in America. Not so overseas, where the series has proved a breakout hit in countries as far flung as Australia, France, Poland and Serbia. The show's first season in Hong Kong broke the local record for viewership of a foreign drama previously held by The X-Files.
Despite his increasing popularity, the 36-year-old actor has somehow avoided becoming regular fodder for the tabloid press. Whenever he's asked about his love life, Miller almost always throws out a stock answer that he's too busy for that sort of thing – which hasn't prevented outfits like Who magazine from tabbing him as one of the sexiest men on the planet, along with the likes of Leonardo DiCaprio, Jude Law and Johnny Depp.
Are you surprised by the success of Prison Break outside the US? We've got an incredibly loyal fan base here in the States but the show is by no means a smash hit. So it was a real surprise to discover there were millions of people out there beyond our borders who totally dug our hard work. It's really gratifying to think that in Africa, Asia, Europe and everywhere in between, there are fans making room for us in their lives. I now know that pretty much anywhere I go I'm going to run into people who know my face like they know their friends and family. And that's pretty extraordinary.
What gives the show such international appeal? I think the show's themes are universal. It's got action, adventure, romance, etc. But at its heart, it's about family. It's about how far one man is willing to go to save a loved one. And that's something that anyone anywhere can relate to.
How did you snag the role of Michael Scofield? Just a regular audition? Actually, to be honest, they were scraping the bottom of the barrel by the time I came along. Every young actor in Hollywood had read for that part, but they still hadn't found their guy. I was the very, very last person to audition for Michael Scofield and after that, it all happened pretty quickly. I read the script on a Friday, auditioned for it the next Monday, had my call-back on Tuesday, found out I had the part Tuesday night and we were in Chicago shooting the pilot the following week. It all happened really quickly, which I think worked to my advantage. There was no time to get nervous.
How are you and Michael alike – and not alike? Michael and I are both neat, and we both have a real respect for organisation and discipline. But Michael takes those qualities to the extreme. He's heroic, but there's also something dark and shadowy just beneath the surface. I have a lot of respect for him, but he has many flaws, and that's what makes him such an interesting character to play. If it came down to it, there are definitely people I'd give my life for, but there's no way I'd be clever enough or crazy enough to pull off what Michael has. He's half hero, half madman. That's definitely where we part company.
You have described Michael as the person who does the "narrative heavy lifting" for the show. What do you mean by that?
I mean it's Michael's job to explain things to the audience. Like, "This is what's happening, this is what just happened and this is what's about to happen." It's a plot-heavy show and we have to work hard to keep the audience up to speed. And nine times out of 10, that job falls to my character.
Are you happy with the direction Prison Break is taking in Season Four, which just started in the US? The fact that there's much less emphasis on incarceration and escape in favour of a proactive attack against the Company? I'm relatively happy with the show's new direction. The brothers can't be on the run forever and we certainly can't send them back to prison. I feel like it's time for Michael and Lincoln to stand and fight and take down the bad guys once and for all. And in an ideal world, the Fox network will give us that opportunity. I really think that after all we've put the characters and the audience through, we've earned the right to a final showdown, a really satisfying conclusion. Hopefully that's where this season is heading. Hopefully the powers that be will allow us all to exeunt when the time is right.
Do you and other actors ever get involved in trying to develop the story lines and arcs? Does any of your own input ever make it into the scripts? At this point, I think it's safe to say that the scripts are like blueprints and it's the actors' job to colour between the lines as we see fit. I don't get to decide what happens to Michael Scofield, but at this point in the series, nobody knows him like I do. Four seasons in, safeguarding the integrity of the character, line by line and beat by beat, is my responsibility. And the writers, to their credit, allow us to make whatever changes and tweaks we feel are necessary. It's become a real collaboration.
Let's talk about your past. Given your diverse background, do you feel American or British or something else entirely? I am and have always felt like an American, but the UK has a special place in my heart. I also have dual citizenship, which makes me feel connected to the UK in a very real and tangible way, even though I was only born there. Having a British passport also makes it much easier to work overseas, and as the international marketplace becomes more and more important in the entertainment industry, that can be a very useful thing to have.
Did your parents encourage your career or was this something driven by your own goals and desires? They were supportive but cautious. Unless you're actually in the business, sometimes it's hard to understand what it is that we do, how an actor's life works. All my parents knew was that for years I didn't have a steady job or a steady source of income. But they're thrilled with my success. They enjoy seeing my face on TV every week. I just have to warn my mom beforehand if something terrible's going to happen to my character. She doesn't like watching Michael get hurt.
So you end up at Princeton, study literature and graduate. What happens after that? How did you make the transition from Ivy League to Hollywood? By the time I graduated from college, I'd basically given up my childhood dreams of becoming an actor. It just seemed too risky, too unrealistic. But I still wanted to be part of the business in some way, so I got a job working behind the scenes for a company in Los Angeles that made movies for television. But it wasn't long before I had to admit to myself that I really wanted to act. I had to answer that "what if?" question. So I started taking acting classes and going out on auditions. And to pay the rent, I worked as a temp at the studios and the networks, which gave me invaluable insight into the other side of the business. It really made me appreciate how much work goes into putting together a movie or a TV series. It's made me grateful on a deeper level for everything I've achieved.
What was it like working with Anthony Hopkins in The Human Stain? Unfortunately, I didn't actually get to work with Anthony Hopkins because I was playing his character as a younger man, so we didn't have any scenes together. We shot all of my stuff first, and then Tony was given the footage to watch. So it was almost like he had home movies of his character's youth. And then when they put the whole movie together, I noticed that he'd copied one or two of my mannerisms and put them into his performance, which was thrilling to watch, and incredibly flattering.
Will you venture into feature films again? Time will tell. Right now I'm very busy with the fourth season of the show, but I am starting to think about the future. There are definitely lots of directors I'd like to work with, like Steven Spielberg, Quentin Tarantino and Ang Lee, among others. I'd probably say "yes" to any role they offered, no matter how small. In many ways, once Prison Break comes to an end, I feel like I'll have to start from scratch, really reinvent myself for audiences. Re-educate them as to who I am and what I can do. I think it'll be a lot of work, but really necessary if I'm going to leave Michael Scofield behind.
You famously appeared in two Mariah Carey music videos around the time that Prison Break first hit the airwaves. How did you get that gig? Brett Ratner directed the show's pilot, and after we were done he recommended me to Mariah for her videos. I'd never done a video before and there was no guarantee that the show was going to go anywhere, so I said yes. We shot both videos back to back, and Mariah was a total professional. She really went out of her way to make me feel at home. And then her record was a hit and those videos got a huge amount of airtime, so when the show started up, a lot of people knew me as that guy from the Mariah Carey videos. And I really think it helped launch the show.
Do you have any musical ambitions of your own? After all, you were in the Princeton Tigertones. My singing days are behind me, sadly. After a decade of neglect I can barely carry a tune. But I wouldn't mind doing a movie musical or something -– just as long as there's enough money in the budget to fix my songs in editing.
What do you like to do when you're not working? Most of my free time is spent relaxing, watching DVDs, reading or napping. But I don't spend all my time on the couch. When we were working in Dallas [shooting Prison Break], I did a lot of road-tripping, just little daytrips to small cow towns all over Texas. And I had such a great time. I think that's one of the best perks of the actor's life – time to travel and time to explore the way other people live their lives.
Any favourite vacation spots? My favourite place in all the world is Prospect Park in Brooklyn, New York. It's right up the street from where I grew up. It's the best spot of green on the planet and I try to sneak back there whenever I can. Sitting on a park bench eating a Jamaican beef patty and watching the people go by . . . it doesn't get any better than that. But for sheer drama that's part nature, part man-made, I think Petra in Jordan is one of the most stunning places on Earth. Those incredible ancient facades carved right into the red rock. Unbelievable. Breathtaking.
Have you ever been to Asia? What were your impressions and memories of the places you visited? I've been to Thailand and South Korea, and what I remember most is the amazing food I had in both countries. And I've been hearing that American Chinese food is nothing like the food you actually find in China, so I'm eager to experience that difference for myself. I also remember how polite and friendly the people were. I was very impressed because I'm a big fan of etiquette and manners. It's so important to treat other people with the same degree of respect that you'd like to be treated yourself. That's why I always try to be on my best behaviour when travelling abroad, especially to Asia. There's nothing worse than coming across like the stereotypical "ugly American."
Paraphrasing that old saying "You are what you eat," there's a new one – "You are what you drive." What do you drive and how does it reflect your personality? I think that's a potentially dangerous statement. It's the reason so many people are driving around in big, fancy cars they can't really afford, living larger than their means and getting themselves into trouble. My father always said a car was supposed to get you from point A to point B, and that's basically my theory, too. It's why I don't drive something outrageously expensive. That said, I do drive a hybrid because I think it's important to be environmentally conscious. So I guess that's a statement in and of itself.
Given your college major, I have to ask what books you've read lately? Unfortunately I spend most of my free time reading scripts. But I do have this little stack of books waiting for me to pick them up. I've got The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon, The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson and Darkly Dreaming Dexter by Jeff Lindsay, which I picked up because I liked the TV show Dexter so much. Hopefully I'll get around to them one of these days. It's just a question of when.
You seem to fly pretty well below the paparazzi radar and I'm sure you want things to stay that way. But that leaves fans gasping to know about your social life. You've been quoted as saying you really don't have much of one because you're always working. But come on – give us the real scoop.
Ha , ha ... No
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hodaharb
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Post by hodaharb on Nov 24, 2008 21:11:23 GMT -5
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hodaharb
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Post by hodaharb on Nov 25, 2008 12:25:06 GMT -5
Cosmopoloitan (China) Interview
Preface
Man We Love
Wentworth Miller: You got to run in the right direction
We should thank Chinese Brand Me & City. If Me & City hadn’t invited Wentworth Miler as their spokesperson, we wouldn’t have had such an opportunity to “scream” to him. Yes, wherever he is, right now he has one identity in the world: the handsome man in Prison Break, Michael Scofield. How long could a man take to pursuit his dream without giving up? How long could a man have to wait before question himself whether he made a wrong decision? Wentworth Miller spent almost 10 years to wait and to insist on what he wants. Just like his character, Michael Scofield, he believes in his objective and pursuit it without hesitation, without caring much about rules and conventions. He is smart and confident. In fact, it is not that difficult for a smart and handsome man to win the “scream” from women all around the world if he is given the opportunity to get his face out there. Whereas, this man was annealed by God for ten years, he knows which direction he’s going to run, if he wants.
Interview
Cosmo: Do you want to be a hero like Michael?
Miller: Michael has a heroic charisma. He is very brave and loyal. I admire these qualities that he has, and I want to have these qualities, but in the meantime, Michael is torn between a hero and a crazy. Along with the plot, his heroic quality is fuzzy. I think that is the exciting part about the show. Nobody is really good or bad. Everyone seems in-between. You can’t really tell his difference from other criminals now at this point. To be honest, I don’t want this fuzziness happened on me.
Cosmo: Can acting help you to find a new aspect about yourself?
Miller: yes, I have this sort of feeling. Being an actor is self-challenging, to act inappropriately. In real life, we all have self control, but it is safe in front of camera to cry, laugh, and do something extreme without holding back your emotion. Those things that you can’t express in your daily life can be let out in acting. Some actors may tell you that you must forget about yourself when you are acting, but for me, acting is about finding myself. You exhibit the one that you usually don’t want to exhibit or the one that is inhibited by the real life situation. I think the lesson I learn from being an actor is how a middle-class young man abandons middle-class stereotype mode of thinking and acting, because we have always been told what is appropriate and what is not in our life. I think all of us should have a chance to indulge for a while. Why don’t use this chance to make some money?
Cosmo: Do you feel be trapped for playing the same character for years?
Miller: This could be a challenge. <Law and Order> has a great influence on me, because Sam Waterston is my model. He plays the same character very well over the years. What moves me most is he proves that a TV show can be also as extraordinary as a movie. Being a lead actor in a hit TV show could be my great opportunity as well as a trap.
Cosmo: In a real life, do you have any impulse to break out any convention?
Miller: In fact, we all live in a certain “prison”, or in other words, we are all trapped in a box, constrained by a certain social character. I followed the rules all along my way, finished up my education in Princeton. It is not that easy for me to do some extreme acting like some other actors. My acting experience grows along with Michael. At first, he was a hero only with a brain. But later on, he needs not only his brain, but also his muscle. This is a big challenge for me. I’m proud of my progress.
Cosmo: what’s the reaction of your family to your acting and being famous?
Miller: They are, of course, very exciting about it. My mom watches the show every week. She doesn’t like Michael or anybody else gets hurt. It will upset her, so I have to call her before the show every week to warn her in advance. Yes, I tell her everything.
Cosmo: Do you worry about the future? What if there is no character coming along as good as Michael after the show is over?
Miller: I don’t worry about tomorrow, and I don’t worry about next week. I don’t plan my career step by step because you don’t know what’s gonna happen tomorrow. It’s meaningless to worry about something you can’t predict and control. The only thing you can do is to focus on what you are doing right now and try you best to make it perfect.
Cosmo: Do you feel be tied up by the down-side of being a well-known star?
Miller: You are not grateful if you complain. I don’t complain any down-side of being a star. I also don’t think Michael is a sexy icon. He doesn’t need to be sexy, neither do I. I will eventually say goodbye to Prison Break, say goodbye to Michael. When the time comes, I don’t wanna be looked only as a handsome guy. I will reinvent myself and show other aspects and skills of mine, such as being a producer, being a director, being a writer… I cannot show all of these by playing this character.
Cosmo: Do you want to be a writer? People in the industry say that a good show must have a good script. Do you want to be the person who can control the quality of a show?
Miller: Yes, I do. I think the real person who can control a show’s quality is not the actor, not the writer, not the director, but the editor. When the show is on, you can really feel the power of editing. I also want to be sitting in the editing room and control which scene I want to put in at which point, where I want to insert music, and which scene I want to make it become panoramic. This is the way how you tell a story. I am very interested in this creative control.
Cosmo: I heard that you wrote a romantic script?
Miller: Yes, I did. It’s called Stoker. It is a salute to Bram Stoker, the writer of Dracula. It has a component from the mysterious story of Dracula. This is a sad love story. He is just like all of us to look for love across space. He is a monster, yet wishes his lover to love all of him. However, there is always this blonde hero who appears and puts a stick into his chest and terminates the love he pursuits. I think this is really sad.
Cosmo: Sometimes you have to pretend that you are a fashion icon. What’s your experience?
Miller: When I get up in the morning, I definitely won’t think about how I’m going to be fashionable today. I never thought about being a fashion icon. But I think everybody should have their own symbolic style: being able to pick up the one suitable for you from many jackets, or pick up a unique pair of sunglasses, a watch. Let them become part of you. I think in that way you will have you own unique fashion. I am willing to share my method with you—clever and affordable.
Interview Postscript (my favourite part so sweet)
Wentworth Miller showed up at the shooting point one hour earlier than the originally scheduled interview time, which made all staff hurry-scurry for a moment, because they were used to the lateness of other stars and didn’t expect this. When he wants to drink water, he will offer you one first. If there is only one bottle of water left, he definitely will let ladies have it. He ate the working package lunch with everybody else [translator note: very simple working lunch, 8RMB (1USD) per box, usually has rice and two or three ordinary Chinese dish, not fancy at all] and said it’s delicious. He also thinks the mini Shanghai dumplings are amazing. When we shot on the boat in the Huangpu River, he wasn’t sure whether the people holding cameras on the bank were all his fans, but he kept waving his hands. He doesn’t want to disregard anyone. While shooting, he was slightly embarrassed and said: “I am not a model. I don’t know many poses.” The photographer didn’t mind it at all because every angle of his is just handsome and perfect.
Credit Fallinblue(CaptWentworth) Excomm
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hodaharb
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Post by hodaharb on Nov 27, 2008 12:23:57 GMT -5
The cover of Mr. Fashion magazine,Dec 2008 Thanks to hannah at excomm
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hodaharb
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Post by hodaharb on Dec 11, 2008 14:27:56 GMT -5
From Esquire the latest issue: source: There's nothing new in the interview, but the most interesting part of the article is the interviewer's observation and comments of Went regarding his behaviours and manners while being interviewed. The interviewer mentioned Went felt uneasy while a staff of the Opera and his bodyguard were arguing and Went just walked away to find another corner for this interview, and he avoided the question concerning politics ( if he would vote for Obama ). On the other hand, the interviewer also noticed Went's spontaneous responses to some incidents: he picked up something that a hasty passing-by beautician dropped on the ground and rushed to return it to her; he didn't change his pose very much while shooting, the photographer described him as " reserved and shy"; he was the first one to react at the ending of shooting and yelled: " Finish!", breathing a sigh of relief.... thanks to Wentholic at excomm
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hodaharb
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Post by hodaharb on Dec 11, 2008 14:28:19 GMT -5
From Esquire the latest issue: source: There's nothing new in the interview, but the most interesting part of the article is the interviewer's observation and comments of Went regarding his behaviours and manners while being interviewed. The interviewer mentioned Went felt uneasy while a staff of the Opera and his bodyguard were arguing and Went just walked away to find another corner for this interview, and he avoided the question concerning politics ( if he would vote for Obama ). On the other hand, the interviewer also noticed Went's spontaneous responses to some incidents: he picked up something that a hasty passing-by beautician dropped on the ground and rushed to return it to her; he didn't change his pose very much while shooting, the photographer described him as " reserved and shy"; he was the first one to react at the ending of shooting and yelled: " Finish!", breathing a sigh of relief.... thanks to Wentholic at excomm
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hodaharb
Assistant Director
Posts: 4,355
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Post by hodaharb on Dec 14, 2008 15:20:27 GMT -5
Wentworth in the German In Touch:
She's calling all the time Yes, mom I'm fine! Wentworth Miller has a afraid mom. "Before I shoot a stunt scene, I have to call at home. If I'm not calling her, she's calling all the time telling me, how I scared she is about me. Scanned & Translated by ★SarasAngel★ from Michael&Sara.org
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Helina
Junior Member
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Post by Helina on Jan 14, 2009 15:29:09 GMT -5
Wentworth in the German In Touch:
She's calling all the time Yes, mom I'm fine! Wentworth Miller has a afraid mom. "Before I shoot a stunt scene, I have to call at home. If I'm not calling her, she's calling all the time telling me, how I scared she is about me. Scanned & Translated by ★SarasAngel★ from Michael&Sara.org Is that women (i mean that little pic) his mom?
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Post by genpop40 on Jan 14, 2009 18:40:52 GMT -5
Yes, that's his mom.
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Post by genpop40 on Jan 16, 2009 13:20:18 GMT -5
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Post by ~M on Jan 16, 2009 13:52:03 GMT -5
holy hotnesssss!
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Helina
Junior Member
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Post by Helina on Jan 18, 2009 16:03:31 GMT -5
Wow, even his mom looks beautiful, what a family. And thanks!!! And of course, thank those latest pic`s, god, he looks goooodd Ohh, what i wanna do to him
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~Vera
Director
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Post by ~Vera on Jan 25, 2009 22:20:38 GMT -5
WOW I'm always amazed at how gorgeous he is
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