Saturday, 3 December 2005

LFPress - 03/Dec/2005

Source (http://lfpress.ca/newsstand/Today/Entertainment/2005/12/03/1335434-sun.html not found)
Making It
The London Free Press
December 3rd, 2005

Life philosophy: "Never lose touch with your past while you pursue the future, because they always connect."

The thing most people don't know about me . . . "I love competition."

Perfect night out: Going with close friends to a good, quiet bar in downtown New York.

Perfect night in: At home with his family in London playing 20 Questions or some other parlour game.

London memory: "One of the most important theatrical experiences I had was in Grade 11 when I saw a production of Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie at the Grand Theatre. I was so moved and it's still one of my favourite plays."

Biggest career break: "That's hard to say, but it all started for me at Julliard. The coolest thing was going to Argentina to launch Over There and seeing my picture on a giant billboard."

Personal: Single, living in Los Angeles

Education: A graduate of Lester B. Pearson School for the Performing Arts; Central secondary school and the Julliard Drama Division, New York.

Family: Son of Dr. Tom Macfarlane, UWO's director of student health services, and Penny Macfarlane, a mental health nurse at a London hospital

If I weren't in this career, I'd be . . . A carpenter or a student.

Favourite TV show: "Northern Exposure. I always try to catch it in re-runs. Someday, I'd love to buy a cottage in north Ontario where my family could spend time together."

What's next: "I'm going up to Vancouver to shoot a short film in January. Now that my TV contract is up on Over There, I'm looking forward to reading new scripts. And I will also be doing a bit of travel."

Born and raised in London, actor Luke Macfarlane, 25, appeared in several off- Broadway plays before making his feature film debut last year in Kinsey. He was cast as Bruce, the son of sex researcher Alfred Kinsey, played by Liam Neeson. Macfarlane most recently had a major role in Over There, an FX TV series about American soldiers on their first tour of duty in Iraq. The series' recent cancellation won't discourage the actor, who told The Free Press, "Being in Over There is a wonderful thing, but at the same time, I don't want it to be the highlight of my career."

Tuesday, 11 October 2005

Toronto Star - 11/Oct/2005

Source - deleted
Toronto Star Interview
October 11th, 2005

They are a study in contrasts, these two young and handsome stars of the new Steven Bochco TV series Over There.Erik Palladino, best known as Dr. Dave Malucci on ER, is sitting quietly, waiting for the interview to begin; he's done so many of them over the years. Next to him on the hotel sofa and almost bouncing off it is overly eager Luke MacFarlane, our Canadian content from London, Ont. Over There? It's a huge hit on pay-TV services all over the world: more than 100 countries and still counting. "It tells the truth about the Iraq war if you care to listen," Palladino says proudly. In other words, if you are pro- or anti-war it really makes no difference because Bochco's scripts are dramatizing the conflict in real time. The aim of Over There is to heighten viewer awareness about the triumphs and tragedies on both sides even if military blogs have been after Bochco for some factual blunders (such as misfired battle tactics). "It's not patriotic in any rah-rah sense," MacFarlane says. "That's why the scripts are so great, they mirror reality." And in a unique selling offensive, 20th Century Fox deliberately shopped the series to emerging pay TV and specialty networks around the world from Canada's History TV to Germany's Premier to Latin America's Movie City and the U.K.'s Sky One. Pay TV fare has to be distinctively edgy and substantive and Over There suits that bill. "We already have our pick up for a second season," Palladino reports. Palladino once joked he'd been on the lowest-rated U.S. network series of all time. That would be 1998's DiResta, wouldn't it, Erik? "Right! And then I was on the highest-rated (ER) and you tend to get more respect on the highest rated." And now comes the hottest new cable TV series and "great reviews. We couldn't do this on network TV, really."

Palladino has wracked up fine personal notices as gruff "Sgt. Scream" who really does care about his unit while MacFarlane has scored in his first substantial TV role as "Dim," the college-educated soldier with the floozy wife (Brigid Brannagh) back home. He's called "Dim" because he's in there fighting even though he was at graduate school and could have requested a deferment. Stories oscillate between the soldiers in the field and the families they've left back home. At the beginning the soldiers' ages flash across the screen: 19, 20, 22 ... showing how young and impressionable they all are. "My character is just that little bit older," smiles Palladino. "Meaning he sees that a 19-year-old has this fearless quality ... doesn't ever believe he'd be hit. Well, that kid has to be protected until he learns about death or he'll be a statistic all too soon." Filming of the superbly reconstructed war scenes is done in a canyon at Chatsworth on 25 acres of bulldozed terrain that actually does resemble Iraq. Chatsworth is near enough to Los Angeles that actors can be transported home after a day of play acting at war. "We all went to boot camp," MacFarlane remembers. "And it was pretty tough. We also use the same weapons as real troops but not live ammunition." Shots of the combat show a gauzy haze and oppressive heat conditions bound to wilt any able-bodied actor. "Bochco is there, he's around," MacFarlane reports. "We do see him, he's there for us. But he's more into the script, it's all there in the scenes. And at Chatsworth we have great directors out there."

Like Chris Gerolmo, who directed Citizen X for HBO and gave the premiere episode its distinctive grittiness. MacFarlane, only 25, nods vigorously when it's suggested he's lucky to have landed such a quality role first time out. "Nobody knows that more than me." A 2003 Juilliard drama graduate, he attended New York City's elite arts school for four years on a scholarship. At London's Central Secondary School, Luke first caught the acting bug and co-starred in several high school productions with twin sister Ruth. MacFarlane received astonishingly fine notices for his professional theatre debut last year in an off-Broadway piece called Juvenelia. Said one critic: "MacFarlane is convincing as the dangerously alcohol prone campus stud." Then he was Bruce, the son of sex researcher Alfred Kinsey (Liam Neeson) and wife Clara (Laura Linney) in last year's movie Kinsey. According to news releases, MacFarlane was just one of hundreds of promising actors considered by producer Bochco for the part of Dim. In the same release, Bochco praises the young Canadian "as a very gifted young guy." MacFarlane says it's true he hasn't struggled too much to get where he is. "All I've met are very co-operative people who have helped me along." One of them is veteran Palladino, who at 37, is just about the oldest of the actors to be cast. He describes the audition as "a real stretch. I had studied the script and it was all there and I felt the character coming out. It was a part I had to get." Born in Yonkers, son of a heating contractor and a junior high school teacher, Palladino remains a diehard Yankee although he now lives in California. When he relocated to Los Angeles it was to co-star in the short-lived sitcom Love And Marriage (1996). He then jumped to a recurring part on Murphy Brown and was on the first five episodes of Joan Of Arcadia. Palladino agrees Over There is his biggest "and best" project so far. "It's shot like a movie, very expensive — those war scenes are well planned. I know we're being talked about, it's all I hear everywhere I go." Shooting has just concluded on Season One. Palladino is a race car enthusiast in off months but also says he'll get married this hiatus. MacFarlane, interviewed last week, only wanted to head home and celebrate a Canadian Thanksgiving with his family.

Saturday, 3 September 2005

CANOE CA. - 03/Sep/2005

[Source]
Canadian fit for U.S. TV duty
By NOEL GALLAGHER - London Free Press

Actor Luke Macfarlane is the first to admit he's been lucky.

"Of course, you need talent and hard work -- and I work damned hard -- but it's naive to think that good fortune doesn't play a pretty big part in this business," says the 25-year-old London native, who has a major role in Over There.

The new FX series, which begins its Canadian debut run on History Television on Tuesday night, focuses on a group of American soldiers on their first tour of duty in Iraq.

Over There producer Steven Bochco, whose list of TV hits includes Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law and NYPD Blue, auditioned hundreds of young actors before choosing Macfarlane to play soldier Frank (Dim) Dumphy.

"My character's a smart, intellectual, compassionate guy who finds himself stuck in this war," explains Macfarlane. "I figure I got the role because I wanted and needed the job so darned desperately. Being broke makes you real determined."

Macfarlane, a 2003 graduate of Juilliard Drama Division, attended the elite New York City theatre school's four-year program on a scholarship.

"The most important thing I learned at Julliard is how important theatre can be," he recalls. "I was surrounded by people, both students and teachers, who have devoted their whole lives and careers to the art of acting.

After appearing in several off-Broadway productions, Macfarlane's career was jump-started last year when he won his first feature film assignment in Kinsey. He was cast as Bruce, the son of sex researcher Alfred Kinsey (Liam Neeson) and his wife, Clara, played by Laura Linney, another Julliard drama grad.

"Working with them and a fantastic director like Bill Condon was an invaluable learning experience for me," he says.

Macfarlane got his first stage assignment while attending Lester B. Pearson School for the Performing Arts. He and his Grade 8 classmates Graeme Cornies and Nate Kreiswirth formed the rock band Slipnaught, which became Fellow Nameless, and is now called van A. Primer.

"We were a progressive, alternative rock group with a pop element added," says Macfarlane. "I was just the guy acting like the band's lead singer. Graeme and Nate were the real musical talents."

"That's definitely not true," counters Kreiswirth. "Luke's got an extremely beautiful, emotionally strong and honest singing voice and a very good ear for music. He was also an animated guy onstage and I wasn't surprised when he decided to go to Julliard and become an actor."

Nor was the actor's father, Dr. Tom Macfarlane, the director of student health services at the University of Western Ontario.

"Luke was always a creative, entertaining kid and kept telling us he was going to be either a scientist or an actor," says the seniorMacfarlane, adding that his son refused to allow a learning disability to keep him from being a good student.

"He's dyslexic and it blew me away to see him staying up into the wee hours of the morning, struggling to read and learn things." his father recalls. "He was also a pretty adventuresome character, doing things on the edge, which didn't endear him to us, like going mountainbiking on the side of a cliff or swimming in the Colorado River."

While attending Central secondary school, Macfarlane encountered Ann MacMillan, the drama teacher who became his mentor.

"That's when I fell in love with theatre. Ann treated her students like professionals and got me thinking about an acting career. She really encouraged me to go to New York and audition for Julliard."

At Central, Macfarlane co-starred in several school shows with his twin sister and best friend, Ruth.

"We both loved performing, but Luke had much more ambition than me and the passion, drive and inner strength it takes to succeed in show business," says Ruth Macfarlane, manager of the Waltzing Weasel, a London bar and restaurant. "I always knew Luke would be famous some day."

His mother, Penny Macfarlane, a mental health nurse at a London hospital, realized her son's acting potential the first time she saw him perform in a high school show.

"He just had this charisma about him and just lit up the stage. Luke has got 'the gift' and knows how to use it," she says.

The pursuit of his dream has taken Macfarlane from his hometown London to New York and now to Los Angeles.

"I've got one of the best jobs in the world," says the young actor, but he's also aware of the challenges success creates.

"The hardest thing about this business is that the more you have, or achieve, the more fear there is of of losing it. There's this huge pressure to keep improving and going to that next step.

"For instance, being in Over There is a wonderful thing, but, at the same time, I don't want it to be the highlight of my career."

Friday, 26 August 2005

Los Angeles Times - 26/Aug/2005

[source]

Whither the SUV?

If you thought fuel costs would send the sport utility vehicle into the automotive tar pits, think again. A new species already beckons to the next generation.

August 28, 2005 Patrick J. Kiger | Patrick J. Kiger is co-author of "POPLORICA: A Popular History of the Fads, Mavericks, Inventions, and Lore That Shaped Modern America" (HarperCollins).

At Lexus Santa Monica, Luke MacFarlane, one of the stars of FX Networks' "Over There," is searching for his dream wheels--something stylish in a funky, offbeat way, powerful enough to haul his bike to the mountains, efficient enough that it won't burn a hole through his gasoline credit card or the ozone layer.

The slim, sandy-haired actor--upwardly mobile, outdoorsy, adventurous--looks as if some Madison Avenue image-maker had conjured him up for a sport utility vehicle commercial. And the Lexus RX 400h, plugged by the company as "the world's first luxury gas-electric hybrid SUV," would seem to be the model to bait the 25-year-old. Its estimated city/highway fuel efficiency is 29 miles per gallon, nearly twice what many conventional four-wheel-drives manage. Green-dreaming drivers are biting. As conventional gasoline-powered SUVs collect dust on Southern California car lots, the RX 400h is a comparatively brisk seller at $49,000, brisk enough that there isn't one for MacFarlane to see. He must make do with a glossy brochure and a sales pitch.

Monday, 25 July 2005

Tront Sun - 25/Jul/2005

Source (http://www.calgarysun.com/cgi-bin/publish.cgi?p=97581&x=articles&s=showbiz not found)
Canucks Break Big in Hollywood
July 25th, 2005

BEVERLY HILLS — On every TV press tour, the words of a U.S. network programming executive come ringing back: “If you want to find the next all-American boy or girl, cast a Canadian.”

It is true again this year as several young Canadian actors and actresses have landed key roles on U.S. network shows premiering this fall.

Montreal’s Jennifer Finnigan stars in CBS’s Close To Home, and Calgary native Kari Matchett headlines CTV’s Invasion.

Here are two more with one other thing in common: neither worked a day of their young lives on a Canadian-produced series.

They’re London, Ont., native Luke MacFarlane and Cobie Smulders of Vancouver.

MacFarlane is front and centre on one of the most red, white and blue shows on the schedule: Over There, an unflinching look at the soldiers on the front lines in the on-going war in Iraq. (The FX series premieres Sept. 6 in Canada on History Television).

“We love Luke, he’s a very gifted young guy,” says veteran executive producer Steven Bochco (Hill Street Blues, NYPD Blue).

The Emmy-winning producer looked at hundreds of young actors before choosing MacFarlane for the part of Frank “Dim” Dumphy.

There’s a refreshing “No, sir, yes ma’am” civility to MacFarlane that really does seem to fit some modest, all-American ideal. He really didn’t think much about an acting career while attending Central Secondary School in London, although his drama teacher was encouraging.

The acting bug really bit him at Julliard in New York. A daring role in director Bill Condon’s Kinsey jump-started his career. After missing out on on a part in a “terrible film” he won’t name, he decided to give L.A. a shot.

Within months, he found himself in army fatigues in a sun-drenched California canyon, working alongside ER’s Erik Palladino and others in Over There’s fit young ensemble.

“I’m very lucky, I really haven’t struggled too much, which is probably both a blessing and a curse,” MacFarlane told the Sun from the war zone-like set of his series, shot about an hour north of L.A.

Why does he think young Canadians are so prized in Hollywood? “Maybe we take things a little bit slower,” he muses. “Maybe we’re a little less blinded by the big lights, big city.”


Brightening yesterday’s CBS press sessions was Smulders, the 23-year-old Vancouver native who plays a dream date on CBS’s upcoming Monday night romantic comedy How I Met Your Mother (coming this fall to CBS, and Global in Canada).

Like fellow B.C. babe Kristin Kreuk (Smallville), Smulders smoulders. “Is everyone in Vancouver this beautiful?” asked the reporter from Philadelphia.

Smulders dabbled in modelling before taking a chance on Hollywood, landing How I Met Your Mother — CBS’s big comedy hope for next season — just months after moving to L.A.

“We all said, ‘Okay, that’s Robin,’ ” said executive producer Craig Thomas, a former Letterman writer, of her audition. “She was just perfect.”

Why does Smulders think Canucks score so well in Hollywood?

Growing up in Vancouver helps, she says. Actors can get roles (and southern exposure) on locally-shot U.S. shows such as Smallville without auditioning against the usual Hollywood hordes.

Plus, “Canadians are just great,” she said enthusiastically. “We’re just very good-natured.”

Sunday, 17 July 2005

Los Angeles Times - 17/Jul/2005

[Source]
get real TV / 'REALITY' PALES AS FX GOES TO WAR, A CULT KIDS' SHOW MORPHS AND PUBLIC TV ENDURES. Showing the true horrors of war through fiction

With 'Over There,' Steven Bochco goes beyond battlefront news to underline the awful anxiety troops face in Iraq -- and at home.

July 17, 2005|Tony Perry | Times Staff Writer
In a nondescript industrial warehouse in Chatsworth, something unprecedented, emotionally risky and potentially politically volatile is going on. A drama series is being produced for television about a war that is underway -- a war where the American death toll is mounting, American public support is eroding, and there is no end in sight.
Putting the Iraq war in prime time is obviously risky; certainly Hollywood hasn't come front and center with a big movie about the war, and few books have surfaced yet that depict the brutality of Iraqi combat. Nonetheless, "Over There," which debuts July 27 on FX, intends to portray the blood, horror and brotherhood of U.S. troops in combat in Iraq in a realistic way that surpasses even the daily drumbeat of news stories about insurgent attacks and American casualties.
The challenges the production faces go well beyond the philosophical. On a recent weekday, as the heat and dust in the early summer air gave the set an uncomfortable physical realism, director Jesse Bochco, son of the series' co-creator, Steven Bochco, worked with the actors as they tried to build a corresponding emotional tension. The scene had the soldiers of the Army infantry squad that is the focus of "Over There" confronting their angriest member, a tough, cynical kid from Compton nicknamed Smoke, full of bitterness toward the Army and disdain for other squad members.
Smoke, played by Kirk "Sticky" Jones, was lying on a cot inside a tent that is identical to tents used by U.S. military personnel in camps throughout Iraq. Dim, a college-educated soldier played by Luke MacFarlane, was trying to break down the alienation and anger that separates Smoke from others in the squad. "You blame me, you all blame me," Jones yelled out. As MacFarlane stood up to leave, Jones reached out to him in a wordless sign that, for all their characters' differences, they must depend on each other for survival.
Then came a break, but the actors stayed in character, talking in subdued voices.
Afterward, MacFarlane talked about the responsibility felt by the cast. He has been reading Web logs by soldiers stationed in Iraq, he said, and also a book by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Rick Atkinson about the U.S. assault on Baghdad, "In the Company of Soldiers," to gain insight into the fears and hopes of soldiers in combat.