Tiffany Vogt

Archive for the ‘Haven’ Category

Previewing Syfy’s Christmas Episodes for HAVEN, EUREKA and WAREHOUSE 13

In * Sci-fi columns, * Showcases, * TV Addict, Eureka, Haven, Warehouse 13 on December 5, 2011 at 3:00 pm


As a special treat for fans and new viewers alike, a few of Syfy’s hottest shows are airing holiday episodes.  Each offers a fun-filled look at their characters as they get caught up in holiday misadventures and offer a bit of unexpected warm-hearted fun in the midst of it.  Christmas is a time of year to share gifts and yuletide joy and these holiday episodes embody the best of the season.

Eureka

Taking a page out of some of the holidays’ favorite stories, EUREKA offers a Christmas episode filled with animation and fun.  It is the night before Christmas and not a creature is stirring — well, except for the ones that little Jenna and her siblings Kevin and Zoe dream up.  Unfortunately for Jack, Allison, Fargo, Jo, Henry, Vincent, Andy and Taggart, the kids decide that Jenna should be allowed to open one Christmas present and she chooses an interactive storybook “Holotown” that once fueled with Kevin’s lithium air battery suddenly turns everyone into animated characters.

As the night’s adventures play out, each takes a turn at being cartoons, Claymation figures, and graphic novel characters as they try to figure out what happened and end up fighting off one nasty Snow-Ninja.  Using a little creative ingenuity, our heroes come up with a grand plan to take down the Snow-Ninja and save the town of Eureka before the kids can unknowingly dream up another super villain for them to fend off.

For EUREKA fans, it is a bit disorientating at first to adjust to seeing their favorite characters in non-human form, but the spirit we all love of each shines through and you have a sense the actors were having the time of their lives voicing their characters in this new animated world.

The EUREKA holiday episode invites viewers to laugh and imagine a world where even magic (in the form of  “perception misconception” photons altering their perception of reality) is possible — and if you ever wanted to imagine Taggart as a wooly snowbear, Jo as a Disney princess, or Fargo as a bobblehead, then you are going to love having that wish fulfilled!

 

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Haven

In HAVEN’s Christmas special, the latest “trouble” to hit the quirky town of Haven is “Christmas in July.”  When Audrey beings to see Christmas decorations popping up all around town and hearing Christmas music, no one thinks it is odd.  But Audrey knows that something surely is behind this unexpected wave of Christmas tidings and joy, and her suspicions are fueled as people begin to die and vanish mysteriously around town.

So with Nathan and a reluctant Duke in tow, she attempts to track down the source of the Christmas infection.  But as they attempt to leave town, a huge surprise awaits them and they discover they are trapped.  It becomes a race against time to solve this latest mystery before the infection spreads to everyone in town with potential lethal side-effects.

"Haven"

For fans left anxiously awaiting the fates of our trio of heroes after last season’s climatic cliffhanger, this episode feels out of sequence, but it is still reassuring to see Audrey, Nathan and Duke working together sharing a few stolen moments of happiness before that fateful shot rings out on Duke’s boat.

The love and family-spirit of the episode soon sweeps one up into the merriment.  There are running gags and jokes poking fun at Audrey’s attempt to avoid the sharing in the Christmas season.  So the episode offers a great mystery and a treasure-filled episode for fans and will enchant new viewers too.  The entire episode feels like a delicious Christmas present waiting to be unwrapped.  Don’t miss it!

 

Warehouse 13

Then in the WAREHOUSE 13 holiday episode, it is Pete Lattimer’s worst nightmare come true:  a world without Pete.  After a run-in with a particularly mischievous artifact, Pete awakens to find he is in an alternate reality where he never existed.  In a twist on the “It’s a Wonderful Life” theme, Pete has to find a way to convince his former friends and colleagues to help him in finding the artifact so that he can return to his world.

Pete’s attempts to befriend and convince Artie, Claudia, Myka and Leena that he is not some crazy guy, is hysterical and unexpectedly charming.  This is the Pete we all know and love, the one who can come across completely outrageous and yet adorable at the same time.

Working against Pete is former Warehouse 13 agent Macpherson, who is still alive and kicking in this alternate-timeline and who does not want Pete’s mission to reinstate the other timeline to succeed.  So it is cat-and-mouse game as Pete rounds up the troops and concocts a daring plan to return to his rightful reality.

WAREHOUSE 13 simply scintillates when it returns to its roots, which is the beating heart of its characters.  As Pete rediscovers why his friends follow him no matter what zany adventure he leads them into, he also finds out how much he cherishes them too.  This episode will bring tears to the eyes and put a song in your heart.  It is a rare treat for this holiday season.

So be sure to tune in for the HAVEN, EUREKA and WAREHOUSE 13 holiday episodes to celebrate this Christmas season in the spirit it was intended — with gifts, surprises, and an abundance of love for everyone.  Mark your calendar for Tuesday, December 6th at 8 pm, when Syfy first airs the EUREKA, HAVEN, and WAREHOUSE 13 magnificent holiday episodes!

(And as a reminder, be sure to read the interview with Emily Rose, Colin Ferguson and Eddie McClintock posted HERE to share in a few more chuckles both before and after the episodes!)

 

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MERRY CHRISTMAS!

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Where to find this article:

http://www.thetvaddict.com/2011/12/06/we-preview-syfys-christmas-episodes-of-haven-eureka-and-warehouse-13/

Emily Rose, Colin Ferguson and Eddie McClintock Dish on the Upcoming Syfy Holiday Episodes of HAVEN, EUREKA and WAREHOUSE 13

In * Interviews, * TV Addict, * TV Watchtower, Eureka, Haven, Warehouse 13 on December 4, 2011 at 3:00 pm

Fans are in for a spectacular treat this year!  In honor of the Christmas holiday, Syfy’s hottest shows whipped up a fun and fantastic episode just for the occasion.  On HAVEN, the inhabitants of the supernaturally-afflicted town of Haven start believing that it is Christmas in July – leaving Audrey Parker to track down the “troubled” person virtually on her own as she is the only one who knows that it could not possibly be Christmas.  Then on EUREKA, things take on a different look entirely as an adventure with a special storybook turns its inhabitants into all forms of animated cartoon and Claymation characters.  It’s a wild ride of misadventures until everyone can figure out how to return to the non-animated world for their holiday celebrations.  Then on WAREHOUSE 13, Pete steps in an alternate reality where he does not exist – or rather Pete Lattimer has not been born.  It is adventure for him as he works to persuade the Warehouse 13 team that he is indeed a Warehouse agent and that an artifact must be behind his new reality.

In a recent conference call with press, stars Emily Rose from HAVEN, Colin Ferguson from EUREKA and Eddie McClintock from WAREHOUSE 13 shared a bit about these fun holiday episodes and what it was like living in these alternate holiday worlds.

Eric Balfour and Emily Rose in "Haven"

Based on the season finale of HAVEN, how does the Christmas episode fit into Audrey’s life and how things were left off?

EMILY:  It’s similar . . . It’s non-linear essentially. It’s not in order. It’s an out-of-time sort of episode. Essentially some of what I’ve said before about the episode is: it’s kind of like a little gift to the fans — kind of a holdover type of intermission episode where it’s kind of just its own little gem of an episode. So if you miss the characters and you’ve missed the world, you could hop into it. But we’re really hoping that the fans know not to put it in any kind of sequential order because it won’t pay anything off or reflect on anything. We kind of took all time references out of it so it would just be its own little episode.

 All three shows probably filmed their holiday episodes in July, but HAVEN is the only one that actually built that into the story line. Can you talk about what it was like just trying to get into that Christmas spirit so early in the year?

EMILY: Yes, well we laughed because we film in Nova Scotia, Canada in a small town called Chester. We kind of were laughing. We were like, “We really should have filmed this one first because it’s so cold there the majority of the time that it would have been nice to start out with the Christmas episode and then launch into the rest of the season.” But we had a very, small window of warm weather when we were in Chester. So to be filming it in the middle of the warm weather season, even though that was still pretty cold in Nova Scotia, it was really, really funny. And it’s always fun to see the town sort of come out and taken in the Christmas decorations.  We refaced one of our main theaters in town that a lot of great little shows go on at with a huge marquee and just kind of pumped the town up to this next, like holiday Christmas level. It was fun because we’re not there in Chester over the holidays, so to sort of get a glimpse ahead of what that would be like was really, really neat — although it was totally sunny and no snow anywhere. But still fun; everybody gets in the holiday spirit when you say, “It’s Christmas.” It was great.

Emily Rose

Since Audrey has no real memories of her past Christmases, what’s the meaning of Christmas for her?

EMILY: That’s a great question . . . It’s something that launches Audrey into her journey for that time and that’s what makes her so resistant to be on the journey and that is the thing for her that she has to sort of overcome. I think that’s the great “chestnut” about that character is that the past for her is something that is really hard for her to literally wrap her head around. But what she does remember, whether they’re her memories or not her memories, what she does remember isn’t exactly the most pleasant thing. So how does she overcome that and deal what’s going on in the day? And I think it makes for a pretty interesting episode.

With your character kind of being slightly out of place and slightly out of sync with the rest of the characters in HAVEN, did you find that there were a lot of parallels between Audrey’s experience in the town and this holiday kind of happening at the wrong time?

EMILY: Yes, that’s an interesting question. I mean if there’s a common theme with Audrey consistently feeling like an outsider, and we revisit that scene frequently in the show. It kind of has disappeared a bit in the second season as she’s belonged more in the town. But this holiday episode is definitely one that revisits that because she’s the only one that’s experiencing – or should I say, “Not experiencing Christmas.” She’s the only one that doesn’t think that it’s happening and thinks that it’s foolish and why would it be happening in July? So again, she’s feeling on the outside and has to try to solve things and kind of get everything back on track on her own. But she’s pretty good at that, so nothing to worry about.

Emily Rose and Lucas Bryant

Do you get lots of shippers telling you whom they’d want Audrey with?

EMILY: Oh, yes. I wasn’t aware of that term until – well I’d never heard it until we actually started our show – and then when I got on Twitter and was made aware of all of the fan videos that people were making for Audrey/Nathan and Duke/Audrey, and I heard that term floating around a bunch — which is kind of very funny for our show and where we film. But I’ve been made aware of each and it’s really interesting like to see all the new fan videos and things that pop up for people wanting which relationship to work out. It’s fun for me. It’s good to keep the tension on both ends and it’s a fun thing for me to sit back and watch.

[SPOILER ALERT] What do you think was going through Audrey’s mind once she saw Nathan vanish right before her eyes in the holiday episode?

EMILY: What would we all think if we saw Nathan vanish? Probably the same thing. I think everybody, hopefully, will feel the same way. I think for her it always has to be life or death for her. If she doesn’t believe that it’s really a reality then we really wouldn’t have much of a story or much of a character. So for her, it’s just that sort of initial freak out that one of the only people that kind of walks through this life with her could really be gone. And considering her past and that she’s always lost people and that she’s never had a family, it’s a really big deal when someone like him disappears.

Emily Rose and Eric Balfour

For the HAVEN Christmas episode were there extras hired from the local area in Nova Scotia? And if so, what was it like to work with them and to celebrate Christmas with them in July?

EMILY:  It was really fun, because we end up building great relationships with a lot of the locals that live in Chester. And so the Christmas episode was fun – it was neat for us. We had a writer that was an assistant writer for the entire season as well as for the company for a very long time, and he wrote the episode. This was a fun experience for him. Then we had our producer directing the episode, and then it was kind of like anybody that had been helping us for a while, we kind of threw them into different scenes and got locals involved in any way we could — whether it be like the dog walker or dressing up the local shop a bit differently, or the theater people — all of that. So it was really fun because there was this big communal feeling of just this was a fun episode. It was a blast to do. It’s always weird doing them in July and it’s the last episode we’re doing so we kind of are anxious to get back home, but then we’re also sad that it’s ending for the season. But it’s always a lot of fun.  I think we film like right outside of the Christmas tree capital of the world or something, at least that’s what they claim at Landenberg. So it’s a very holiday festive area anyway in these little tourist towns. So it’s right at home but also a little out of place in July, but a lot of fun nonetheless.

Emily Rose and Eric Balfour

Can you talk about what’s planned for HAVEN coming up after this holiday episode?

EMILY: After the holiday episode? I have no clue what’s going to happen in Season 3! We have not been informed. We’ve just been gearing up for the Christmas episode, which we’re actually excited we got to do this year.  I know it’s a Syfy tradition with their other flagship shows they have, and it’s just that it was exciting to get invited to do that because we got invited to do that before the season started this last year — so I was kind of thinking I was like, “Well, that’s a good faith little move on their part”. And it was really fun to actually be able to do a holiday episode, being that I kind of grew up on them as well. But in terms of what we have beyond the actual Christmas episode, I don’t know what’s coming up. The way this town works with shows shutting down and starting back up again it’s very, kind of kept under wraps for quite a bit, and from us, as well.

Now that HAVEN has shot its first Christmas special do you feel the series has finally come into its own within the Syfy Network?

EMILY: Yes, very much.  I feel really honored to be on this call with Colin and Eddie, and feel honored to be so welcomed into the Syfy family. They did an amazing job of that and I felt the same way when the network asked us to do a Christmas episode. I mean it was kind of like a good faith gesture in I thought to us before the season even started like that, “We want you to be around during the holidays.” It’s like getting invited to a party. It’s like, “Sure, I’ll come. That’s great. You want me to be there? That’s wonderful.” So I do feel like HAVEN is the kind of small town environment that’s conducive to a Christmas episode. So I think that those two things go hand-in-hand. But the fact that it’s sort of like a Stephen King show, it is kind of interesting to be doing like a Christmas episode in that sort of genre. But, definitely, I feel very much welcomed into the Syfy family. It’s neat to be included in that lineup over the holidays; it’s neat to have people want to sit with the characters through that experience, and it’s definitely an honor and a blessing. And I’m super thankful for it!

Eddie McClintock

For WAREHOUSE 13 this is a much heavier kind of a darker holiday episode. Outside of the more recent episodes involving his mother, Pete’s kind of a lighter character, in terms of happy, outgoing personality and stuff. Was it very hard or very different to do this episode?

EDDIE: No. I liked this year’s Christmas episode better because I just felt it was a little too, dare I say, “Schmaltzy, last year.” Not that it was a bad episode. I enjoyed it. But I just like this one better.  I mean Roger Rees is back as Macpherson — there’s an actual bad guy and the stakes are much higher this year . . . But was it harder this year.  Just more great writing from Jack Kenny and company to give Pete the depth that I think that he needs to have longevity in regards to the show.

Macpherson is back. Can you tell us who will or won’t be appearing in the WAREHOUSE 13 episode?

EDDIE: The episode exists out of time. It doesn’t exist within the timeline of the show, so Jinks and everybody is still alive.  There’s been no deaths yet.

Were you a fan of that film “It’s a Wonderful Life” and did you try to incorporate anything from that into your performance in this?

EDDIE: I don’t know. I’ve seen it and I think it’s a great film. I haven’t seen it a bunch of times, so I wasn’t really able to try an incorporate anything into it other than for me just to try and make it an enjoyable show for the fans. Don’t get me wrong, there’s still some good lighthearted, funny stuff and there’s some good heartfelt moments as well. It’s not that dark, but I think what it primarily does is it kind of gives you the same feeling I think that “It’s a Wonderful Life” provided for viewers. Kind of that sense of redemption and struggle and at the end I think it’ll leave everybody nice and happy and ready to go see Santa.

"Warehouse 13"

In the WAREHOUSE 13 holiday episode there are some really touching moments, “What was your favorite moment and what was the most challenging?”

EDDIE: I’m trying to think. I think any chance for Pete to nestle his head between Mrs. Frederic’s ample bosom. I think that’ll be a fan favorite, and that kind of comes out of nowhere. That was really fun because everybody on the show, all the characters on the show are so afraid of Mrs. Frederic and the fact that she ends up spending Christmas with us and Pete gets to give her a big hug at the end. I don’t know if that’s a spoiler or not but that whole scene there at the end with everybody there, and when Pete tells them how happy he is to have them in his life and how much he loves them it was really nice for me because I really feel that way about my castmates.  So it was a sneak chance for me to tell everybody how I felt about them and then just be able to say, “Hey it’s just my character.” So I would say the funnest part for me was the last scene there where everybody kind of comes together.

The WAREHOUSE 13 and HAVEN holiday episodes are kind of standalone and not really kind of part of the timeline of the show. Is the same true with the EUREKA episode?

COLIN: Yes, absolutely. It exists out-of-time, and part of that is a necessity for the writing staff because when you shoot it and all sorts of stuff like that. As well, you want it to be perennial.  You want it to be something that can air every single year. So if you lock it in the continuum of a show, you almost make it outdated by the next year. So I think I you do a service to the holiday, so all of ours exist out-of-time.

"Eureka"

EUREKA’s holiday episode deals with different forms of animation, what was that like?

COLIN: Well, for us it was sort of more of a concept than a reality. We took one of the sets that we usually shoot in, Café Diem, and we sat there for six hours one day and blew through 30 pages of dialogue or something like that. That’s awesome. I mean, if I could shoot like that everyday that’d be the greatest. So we loved that. We didn’t really adjust vocally for any of the animation that we were doing. So I’ve only seen I think the rough version. So I haven’t seen the final tightened version that’s going to go out or air I guess in a couple weeks. But it was really, really fun to see, for myself, to be a Rankin and Bass character like Fred Astaire when he was like S.D. Kluger and it brought me back to when I was a kid. I haven’t seen that stuff in a long time so it was really, really fun to watch.

What kind of is your favorite out of the different animation styles/slash characters in the episode for EUREKA, and why?

COLIN: Probably my favorite is the old Rankin and Bass Claymation style. It’s just not something that anyone does anymore, and nor will they probably ever do it anymore because it’s so low-tech. Like it’s that chunky way that they move, that sort of stutter way that they move. And it’s so cool, I mean it’s so warming, that that was one of those things, when you see all your friends all done up with their Claymation characters, it’s a really sort of amazing thing to see. And we asked for our little dolls — the Claymation dolls — if we could have them afterwards and Curious Pictures said, they said, “You can have them but they’re so beaten by the time they’re done, like they just – they’re completely falling apart.” So they said they wouldn’t even survive a shipping, so we don’t get to have them. But that’s definitely my favorite. Although the anime is really cool, it’s sort of sexy and fun. But as far as a nostalgia thing I would say the Rankin and Bass.

"Eureka"

Do you have any say in how Jack’s animated character was made? And what was your reaction when you saw how he was portrayed as an animated character?

COLIN: I didn’t have any say in it. It was a really long process for them. So to add one more sort of cook in the kitchen would have been a really bad idea. But I was really pleased with how it came out. I mean they’re still not done. They don’t have the final for some of the animation and it airs in like a week. I know that they’re all racing to get it done. I really liked it. I thought it’s really cool to see, where like you have a vision of yourself and I guess what it is for me is my forehead is all wrinkly, because they said like, “Yes, it didn’t look like you until we put wrinkles all across your forehead.” And I was like, “Oh really? Thanks, thanks. Okay, there’s that then.” It’s my face, but apparently without the wrinkles, it’s not quite me. So that’s sort of the indicator that I learned about myself. But it was really, really cool to see other people’s interpretation.

What was it like working on an episode that was produced so radically different from previous episodes?

COLIN: It was really hard. I mean it’s a different prep procedure to do it.  It needs way more lead time, it needs way more — I was talking to Matt about it, who directed it, and he was saying, “It’s really fun in an egotistical way,” because he sort of comes up with a shot and like that’s the shot, like full on, that’s the shot — no one else chimes in, it’s like that’s the shot that tells that these are the stories. So it was a very, very different way to prep and shoot than we’re used to. It was much easier on us as actors and much harder on the production staff — particularly the post-production staff who had to keep sort of a live animation.  I mean, a live action wing going as well as all this animation stuff. And so it stretched them I know, and they’re tired. But for us it was way easier.

Is there anything you can tell us about next season for EUREKA?

COLIN: Yes, I can spoil everything. Well, it’s good. I mean, I think that the season premier for next year should have been the season finale from this year because not only do they address what went on, it makes this crazy left turn that they deal with for the rest of the time. And it’s a really, really cool idea. It’s not what you expect.  You could never guess that it’s coming and it’s the best ending of any episode we’ve had for a season premier.

Is there anything that you would say that we can expect, beyond the season premier of EUREKA?

COLIN: Yes, I guess this season, it’s a great little run that they constructed.  All the guys in LA, the writers — and I like it because everyone sort of comes back. I mean, we have Wallace Shawn coming back.  We have Felicia coming back.  We have Wil Wheaton coming back, and for long stretches. It really sort of feels like we set up our family finally, and it’s a great way to send it off. We actually got an episode where we closed everything off, which is cool. I know the guys are writing, hopefully some sort of spinoff, a next generation EUREKA show that they’re pitching to Syfy.  Who knows if that’s going to get picked up or anything. But, hopefully, the idea will continue. And there’s some really fun, fun stuff that happens this year. It was a good way to send it off so that’s part of it.

"Eureka"

With EUREKA, being now essentially being over once these next episodes have aired, can you actually see the Christmas special continuing with crossovers between EUREKA and WAREHOUSE 13?

COLIN: Oh, that would be great!

EDDIE: Yes, I would.  It would be nice if Pete could actually go to another show. It’s just tough because I’m pretty much in almost all the scenes. I think for the same reason Colin never crossed over is because we’re kind of in every scene of our show so if we can find time to go, I’d love to travel to HAVEN or to ALPHAS, or any of the shows. But I guess it just comes down to network desire and availability for us.

COLIN: Yes, I mean I know that we’re all free. I’m assuming Fargo will come back at some point because that seems to be a popular thing. I’m like Eddie, I’d love to join in. I’d love to jump around and do some stuff wherever people see that it fits. And especially knowing all the guys at this point, I mean it’s great to jump on a plane and go work with your friends for a week so. We really enjoyed it when Allison used to come in, so yes, absolutely!

 What are you looking forward to from the holiday programming? What sort of determines whether or not you’ll watch a particular holiday special this time of year?

COLIN: Well, for me anything that’s good. I mean I’ll go dark or light or happy or sad as long as it sort of has integrity in and of itself and works as a pieces. I mean, I love the Grinch stuff and all the classics that you sort of see once every year and they bring you back to when you were a kid. But I think anything – myself, anything with a moral compass and integrity, I’ll go for that. How about you guys?

EMILY: I usually fall to kind of the old classics that signify like Christmas tradition. For me, sitting down and watching Rudolph and the Grinch, and all of those, all the classics. But I think for me it’s really about if I want to sit with the characters again and if I’ve been missing them for a while and I want to like fit into that place again that I will definitely tune into that.

EDDIE: It’s boobs for me — lots of boobs.

EMILY: Honesty! [Laughter]

Syfy

Can your own personal insight to why holiday specials are such a big tradition in the television culture?

COLIN: That’s a good question.

EDDIE: I guess I’ll start.  It’s a tradition because the television networks have created it and starting back as far as I can remember, like “Miracle on 38th Street,” and it’s a tradition at my house because we can put the kids in front of the TV and the adults can have some quiet time. I suppose that’s what my parents did with me.

COLIN: I think culturally it goes back so far at this point. . . . I mean, it goes to like the end of the year. It’s the most dark that we get solstice-wise of the year. I think it’s a really important time of year, sort of culturally and historically, and I think that’s why we put holiday’s there and that’s why we try to sort of put some brightness into our lives when it’s the darkest day that we get. So that’s what I think.

EMILY:  I think one of the things we love culturally about traditions is it’s something that we all can relate to in different traditions and different ways, but we can all talk about it and all relate to it. I know, as a kid, I loved watching when television sort of merged into my own life. I don’t what that says about my vocation today. But I really loved watching the characters on television go through maybe the same things that we were going through at home — whether it was like getting the Thanksgiving turkey ready or you know, all of the Christmas mayhem.  When these characters go through what our families go through every time we come to hang out. So I think there’s a bit of a joy of peering into an imaginary world with them kind of going through the same things that we do.  It kind of joins our two worlds together. So I think it’s something that we all love to have something that we can count on that makes us laugh and that entertains us. So there’s the old traditional ones, but then it’s exciting to see what new will come about. It’s something to count on.

COLIN: That’s a great answer. I like that answer. I’m doing all my calls with Emily. That’s a great answer.

What would your Christmas wish be for your character’s futures?

EMILY: What an interesting question!

EDDIE: I guess I’d like Pete to find himself a good woman.  He gets tired of being alone at night back at Leena’s.

EMILY: I think I would wish a great holiday online shopping for Audrey. That there would be some great accessible stores for her to go and shop in so that she can continue to have a really amazing wardrobe for the consecutive seasons.  [Laughter]  No, I would always hope for Audrey that she would find out more about her mother or her previous memories or whatnot. I am always be begging writers to dive more into that because it’s so intriguing — and whenever I do get to look into her past, I get to dress up in really cool period costumes. So that’s what I would hope for her.

COLIN: I think for Jack it would be a simpler wish of just raising a family again.  In a sense properly and continuing to do what he does in the town. I think he belongs there. I think the town should sort of go off, you know, and do what it does forever. So I – my wish would be that he gets to settle in and have a real family community small town life. I think it would do well for him to have that.

To see what adventures and Christmas wishes come true in the wonderful worlds of HAVEN, EUREKA and WAREHOUSE 13, be sure to catch the special holiday episodes airing Tuesday, December 6th starting at 8 pm on Syfy.

Where to find this article:

http://www.thetvaddict.com/2011/12/06/emily-rose-colin-ferguson-and-eddie-mcclintock-dish-on-the-upcoming-syfy-holiday-episodes-of-haven-eureka-and-warehouse-13/

 


HAVEN Exuberantly Celebrates Its Third Season Renewal at New York Comic-Con (PHOTOS and VIDEO)

In * Events, * Interviews, * Sci-fi columns, * Showcases, * TV Addict, * TV Watchtower, * Video interviews, Haven on October 18, 2011 at 9:30 pm

Every once in a blue moon, the stars align and something miraculous happens.  In this case, HAVEN’s third season was announced simultaneously with its appearance at New York Comic-Con.  It was perfect timing as it allowed fans to celebrate face-to-face with the cast and creators of HAVEN.  So as NYCC embraced and showcased the supernatural sci-fi series for the first time, fans from around the globe raced to join in the festivities.

As limos arrived, fans streaked through the hallways, and security smiled as both the talent and fans strained to get a glimpse of each other, the air was filled with anticipation.  This was not just a day to celebrate; it was a day to revel in the mutual love-fest from both sides of the entertainment spectrum.  It is a curious symbiotic relationship, for entertainment needs both talent and an appreciative audience.  The most gifted writer or performer in the world is but a voice echoing in a forest without someone to watch and listen.  So when such an occasion arises, it is a joyous thing to be a part of — and the HAVEN panel and autograph signing at NYCC was one such beautiful moment in time.

Emily Rose and Sam Ernst

With gleeful exuberance, the enormous 3,000-seat auditorium filled to capacity.  It was an hour to be remembered.  There was laughter and tears — well, tears from laughing too hard.  Try as one might, it was simply impossible to reign in the impish delight and naughty humor of some of the panelists.  Perhaps the teasing blooper-reel was to blame for setting the devilish tone, but more likely it was just the true natures taking the opportunity presented.  Most of the good-humored antics rested squarely on the shoulders of castmates Lucas Bryant and Eric Balfour, who act more like mischievous teenagers.  Though funny enough, unable to resist the infectious comedy, the rest of the panel were soon joining in.

The HAVEN panel started smoothly enough with a nice introduction discussing the genesis of the show.  Invited as a last-minute special guest, co-creator Charles Ardai shared how he had approached Stephen King to write a story for a book he was publishing and that story ended up being “The Colorado Kid,“ from which HAVEN is based upon.  The story caught Charles’ attention and he thought it would be a great launching point for a television series; so he pitched it to a friend of his, and the next thing he knew, Jim Dunn and Sam Ernst had been brought in to write the pilot.

As Sam explained, after reading the book, he could not see a TV series in it, but in the end, he and Jim tackled it — although the pilot they came up with turned out to be a story with no supernatural elements in it — simply because there had been none in the book.  Unfortunately, the first thing Stephen King said after he read it was, “Where’s the supernatural element?” That’s when Sam and Jim went right back and re-wrote it on Sam’s back-deck — and the rest is history.  Though Jim added, “It was a bit nerve-wracking asking Stephen King to associate his name with THIS!”

The rest may have been history in the sense that HAVEN was ultimately greenlit and ordered to series by Syfy, but there is so much more to the HAVEN story — or rather, the stories HAVEN portrays.  The increasingly labyrinthine stories of Audrey Parker, Nathan Wuornos and Duke Crocker are anything but “history” – they are continually unfolding before our eyes.  As fans and viewers of the show well know, their stories are happening right now.  We have watched with fascination as Audrey Parker arrived in Haven and discovered its supernaturally-infused town of “troubled” inhabitants.  We have swooned with ecstasy as Audrey and Nathan have danced around a tentative flirtation for two seasons.  And we have wondered at the backstory and history between Nathan and Duke and how their respective forefathers have set them on paths that may ultimately have put them in the cross-hairs of a destiny not of their own making.  The mysteries, the “troubled,” the tattoos, the prophecies, the romance and the bonding in the midst of the most extraordinary of circumstances has created a rich tapestry for HAVEN.

Having just watched the climatic second season finale in which Audrey was kidnapped and Nathan and Duke are left in a gun-drawn, stand-off when a shot rings out, the fate of all three of the show’s principal characters hangs in the balance — and fans are biting their nails to find out who survives.

Alas, with humor being in abundance at NYCC, the panelists were more inclined to tickle the fans’ funny-bones than to illuminate and provide any real spoilers on where the show is headed in its third season.

Eric Balfour, Lucas Bryant and Emily Rose

With one note of caution that there may be minor spoilers ahead, here is some of the responses shared during the panel:

For the cast, maybe you could describe your character’s “trouble” and how it may change during the third season?
EMILY:  Audrey’s ability is to help people, and she finds her home in that.  While at times, she feels it is a burden, it is the only thing she knows is true and can hang onto.  As for where that goes for her, that will be interesting.  She will always be pulled into helping others and their emotional issues, while still trying to figure out her own.  But it is always easier to focus on other people’s issues than your own, and she is constantly pulled by that need to help.
LUCAS:  First of all, my name is Nathan Wuornos. I play Lucas Bryant on HAVEN, and as you know Nathan can fly.
SAM:  Hey, you weren’t supposed to give it away!  [laughter]
LUCAS:  People call it a “trouble,” but what is a “trouble”?  What’s so troubling about being remarkably good looking?
ERIC:  He smells fantastic too!  [laughter]
LUCAS:  I don’t look at it as a negative, though some people are just jealous. [Pointing at Eric.]  Let’s see, what were we talking about?  Yeah, my “trouble” — not being about to feel.  I’ve talked about it before, they were looking for an unfeeling actor and they found me.  It’s all good.
SAM:  Why don’t we talk about the change up — the tattoo.
LUCAS: So the tattoo thing, Nathan really felt it.  It really hurt [laughter]
. . . . What’s going to change about Nathan is he’s going to be wearing more ties – uh, what am I talking about again?! [laughter]
ERIC:  As for Duke, his affliction is his horrible, horrible taste in woman.  I mean, one girl turned him into a crotchety old man and almost killed him, another one sought his death and made a death-obsessed OCD guy, then his ex-wife did what? Sold him out — yeah, she was a turn-coat. . . . We found out that Duke had this ability to cure the cursed or to remove the affliction. I think it will be interesting to see how Duke handles that because clearly he is the lunar opposite of Nathan who is in my opinion a much more earnest hero.  I guess it’s like Luke Skywalker and Han Solo. Luke still looks good and fights for what’s right.
LUCAS:  Wait, I’m Luke? Unbelievable. [laughter]
ERIC:  Duke is that sort of reluctant hero, I guess, or maybe not even the hero.  I imagine he is going to struggle and want to push this ability as far away as possible.  It would be my hope – and this is for the writers — that we see Duke in Season 3 not using his ability, but when he does, it is to help Nathan or Audrey.
SAM:  Yet, Duke is a stone-cold killer!

Sam Ernst and Jim Dunn

Then Sam told a story about how he got call from director about how Eric wanted to be allowed to pull the trigger in a scene.  The director figured, “Well, it’s his boat, it’s been hijacked –  well, F-that!” To which Sam replied, “Yeah, F-that!” and then said it had been entirely Eric’s idea.  So they let him hold the sawed-off shotgun 6 inches from the guy’s face and pull the trigger — unfortunately, the guy had taken the bullets out.  But Duke did not know.  Thus, Sam said, “So now this next season, we’re going to test Duke’s badassedness.”  To which Nathan impishly said, “How bad is his ass?!” and Eric retorted, “Well, apparently, it’s on the gag-reel.  Of all the things to cut out of the gag-reel, you didn’t cut that out?!  They cut out all the f-bombs.  There were like 27 in the gag-reel!”  After being reminded there may be children present, Sam laughed and said, “Oh no, this is New York City!” After which a loud cheer erupted from the fans.

One further question that elicited a great response was:

In the finale, there was a gunshot that rang out in the dark and we don’t know who the recipient is yet.  Since Duke was exposed to Dwight’s blood, and he is a bullet magnet, is it possible that Duke either acquired that ability or transmuted Dwight’s ability which could play a factor in that scene, thus preventing Nathan from being shot?
SAM: That is definitely a possibility. . . This is why sci-fi fans  (and we are all sci-fi fans!) are the coolest people on the planet!  Because after you’re done watching — I have to pick a show that is off the air – like MASH, you don’t sit there and wonder if Hawkeye had not removed the spleen and put the patient into a temporal rift, he’s not a zombie, not a True Blood vampire, or an Anne Rice vampire from the first two books.  Hey, we could do this all day — this is why we have the greatest f-ing job in the world!


Other questions raised, but not fully answered during the panel were whether HAVEN is a story more about coping with the “troubles” or resolving the “troubles,” or whether there is a particular “troubled” person who continues to haunt them long after a particular episode.

Though the writers were pretty unambiguous about shooting down the theory that there may be a temporal rift in Haven which could explain the “troubles,” they explained that it was like there are two different sets of people, like political parties, that have to work together and figure out a way to live together.

It was also definitely answered that Duke cannot simply take the afflicted person’s “troubles” away.  Duke is a reaper.  He must kill the person to remove their affliction.  This places a heavy burden on Duke.  He must choose to help by killing those who are suffering from “troubles” or stand by and watch them suffer, knowing he could help them — but only by offering them death.  Is death truly the only option?  According to Sam and Jim, it is.  Though Sam was intrigued by the idea that Duke could transmute the “troubles” and use that power in a different way.

Questions that seemed to stymie the writers a bit were:  Will the seasons ever change in Haven, or will it always be summer?  Where do the “troubled” go once they leave Haven?  Is there a refuge out there for them, or do they simply disappear? Similarly, is there a perfect yin/yang or split-apart symbiotic relationship between the troubled and their soul-mates and thus are only “troubled” when they are separated from each other?

They also did not want to answer just yet the question of when Nathan got the mysterious tattoo on his arm.  Even Lucas seemed to want to know the answer to that question!

On the more definitive side, Sam and Jim were in accord that they hope to bring back Adam Copeland as Dwight next season, schedule and budget permitting.  And everyone agreed that Vince and Dave are definitely hiding something and know a lot more than they are letting on and it is about time they got some answers out of them.

The one juicy tid-bit that was offered came from Charles Ardai who was intrigued by the idea that Vaughn Carpenter’s wife from “As You Were” was also a shape-shifter and he promised he would consider revisiting that storyline if given the chance.  Imagine how much fun that could be!

To see for yourself how humorous and hysterical the panel was in the following are fun video

Provided courtesy of Trchwdspnfan80:

Provided courtesy of Trchwdspnfan80:

Provided courtesy of Tep711:

Provided courtesy of Jessalessa:

Provided courtesy of Jessalessa:

Then providing some additional insight into the psyches of Audrey Parker, Nathan Wuornos and Duke Crocker, the following is a video of interview clips from the press room:

And for the fan always looking to peek a bit more behind the curtain, here’s where to find photos from the autograph signing showing the cast and writers hard at work chatting with the fans HERE.

Eric Balfour, Lucas Bryant and Emily Rose

HAVEN certainly knew how to bring down the house with its lively repartee and wild enthusiasm during the panel and their warm, welcoming stance with their fans during the autograph signing. So much so that the cast literally had to be pulled away from the fans to leave!

As all good things must come to an end, such a magnificent day had to end as well.  But it left a glorious impression as everyone left happy having been a part of this wondrous event.  As the HAVEN stories continue in its third season, here is to hoping for more fun-filled adventures at future conventions.  ‘Til then, let’s countdown the clock to Season 3!  Is it July 2012 yet?!

Sneak peek at the “Haven” holiday episode airing December, 6, 2011:

In the meantime, in case you missed them, here are some earlier articles from interviews with the cast that you may find illuminating now that the second season has concluded:

***Lucas Bryant Talks About the Nathan-Audrey Romance on HAVEN and What To Expect In the Season Finale

***Syfy’s HAVEN Continues To Be A Summer Thriller

***Emily Rose Talks About the Many Men of Audrey Parker on HAVEN

***Why You’re Missing Out If You’re Not Watching Syfy’s HAVEN (with video interviews)

***Cristián de la Fuente Previews His Killer Role on HAVEN

***Eric Balfour Offers Special Insight into the Mysterious World of Syfy’s HAVEN

***Comic-Con 2011: Candid photos of HAVEN stars Emily Rose and Eric Balfour


Where to find this article:

http://www.thetvaddict.com/2011/10/18/haven-at-new-york-comic-con/

Celebrating HAVEN’s 3rd season renewal with photos highlighting its past two seasons!

In * TV Watchtower, Haven on October 12, 2011 at 6:49 pm

For fans as we celebrate today’s fun news that HAVEN has been renewed for a 3rd season!

Links to articles about “Haven” in case you missed them!

*** PHOTOS from NYCC autograph signing with cast of HAVEN

*** VIDEO clips of interviews from NYCC press room with cast of HAVEN

***Lucas Bryant Talks About the Nathan-Audrey Romance on HAVEN and What To Expect In the Season Finale

***Syfy’s HAVEN Continues To Be A Summer Thriller

***Emily Rose Talks About the Many Men of Audrey Parker on HAVEN

***Why You’re Missing Out If You’re Not Watching Syfy’s HAVEN (with video interviews)

***Cristián de la Fuente Previews His Killer Role on HAVEN

***Eric Balfour Offers Special Insight into the Mysterious World of Syfy’s HAVEN

***Comic-Con 2011: Candid photos of HAVEN stars Emily Rose and Eric Balfour

125 Reasons You Should be Watching Syfy’s Haven:

Lucas Bryant Talks About the Nathan-Audrey Romance on HAVEN and What To Expect In the Season Finale

In * Interviews, * TV Addict, * TV Watchtower, Haven on September 30, 2011 at 2:00 pm

After such a momentous season and last week’s big kiss between Nathan and Audrey on HAVEN, Lucas Bryant shared in a recent conference call with press what lies ahead for the star-crossed lovers and whether the season will provide the answers fans are clamoring for or if there will be another cliff-hanging shocker like last year.  Surely, in the HAVEN-world, nothing will be that easy to resolve, nor that easy to predict!

How do you feel about how Audrey and Nathan’s relationship is changing?

LUCAS: Well it’s been a long time coming, and it is exciting. I think a lot of fans got what they wanted this past episode. I mean, a taste of it anyway. Maybe some were horrified, but I hope there’s not too many of those. But I’m sorry to say I don’t see it progressing as easily as one might hope and realize. I mean, there’s definitely going to be some roadblocks and speed-bumps. I can’t and won’t tell you exactly what they are, and I don’t know the half of them. But I think that puts us on a trajectory that has potential to be lovely, but will probably and inevitably be very difficult and potentially dangerous.

For a lot of the people that are troubled, it seems like once they end up with like the people they are meant to be with, their trouble becomes a bit more manageable, and in some cases even goes away. Do you think that that could be why Nathan can feel Audrey’s touch? Is that a sign that they’re meant for each other?

LUCAS: I think that’s definitely in Nathan’s mind — there’s some feeling of fate there. Like she’s the only one that he can feel and for anyone to have that effect on him, I think it puts their relationship up in high standing. But I hope — I guess it’s interesting what you’re saying, like in other cases when people are with the ones they’re meant to be with that sort of negates their troubles. And I guess that speaks to the fact that “troubles” sort of manifests when there’s a stressor and that manifests them. So I guess if people are happy or content or keep it mellow, they can sometimes sort of circumvent their afflictions. So I hope that them getting together doesn’t negate Audrey’s capability, like that their abilities or afflictions don’t cancel each other out. But that could be a good reason for them not to be together, couldn’t it?

Your work in last week’s episode, when you’re at the meeting after Audrey kissed you, was absolute perfection.

LUCAS: Oh, thank you.  Yes, that was a big moment.  We really were concerned about getting it right and I think it landed well. So I’m very happy about that.

How did the dynamic between Audrey and Chris Brody impact the way Nathan feels about her?

LUCAS: Oh, well I suppose, as I’m sure you’ve noticed, Nathan is never too sure of himself. And so I guess that was just an example of what can happen when you wait. So I think things that have taken place over the last couple of episodes have forced him to be a bit more forthcoming about where he stands and forced him to address how he feels about her. And I think that’s a good place for him to be because he’s a pleasure to play. He’s wrestling with asserting himself and being forthcoming, and the general effect that she’s had on him — which is to push him to man up — so it’s really fun to be a sort of long uncomfortable guy, trying to step up.

What do you think intimidates Nathan or scares him about pursuing a relationship with Audrey?

LUCAS: Well, I guess first of all, he is intimidated and/or scared by her period, because he is just that way. Not so comfortable letting it all hang out, and also because I think he has a great friendship with her and mutual trust  and the last thing he wants to do is screw that up. Not that that has to inevitably be the way it works out, but I think as with any good relationship, there’s a lot of trepidation that comes with taking it any further.

What keeps challenging you about the role of Nathan?

LUCAS: Oh, wow. Well, I guess one of the most fun and challenging things to do is explore how he progresses as a man when he has so many socially awkward issues. On the one hand, he’s totally comfortable in his role and relationships in the town. People, I think, have generally a good feeling about him. And he’s a good guy, but he’s not terribly excellent at expressing himself. And so any time that Nathan’s put in a awkward situation, often with Duke or with women or with his emotions, that is a real pleasure and challenge to work through.

What would you say is your favorite and least favorite characteristic of portraying Nathan?

LUCAS:  Favorite and least favorite. I like the fact that he’s like terribly reserved and somewhat uncomfortable in social interactions. But then at the same time, have the sense that he does have a great and sort of strange sense of humor, and more quirky and weird personality than we get to see all the time. Like his terrible dancing ability which that was totally ridiculous to shoot and even more awkward to watch.  But that was a lot of fun. That might also be my least favorite of Nathan’s characteristics is his terrible dancing. . . . I guess I just want him to pull the trigger. Not literally, but it’s like, ‘Man do something!  Tell her. Do it, kiss her, step forward.’ You know, push him, whatever. I mean he’s still sort of fighting in self-imposed handcuffs.

Nathan and Audrey "Haven"

If you could give Nathan one piece of advice, what would it be?

LUCAS: Stop worrying so much and just go for it, man. And I guess that’s what happened a little bit at the end of Episode 11, right? When he has that realization and he’s at the meeting, and he says to Vincent and Dwight that, ‘Sometimes taking risks pays off.’ So hopefully he learns that lesson, and that’s not just a moment of fleeting feeling for him. Because I think if we get to see him taking a lot more risks, that would be first of all dramatically exciting and then a lot of fun for me to play. But also great for him as a character.

For you as an actor, playing a character who theoretically can’t feel anything, is there any specific things you have to do in your performance in creating this character to convey that??

LUCAS: Well, I guess I initially in the first season when we were starting, there was a lot of experimentation, figuring out what the heck that looked like and how I was going to maintain that. And then there’s something magical that happened. When you’re playing a character like that for so long, and especially like I was saying, when we’re living in this small town so far away from home, and you’re just kind of living it, and you’re in it. And it starts to seep into your being in your regular life to. So I would go around and slam my hand on the car door after work and not even feel it, and realize that Nathan was me. I mean, it just becomes — much to my wife’s chagrin sometimes when she’s trying to have a conversations with me, and I’m giving like monotonous monosyllabic answers.  She’s like, ‘You’ve got to stop doing that show!’ But, it’s always like – what was that episode where [Nathan] got his feelings back for a little while? It was hilarious to play, and so fun to have those little moments where he is reveling in what that’s like to feel after not having that feeling for so long. So I just try and find every opportunity that I can. Whether it’s just bumping into doorframes as you pass them or pressing pencils too hard into my forearm. Just to give sort of physical indications of that affliction. And then I think like I was saying, that it just happens after awhile, it’s just second nature. Like this character the emotional distance that that physical distance forces just in his interactions with people in general. That just kind of starts happening, the stand-offish and awkward physicality.

Is there a characteristic that Nathan has that has taken time adjust to it?

LUCAS: Well, I guess the overall characteristic of being reserved — someone that doesn’t wear his heart on his sleeve. It’s strange, because he kind of does in many nonverbal ways. So it was that: how to communicate the heart and soul of this guy that was so unwilling or unable to communicate it verbally. And that I think that just came with trust and experimentation. And then seeing it back — then after a while you’re like, ‘Yes, this guy does make sense.’ So now I think it’s a much more comfortable thing to portray. But like going into the second season when we started shooting the first episode, I remember thinking, ‘Aww man, what was this guy like to begin with? I just stand still and that’s him? I just stand still and speak in simple sentences and very quietly and I’ll be him again?’ I remember being a bit nervous about that. But as soon as I did, I was like, ‘Oh yes, there he is.’

In the episode “Lockdown,’ the scene that you filmed where Nathan was with the Dwight, and Dwight saved Nathan, and Dwight said, “Well, bullets seem to find me,” it looked like you were about to crack-up. Can you tell us a bit about filing that scene?

LUCAS: Well, first of all, I must say after watching this whole season so far, Adam Copeland (otherwise known as WWE Superstar Edge) is fantastic and I could not be any happier with the fact that he’s joined our cast. He is a really, really an awesome guy, and like a total sweetheart, very professional. I mean, I think his work has been fantastic. And people are so into his character and his performance, he’s a blast. So that said, working with him has been a total pleasure. And I thought in that scene, Nathan doesn’t have many buddies, and very few opportunities to have this sort of bonding moment with another guy. So both Adam and I were thinking and looking for ways to really make that connection. And I think I wanted to communicate in an honest sense – like how funny I think that trouble is. I mean it’s totally ridiculous. He is a bullet-magnet! I mean, it’s a bit silly and dangerous. And then in the episode where we’re chasing the Wendigos in the woods and I say to him initially, ‘Dude, you can’t come with us — like everyone’s got guns. So basically you’re going to turn all of our weapons into completely useless devices and our hands that will only kill you. Thanks.’ So, yes, I was about to crack up, and I think he played it perfectly too, with this sort of like, ‘Yeah, man, I know.  Its kind of ludicrous, but this is what I’m dealing with.’ So I think if you saw me about to crack up, you’re absolutely right, because I was.

Could you talk a little bit about the like stunts that you do and the effects and that?

LUCAS: Sure. Well, this year I didn’t have too many crazy stunts. Most of them involved people flying into the water or flying walk out of the water. Kris Wood, who does our visual effects, I think is totally cool and ridiculously capable. And it’s become an act of faith to shoot this stuff in front of a green screen or to imagine something that’s not there, but we’re all getting much more comfortable with just doing it. Because I think if you think too much about it, then it becomes ridiculous. But if you let your 6-year-old mind just pretend, then I’ve been really happy with how things have been working out. And I like to do as many of my own stunts as they’ll let me. But I understand sometimes when they don’t, because I’ve seen how banged up these guys get. And I might like the experience of doing it, but I wouldn’t necessarily like the aftermath.

How would you describe Nathan’s relationship with Duke? It’s a very complicated relationship.

LUCAS: It is very complicated, and you’re going to understand a bit more about why in the season finale. And I’m really happy about that. I mean we know something about their complicated history, but there’s a really great reveal in the season finale that doesn’t explain fully their relationship, but gives a lot more insight into why it is what it is. And I have such a blast with him myself. He’s a great actor and he’s a lot of fun to play with and work with. Any time we get to buddy-up with for a moment or be at odds is a pleasure. And  I think it’s something that fans have enjoyed as much as I have, so it’s a blast. Beginning to understand more why they are the way they are, which we do in the finale, is I think going to add a lot more weight to that relationship.

Is it hard for you and Eric [Balfour] a lot of times to go through scenes without laughing?

LUCAS: Actually, yes. The two of us get along quite well and screw around a lot in our real lives. So when we get to play together on screen, it’s a blast. And especially this year, I think everyone was a lot more comfortable in their roles and a lot more comfortable in the show. So there was probably to the chagrin of the producers and directors occasionally. There were a lot more laughs this year than we had in the first season, and it took us a lot more time to get things done. We’ll try to be a bit more professional next year. But, at the same time, I mean it’s a blast to have such great people that would play around with every day too.

Is there something specific that you would like to see happen for Nathan?

LUCAS: I would like to see his house. I don’t know if that’s going to happen, but I’d like to see a bit more of his home life, if he has one. What that home is. Is it just the tent that he pitched on the back of the police station? Does he have like a large sort of locker that he sleeps in at the police station? Does he live in a cabin in the woods? Does he have a trailer that’s on the coast, you know? Yes, I’d like to see a bit more of that. But story wise, well like I was saying before, if he could just step up and risk taking more risks, I think he’s got a lot of potential, power and danger and anger and good love if he could just step things up, that would be lovely. And I guess that would also include seeing his home. Because I want to know more about who the guy is when he’s just chilling.

What do you think that Nathan saw in his vision in the episode “Fear and Loathing”?

LUCAS: I don’t know actually what he saw, but I do hope that we get to know. But I don’t think that will happen for many seasons. And actually I don’t have a clue what it is. But I hope that writers, who are much smarter than I am, can bring that one out someday and it will knock all of our socks off. I don’t know what it is, but- I think it has something to do either with his childhood and/or his fate. You know, like a vision, like Duke’s, but hopefully not a tattooed guy reaching for me!

Can you talk about what it’s like to work in Nova Scotia for the last couple of years?

LUCAS:  So you know, from LA it’s not an easy commute. Not that I go home to LA everyday after work. But I realize I could live in Germany and commute to Halifax more easily than I can from LA. So just specifically getting there is a haul and I think that’s something that serves the show well. We’re an hour down the South Shore from Halifax, mostly around the Chester area. And so we feel really removed from all other parts of our regular life. And I think that’s a perfect ingredient to the remoteness that is HAVEN — it is another world there. It’s a beautiful, tiny little town. I grew up in a small town in Ontario, so I sort of have a love/hate relationship with small towns. But I must say, I’ve enjoyed being in Chester because I have a three-year-old daughter now. And so she cruises around and has swimming lessons and a bunch of great little friends. And we get ice cream every day.  It’s sort of Norman Rockwell. Sit and watch the boats. So that’s really fantastic. But yet just that feeling of all being apart and away together, there’s a number of people camped out there.  I really feels like it’s summer camp for big kids. We’re all away from home, hanging out together, doing this weird thing. And so you really do form a key sense of community and family, and it’s just a pleasure and honor to be a part of. And then the community itself is so welcoming and great with us, it’s amazing.

Have you seen the final version of the finale yet?

LUCAS: I have not.  I don’t know if they cut out the whole second half of it yet — I might not even be in the finale at all. [laughter]

Do you know if there will be another cliffhanger like last year?

LUCAS: There are some definite cliffhangers. I mean, it would be nice to say that everything is revealed and they figure out how to end the “troubles” and everyone lives happily ever after. But we want to do another 10 seasons, so you’ll get some great answers and learn some crazy stuff.  And we’ll see if people think that it’s as rug-pulling as the season one finale was. But there’s definitely some huge, big precipitous at the end.

Do you know what might be in store for season three?

LUCAS: I don’t. I have completely given up trying to get my head around what the heck is going on here. There’s stuff that they want to keep from us. But then I don’t necessarily want to know the things that Nathan doesn’t know. I enjoy it discovering it as we go, as he does. So I don’t know. I mean, I hear some rumblings about potential storylines, but then I imagine those will all change as well in the writer’s room as they hash things out. So I’m as clueless as you.

Since we see a shot of Nicholas Campbell in the preview, can you talk a bit about where Nathan’s at and where he winds up at the end of the season?

LUCAS: I guess that’s been leaked hasn’t it by Syfy themselves. Yes, we get to see the Chief or some version thereof in the second season finale. And thank god, I mean I was so excited for that. I love Nick. I think he’s a fantastic actor and person and a great character. So I’m really happy that he’s back for this episode at least. And hopefully there’s potential for more. The conversation that Nathan and the Chief have in the season finale is revealing. But, how do I say this, it also doesn’t reveal everything that it could. So I believe there’s going to be large ramifications from it, which we won’t necessarily come to understand until – god willing — season three, four or five. So it’s a big moment obviously for the character, and also for the show. But saying this, I wonder if people when they watch the show will be like, ‘What the hell was Lucas talking about because I didn’t see that?’ Let me just say that there’s more to their interaction than we necessarily experience now. Boy that’s a bit vague, isn’t it?

To find out if the promise of a rose-colored future between Nathan and Audrey lies in store and what kind of fatherly advice the Chief may have from the grave for Nathan, be sure to tune in for the sensational season finale of HAVEN on Friday, September 30th at 10:00 p.m. on Syfy.

Links to articles about “Haven” in case you missed them!

*** PHOTOS from NYCC autograph signing with cast of HAVEN

*** VIDEO clips of interviews from NYCC press room with cast of HAVEN

***Syfy’s HAVEN Continues To Be A Summer Thriller

***Emily Rose Talks About the Many Men of Audrey Parker on HAVEN

***Why You’re Missing Out If You’re Not Watching Syfy’s HAVEN (with video interviews)

***Cristián de la Fuente Previews His Killer Role on HAVEN

***Eric Balfour Offers Special Insight into the Mysterious World of Syfy’s HAVEN

***Comic-Con 2011: Candid photos of HAVEN stars Emily Rose and Eric Balfour

Where to find this article:

http://www.thetvaddict.com/2011/09/30/haven-preview-season-finale-interview-lucas-bryant/



Syfy’s HAVEN Continues To Be A Summer Thriller

In * Sci-fi columns, * Showcases, * TV Addict, * TV Watchtower, Haven on September 23, 2011 at 2:05 pm

As the second season of Syfy’s supernatural series HAVEN wraps up its summer season for a long winter of hibernation, fans are holding their breath wondering if the big mythology arcs of this season will be nicely tied up with a bow, or if we will be left-hanging with a wallop of a cliff-hanger.   Either way, we are sitting on the edge of our seats, anxiously awaiting what is next.

After a summer filled with doppelgangers, a thief stealing abilities, renegade machines, demonic trees, time-loops, fish people, a man whose dark side manifests in copycats, a poisonous abuse victim, and flesh eating children, HAVEN has explored a variety of creepy and yet haunting stories of those affected by the “troubles” and the agony it wreaks in their lives – and all does not necessary end well for those caught up in these events.   For some, living in the town of Haven is not a blessing, but it is a curse and one that they desperately would love to have gone from their lives.

Friday night’s penultimate episode before the big Season 2 finale on September 30th promises to be riveting.  The episode entitled “Business As Usual” is likely to be anything but usual:  someone is leaving mummified dead bodies around Haven.  While deputies Nathan Wournos and Audrey Parker are tied up with that mystifying mystery, local smuggler, part-time businessman Duke Crocker is struggling with his own inner demons.

After last week’s shocking death of Reverend Driscoll, who took with him to the grave the secrets that Duke desperately sought about his father and the mysterious tattooed man who is prophesied to kill him, it is fair to say that Duke will be at odds with his former frenemies.  After all, Audrey killed the good ole Reverend when she could have easily maimed him.  That plus the fact that Nathan and Audrey seem to be getting closer is going to push more than a few “hot buttons” with Duke.  Fresh off the loss of both the Reverend and his estranged wife, Evi, Duke is looking for blood. Answers are not good enough; he needs to even the playing field a bit.  But will Duke find that he still has a heart of gold under all his self-serving and vengeful instincts?  Surely the past two seasons of friendship with Audrey and Nathan will not be so easily cast aside in a fit anger and pique.

In addition, will the looming romantic entanglement of Nathan and Audrey truly blossom into a relationship or will they continue flirting with fate and each other? Last season’s revelation that Nathan (who is afflicted with the inability to feel anyone or anything) can actually feel Audrey’s touch, whipped fans into a frenzy.  As the show continued to lace the series with bread-crumbs allowing fans to follow the star-crossed love story of Nathan and Audrey, it was a delicious treat to watch Nathan react with near ecstasy with each and every touch.  It was also that unique revelation that clued in Nathan that Audrey had been replaced by a desperate shape-shifter last season, which also provided one of the most touching episodes to date when Nathan thought he had lost Audrey forever.  The subsequent episodes and the episodes of this season have introduced barriers to the Nathan-Audrey relationship, but the boiling sexual tension must be satisfied at some point and with a rumored kiss on the horizon, this is the time to be watching this show.

With Evi’s death and Chris Brody (Audrey’s summer fling) rendered to the wings of the show for the moment, another friendly face has been introduced to aid in Haven’s “troubles”:  Dwight Hendrickson– Haven’s “cleaner” (portrayed by WWE’s The Edge, Adam Copeland) – who has surfaced as the go-to guy in a pinch.  Dwight not only cleans up the nastier side of Haven’s “troubles,” he is a handy guy to have around when the bullets start flying — for as he wryly told Nathan, “bullets seem to find me.”  Alas, while bullets may zero in on Dwight as if he were a human-magnet, Dwight is not bullet-proof. And if the previews of this next episode are any indication, Dwight’s ability will not be a blessing when he tangles with Duke and shots are fired.

Just what is going on in Haven and whether its mysteries will be resolved or if there are threads to be followed into the next season remains to be seen.  But one thing we are desperate to find out is whether Dwight and Duke will live to see the remainder of the season and whether Nathan and Audrey will continue their delicate dance around each other.  As the season comes to a close: will death-come-a-knocking or will romance blossom?  And will we ever find out exactly who Audrey Parker really is?

After the discovery that Audrey Parker is not actually Audrey Parker and merely has the memories of another woman, the question of who Audrey is has been hanging over the show.  Just who she is, why she does not remember her past and why she or someone else felt it was necessary for her to steal someone else’s identity is a massive mystery.  Local newspapermen Vince and Dave Teagues clearly know more than they are telling about Audrey’s past and how it connects to a woman who looks exactly like her, Lucy, who came to Haven several years ago, but they are keeping that secret to themselves for the time being.  It begs the question of whether Audrey could really be Lucy and if so, how could she have not aged one day in the intervening 27 years?  It boggles the mind to conceive of it, but given Audrey’s natural ability to be immune to most of the town’s “troubles,” perhaps one of her special abilities is regeneration or the ability to defy aging.

Whatever is going on in Haven, it has ensnared Audrey, Nathan and Duke in a collision-course with some yet unknown enemy.  Who exactly is the puppet-master behind the curtain and bringing all these “troubles” to their world remains to be seen; for surely, a curse does not manifest on its own without a little help from someone or something.

To find out what lies ahead for Duke, Nathan, Audrey and Dwight and their destiny-intertwined fates, be sure to tune-in Friday, September 23rd at 10:00 p.m. on Syfy.

And for those curious to learn more about HAVEN, see my prior article “Why You Are Missing Out If You Are Not Watching HAVEN.”

Where to find this article:

http://www.thetvaddict.com/2011/09/23/summer-lovin-had-us-a-blast-we-preview-havens-penultimate-episode-of-the-season/

Cristián de la Fuente Previews His Killer Role on HAVEN

In * Interviews, * TV Addict, * TV Watchtower, Haven on September 2, 2011 at 4:00 am

There’s a serial killer loose in Haven! Special guest star Cristián de la Fuente took a few minutes to chat with press in a recent conference call about his highly unusual role on HAVEN. Cristián plays a mild-mannered banker with a twisted secret that is about to be unleashed on the unsuspected town of Haven.

What can you share about the character Cornell, which you are playing on HAVEN?
CRISTIÁN: It was a great challenge and I don’t want to give too much about the character because there’s going to be a lot of surprises that you’re going to find out during the episode. But it’s not your average evil twin story — it’s that incarnation of all your bad thoughts. That one day you wake up and you’re facing them. All your thoughts are materialized in a person that looks exactly like you and you’re confronted by them.

How did you come to get this role on HAVEN?
CRISTIÁN: I met the producers of the show a while ago when we were working on other stuff with them, and then one day we were talking and they say, ‘Oh, we have this idea of this character that would be great for you to play!’ And when they described the character to me it was a great challenge and I was like, ‘Oh, let’s do it right now!’ I’ve never played myself twice and it’s a great challenge.

How would you compare this to your role in IN PLAIN SIGHT? What’s different, challenge-wise and everything?
CRISTIÁN: The biggest challenge is, in IN PLAIN SIGHT, I had to act with Mary McCormack and here I was acting with myself. So talking to yourself is kind of a challenge. And doing all the scenes more than twice, because you do it all from one character and then you do it from the other character. And then always have in mind and being very careful that you’re not confusing them, especially in HAVEN as they both were raised the same way and they were almost twins. To be able to understand, ‘Okay, now I’m playing one Cornell, and now I’m playing the other version of Cornell.’ So being very focused in trying to not confuse the characters.

At the end of last week’s episode of HAVEN, they gave us a sneak peek into your episode tonight, and we saw that Cornell looked like he’s about to kill himself. So is what Bad Cornell doing to Good Cornell, is that really happening?
CRISTIÁN: As you know, we call them that in order to make a difference. It’s easier – the Good Cornell or the Bad Cornell. But, at the end, we realize that the Good Cornell is not that good. But let’s try to keep it simple, so the Good Cornell and the Bad Cornell. When the Good Cornell wakes up and realizes that the Bad Cornell is trying to do something that he doesn’t want to happen, because it’s something that he’s been keeping as a secret and he doesn’t want that secret to go out or to really deal with it. Many, many times in life we have things that we don’t deal with, but all of a sudden this Good Cornell one day wakes and he has this version of him that wants to do all the things that he hasn’t done and wants to really face all the problems that he hasn’t been able to face. So, that’s when he gets scared and he starts to kill his versions.

What inspired you to take on such a controversial role on HAVEN?
CRISTIÁN: As an actor you always want challenges. My first challenge was to come all the way from Chile and start acting in a different language. That was my first challenge. When I did that then I started doing drama. When I did drama then I wanted to do sitcoms. And then, do different roles and then go back to Spanish, go back to English. And then, when this character was presented to me and they told me about it, it was a great challenge. It was something that I’ve never done. I’ve never been able to play two characters at the same time and acting with myself, which is something that is, thanks to technology now, it’s very easy to do. But, it’s something that you don’t get to do very often unless you’re living with a mirror. So it was a great idea and a great experience, and I’m very happy I was able to do it.

Can you tell us a bit about which part you enjoyed playing more? Such as you mentioned how the good one would play the bad one and that you enjoyed playing the bad character.
CRISTIÁN: Of course, the Bad Cornell. We always have to be good in life. You can’t run a stop light. You can’t speed. You can’t eat too much of anything. You always need to measure up, and because you have to interact with society with yourself there’s a lot of rules that we have. But Cornell, the bad version of Cornell, doesn’t have any rules. So it’s great to play that little craziness that we have and do things that you would never do.

What do you think you’ve learned about yourself since you worked on HAVEN?
CRISTIÁN: That probably there’s a bipolar part of me that I didn’t know, because it was easy to talk to me!

What other character did you interact with the most on HAVEN, besides just your two characters of yourself?
CRISTIÁN: Well, everybody of the show — with Emily, with Lucas, with Eric — but with Emily, I had a little more scenes than with the rest.

And beyond the police force of HAVEN, were you interacting with any of the other characters on the show, the Reverend, or any of those characters?
CRISTIÁN: No. Just with myself, that was a lot! [laughter]

Was the storyline mainly based on your character or were there any other storyline plots going through this episode?
CRISTIÁN: Well, there’s also something that happens with a kid, but that kid is kind of related with me.

In what ways did you relate to Cornell in order to play him effectively?
CRISTIÁN: I’ve always said that we as human beings, we are a mix of many characteristics. We all have our crazy side, which in a way for us, let’s say, so 10%, for other people it is 90%. You all have that mix of personalities and that mix of characteristics that make your personality unique and different from somebody else. So when I played one Cornell, the mix of characteristics was in one way, and then when I played the other Cornell it was the complete opposite. So all the craziness that I have, all the things that, sometimes you think about doing and you never do, all the personalities that you are not, you play them.

What was your favorite scene that you filmed on HAVEN?
CRISTIÁN: Favorite scene is probably the last scene that I had that. I’m not going to spoil what happened at the end, but it’s a great scene where between me and myself, which just sounds crazy to say, but it was a scene with me and how the twist of what the decision that both Cornells have to make and what’s the result of that decision.

You joined a cast that’s pretty well established already. Did you find there was chemistry right away with the cast members?
CRISTIÁN: Yeah, I met Eric (Balfour) a while ago, a couple of years. I met him in another set that he was visiting. So when I arrived to the set he wasn’t a complete stranger. But as you said, it’s a cast that has a chemistry between them. They’re all friends. The fact that they’re all living far away from Los Angeles in Nova Scotia, it’s something that you all create like kind of a new family out there, and everybody was really nice. I was very happy, not only with the cast, but the crew and everybody. The first day, of course, you feel like the new guy, but then after a week I was like part of them and I didn’t want to leave.

How was the experience of HAVEN different than what you envisioned before you go on set?
CRISTIÁN: Well, I’ve never been in a set like that. When you are working with green screens and you are working with somebody that is supposed to be you, and then you’re going to replace that somebody. The whole mechanics of how the show had to happen in order for us to see what ended up in the screen, that I’m doing both characters and they’re both interacting, that was completely different from anything that I’ve done in my life.

How would you feel if you’re offered a reoccurring role on HAVEN? Would that be something you’re interested in or are you committed to other projects?
CRISTIÁN: No, right now I’m not committed to anything and the only one that I’m committed to is my wife because, if not, she will kill me! [laughter] And work-related I’m always open to new challenges and new things, and HAVEN would be great because it’s a great set and a great crew and I really liked everybody working there.

Can you talk about what it was like to travel to Nova Scotia to be in HAVEN?
CRISTIÁN: Well, Nova Scotia I’ve never been there and it was great. I never ate so much lobster, because they eat lobsters morning, breakfast, lunch, dinner, and the place reminded me of the South of Chile, where I’m from. It’s a very beautiful place and people are very friendly, and it’s a very beautiful place to travel to.

What will you remember most from working on the Nova Scotia on the show?
CRISTIÁN: I remember how we celebrated the day of sun. I was there ten days and it was one day that it was sunny, but we were all celebrating. And I think it was a day and a half. So that was in the winter, and in the winter most of the time it’s raining or cloudy, but we had that day of sun and we were all dancing and happy.

What’s something that your fans would be surprised to know about you?
CRISTIÁN: That’s an interesting question. I think probably what people don’t know is I’m addicted to adrenaline. When I was living in Chile, I was a firefighter. Now, I’m a Lieutenant to the Chilean Air Force and I fly with a (robotic) team. I do water ski and I do a lot of sports that, require a lot of adrenaline, so that’s kind of something that moves me. And probably the adrenaline comes from also every day trying to face a challenge and always trying to challenge myself, and not being comfortable in a way that life gets boring because it gets in the routine of daily routine.

Do you have any other projects coming out besides HAVEN?
CRISTIÁN: Well, there’s a series “Profugos” for HBO Latin America that premieres September 4 that we produced in Chile with my production company. It’s a series done in Spanish, but for all Latin America and for the U.S., and I’m very proud because there also I have a role that I play. I play a politician, but what’s really made us proud is it was the first action series produced in Chile for HBO Latin America. So we’re happy that they’re producing stuff in my country also.

What do you think it is about HAVEN that keeps people tuning in?
CRISTIÁN: When I saw the sneak peek of this weeks’ episode and the promos that they have, you realize that HAVEN taps into that magic and unknown world that we never see, but it may exist or it may not, but it’s always a surprising world. Everything has a surprising twist and everything is unpredictable. In life, many times things are very predictable, but in HAVEN nothing is predictable.

To see the multiple and fascinating roles of Cristián de la Fuente as Cornell in HAVEN, be sure to tune in on Friday, September 2nd at 10:00 pm on Syfy.

Where to find this article:

http://www.thetvaddict.com/2011/09/02/cristian-de-la-fuente-haven-interview/

Emily Rose Talks About the Many Men of Audrey Parker on HAVEN

In * Interviews, * TV Addict, * TV Watchtower, Haven on August 19, 2011 at 2:00 am

As fans of the Syfy series HAVEN already know, the key question to be answered this season is not who is Audrey Parker, but which of the many men in her life will she end up with.  After last week’s surprising reveal in which Audrey and Chris Brody (Jason Priestly) took their blossoming relationship to the next level, this week’s upcoming episode entitled “Audrey Parker’s Day Off” gives Audrey a chance to look at how much her competing love interests mean to her.  Given the chance (or perhaps curse) to relive the same day over and over again, Audrey assesses her relationships with Nathan, Duke and Chris.  Talking time out of her busy schedule to chat with press, Emily Rose candidly shared her perspective on the show and many loves of Audrey Parker.

For the upcoming episode “Audrey’s Day Off,” since actors have to do so many takes on a scene, was it easier to relate to Audrey repeating the same day over and over?

EMILY: No, and that’s a great question. It was just really a challenge for me. I remember going through the script and writing the timeline out of what was occurring. Through the day I would because — based on a production schedule — I would have to do the day repeating in the same location just at different levels. So what was nice about that is our ADs and our producer set up the best they could to start at the earlier stage and then to slowly kind of fall apart, but what’s tricky is how do you make some of these tragic events throughout the day seem different and how do you let them effect you even more each time and how do you step the urgency up each time. It was a great and wonderful on camera acting exercise for me, and one I was really, really excited about. It was really challenging. I knew that when I was walking into that episode I just knew that it was going to be one of the biggest emotionally challenging episodes I’ve done because from a technical standpoint, not only do you have to make it seem real in the wide-shot but the tight-shot and the close-up, and then also on the reverse for the other actors.  So you’re doing a scene that’s really, really emotional probably 12 to 15 times and then on top of that, you need to have the technical DP or focus puller or grip or director talk to you through the scene in a technical way just to pull it off, but yet you still have to be freaking out and even though your brain knows that it’s not really happening, at the end of that week my body was so tense and so drained because my body thought that I had been through those traumas multiples of times. And so it was a real challenge but a real reward and I really hope people are affected by it as much as I was when I played it.

What has it been like for you to work so closely with Jason Priestly?

EMILY: It was weird. I was like is this my life right now? What’s happening? Especially because I’d worked with Luke Perry before for a long episode on JOHN FROM CINCINNATI, so it was just bizarre that I was like what’s happening with 90210 intersecting my life. But really it was great. It’s always really great to work with really seasoned professional, creative, talented people because you learn a lot from working with them and there’s always the mystery surrounding his name and who he is and then we meet him in person and realize that he’s super down to earth and really loves his family and is just really talented and super hardworking and is not a diva at all. It’s just great because you learn a lot from working alongside of someone like that that’s very eager to work and make a good story, and so obviously it’s always a little weird but then you get over it and you move on.

That was a big game changer at the end of the last episode with Chris. How’d you feel about that when you first learned about it?

EMILY: It’s always a little weird because you’re introducing a guest character and that’s going to kind of tear you apart from the subtext that you’re creating with other characters but I’m always a little leery of it because you’re always like well how’s it going to be written, what’s going to happen and ultimately it’s kind of neat because I think I’ve been reading a lot of the reviews lately of the last episode. And one of the things people are talking about is Audrey’s sort of oblivious nature towards Nathan and how he’s feeling towards her.  And I was talking with one of the writers and they were talking about how normally that’s a guy thing, that’s a guy attribute that the guy would be oblivious to the girl who really likes him. And that on our show it’s Audrey who I think is oblivious in so many ways because she’s conditioned to not connect with people and the only way that she connects and the only time that her connecting is good or that she experiences is when she’s actually able to help ‘troubled’ people. But when it comes to relationships, she doesn’t know anything about that and even if she might sense something from Nathan, she’s not. It’s too important to her and her job and she doesn’t know how to function. So I think when I read about this relationship it was kind of exciting. This is the first time we get to see Audrey actually being the girly-girl and in a relationship but it’s almost like she said screw it. I think I’m going to try whatever everybody else is trying and if bad Audrey can have a relationship why can’t I and who am I in a relationship and this is a kind of fun place to try that out. And then also Chris is like opposites attract. He’s all about science and he’s all about scientific explanations and she’s all about safe and her instincts and her intuition and so it was interesting. It was really fun to play and it was really fun to see what that did between Nathan and Audrey and what that did with Duke and Audrey especially when everybody else is so enamored by him and she isn’t but then sort of she is. So it’s a lot of double edged swords to play but that’s always fun and deep and more interesting ultimately I think . . . And I think it’s like one of those things where it’s like you said, if they’re not going to act on it, am I imagining that? Is that something that I’m imagining? It’s not really my place right now to act on anything and we are good partners and we work well and maybe it’s just that. You have to know too as an audience that the audience gets to see what Nathan’s feeling but Audrey doesn’t necessarily see that and I think one of the things that she wrestles with, is does Chris like her for her or does he like her for the fact that she’s not effected by his ‘trouble’ and is that maybe why Nathan likes her because he can feel around her? So it’s pretty complex.

Do you think things have been accelerated this season by the addition of the new characters Evi and Chris?

EMILY: No, not really because I feel like we don’t have the luxury of having 24 episodes. We have 12 to 13 episodes to really kind of get across all the different arcs and things that we want to do in the second season. I think it’s really exciting to me personally to have everybody so effected by new people coming in because it really goes to show how much they really value the relationships that have been set up between the characters and it’s exciting because with change comes new possibilities and I think it shows the different colors of each relationship.  It makes you want to fight for Audrey and Nathan or Audrey and Duke so much more and fight for these things and want to stick around to see if they actually flesh themselves out and I think that if we kind of served up immediately the dessert of what people wanted to see in the first couple, two or three episodes, I think that it’s kind of like where do you go from there? So no, I think the timing of it’s pretty right on.

Nathan looks like he’s pining for Audrey and he doesn’t know exactly what to do now that Chris Brody’s in the picture and it’s sort of like he’s just waiting in the wings for her. Can you talk about that?

EMILY: Well, I think that’s what’s been great about Episode 6 and what’s so great about last year is we’re able to establish the world in which we want to live and so in order to do that, we need to serve up those relationships and Season 2 is about vending that stuff and stretching it and creating tensions and the great thing to me about this next episode that’s coming is it tests our boundaries on all of those fronts relationally.  And she’s jumping into this relationship with Chris, I think, out of a dysfunctional sort of feeling like who is she and if this other Audrey could have a relationship, why can’t she and what is that like. And I think you sort of test those boundaries out on people maybe that you don’t necessarily – that you feel safe to kind of be testers if that’s like not in a cruel way to say it and I think her and Nathan have something really special and I feel like maybe that’s not the proper testing grounds, if that makes any sense.

Do you think Nathan likes Audrey simply because he can feel her?  Like for many of the ‘troubled’ the solution is to be with the people they care about.  Thus, I’m wondering if that’s actually more of a hint that Nathan has feelings for Audrey as a person or is it simply because it means she is a possible cure for him?

EMILY: I think you could definitely be on to something. I always ask the writers that. I wonder if there is a past connection with Nathan and Audrey about why he’s able to just feel her and I’ve definitely wondered that myself, although the hard thing is that makes it hard to get under that theory is the fact that Audrey is able to help a lot of people and in that regard, the people that they are good with. I was listening to a podcast the other day that was really good and they were talking about our show and one of the things they noted was that there’s never a really wholesome working relationship in HAVEN. The only one that’s remotely close is Vince and Dave, the brothers. All the other relationships are dysfunctional. Or have fallen apart or there’s been sort of severing or something. And so in that regard it’s not necessarily that the other people that they’re with calm them down. Audrey’s the one that’s able to sort of get them to understand and then resolve with those people. So I’m not sure. I think that there is something to be said between Nathan and Audrey’s connection. Nathan obviously is the one that feels it more on his side but Audrey definitely wouldn’t be able to move forward without his support so it’s interesting. I don’t know. Good food for thought for sure.

Are we going to find out why Audrey is immune to some of the forces in HAVEN and she is not affected by it like other people?

EMILY: I don’t know if we’re really going to find out why that is as much as we’re going to find Audrey searching for her identity and clinging onto that as being something that’s really unique to who she is. I think that’s more in the long-term mystery of the mythology of the show but it’s definitely something that we really cling to as part of her identity for sure.

How do you think Audrey has evolved this season?

EMILY: I think last season was really about why should I stay in HAVEN and what’s my connection to the place and why have I been brought here and this season’s been more about who am I. Sometimes I get side-barred because we have to focus in on the ‘trouble’ of the week and it’s always a challenge to try to portray the duality of that but anytime that I can find Audrey being effected by the ‘trouble’ in a personal way then that’s sort of my way in. And what I think this year is different for her is there’s a bit more of a comfort. Last year she was circling all of her other characters to kind of get an idea of who they are and this year she’s at home with them and is circling them and is thrown off by them when there might be a situation that occurs that she’s not really familiar that they would handle it in a certain way or what she knows about Nathan and he reacts in a way she’s not expecting, things like that. That to me is the different side of it and just what’s exciting about being able to stick with the series and I’m so excited that our ratings are holding strong every week and that we have an audience that’s returning and coming back because they’re getting to know the characters just as well and maybe will have the same reactions as Audrey does when those different situations come about.

Compared to last season, how do you relate with what Audrey and what she’s going through?

EMILY: This may sound really depressing but it was funny. I was laughing with some – well, I wasn’t laughing — they were laughing at me but we were talking about Christmas for Audrey and I was talking with some producers and we were talking about what that was and I said, ‘You guys, I really don’t want to talk about this because it makes me really sad when I think about Audrey at Christmas.’  And I’ve just found that as I spend more time portraying her, you should always have compassion and understanding for your character but I feel it in a much more visceral way now. She’s more in my body I think this season and what I mean by that is I really experience if there’s something that’s just really sad, it really saddens me like as a friend when they’re going through something tragic where your heart really aches and hurts because you feel like you’re right along side of them.  I’ve been feeling that way towards her and so I think that’s a gift and I have to remove myself from that gift sometimes but I think that that’s a really sweet gift to have and it makes her a lot more accessible and a little bit less work I guess you could say.

Are we going to find out more about specifically Audrey and her attachment to Lucy and are we going to find about more about that red curly wig she had?

EMILY: Yes, you definitely are and you will understand why she doesn’t really look that much like Lucy and there will be a big, large Lucy development. One of my favorite parts of the season so yes that is to come for sure.

Vince and Dave know a lot of what’s going on and with Lucy and everything. They seem to have a lot of insight. Why do you think it is that they won’t help Audrey and won’t tell her? Do you think there’s like a big reason behind that or are we going to see that soon?

EMILY: I definitely think that there’s a big reason behind it. I don’t know the reason. My own speculation is that I feel like they’re either ultimately afraid of something or it’s like with a child that you think they can only handle so much or they don’t really know all the answers and so why tell some of the answers if they can’t tell all of them. Or they’re being held accountable to someone else behind the scenes in some kind of way. I really don’t know. I do know that there is a great moment in the season where Audrey confronts them about that and it’s one of my favorite scenes I’ve been able to play this season as well. So I definitely think that’s a legitimate question and that’s one that she has too.

Audrey has been searching for her identity and of course and it seems like that’s going to be continuing. Can you expand on Audrey’s journey this season?

EMILY: It’s tough because I think she’s sort of hunkering down in HAVEN. I wonder if our season will echo the stages of grief but I think the first season is kind of this denial of what am I doing here and is this really happening and why am I here and the shock. This season I feel like Audrey’s pissed off about a lot of different things as a result of the information she doesn’t know and the information that she finds out and it’s kind of a balance of trying to continue to endear the audience and endear them to her and make everybody sympathize with Audrey and what she’s going through but also experience some really real emotions about what it feels like to continually get abandoned or not have the answers that you need or just be grasping at straws all the time. Yes, so I think oh my gosh and then the final moment of the finale just flashed in my eyes. It is huge people, let me tell you. It is big time. So I’m very excited. I’m very excited. It’s just more rug pulling out. We all love that, where did that – I did not see that coming, definitely those moments for her.

How would you say that Audrey has evolved and how would you say you’ve evolved?

EMILY: That’s a good question. I mean I think she’s evolved in she sort of starts out in the way that we see for Audrey come in second season with this sort of structure, law. This is kind of I do the things the FBI sort of way but I’m also kind of a renegade in that way and then we see her sort of abandon that and sort of find kind of gravitate more to finding her own sense of identity. And then in the second season we find that as it’s being ripped out from underneath her really searching and grasping but kind of figuring out who her family is. And I think I kind of echo that in some ways. I mean I think that I kind of came to the show trying to be as professional and as prepared and as focused and concentrated and giving it my all completely at the beginning and then kind of discovering how what different parts of me were really Audrey and how to kind of focus on those things and settle and chill out a bit and relax. And then I think the fact that season you kind of come in relaxed and you think that you have it all together but then it offers a whole new set of challenges and trying to balance family life and relationships and feeling at home in all of it but also still getting freaked out by it sometimes. So I think I echo that in a lot of ways but I think we’ve grown together definitely. I think there’s ways I’m very much different from Audrey. I feel like I have some really great friendships and really fantastic family and a sense of humor and kind of can enjoy life and chill and I think Audrey can be a little bit of that but we don’t see that as often. And in a way I’ve had to really kind of be careful that I don’t come home from portraying somebody that’s kind of full of defenses and kind of bugged and frustrated and urgent and stressed out because she can’t figure out what’s going on. I have to really learn about coming home and sort of dropping that and being like okay, I’m not Audrey Parker. I am Emily Rose. Hi puppy dog, how are you? Hi husband, how are you? it’s about finding a balance between those things but I think I’ve definitely grown in not necessarily I wouldn’t say confidence but just ease and comfort about the group of people and being here and being kind of away from my home for five or six months.

Is there any characteristic of Audrey that is complex that you have to adjust to?

EMILY: Yes, wow that’s a good question. You know to be honest with you, it sounds kind of funny but I think she thinks faster than I do. I think that I think and process and put together things but in my brain. It doesn’t always like come out of my mouth in the correct form as it’s probably doing right now and they’re always telling me Audrey like she thinks of this really quickly. This comes to her really quickly. She processes things really fast. It’s like she’s on speed.  So when I’m having a really difficult time with my lines or getting the dialogue because we move so quickly or making sure that I understand the story and then on top of that having to say things that are supposed to lead the audience through understanding the story as well, it’s been tough at times for me to adjust to her pace but when I do, I enjoy it and I enjoy the results of it. It makes sense to me so I don’t know if that makes sense to you but it makes sense to me.

Have you all made a real conscious effort to keep that balance between the ‘troubles’ and the relationships on the show?

EMILY: I think it’s neat to get asked this question because I feel like I’m able to kind of say where I’m coming from on it. It’s one of those things when you get a show or you read a script, you never really know where all of the other creative entities that be want to take the show and so I remember reading the pilot initially and not really realizing that it was going to be sort of a ‘trouble,’ for the lack of a better term, ‘trouble’ of the week sort of a deal and so when I realized that I remembered that I was a little – I mean it might be bad for me to say this but a little like disappointed that it was going to be sort of – like have something like that every week because I’m such a like a Lost fan or fan of deep mythology or long form television which I think we’re coming into with the age and era of DVR and being able to access episodes online. That being said, there is a lot of validity in people that say shows like LAW & ORDER SVU and CSI and all these sort of procedural sort of serialized shows have been successful and people really enjoy it because they know what to expect from the characters when they come every week and if they don’t want to stick around for all of the season, they can pop in and out and still be entertained. So from a business model, I understand it. The artist in me, the creative side of me, really just loves long form character development and the ‘troubles’ actually do give our characters something to do every week by which when you get a breathing – a chance for a breathing room to expand on the history of stuff and to have the subtext come out, you ache for it. It makes those scenes when we’re kind of looking over bodies and there was some cool stuff with Nathan and I this season towards the end where I was like we’re able to do the subtext in the scene because we’re doing something else. If the scene was just about this, it would be pretty flat. So I think one supports the other but for us, the mythology is what gets us through and it also is what makes the ‘trouble’ stuff exciting and then what’s really exciting is when we’re able to intertwine those stories where the characters are effected by the ‘trouble’ and so it’s our effort every episode to make sure that we don’t abandon one in lieu of the other and for us we’re on the same page. We love the mythology. We love the characters and we love all of the fun that comes out but at the same time, it’s really fun. Like for example, sparks and recreation, the ‘trouble’ of the week was that everybody was enamored with Chris Brody and that allowed us to see Nathan in a really, really fun light and so I think there is some validity and advantage to having those. It’s just when one takes over the other, it gets a little tricky but I think we found that balance and in that way, it’s excited that they can both co-exist.

What was it like working with guest-stars like Adam Copeland and Jason Priestly?

EMILY: Adam, he’s awesome. I didn’t know what it was going to be like to have it. Everybody just kept telling us that we had a wrestler coming on the show and I sort of imagined somebody that was short and ripped and bald. I don’t know why I imagined that and so when I stepped out of the van and I saw Adam I was like, ‘Nice to meet you. Welcome, welcome to our show.’ And I just had no clue what to expect. And Adam is the most unassuming, kind-hearted, warm person you could meet and on top of that, really talented in this character of Dwight that he plays.  When the writers were talking to us about a cleaner, it just made sense. It made total sense and I found Audrey and I don’t know it’s just because of Audrey’s love for ‘troubled’ people but her feelings towards Dwight in terms of protecting him and wanting to help him definitely flaring up as well and really felt that for his character and so it was really great working with Adam. And then Jason is just amazing. He’s great and just really great to work with and learn from him as a director and as an actor and as somebody that has had a long successful career. Just really asking him questions and talking with him and then watching him work, and he’s so open to other people’s suggestions and working together and collaborating that it’s really encouraging and it’s great to see people that aren’t defensive about their work and that just really want to make the best story and he’s just great and really talented and an honor to work with him.

Can you expand on some of the things that are coming up after the “Audrey Parker’s Day Off” episode?

EMILY: One that I’m really, really excited about, this next episode but yes I think there’s an episode coming up that takes place completely in the woods which is really, really creepy and some night stuff that is directed by Lee Rose who is amazing, an amazing director and couple that with our VP Eric Cayla and in the woods at different times of the day. There was a shot where we were sitting there I think I tweeted about it. There was a sunset that we were shooting there the day before our premiere date and it was absolutely stunning and taking up the level of creepiness of Stephen King in that episode is really cool. So I’m looking forward to that episode. I’m definitely looking forward to some moments in the finale and – with Vince and Dave and between Audrey and Nathan – that are some cool developments. I mean those things are really cool to me. Any kind of heightened emotion and high stakes and stuff that deals personally with the characters to me is great but I think that episode in the woods is episode 10 I believe. And then also there’s a cool episode that actually working with Jason Priestly, the one that he directed, was really neat and that was fun because his character came back for a little bit and that was a blast. But looking back, Lucas and I were talking about it over the season where we were thinking about okay is this going to be as strong a season, is this going to up the ante this year and as we started going through the episodes out loud and kind of tracking some of the major events, we’re like wow, there’s some really big things going to happen this season. So it’s going to be a great gift to our fans, which I really hope they continue to watch for.

Did working on JERICHO help with working on HAVEN in terms of getting acclimated to the genre?

EMILY:  I think it was kind of just a prep for how great the fans are but my part on JERICHO didn’t really deal with any kind of crazy supernatural stuff that was going on, not like there is on HAVEN. My part on JERICHO really was more of a part that was based more in reality and I think my video game background with UNCHARTED has been probably the most help in terms of really having to imagine some things that you aren’t seeing on the day and what not. But yes, it just mainly prepared me for how great the fans are really.

Do you enjoy watching yourself on television or are you one of those people that cannot tune in to see the show each week?

EMILY: I definitely do like watching the show because we never really get to see how it comes together until it airs so to me it’s neat to see an episode in its cohesiveness to see if we tracked everything correctly and for me just learning more everyday about my craft, wanting to know if I pitched things in the right place. But that was a really interesting thing about Episode 6 that chronologically what’s coming up, it was really all about different emotional levels and kind of all existing in what was a very similar timeframe and so trying to make those things different and trying to track the story well and so I remember when I saw an early cut of six, I was really, really excited because everything tracked pretty well and it’s such an interesting, fast-paced, awesome story. Now it’s not ever comfortable for me to sit with my husband and watch me have scenes with other guys. That’s not comfortable. I don’t enjoy that but no, I do. I don’t cringe so much. I don’t enjoy but I don’t cringe. I like to sit there and watch what I need to do better and what landed well and all of that stuff.

Do you find that filming in an actual small town maritime setting that you can really draw from that in creating your character and how she reacts to her surroundings versus rather just being on a generic sound stage somewhere?

EMILY: Hands down. It is a major character of our show. I always say it should be number one on the call sheet. When we moved here and we were from L.A., the way that you felt in a small town that everybody was sort of aware of who you were also with having the stigma of being an actor and what everybody thinks you are or how much money you have they think you have or what they think your life might be.  You absorb all of that and I said okay, Audrey definitely feels under the microscope as well and she definitely isn’t sure of where to go to get certain food and she definitely doesn’t know how to really get settled and she definitely feels like a fish out of water like she has her work which she finds comfortable and homey and she knows how to do that but other than that, she feels under the microscope. And it was really kind of great, being in season one and then season two to come back the second year and the warm reception we had from the town and everybody being so excited about HAVEN and being so enthusiastic about wanting to help and loving watching us film and all this stuff. It’s sort of similar parallel lives with Audrey about being there still and now having everybody sort of accept her more and know who she is and be excited about who she is and all of that it definitely parallels and I think that if I was doing on the WB lot back in the day in L.A. I wouldn’t have the feeling of getting pouring down slanting rain on me while I’m doing a scene and being on a boat that likes rolling up and down and the hard rocks and the beach and just the grittiness of finding a body on the beach, all these things that help for the texture and what aides us in the scene. It would definitely be lacking if we weren’t here. And actually one thing before you go in terms of location, next in episode six, we shoot pretty much the entire episode in this town that we haven’t really shot in yet called Mahone Bay and it’s north of Chester. And it’s absolutely stunning and it’s beautiful and it’s really neat because I think that we see another like different sides of HAVEN and a different street. We usually shoot in Chester and Lunenberg but this whole episode takes place in the Mahone Bay area. It’s one of my favorite places to film and most scenic picturesque, three churches on this little peninsula or this little bay and it’s beautiful. So I think they’re in for some major eye candy in the next episode in that way.

Were you a Stephen King fan before you signed onto HAVEN? Have you become one since you started working in the universe?

EMILY: I definitely wasn’t a fan in terms of reading all of his novels. I mean I find that the Stephen King fans, the true fans are really amazing fans so to say that I was one would be not right. It’d be horrible but I definitely like a lot of my favorite major movies that I really enjoy like Stand by Me is one of my all time favorite films and obviously Green Mile and Misery.  Kathy Bates, whenever I’d get asked in interviews what actress I would really love to be most like, Kathy Bates was one of them and I just feel like I stood back and I thought wait a second, all these films that I absolutely love, the richness in character and just the texture of them is Stephen King and I realized that I was a fan of his storytelling and just never had really put together that all of those were Stephen King.  So no, I haven’t had a chance in terms of all of the work here I’ve been doing to engross myself in a Stephen King reading but maybe I’ll do that in the off season, but I’m definitely a fan of who he is and his deep understanding of characters and the films that he’s made. I mean I could live in Stand by Me. It makes me so happy.

Do you hope to go back to Comic-Con again next year assuming HAVEN comes back?

EMILY: Our big hope is that Comic-Con would have us because I guess I’ve heard through the grapevine that shows get invited to come there so my huge dream for the show is that Comic-Con would have a panel and that we would be able to shut production down like EUREKA does or had done for a day and do a panel and get to be a part of the Syfy café stuff and just to be there, just to be asked to come to such a fun event, one of the few events where you get to connect with your fans. I’ve always loved Comic-Con. I’ve gone before HAVEN for UNCHARTED and to me just to be able to ask to be able to go would be awesome. Yes please, please season three and please Comic-Con season three together, that would make my year complete. That’d be rad.

With Lindsey Wagner’s recent guest appearance on ALPHAS, she tied in their series with EUREKA and that’s tied into WAREHOUSE 13 and I was just wondering if you would like HAVEN to also be part of that shared universe and if so, if you were to guest star on one of those shows, which one would you like to visit?

EMILY: I was so excited when I went to my first Syfy event and met Eddie McClintock and Matt Cullen. They came out of the woodwork to welcome me to the Syfy family and I was really amazed by that. I just thought there I’m standing just kind of nervous about being new on the show and new to this network and everything and they just came right up to me and were like, “Hi, you’re Emily. You’re on the new show. Congratulations. So good to have you.”  So I would love to work with either one of them. I always thought that Eureka and HAVEN, if that was to ever do a crossover that would be really interesting as in like neighboring towns or something weird like that or because there is this sort of small town mentality with the cops and that kind of deal or if they had to work together on something I always thought that would be really interesting and funny. So,  yes, that’s great but we’re so thankful to be on Syfy and to have the viewership and people tuning in for our show and everything and that’s fantastic. Sometimes I think because we’re all the way up in Nova Scotia, Canada, we’re sort of like away from everything. We’re kind of tucked up into this neck of the woods that we’re kind of a little outside of the core shows on Syfy so I don’t ever know if that would actually happen but I think if it did especially with Eureka wrapping things up that that would be a really fun thing and I’ve got to try to think about would there be a ‘trouble’ in the Warehouse or something like that. I can see the possibility. It definitely would be a lot of fun and it would just be one of those episodes where you just would be laughing I think the whole time. So that’s a good, interesting question. That’s funny.

With the 7-episode Twitter arc that’s happening now with Vince and Dave, it’s primarily just involving their two characters. I was wondering if Audrey’s on Twitter and if she might but into the conversation with them that they’re having with cold in HAVEN.

EMILY: I don’t think that Audrey is on Twitter. I think that I absolutely love that Vince and Dave have the accounts with the newspaper. I think that’s really a lot of fun and it’s kind of just cool to be able to interact with a show like that. I think that that’s great but I love it being a Vince and Dave. I just love that our town in quirkier by the minute and this is one of the quirky things. You would think that they would be so out of date yet they’re totally up on the times and that to me is hilarious that Nathan has like 40 year old walkie talkies in his office but yet they’re on Twitter. To me that just makes me really happy.

What do you enjoy most about working on HAVEN?

EMILY: I think for me this year I enjoy the depth of where we go with the relationships of the characters. I don’t get my creative energy or batteries are recharging from the sort of ‘trouble’ of the week thing. That to me is kind of what keeps people – well, it’s kind of like the laundry line on which everything else hangs. For me, what’s enjoyable is the mythology and the characters and the deeper mystery behind this town and so when we get to do really like – when we get to scenes to me that have a subtext and we’re not having to explain things exactly on the nose or that involve relationships and history and what’s not being said, that to me is my favorite part of working on HAVEN. Thank goodness I get along with my cast mates and enjoy the people and think that the place is beautiful. So I enjoy all those things but to me the real reward is working really hard on a scene with the director in the limited time that we have and then watching it really affect people and then watching the fan videos later.

Have you finished shooting the season now?

EMILY: We are. I am currently talking to you with three more wake ups left until it’s done.  So three days away from it being in the can. It’s a little bittersweet. It’s like you look at our ratings and you really hope that we’re coming back for a season three but nothing is for certain in this industry and so you want to be excited for what can come but you’re also very aware that you just never know. It kills you, but it is what it is.

Any idea when they’re going to tell you if you’re going to get a third season?

EMILY: Oh man, I guess we’re supposed to hear hopefully by the beginning of October. That’s what I hear floating around but I mean my hope is that they can see that our ratings are just awesome and they’re steady and that’s great and I think I got the technical specs from some people earlier today in terms of our lead ins were kind of dropping off but we stayed in the same and I know that we had some big hits like Harry Potter opening and things like that and I think it’s just been really great because overall we have our live ratings completely but then we also have everybody that tunes in and watches it off of DVR because it is on a Friday night. So I am optimistic. I feel like the fact that we’re steady and they can count on us is a great thing and our stories are just – are getting like really, really good and that gives me hope for a third season and I’m excited about what we could do in a third season. So I’m really hopeful.

Do you know anything about what the writers have in mind for season three providing there’s going to be one?

EMILY: As of right now I don’t. We have some of them here and I should ask them. I’ve been so wrapped up in what’s going on now but I do know that they have an idea of where it would be going next season but that’s a good question. I’ll make sure to ask them after we’re done.

If you could personally see Audrey going somewhere in season three, where would you want to see her go?

EMILY: That’s a really good question. Yes, that’s a really good question. Oh two seconds.  I think I’m always a fan of watching her get wrecked for some reason and I think that’s just because it’s interesting to me. I’ve always wondered what she would do if she couldn’t help people. What would happen to her? If this did get stripped away from her in some regard what would happen to her or if she was force with a choice of helping the people that she loves versus ‘troubles’ or what would happen. To me there is a lot more that could be done in terms of her searching to find out who she is.   This year has been a lot about process of elimination for her. Well, if I’m not this then I am this and I think I’d like to see her search some more and really kind of look and examine what that is. I know that’s sort of like a vague answer. I feel like she’s a pretty steady rock but I really – I would like to see her really struggle and not just have that happen through one episode because there was a mishap, like really be on the brink and get to see what Nathan and Duke do in order to like bring her back. I think that would be really interesting. And I also personally just have a little dream of here of maybe exploring her indifferent eras or timeframes or something like that just because I love costumes.  But I don’t know. I don’t know and I would love to see her on a horse. So these are some of my dreams. If you could make them happen, I would appreciate it and no. I think it would be great.

To see who Audrey ultimately chooses and whether she finally figures out who she is and her connection to the mysterious Lucy, be sure to watch HAVEN on Friday nights at 10:00 p.m. on Syfy.
Links to articles about “Haven” in case you missed them!

*** PHOTOS from NYCC autograph signing with cast of HAVEN

*** VIDEO clips of interviews from NYCC press room with cast of HAVEN

***Lucas Bryant Talks About the Nathan-Audrey Romance on HAVEN and What To Expect In the Season Finale

***Syfy’s HAVEN Continues To Be A Summer Thriller

***Why You’re Missing Out If You’re Not Watching Syfy’s HAVEN (with video interviews)

***Cristián de la Fuente Previews His Killer Role on HAVEN

***Eric Balfour Offers Special Insight into the Mysterious World of Syfy’s HAVEN

***Comic-Con 2011: Candid photos of HAVEN stars Emily Rose and Eric Balfour

Where to find this article:

http://www.thetvaddict.com/2011/08/19/emily-rose-dishes-on-the-many-men-of-audrey-parker-in-haven/


Previewing HAVEN – ‘Roots’

In * Press Announcements, * TV Watchtower, Haven on August 10, 2011 at 8:22 pm

On Friday, August 12th, Syfy’s HAVEN will explore a fearful forest — the unfortunate location of Audrey Parker (Emily Rose) and Chris Brody’s (Jason Priestly) first date.  Who knew that taking a girl on a hike through the woods could be so treacherous?

The following is a preview clip and scene description giving a glimpse into what the upcoming episode holds:

Audrey is trudging through the forest with a firearm in hand.  While keeping an watchful eye she finds an opening under the mossy ground.  Chris (Jason Priestly) startles her and is checking up to see if she’s more interested in work or their date.  They spot a pair of glasses on the ground and quickly document it for evidence.

Watch the clip and tune in this Friday at 10/9c on Syfy to see if they’re able to find who the glasses belong to, or if they encounter a grizzly first!

HAVEN airs Fridays at 10:00 p.m. on Syfy.

 

SYFY’S HAVEN SERIES WILL LAUNCH UNPRECEDENTED FULLY INTEGRATED TWITTER STORY LINE BEGINNING FRIDAY, AUGUST 12

NEW YORK – August 10, 2011 – Syfy’s popular series Haven will become the first television series to create a storyline that flows between the show itself and the micro-blogging service Twitter when it launches a special seven-episode arc beginning Friday, August 12, at 10PM (ET/PT).

“The Haven writers and producers have done an amazing job of crafting a story line that seamlessly moves between the TV show and Twitter,” said Craig Engler, General Manager and Senior Vice President, Syfy Digital.  “Although there have been simple integrations before, no one has fully and organically integrated Twitter into the fabric of the show in the way Haven is doing. If you watch Haven and use Twitter, you’re in for a real treat.”

In the story, Vince (Richard Donat) and Dave (John Dunsworth), who run the newspaper in Haven, join Twitter as newcomers to the medium. Viewers who follow their characters (@VinceHaven, @DaveHaven) will see them interact with a mysterious Twitter user (@ColdInHaven) who knows more about Haven – and Vince and Dave – than anyone should.

Said Executive Producer Lloyd Segan: “Although Twitter has been featured in TV shows before, this is the first time a storyline from a television series has been fully integrated with the popular online service. The story has been created in such a way that viewers who don’t follow the Twitter plot can still enjoy the show. For those that do, there will be a special meaning to events in Haven during these seven episodes.”

As the special plot unfolds on Twitter, viewers will catch glimpses of it in the show itself, where they’ll be directed to follow the Twitter conversation through special promos. The outcome to the Twitter story will be revealed in the second-season finale on Friday, September 30.

“Twitter has become the default platform for TV fans to talk, in real-time, about the shows they love,” said Robin Sloan, manager of media partnerships at Twitter. “Syfy has embraced that conversation, and now it’s breaking new ground with this Haven storyline. It incorporates Twitter more deeply into the show’s plot than anything we’ve ever seen before.”
Viewers can follow the story on Twitter with the hashtag #HavenNews as well as on www.syfy.com/haven.

Syfy and Twitter will be working together during the seven-week event to measure viewer engagement around the Haven Twitter storyline. The findings will be shared in an online case study, with best practices for any network to use when integrating Twitter directly into a storyline.

Now in its second season, Haven, starring Emily Rose, is based on The Colorado Kid from renowned author Stephen King.  The series follows FBI agent Audrey Parker (Rose), who takes up residence in the small town of Haven, Maine, and soon discovers the town’s many secrets.

A longtime refuge for people with an eclectic range of supernatural abilities, Haven also holds the key to unlocking the mysteries of Audrey’s lost past.  Among the townspeople are Nathan Wuornos (Lucas Bryant), a handsome local cop with his own supernatural affliction, and Duke Crocker (Eric Balfour), a smuggler and reluctant aide in solving Haven’s troubles.

From leading independent producer Entertainment One, Haven is co-commissioned by Shaw Media in Canada and globally via Universal Networks International (UNI).

The creative team behind Haven includes Executive Producers John Morayniss (Hung, Goodnight for Justice) and Noreen Halpern (Call Me Fitz, Rookie Blue) from eOne Television, and David MacLeod (Legends of the Fall, The Ray Bradbury Theater) of Big Motion Pictures, who are joined by Lloyd Segan, Shawn Piller, Scott Shepherd (Stephen King’s The Dead Zone) and Matt McGuiness (Journeyman) as well as Sam Ernst and Jim Dunn (Stephen King’s The Dead Zone), who also developed the series.

Haven is produced by Entertainment One and Big Motion Pictures in association with Piller/Segan/Shepherd and airs on Syfy in the U.S., Showcase in Canada and internationally on UNI’s multiple Syfy Universal channels. Entertainment One controls the worldwide distribution rights to the one-hour series and concluded a deal with Germany’s Tele München Group (TMG) for the television rights in Continental Europe.

(Information provided courtesy of New Media Strategies)

Why You’re Missing Out If You’re Not Watching Syfy’s HAVEN (with video interviews)

In * Comic-Con, * Events, * Interviews, * Sci-fi columns, * Showcases, * TV Addict, * TV Watchtower, * Video interviews, Haven on July 29, 2011 at 4:00 pm

Last year, a remarkable new television series debuted under the auspices of one of the most renown names in horror fiction:  Stephen King.  Despite the prestigious name associated with it, Syfy’s supernatural series HAVEN debuted quietly and snuck up on everyone.  Perhaps because of its quiet introduction, it managed to do the impossible.  It unveiled its first season with such a careful and methodical approach that viewers were lulled into a false sense of security.  By the end of its first season, fans and viewers only knew one thing for certain – HAVEN was never going to be predictable.  It had shattered and exceeded expectations time and time again over the course of its initial thirteen episodes.  So much so, that no one knew exactly who the main character Audrey Parker really was in the end.  Was she an FBI agent, a shape-shifter, an amnesiac, or something else entirely?

Based on the short story “The Colorado Kid,” by Stephen King, creators Sam Ernst and Jim Dunn, expanded the King story to create a town inhabited by people afflicted with special abilities – or “troubles” as they like to call it.  Whether a blessing or a curse – well, mostly a curse – the townsfolk of Haven, Maine sought only to live normal lives.  But for some unknown reason, the “troubles” continued to plague them generation after generation.

As seen through the eyes of FBI Agent Audrey Parker (Emily Rose) sent to investigate what was really going on in Haven, viewers soon discovered that normal was the last thing the people of Haven were.  Each seemed to possess a special ability that ranged from telekinesis to things much more strange and freaky than can be imagined.  Aided by the town’s local sheriff and his estranged son, Deputy Nathan Wournos (Lucas Bryant), and a rebel smuggler, Duke Crocker (Eric Balfour), Agent Audrey Parker began peeling back the surface of the mysteries of Haven.

But as the first season unfolded, the mysteries became less about the town and the “troubles” and more about Agent Audrey Parker herself.  As revealed mid-way through the season, Nathan who had been unable to feel any kind of human contact before in his life, began to feel Audrey’s touch.  Overwhelmed and bewildered by this discovery, Nathan hid this fact even from Audrey.  There was something about Audrey that made her special – and it was not just the fact that she was the spitting-image of a woman who had visited Haven 27 years earlier when the “troubles” first resurfaced.  The fact that Audrey could cure or abate some of the afflicted’s pain and suffering was astounding; and the fact that Nathan could feel her touch and no one else’s was just another piece in an ever expanding puzzle.

There was also the mystery of Nathan’s childhood nemesis Duke Crocker and why he continued to stay in Haven when his skills and ambitions would be better served elsewhere in the world.  With each episode the net around Haven seemed to grow tighter and tighter.  This was not simply a chain of supernatural events occurring, but rather there was some sort of design in the madness.  It was as if something or someone had intertwined all their destinies and was now making sure that each played out perfectly.  Caught up in a web not entirely of their own making, Audrey, Nathan and Duke banded together, forging an uneasy alliance, to put an end to the “troubles.”  But prophecies and destiny are not so easy dissuaded.

With a climatic and surprising cliff-hanger ending, the first season of HAVEN was simply mesmerizing.  It was a shock-and-awe ending that no one saw coming.

It was also the perfect hook to lure viewers back for HAVEN’s second season.  Returning on July 15th, and with only two episodes having aired of the current season, HAVEN is once again enchanting us with its labyrinthine stories that serve only to lure us into another fascinating season of mystery.

Making a special appearance at San Diego’s Comic-Con event last week, stars Emily Rose and Eric Balfour took a few moments to talk about the incredible world of HAVEN and what continues to draw them to such an wonderful series.   Video interviews with Emily Rose and Eric Balfour at Comic-Con

Emily Rose Talks HAVEN from Daniel Malen on Vimeo.

Eric Balfour talks HAVEN from Daniel Malen on Vimeo.

LINK to candid photos from the interviews HERE.

For both fans and even the stars of the show themselves, HAVEN is a remarkable series.  It is not just a supernatural thriller, it is a mystery that invites viewers to take a extraordinary journey.  Trust me when I say, it is a journey not to be missed!  Find a way to tune and see for yourself, you won’t be disappointed.  HAVEN is a series that tantalizes and teases with mystery and confounds all expectations.  Join the fun and discover HAVEN, which airs Friday nights at 10 pm on Syfy.

125 Reasons You Should be Watching Syfy’s Haven:

Where to find this article:

http://www.thetvaddict.com/2011/07/29/why-you%E2%80%99re-missing-out-if-you%E2%80%99re-not-watching-syfy%E2%80%99s-haven/

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