Showing posts with label web. Show all posts
Showing posts with label web. Show all posts

Monday, 23 May 2011

The 2011 AfterElton Hot 100!

[Source]

6. Luke Macfarlane

Rank last year: 4

Sadly Brothers & Sisters has been canceled, so that means we won't be seeing any more of the adorable Scotty Wandell. But you can bet this won't be the last you see of handsome, out Canadian actor Luke Macfarlane. Five years on Brothers & Sisters showed us his talents as an actor, a singer (did you see the episode where he sang that touching Irish funeral song?), and even a potential underwear model-- at least based upon what we saw in a few brief briefs scenes. Hubba hubba.
Okay, he's probably too serious an actor to pursue underwear modeling, but keep your options open, Luke. And come back to television soon, we're going to miss you!
Further reading...

52. Matthew Rhys

Rank last year: 34
Further reading...

35. Jo Weil

Monday, 8 November 2010

An article from AfterElton

[source]
Meet Your Asshat and Your Gay of the Week for the Week of November 05, 2010
Posted byEd Kennedy on November 8, 2010

I have to admit, the winner of this one surprised me quite a bit. Last week's voting split up Kevin (Matthew Rhys) and Scotty (Luke Macfarlane), because one was cheated on, and one was a cheater, and each had separate journeys to make as a result. I fully expected the wronged Kevin to run away with the vote, but it was Scotty you sided with.

There was something humanizing about revealing that Scotty wasn't just be perfect kitchen utensil for the Walker family, and you guys responded by giving him an astonishing 52.77% of the vote. His television husband was a distant second at 19.77%


Mitchell (Jesse Tyler Ferguson) and Cameron (Eric Stonestreet) only managed 14.48% of the vote for negotiating the power structures of their relationship, and perky Zac Young brought up the rear at 12.97%.

With Scotty reigning over all the Gays for the week, we're sure that appetizers will be served, and wine glasses will never be empty. Which is as it should be.

Friday, 29 October 2010

An article from Spoiler TV

[source]

Kevin & Scotty: A Strong Message To Society
Posted by dominic brown at Friday, October 29, 2010

Hello everybody, I wonder if you watched “Brothers & Sisters” last Sunday, and if you did, how did you react to Scotty’s confession. By the way, it looks like next episode “An Ideal Husband” is mostly concerned about the Kevin/Scotty issue. And that’s what we’re gonna talk about in this week’s article.

It’s nothing new that Kevin and Scotty relationship is one of the most representative for gay/lesbians couples. Their story went through the issues of every normal straight couple, showing that being married to a same-sex partner it’s nothing different than being married to a different-sex partner, and that’s what I think caught most of the attention of LGBT community, and not only it. Same-sex couples is one of the issues that are still opened in today’s society and it’s anything but easy to “deal with” and personally, I appreciate how the writers decided through these years to face this kind of matters. I think it’s a strong and important message to all the people that gays are normal, in the good and bad things.

Of course, some things are more difficult, like getting married and trying to have a baby and it’s something that Kevin and Scotty had to deal with during these years: they got married with a commitment ceremony, tried to have a baby through surrogacy, and dealt with discrimination (remember season 3?) on the workplace and of the parents. But all of this had the chance to teach something and to show something relevant.

Kevin and Scotty are loved by all “Brothers & Sisters” viewers because of the honesty, the clearness and the sweetness of their relationship, one of the best among the other Walker siblings (since Sarah divorced, Kitty almost divorced and cheated, Tommy divorced and cheated, Justin divorced). But now, the time has come for them to face one the biggest issue a couple could ever go through: cheating.

We must say that maybe the “cheating card” was overused on this show, but that opens up these characters to new horizons in terms of storyline and in terms of acting, and there’s no way they’re gonna let us down! Mostly because we know (and here I yell at you “SPOILER”) that they’re gonna adopt a baby girl, Olivia, and even this will lead to a stronger and more important message to society: gay couples can look after and raise a baby like all the other couples can!

LGBT community should be glad to these writers who made a hard choice in exploring so deeply these characters: it’s almost an experiment of how things can work out in a gay couple! I’m personally sure that all of this will help people who gone through issues like that and people who are still close-minded! On a personal note, I just would love to see Kevin and Scotty (maybe accompanied by the tremendous Nora) to a L.A. parade for gay rights! That would totally be as hilarious as important to show! And.. Since Proposition 8 got cancelled, we could get to see another Kevin and Scotty real marriage, who knows...

For now, just watch this Sunday, the brand new episode of “Brothers & Sisters”!


Dominic Brown



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Monday, 17 May 2010

The 2010 AfterElton Hot 100!

A customary event, the result of AfterElton Hot 100! has come out. Luke got the fourth place.

4. Luke Macfarlane

Rank last year: 3

He sings too! Did you catch that on the most recent episode of Brothers & Sisters where Luke Macfarlane sang that touching Irish funeral song? Granted, he was singing about Ojai Foods, which is hard to get too worked up about, but who knew he had such a beautiful voice?

As Scotty Wandell, Kevin’s love interest on ABC’s primetime soap, Luke caught our attention early on. Some have wondered what Scotty sees in the famously neurotic Kevin, but no one has ever wondered what Kevin sees in Scotty: not only is he the calm at the center of the Walker family storm, he’s got classically handsome good looks. And now that we’ve seen Scotty in both his swimming trunks and his underwear, we also know he’s got a body to die for.

Basically, Scotty is damn nice to come home to. And ever since the actor himself bravely came out in 2008, we can make a pretty good guess that Luke would be wonderful to come home to too.

And of course Matthew Rhys is also on the list.

34. Mathew Rhys

Rank last year: 34


If I remember correctly whom I voted for, one of my vote didn't come onto the list.

Monday, 10 May 2010

One episode left

Although I was expecting new SideDish, it's not coming.
So I picked the result of a poll up from SideDish page. They are the most popular five episodes of Scotty.
  1. An Act of Will (S1E2): In which we meet Scotty
  2. Northern Exposure (S1E7): Scotty and Kevin break up
  3. Prior Commitments (S2E16): Scotty and Kevin's wedding
  4. Something New (S2E8): Scotty and Kevin reunite
  5. History Repeating (S2E3): Scotty returns
I like them but I can't say they are the best. The end of last season, I tired to choose the best episode but it was quite difficult for me to pick the best. I definitely like Something New, I like Prior Commitments but it's like a cliché. That was an amazingly beautiful scene though. I don't know, still I can't decide which episode is the best. To tell the truth, I don't care their storyline much, as long as I can see Luke in it. It's a lie, I do care but it's a different focus.
Anyways there is only one episode left in this season, I hope it will be very much fine and also I hope the next season will be good as this season. However, I think ABC hasn't announced about renewing. I wish they will do it soon.

Thursday, 1 April 2010

AfterElton makes us fun

A great April Fool article from AfterElton
Kevin and Scotty Moving From “Brothers & Sisters” to African-American Spin-off

by Brent Hartinger April 1, 2010

Think Kevin’s partner Scotty has put up with a lot of family drama on ABC’s Sunday night show Brothers & Sisters?

This fall, Kevin will be the one putting up with Scotty’s family drama in Brothas & Sistahs, a spin-off version of the show that will include Kevin and Scotty as part of the ensemble cast.

But Scotty’s family won’t be the conservative, anti-gay couple previously featured on the show. Instead, they’ll be black.

The pilot episode of Brothas & Sistahs reveals that Scotty was adopted and his biological parents are African-American, making Scotty a very light-skinned black. The first episode involves Scotty discovering and actively embracing his heritage while fussy Kevin is something of a fish-out-of-water in a family very different from his own.

“We’re currently fitting Luke MacFarlane [who plays Scotty] with a Kente cloth robe,” said Nina Hensley, formerly an executive producer on Brothers & Sisters and now the showrunner on Brothas & Sistahs. “He looks great – articulate and bright and clean and even lighter-skinned than Obama!”

“The producers pitched us a spin-off version of the show centering on a second family of Los Angeles brothers and sisters,” said Veronica Miles, President of Prime Time Programming at ABC. “But we’d been wanting to do a family drama with a predominantly African-American cast. When we suggested combining the two shows, the producers were thrilled.”

“In retrospect, having Scotty turn out to be black made perfect sense,” Hensley agreed. “Two years ago, we even did an episode where Scotty cooks collard greens!”

Scotty’s newfound black relatives on the show include a couple who have built a successful dry-cleaning franchise and are moving on up into a deluxe condo in Beverly Hills.

They’ll be played by Vivica Fox and, in his much-anticipated return to television, Martin Lawrence, who, in a dual role, will also play their sassy black maid.

Another of Scotty’s black brothers, played by Isaiah Washington, operates a junkyard in Watts with his son, although Hensley points out that Washington has contractually insisted that his character only deal with any gay characters via cellphone, so he and his TV brother Scotty will never actually be seen on screen together.

The son has not yet been cast, but Miles promises, “He’ll be cute. Really, really cute.”

As with the original Brothers & Sisters, two of the show’s primary features will be multi-person cell phone conversations and contentious dinner parties.

“I know all about black dinners,” Hensley said. “One of the girls at my sorority was black, and once I had Thanksgiving at her house. They had a turkey and everything!”

Rather than drink wine, Scotty’s family will drink wine coolers.

“I quit,” said Alfonzo Cooper, editor of AfterCosby.com, a site that analyzes people of color in popular entertainment. “No, seriously. I’m shutting my website down. You hear that clicking sound? That’s the sound of me deleting the entire website. There. It’s gone. Bye-bye!”

James Earl Jones will play Brothas & Sistahs family patriarch, a Republican senator who is also a staunch defender of the environment and gay rights.

He will also live inside Cinderella’s Castle at Disneyland’s Fantasyland and sometimes fly around on a sparkly pink unicorn.

Anticipating some criticism over the fact that a white actor will be playing a major black role, the network insists that the show will be “authentically black.”

While it’s true that most of the show’s current writers are white, the producers have recently added one African-American writer to the staff.

“We’re also thinking of maybe letting Paris Barclay direct an episode,” Miles said.

Future plot-lines include an episode where the brothers and sisters – or “brothas” and “sistahs” – fight about how to spend a $10,000 life insurance check. In the end, they decide to invest it in an all-white revival of the play Raisin in the Sun, which proves to be a massive success.

Another episode has Kevin, the only white character in the cast, organizing the entire California African-American community into an effort to thwart an attempt by the U.S. military to mine a vein of unobtanium located directly under the Los Angeles chapter of the NAACP.

“Seriously?” said Justin Montgomery, a professor in media arts at the African-American Studies program at UCLA. “This is an April Fool’s Day joke, right?”

Editor’s note: Please don’t give away the joke in the subject line of your comments.

Monday, 15 March 2010

An article from AfterElton.com

AfterElton.com's Top 50 Gay Characters of All Time!

by AfterElton.com Staff

March 15, 2010

5. Scotty (Brothers & Sisters)
Previous rank: 19


Played by actor Luke Macfarlane (2006 - present)

Let's face it: playing the spouse to one of the Walker's screwed-up family members on Brothers & Sisters is a thankless role. You get a couple of scenes per episode, at most. So what is it about Luke Macfarlane's portrayal of Scotty Wandell that has caught the attention of so many AfterElton.com readers? There's something about Scotty's quiet grace that is both infectious and truly touching ? especially in the face of Kevin's non-stop neurosis. It probably doesn't hurt Macfarlane is drop-dead gorgeous.

6. Kevin (Brothers & Sisters)
Previous rank: 4


Played by actor Matthew Rhys (2006 - present)

Like Brian Kinney, Kevin Walker on Brothers & Sisters proves you don't always have to be “likable” to be interesting. And in the hands of an actor less talented than Matt Rhys, we suspect that viewers would've rejected this frequently whiny, selfish windbag years ago. But there's something about Rhys' portrayal of Kevin ? the way he hides the character's insecurity, even as he makes it screamingly obvious ? that makes you feel protective of the poor guy. Sure, he's fussy, needy, and gives new meaning to the expression “high maintenance.” But let's face it: we all know that guy ? and in some cases, we are that guy!

Original Article: http://www.afterelton.com/TV/2010/02/top-fifty-gay-tv-characters

21st annual GLAAD

Award Recipients for the 21st Annual GLAAD Media Awards - New York

GLAAD Media Award recipients were announced in 24 of this year's 32 media categories at the 21st Annual GLAAD Media Awards presented in New York by IBM and Prudential at the Marriott Marquis on Saturday night. Additional awards will be presented in Los Angeles on April 17 at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza, and in San Francisco on June 5 at the Westin St. Francis.

Awards Presented on Stage
Outstanding Drama Series Outstanding TV Movie or Mini-Series
Brothers and Sisters
(ABC)
Prayers for Bobby
(Lifetime)

Outstanding TV Journalism Segment Outstanding Digital Journalism Article
"Why Will Won't Pledge Allegiance"
American Morning
(CNN)
Two-Way Tie:
"'We Love You, This Won't Change a Thing'"
by John Buccigross (ESPN.com)

"Why Can't You Just Butch Up? Gay Men, Effeminacy, and Our War with Ourselves"
by Brent Hartinger
(AfterElton.com)


http://www.glaad.org/Page.aspx?pid=1342

Wednesday, 17 February 2010

AfterElton Interview

The original article is in AFTERELTON.

Interview: Matthew Rhys and Luke Macfarlane Aren't Just "Hollywood Actors"
byMichael Jensen, Editor
February 17, 2010
Luke Macfarlane, Matthew Rhys

It's a warm January day on the ABC studio lot in Burbank, California as I wait for Matthew Rhys and Luke Macfarlane, who play Kevin Walker and Scotty Wandell on ABC's Brothers & Sisters, to arrive for a joint interview ? an interview that's been quite some time in the making. So after having first toured the set where Rhys and Rachel Griffiths will later film a scene in an art gallery (a scene that will have major implications for Griffiths' character Sarah Walker), hanging out a few more minutes is no big deal.

Ten minutes pass before Calista Flockhart, Emily VanCamp and Griffiths arrive at the stage via shuttle, while Rhys and Macfarlane turn up a few minutes later … on bicycles. It turns out that this is how they usually get around the lot, which isn't surprising given how down to earth both men are during our subsequent interview.

It also isn't surprising that the duo, who play one of the few same-sex couples on broadcast television, also display an easy rapport and chemistry, both teasing and complimenting each other. That chemistry is something viewers noticed almost right away during the show's first season, and why many fans lobbied for Macfarlane's character to return after Scotty and Kevin first broke up.

Fortunately, Scotty did return, with the two men subsequently falling in love, dating and then having a commitment ceremony, all of which led to their current storyline where they are using surrogacy to become parents.

Over the next half hour we discuss whether each actor would like to one day be parents themselves, what the success of the show means for them, and for Rhys, who recently made his directorial debut on Brothers & Sisters, what it's like directing, or at least trying to direct, a cast of such strong women. Hint: It's a challenge.

AfterElton.com: Your characters came along when gay and bisexual men were starved to see themselves represented on television, especially as couples. Now that you've got some time and distance, what was it like dealing with the intense reaction and expectations at the time?
Matthew Rhys:
Primarily I was very buoyed by the fact that we had this very positive reaction from the get-go. That's always very heartening to hear. That's owed primarily to Jon Robin Baitz and the way he wrote Kevin very specifically from the beginning. There wasn't meant to be that much emphasis or definition through his sexuality. That's what was refreshing.
Luke Macfarlane: He was the brother, not the gay brother.
MR: Yeah. The lawyer.
LM: Not the gay lawyer. People do want to know the writers consider storylines. They pay attention to what's happening in politics and they do want to represent the characters now in perhaps a more ... I don't know. I don't think it started off that way. As the characters have grown, I think there's been more attention paid to how to portray them as decent and good.

AE: Do you even think about the weight of the expectations as one of the few gay couples on television? A lot of people tune in to the show specifically to see you guys, and are really invested in your relationship and how it's going to develop and how they can relate to it.
LM:
I don't think you really can. I met recently with someone who is working on the case in California, the Proposition 8 case, and he said to me, "You know, your names and your characters always come up in our meetings as a representative of good gay people in the media. But I think as an actor, you really can't take that into consideration. It's nice to hear, but it doesn't help our work.
MR: Without shirking, I always think it's the writers who bear the responsibility. They're the ones who forge ahead and do it up for us. We're just very fortunate to say the words.

AE: Do you ever get gay couples coming up to you and saying, "Oh we're like Kevin and Scotty" or "He's the Kevin in the relationship and he's the Scotty" or "You guys should take this storyline and go there with it"?
LM:
I've certainly heard that, yeah. I'm always like, what does that mean? Are you a chef? [laughs] You always want to know what is it... What exactly...
MR: No one ever really sees themselves as they are. Same thing as an actor, you never know how the character you're portraying is coming off.

AE: Has the current baby conception storyline, other than teaching how to say the word blastocyte, has it made you reflect on whether one day you'd like to be a parent yourself?
MR:
Yeah, I'd certainly like to be a parent.
LM: Absolutely. One step at a time, I suppose.

AE: Are you prepared to work with babies should this storyline actually go somewhere?
MR:
Being in the Walker family, we're already well accustomed to working with babies. It would be a very natural progression.
LM: But it [will be] a very Victorian relationship. Children are seen, not heard.
MR: Nannies.

AE: I was talking to Jesse Tyler Ferguson from Modern Family recently...
LM:
He's a friend of mine. We did theater together.

AE: Then you've probably heard him say this, but the baby who plays Lily on the show just cries whenever he gets near her. It's like, how can I do this?
LM:
He's got to shave that beard. [laughs]

AE: Speaking of Modern Family, I would have bet that you guys would have been the first of the network television gay couples to have a baby, but Modern Family beat you to it. Annoyed at all? Any rivalry there?
MR:
Yes. I think we pride ourselves on not jumping sharks too early. [laughs] Whereas Modern Family went for the obvious. Good luck to them. We'll see where they are in three years.
LM: That baby's going to grow up. But you know what? More interestingly, I think we're actually telling the story about how gay people do have babies, and that's a really interesting story. People don't know about surrogacy and blastocytes and stuff.
MR: I agree. To me, it's the journey that's so interesting, this whole roller coaster. When it happens, it'll just be diapers and screaming. It's the journey that's interesting.

AE: For Kevin there's a bit of concern about how all but one of his blastocytes didn't take. Would that matter to you personally that the child be genetically related to you?
MR:
No. No, no, no, not at all. I think, just referring back to my previous answer, is that what's so lovely about this hop-on-motherhood journey is what they realize in relation to those moments, where they're confronted with those things. Things that a lot of people don't have to think about, they actually do. It informs them on their path and their personality, which I think is only beneficial.
LM: My family looks like a collection of strangers. They really do. So I've always believed that genetics are ... who knows. Maybe she's not really my twin sister. [laughs]

AE: As anyone who pays attention to television knows, TV is really mercurial. Getting a pilot is amazing enough, then actually getting picked up, and then having your show run for a number of seasons is practically a miracle. Ugly Betty was at the top of the heap just three years ago, and now it's been canceled. What does it mean to you that the show is going so strong three years later?
LM:
I think it's so great for any actor. We're such creatures who do things intensely for a short period of time and then move on to something else. That's sort of how we're built. But I know inside of me, I've always had this desire to belong to something a little bit longer. To be a part of this family, both literally and proverbially, it's just remarkable. I love it.

I'm kind of a homebody. I like coming to work and seeing the same faces. I'm not quite as enthralled by traveling all over, knowing people intensely for three months, and then moving on. For my soul, it just makes perfect sense. I've done pilots that didn't go anywhere, I've done shows for a year that didn't go anywhere, but I think I've always been looking to be a part of something for a long time. It just speaks to how I'm built.
MR: As usual, Mr. Macfarlane summed it up beautifully. From what I can glean from our success of three years is that we picked a subject matter that is so universal and so ever-evolving and something so many people can relate to, as opposed to shows that are very specific or have very specific storylines. We have something that evolves as everyone's family does over time. I think that accounts for our longevity.

AE: Since you're from Wales, Matthew, and you're from Canada, Luke, does making it in Hollywood carry something extra special?
LM:
I think we each get a nice spread in our local newspapers. [laughs]
MR: [laughs] We do. I was home recently, and I'm not going to blow my own horn, but in the local newspaper I'm always prefixed with "Hollywood Actor". "Hollywood Actor Matthew Rhys." [laughs]
LM: It's a funny thing to say "making it." I certainly hope that I have more places to go. Sure I've made it when I look at certain people, but still so far to go. You never quite feel like you've made it.
MR: What is lovely is whenever people from home or whatever come to set, and you forget, but when they come on the lot they sort of do go, "GASP!" And you're reminded of that and you go, "Oh God. Yeah."

A friend of mine just came on the lot and said, "You must live the dream every day." And in a way, I'd sort of forgotten how remarkable it is, so you are reminded. It's true. Like Luke says, it's part of a journey.

AE: This show has a really big ensemble cast, I would imagine that has pluses and minuses. A plus being you don't have as much responsibility to carry or as many scenes. The minus being you don't have as many scenes. Would either of you ever be interested in doing a show where you were carrying it on your shoulders?
MR:
I don't know. I've met a lot of actors who do that and they're just burnt. It's a lot of work. It really is. And you know what acting creatures are like. I don't know. That amount of pressure and that work load, it's the antithesis of what we do where we don't have a lot to do but we get time off. You get the big bone, but it's a lot of work eating it. ... Where did that come from? [laughs]

AE: So it doesn't really appeal to you then?
MR:
I think it would be project specific.
LM: Yeah.
MR: If one came along and you said, "Oh, this is a gift," then you'd have to.

AE: You have both done a lot of other work. Is television where you feel most at home, least at home, or is it just acting is acting?
LM:
I always say this is a bit of a cliche, but I started in theater and I feel very comfortable there. I haven't had a lot of experience in film, but theater is always the thing I imagine returning to.
MR: Exactly the same answer. It's where I started. It's where I feel most alive, really, for obvious reasons ? performing for a live audience and everything else that comes with it.
LM: It's really yours, too, in a way that television isn't. You shoot something and you have no idea how they're going to edit it or even if they're going to keep the scene. When the curtain goes up, it's your show. You're totally in control. The director is around the corner drinking beer with his buddies.

Macfarlane as F. Scott Fitzgerald in The Jazz Age

AE: With the directing you've done, Matthew, is that something you want to eventually do more of, or something you were just trying out?
LM:
Before he answers that, he was brilliant. He really was. He dealt with the actors and everyone respected him. He did so well.
MR: I was very nervous, but thank you Mr. Macfarlane. It was something I wanted to try out and there was no safer environment than having been on a show for three years and to step out with a fantastic crew. I thought it was the prefect environment to test the water, dip my toe in, and it was.

AE: Who gave you the most grief? Rachel Griffiths seems like she has a lot of spunk to her.
MR:
Rachel, in that amazingly Aussie way where the truth is presented with sledgehammers and baseball bats, is sort of unreal for me, but it's still the truth so you can't argue with it. I mean, my God, you've got a collection of the strongest women in Hollywood, so trying to cajole them sometimes into a note you think might elevate something to somewhere was sometimes terrifying and sometimes terrifying.

AE: If you survived that, you're ready for...
MR:
...anything. I'm ready for Melrose Place. [laughs]

AE: Dear God, I hope not. Don't tell anybody I said that.
MR:
[laughs]

AE: Going back to the expectation issues of your character, obviously when people care about characters on television, it's almost like having a relationship. You care so you pay a lot of attention, and you start to nitpick, and focus on the little things. It seems like lately, a lot of people on our site have described Kevin as unlikable in some of the ways he behaves. I think it's a testament to you as an actor, Matthew, and your personality that he comes across as likable as he does. How do you look at Kevin at this point?
MR: First off, with any character it's the complexity, the warts and all, that I love. I like the fact that there are those moments. I love the rough with the smooth. For a lot of the time, Kevin seems to be in transition. If it's not relationships, it's work, and it takes him a while to come to these conclusions, but like everything else, that's what makes it interesting for me. Thank God, Scotty is so understanding and loving. [laughs]
LM: Scotty is his psychiatrist.
MR: Yes, he's the alkaline to his acid.

AE: How is Scotty feeling about Kevin these days, Luke? Is he getting exasperated?
LM:
It's the thing that happens in relationships. This is who he is. I knew that from the get-go. I think on some level, Scotty thrives on that kind of relationship. He is the most comfortable being the person who can be a rock. Some people like that. They feel very useful that way. That's why he picked Kevin, because he feels very useful to him.

AE: Non-actors like to think that actors spend a lot of time discussing their characters and the dynamics of the relationship. Do you two do that? When the whole baby storyline came up, was there ever a time where you said, "Let's talk about this," or does that come from the writers?
LM:
I love talking to the writers about where they're coming from. Often, that's the most useful way to have those conversations about characters. You can say, "So what is he thinking here?" I tend to do a lot of that, but not necessarily with the other actors so much. That's sort of an acting thing. You keep your secrets to yourself. You don't always want to share them with your scene partner.
MR: Do you [keep secrets]?
LM: Yeah.
MR: Oh.
LM: I'm playing that Scotty is straight. [laughs]
MR: And that he's trapped! For me, it's very rare. When something pops and I go, "Oh, I really disagree with that, then I'll... It's rare though that something's not working on the page.
LM: I don't know if I should mention this, but I said to Matthew once, "I think they might have you do drag." And Matthew was like, "No. No. No. Kevin would not do that!" Which I think he's actually right about, you know?

AE: I wouldn't argue with that.
LM:
But come on. Who wouldn't like to see Matthew do a hilarious drag act? That's what all the writers are thinking.
MR: Yeah. I wouldn't. I wouldn't ever want to see myself in drag, and that's what it boils down to.

AE: Luke, you do that really fun cooking blog on the ABC site. Do you go out and shoot all those pictures at one time? Do you come up with the ideas for the posts or do the writers?
LM:
I write about half of them and then John writes the other half. We keep coming up with ideas and then we panic and go, "Oh God! We have to write another one this week!" Literally, the idea came from having dinner with my friends and I said, "Wouldn't it be great if ABC bought dinner for us?" Then I was like, "I'm going to go ask them if I can do reviews of ten restaurants." Of course, that didn't happen, but they were like, "That's a great idea. Write a blog." It's actually been a little more work than I originally anticipated.

AE: Both of you guys have been featured on our Hot 100 list. Luke, last year you actually came in at #3. Matthew, you've made the Top 25 before, but now you're down to 34. Gareth David-Lloyd passed you...
MR: Well done, darling.
LM: Where are you going with this question?

AE: He has to campaign!
MR:
Oh. Vote for me?
LM: [laughs]
MR: Uh.... I don't know. I feel rather crushed by all that, especially young Gareth.

AE: Okay, I'll let you off the hook. Matthew, you're a big rugby fan. Gareth Thomas just came out. What was your reaction to that?
MR: I was, this sounds very patronizing, but I was very proud of my nation. I was at the rugby game immediately after he came out, and he was our Welsh captain. It was a huge club match the day after Christmas, so it's a big game, and we're all there, and they didn't start him. He came out and he got a huge round of applause. I was really quite moved by it.

AE: Not to sound corny, but that actually kind of gives me chills.
MR:
I got such a chill when it happened. All these tough, rugged ... it's still a working man's game. It's not the game it is in England and Scotland, so for all those men to give him a huge round of applause when he ran out, because he ran out on his own.

AE: Why do you think he got such a positive reaction?
MR:
I think... I don't know. You can dress it up as anything, but I think it was an appreciation and acknowledgement that he did a very brave thing in a very difficult environment. For all the bullshit of what being a man is, what he did was a very manly thing.

AE: This will be good because I don't think Americans understand just what he means to Wales.
MR:
He's our hero. Plus, he looks like an animal, which is what's so fantastic about it. He's a huge mountain man.
LM: Is he single?

AE: Actually, he is.
MR:
Yeah, yeah. He was here in LA, as well, recently. We were on hiatus or otherwise we would have met up.

AE: Any other projects you've got coming up that you're working on?
MR:
No, not really. I did a little movie while we were on hiatus called Patagonia that will be coming out in a little bit, but that's the only thing in the pipeline.

AE: Luke, anything coming up?
LM:
I've been working on this interesting solo theater piece with my writer friend Keith Bunin who is a writer on In Treatment. Hopefully, this hiatus we'll be able to do some more. That's about it.

Brothers & Sisters airs on ABC Sunday nights at 10 PM.

Thursday, 21 January 2010

An interview on Daily Telegraph

Matthew Rhys on Brothers and Sisters

The Welsh actor discusses moving from Cardiff to California and starring in the hit US drama series.

By Neil Midgley
Published: 10:37AM GMT 21 Jan 2010

Luke MacFarlane, Matthew Rhys and Marion Ross in the US drama series Brothers and Sisters.

“Security will direct you to the Zorro parking structure,” says the email from the PR, explaining how to get to the set of the hit ABC show Brothers & Sisters. This is a Disney studio lot in Burbank, California: generously landscaped and sun-drenched, with its own gas station and murals featuring Donald Duck. It’s a long way – both literally and metaphorically – from the south Wales childhood of Matthew Rhys.

“I love and embrace the cultural differences,” says Rhys – now almost a California native, after four years’ worth of Brothers & Sisters (shown here on More4). “In some ways, they’re so profoundly different from Britain. In other ways, very similar.”

Macfarlane, who hails from Canada, joins in. “Matthew’s also exceptionally talented at all accents,” he says archly.

“Yes. Even neighbourhoods of Canada,” says Rhys.

Not just neighbourhoods – specific hockey teams,” quips Macfarlane.

The pair’s good-natured off-screen banter is exactly how fans of the show would hope. Brothers & Sisters has no time-travelling cops, no jets crashing on desert islands. It rivets more than 10million American viewers with nothing more than the intertwined stories of one family. Warm, prosperous and sentimental, the show - and its high-octane, often tear-jerking emotion – is kept from descending into soap opera not just by polished scriptwriting, but by a classy cast: Calista Flockhart, Rob Lowe and, crucially, Sally Field as materfamilias Nora Walker. On Facebook, there’s a “Which Walker are you?” quiz – and, quips Macfarlane, “everyone just keeps taking it until they get Nora.

As British viewers start season four tonight, they will catch up with Kevin and Scotty’s newest storyline: the quest for a baby. “We’re lucky that that storyline is relatively uncharted,” says Rhys. “The whole journey of going about it makes very interesting TV.”

And so do the different ways one goes about it – adoption versus surrogacy,” adds Macfarlane.

Along with the gay couple on ABC’s new sitcom Modern Family, Kevin and Scotty are blazing a trail for gay parenting on American primetime television. But, says Rhys, he doesn't feel like a “poster child” for gay rights. “The press we’ve had has been very positive,” he says. “A very healthy, very nice response – that what we’re doing is on the right track.”

Macfarlane agrees. “The cultural significance is always surprising,” he says. “We just show up and do the work, and they tell us it’s groundbreaking – but it doesn’t necessarily feel groundbreaking.” Certainly Brothers & Sisters doesn’t trumpet itself as a genre-altering show. It is executive produced by Ken Olin, who appeared on screen as self-obsessed ad exec Michael Steadman in the Eighties-zeitgeist series thirtysomething. Brothers & Sisters reflects a more mature version of the same sensibility, with enviable suburban houses and beautiful knitwear as much on show as Rhys’s American accent.

Rhys himself is evidently having the time of his life. “I feel comfortable here primarily because I think Los Angeles is made up of people who don’t come from here, so you can find kindred spirits very easily,” he says. “It’s a town of gypsies.”

But Rhys has a more versatile CV than some TV actors, having played Dylan Thomas in the 2008 film The Edge of Love – and opposite Kathleen Turner in the West End version of The Graduate. “I definitely want to go back to the theatre. It is hard work, it is repetitive, but it is intensely rewarding,” he says.

His career as a chameleon extends even to talking to journalists. “You play to whatever publication you’re being interviewed by,” he says cheerily. So who is he being today, for The Daily Telegraph. “Upright Tory. Bring back Maggie!” So… does he hunt and shoot and fish? “I do, yes. I actually do! Well, I don’t hunt on horseback. In Wales, it’s a little more practical. It’s vermin control.” As Rhys is called back to the cavernous sound stage, it’s hard not to think: you can take the boy out of Cardiff…

Monday, 23 November 2009

Side Dish - 23rd Nov.

Side Dish - Scotty's Food Blog from ABC, Brothers & Sisters.

This week has been particularly cold for LA. I imagine that this is what autumn in New England feels like: the approaching cold, coming indoors rosy-cheeked after a pickup football game, raking colored leaves into piles and drinking hot mulled apple cider.

"I can see my breath," Kevin demonstrated with characteristic gruff as we left the house this morning to head over to his mother Nora's house. So much for global warming. When we got to Nora's, Kevin was still complaining about the cold and so I got an idea. One quick look at Nora's pantry assured me that she would not miss a few ingredients (and we all know how expensive nutmeg is!), so while everyone was in the other room undoubtedly spilling secrets they had promised to keep, I slipped into the kitchen and raided Nora's pantry.


I filled the crockpot with about a gallon of apple cider and stirred in 1/4 cup of brown sugar. Then I stuck about 20-25 whole cloves into the skin of 1/2 an apple cut into wedges and 1 whole orange.

To the apple and orange, I added 2 whole nutmegs, 3 cinnamon sticks, 4 pieces of crystallized ginger wrapped it all in cheesecloth and dropped it into the crock pot, topping it off with the rest of the gallon of cider.You can use other spices too star anise, lemon zest or allspice berries, for example but make sure you use whole spices; ground spices will leave the cider gritty and cloudy. Let this simmer for a few hours, enjoying the autumnal aromas as they fill your house.


Next, pour a healthy mug two-thirds full, top off with Brandy and enjoy with someone who needs a little warming up.

Happy Thanksgiving!
Scotty.

I didn't expect a new post because there was no airing yesterday. That was a very good surprise.

Side Dish - 16th Nov.

Re-post with pictures.


Dear Friends,

It's 6:00 AM and I'm sitting cross-legged on my couch while my husband sleeps quietly in the next room. Usually this time of day is relaxing for me, but not today. In fact, today I feel panicked because I'm typing the first tentative lines of my food blog and, as my closest friends can tell you, writing has never been my strong suit. Some of you may recall my attempt in high school at self-publishing the comic: Johnny Truth and the Big Secret Squad.


I don't want to call it a dismal failure, but let's just say I couldn't even convince my parents to buy a copy. But I've been poked enough times by friends and colleagues to put a few of my kitchen and culinary musings into print to reconsider my literary ambitions. I know you were hoping for a cookbook, but after Johnny Truth, this seems like a more manageable first step. Who knows? A blog today, a cookbook tomorrow...

Part of the deal with my little online journal is that it remain amongst my friends. The truth is that as much as I love my slumbering husband, I've become entangled in his family's life rather profoundly and I'm looking for a bit of an escape. I want to talk about my thoughts on cooking, recipes, restaurants and all of my culinary adventures free from the Walker family's web of gossip. As much as I love my Mother-in-Law she has her way of making a Hollandaise sauce and I have mine.

Because it's my first post and it's so early in the morning it seems fitting to start with breakfast and a few thoughts on a kitchen classic that is all too easy to get wrong: the poached egg.

And, believe me, over the years I've gotten the poached egg wrong. In fact one of my first recipes was a Zucchini Summer Stew with a poached egg on top. I first made it for my Dad when I was 9 and my Mom was out of town visiting Granny. It was so good he hasn't stopped asking me to make it for him since. Coming up with the recipe (which I can share later) was the easy part – poaching the egg proved a good deal harder.

So here are my favorite egg poaching pointers – I wish I had these when I was 9:
• You need to use a fresh egg. There's no substitute for that. Trust. Me.
• I always add a tiny bit of vinegar to the water first (about 1 TBSP per pint). Something about the chemicals helps to keep the egg together as it cooks.
• Bring the water only to the slightest boil. A roaring boil can pock the egg and leave bubbles.
• To make sure your egg is perfectly shaped, crack it into a small bowl first, and then tip the egg from the bowl into the boiling water.

Two other things. First, I'm not a believer in the whirlpool technique for poaching eggs. I've tried this "chef secret" many times and just find it messy. I used to work with a sous chef who liked to say: "Whirlpools are for happy blokes, not cracked yokes." I couldn't agree more.

Second, don't overcook the egg. It probably needs a maximum of 3 minutes, covered. A runny yoke is always preferred, unless you are classless. (You know who you are.)

I like to serve my eggs with salt and pepper on toasted bread smeared with the slightest bit of White Truffle Butter. My sister-in-law just brought me a tiny jar of the stuff from a recent trip to France. Now don't think that I am one of those people who thinks that everything taste better with truffles. But I do think that starting your day off with a bit of class can only lead to good things.


And on that note I think I may just open up that bottle of Champagne that has been sitting in the back of my fridge, make a Mimosa, and bring sleeping beauty some breakfast in bed.

Scotty.

Monday, 16 November 2009

It's started!!!

Side Dish - Scotty's Food Blog has launched today. It will be posted weekly.

Obviously it's better to read it on its own website though, I would like to copy them here.

Side Dish
Get weekly dish from Scotty Wandell as he talks about his favorite recipes, cooking adventures and thoughts on the latest Walker drama.

Dear Friends,

It's 6:00 AM and I'm sitting cross-legged on my couch while my husband sleeps quietly in the next room. Usually this time of day is relaxing for me, but not today. In fact, today I feel panicked because I'm typing the first tentative lines of my food blog and, as my closest friends can tell you, writing has never been my strong suit. Some of you may recall my attempt in high school at self-publishing the comic: Johnny Truth and the Big Secret Squad.

I don't want to call it a dismal failure, but let's just say I couldn't even convince my parents to buy a copy. But I've been poked enough times by friends and colleagues to put a few of my kitchen and culinary musings into print to reconsider my literary ambitions. I know you were hoping for a cookbook, but after Johnny Truth, this seems like a more manageable first step. Who knows? A blog today, a cookbook tomorrow...

Part of the deal with my little online journal is that it remain amongst my friends. The truth is that as much as I love my slumbering husband, I've become entangled in his family's life rather profoundly and I'm looking for a bit of an escape. I want to talk about my thoughts on cooking, recipes, restaurants and all of my culinary adventures free from the Walker family's web of gossip. As much as I love my Mother-in-Law she has her way of making a Hollandaise sauce and I have mine.

Because it's my first post and it's so early in the morning it seems fitting to start with breakfast and a few thoughts on a kitchen classic that is all too easy to get wrong: the poached egg.

And, believe me, over the years I've gotten the poached egg wrong. In fact one of my first recipes was a Zucchini Summer Stew with a poached egg on top. I first made it for my Dad when I was 9 and my Mom was out of town visiting Granny. It was so good he hasn't stopped asking me to make it for him since. Coming up with the recipe (which I can share later) was the easy part – poaching the egg proved a good deal harder.

So here are my favorite egg poaching pointers – I wish I had these when I was 9:
• You need to use a fresh egg. There's no substitute for that. Trust. Me.
• I always add a tiny bit of vinegar to the water first (about 1 TBSP per pint). Something about the chemicals helps to keep the egg together as it cooks.
• Bring the water only to the slightest boil. A roaring boil can pock the egg and leave bubbles.
• To make sure your egg is perfectly shaped, crack it into a small bowl first, and then tip the egg from the bowl into the boiling water.

Two other things. First, I'm not a believer in the whirlpool technique for poaching eggs. I've tried this "chef secret" many times and just find it messy. I used to work with a sous chef who liked to say: "Whirlpools are for happy blokes, not cracked yokes." I couldn't agree more.

Second, don't overcook the egg. It probably needs a maximum of 3 minutes, covered. A runny yoke is always preferred, unless you are classless. (You know who you are.)

I like to serve my eggs with salt and pepper on toasted bread smeared with the slightest bit of White Truffle Butter. My sister-in-law just brought me a tiny jar of the stuff from a recent trip to France. Now don't think that I am one of those people who thinks that everything taste better with truffles. But I do think that starting your day off with a bit of class can only lead to good things.

And on that note I think I may just open up that bottle of Champagne that has been sitting in the back of my fridge, make a Mimosa, and bring sleeping beauty some breakfast in bed.

Scotty.

I can't wait to read next blog already.

Friday, 13 November 2009

SIDE DISH - Scotty's Food Blog

There is an unbelievably incredible, amazingly wonderful and absolutely fabulous news!!
Luke is gonna blog as Scotty. It's "SIDE DISH" and will start this coming Monday, 16th. You can check it out on the website, Bloggers & Sisters.
Beginning this Monday (November 16) Scotty Wandell fans have a new weekly treat to look forward to – SIDE DISH, Scotty’s very own food blog. But wait, Scotty’s a fictional character...so who is actually going to be writing this new blog? Well, who knows Scotty better than Luke Macfarlane himself

“All my life, I’ve loved writing. In high school I used to write short stories all the time. So when I first had the idea of writing a food blog as Scotty, I knew that I also wanted to do most of the writing. I asked John Kazlauskas to be involved as well, but it's just the two of us who will be writing everything you see posted.”

But that’s the last time you’ll hear that Luke and John are doing the writing:

“We wanted this to come completely from Scotty’s world -- to feel totally real and intimate. Like the show is alive outside of Sunday night. So you won’t see John’s or my name anywhere on the blog. This is from Scotty. Even down to the pictures we’re taking. We’re not going to use ABC publicity stills from the show. We’re doing what Scotty would do: take pictures with his phone.”

How did the idea for the blog come about?

“I love going out to eat and the idea came while I was out eating with some friends. It just seemed like a fun opportunity to explore more about who Scotty is. And, unlike Scotty, I’m not much of a cook so this is a chance for me to learn something, too.”

What can we expect to see on the blog?

“It’s basically everything food-related that’s going on for Scotty when he’s not on screen. It might be his musings on a particular food or food trend, his kitchen tips, a copy of his favorite recipes or just stories about his random culinary adventures. But it’s all real. John and I are actually doing everything we write about whether it’s pickling beets or doing a tasting of frozen TV dinners. It’s going to be a lot of fun”


SIDE DISH launches on Monday, November 16. A new SIDE DISH will be posted the Monday following every new episode of BROTHERS & SISTERS.

I can't wait to start reading his blog as Scotty! I think it's a great interaction between Luke and his fans. He hasn't been around much as himself, but at least we can see him on the website as Scotty from now on. And he still can keep his private life as his own. I would like to thank for this wonderful idea. And the same time, I'm a little jealous of the writer, John, because he can work with Luke!