Showing posts with label owain yeoman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label owain yeoman. Show all posts

Friday, November 2, 2012

|INTERVIEW| 'The Mentalist' Owain Yeoman Q&A

The fifth season of hit crime drama The Mentalist reaches UK screens this week, courtesy of Channel 5 - 'The Red Glass Bead' picks up right where season four left off, with the CBI and FBI at odds after serial killer Red John was able to evade justice once more.

Digital Spy caught up with Owain Yeoman - who plays the faithful Rigsby - to chat about his character's role in the new season, how dark Patrick Jane (Simon Baker) can afford to get and whether our heroes will ever catch up with the elusive Red John...

When The Mentalist first began, Rigsby was a little immature. Do you feel like he's grown as a character?
"Yeah, it's funny; I was talking about this the other day actually. We've obviously all grown with the show - we looked back at the pilot the other day and it's always funny when you look back on something and you think, 'Oh I looked good then, I was really proud of that'. I looked back and I was like, 'Oh my God, I was a child!' so yeah I like to think [that Rigsby has become more mature].

"There's been a lot of things that have happened this season, like all the returning characters coming back. I just finished filming a wonderful episode with William Forsythe, who plays Rigsby's father, and that was a real kind of reckoning moment for me and for the character.

"The nature of an ensemble means when you're a supporting character and not the lead character, you get little tidbits here and there, but you're usually there to provide bits of comic relief and little bits of action or something. So when you get the spotlight fully thrown on you in an episode like [season five, episode four] 'Blood Feud', then it really gives you a chance to draw a much bigger picture of who this guy is.

"He's transitioned into more serious problems - he's got his job on the line, he's lost the woman that he truly loves and he probably still hasn't given up on her, he's had an unwanted pregnancy with a woman where the relationship hasn't worked out, so there's an awful lot of real-life adult problems that I think would force anyone to grow up really quickly."

What was it like working with William Forsythe again?
"He's quite an intimidating force in the best possible way. He brings such a level of preparation. He's currently working on another show called The Mob Doctor where he is the head of the mob, so if that's not intimidating enough... you know, 'My Dad is being played by the head of the mob!'

"But he's just so full of ideas. We had him for 24 hours to shoot probably 15 scenes and every single one of them was a huge emotional scene. You'll see from the episode, it's a real kind of growing up moment for Rigsby where I think he reflects upon the father that he had and the father he wanted to be.

"I love that, I love coming to the challenge. I guess William threw down the gauntlet and it really is a question of... you either bring your best game or you'll just get lost. He's so on all the time and we actually spent almost the entirety of the episode just doing our stuff together, which was lovely.

"He's a fantastic actor and I'm really excited for the episode to come out and also I'm excited for Rigsby, I think people will finally get the chance to see that there's more to him than just a quip here and a joke there, with a doughnut or a bagel in his mouth!"

Can you give us any hints on where the Red John storyline will head this season?
"I think the big question has been, 'When will we see Red John?' and the challenge that Bruno Heller has as the show creator is that it's the raison d'ĂȘtre for the show - if you take away Jane's hunt for Red John, the serial killer who killed his wife and child, you take away his whole reason for being and his whole reason for being in the CBI, so it's a fine balancing act of how much you can tease it out without boring an audience.

"Bruno's been very tactical this year and promised we will get within inches of Red John. You know, I'd love to pretend I'm being all kinds of sneaky, but I'll just be dead honest with you and say I really don't know who Red John is! It makes me laugh when you hear actors go, 'I'm gonna have to be top secret about the truth' - I really don't know! I think only Bruno really knows - he decides on where to go with that.

"But we've got Emmanuelle Chriqui coming back playing Lorelei this season, which I think was a wonderful injection of life last season. It's really interesting to see the dynamic between her and Jane, and we've got William Forsythe coming back and Summer (Samaire Armstrong), Cho's prostitute girlfriend, is making a return. We've also got Virgil Minnelli (Gregory Itzin) coming back...

"It's a season full of old faces and we actually will get to see Jane's daughter, but I can't say in what context. It's a season that really explains where Jane came from and his journey to the CBI and we've been promised from Bruno that we will get literally inches away from Red John this season. This is the big season if you are a Red John fan."

Some fans noticed that Jane started going down a darker path last season. Do you think the show can ever get too dark?
"I think it's sort of a challenge. I always thought that the show found its groove in the first two seasons by being a mixture. You know, we all love our cop shows like the CSIs and Criminal Minds - all those shows that have thrived for years because it's a classic whodunnit, and everybody loves to solve a whodunnit.

"I always thought we kind of managed to stick out from the pack by having that element of human interest. We're not just faceless cops - we're all having relationships we've all got problems, Jane's got his demons, Lisbon's got the issue with authority, Van Pelt's got the trouble with her romantic stuff, and you know Tim's character Cho battled addiction last season, so these are real people and the human interest element is what keeps people going.

"We've found that people seem to be responding more to grittiness at the moment. I don't know if that's down to the economy being in a bad place or people just being in a darker place, but they just seemed to have really responded to that and I think it makes the Jane character so much more interesting - under all this lightness, you suddenly see a very dark and possibly slightly mentally unstable place that he comes from.

"I think that layers it and I think you'll see this season with every single character, we peel the onion away and see that none of us are stable characters and none of us have come to law enforcement through a very traditional path. Hopefully that'll make it interesting. You know, I'm not saying there's not an element of humour there, but I think Simon wanted to deliberately take Jane down that path to see how much they could push that envelope."

How long do you see The Mentalist going on?
"I never like to guess. To be honest with you, when we filmed the pilot, I think every part of you as an actor just wants to say, 'Well great, see you next pilot season!' because you daren't wish that anyone will respond to it. This was my sixth series and none of the others had gone, so you just never take it personally. You roll on and you hope that the next one will find an audience.

"I know we're aiming for seven [seasons] and that Simon is the producer for this year, so he gets to have a real direct say in the creative [side of things] and I think he's directing a couple [of episodes]. The workload is so squarely on his shoulders with the amount of heavy lifting that the Patrick Jane character does, I think how long the shows continues will rest on; a) If an audience is still reacting to us and b) How much time Simon feels that he can keep the Patrick Jane character interesting, because he works tirelessly to keep that creative and fresh.

"I'm a cautious optimist and I would love to see it go the full seven seasons. We are in a world of uncertainties, but we could give the show a nice proper conclusion if we said, 'This is our final season', and we could get the chance to tie everything up. Having said that, would I mind if it ended up lasting for twenty seasons? Not at all."

You're a Welsh actor and you've had this big US success. Why do you think there is this trend of non-US actors - Damian Lewis, Andrew Lincoln, yourself - making it big out there?
"I always joke that we're cheaper! But seriously there seems to be a real response to British theatrical training and there's a real respect for that. I had the good fortune to go to Oxford and go to RADA, so training is really respected over here.

"Also, I remember speaking to a casting director and he said to me, 'It's really funny, America's filled with these very good-looking boyish leading men but we can't get many men's men, so we looked to Australia and the UK because you guys... have that rugged element.' If you look at your Russell Crowes and your Eric Banas - those kind of real leading men - they're all coming from overseas.

"I came over to the US in 2004 and it was quite trendy to be British, but now it's quite trendy to be American. It's like, 'Can we get an American to play that American? I'm getting sick of all these Welsh people playing them' [laughs]... but as long as this show continues, I'll be very happy!"

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Source: Digital Spy.
P.S.: I had to post this picture, I just HAD to. Don't ask me why... 
Don't forget to follow the suavest man in the world on twitter, @OYeoman.

Friday, October 26, 2012

|VIDEO| ‘The Mentalist’ Celebrates 100th Episode



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Source: Extra TV.
Special thanks to @Aleee_O for the heads up.

|VIDEO| The Mentalist Celebrates 100 Episodes



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Source: thetvaddict.

|VIDEO| 'Mentalist' Honors 100th Episode with Flashback

 

The Mentalist airs its 100th episode on Sunday, and before the milestone episode hits the airwaves, the cast and crew threw a party to celebrate the accomplishment. As they toasted to 100 episodes, they reflected on the past five seasons.

Not only did the cast have an opportunity to reflect upon the course of the show from its very beginning but viewers will have the same opportunity when watching the 100th episode, which flashes back to show how Patrick Jane (Simon Baker) met Teresa Lisbon (Robin Tunney) and the rest of the CBI gang.

On the red carpet at the party, the cast had a blast thinking back on the past 100 episodes and the evolution of the show and its characters. As the cast members looked forward to the show's hopeful 100 more episodes to come, they had some comical propositions for what the show should explore next.

As much as his fellow cast mates would like him to lead the cast in a musical episode, Baker assures that his character won't be displaying any hidden theatrical talents any time soon.

"I think that's the point where I'm going to be on vacation somewhere," he said on the prospect of the cast partaking in a musical episode.

Check out the special 100th episode of The Mentalist this Sunday at 10 p.m. on CBS.

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Source: ETOnline.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Sunday, October 21, 2012

|VIDEOS & PHOTOS| 100th Episode Party


Watch these great interviews with Simon Baker, the love of my life Robin Tunney, Tim Kang, the very pregnant Amanda Righetti, Owain Yeoman, Emmanuelle Chriqui and Tom Szentgyorgyi, all of them celebrating the 100th episode of our favorite show. Oh, there're more pictures, too (aren't they gorgeous?).

Don't forget to watch tonight's episode Blood Feud, written by Jordan Harper, and of course, wait for Red Dawn's promo!




















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Source: The TV Watchtower.
Special thanks to @Aleee_O for the heads up.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

|SPOILER| TV Guide: Blast to the Past

The Mentalist’s 100th episode goes back in time to crack the case of how Patrick Jane first teamed up with the CBI. “Jane is like a shadow of a person”, says Baker. “He’s not the three-piece-suited smartass you see later down the line.”

Think about it. We’re now five seasons into The Mentalist and we still don’t know all that much about Simon Baker’s title character—the sad, tormented, ultra-private Patrick Jane. What happened to him right after the murder of his wife and daughter by the mad slasher Red John? Is it true that he was in a mental hospital under suicide watch? And, if so, how did he ever get his act together to join the major crimes unit at the CBI? To celebrate the 100th episode of the CBS series, creator exec-producer Bruno Heller is flashing back—eight years to be exact—to cough up a few answers. Prepare for a very different Patrick Jane.

“We started out the series in the past, showing how Jane’s scheming and manipulation as fake psychic led directly to the loss of his family, then we jumped ahead to find him on the job with the CBI—now we’ll reveal what happened in the year in between,” says Heller. “This Jane is fresh out of the insane asylum. He’s shucked off his straitjacket and comes directly to the CBI offices to find out what the hell is going on in the search for Red John.”

Baker and costar Robin Tunney, who plays CBI senior special agent Teresa Lisbon, are shooting that very scene on the Warner Bros. Studios lot in Burbank. Jane, dark circles under his eyes and rumpled, crumpled mess, has shown up unannounced at CBI and asks Lisbon for details on the investigation. She’s understandably evasive and more than a little concerned about Jane’s mental state. She gently tells him to beat it but, before long, her maternal instincts kick in.

“Jane is very much the rescue dog—homeless, shattered, looking for a place to be and perfectly willing to tag along,” says Baker during a break in filming. “For the first time, the audience will see him not in control of what he’s doing. The last thing he wants to do is go back to being a con man because that’s what got him in all this trouble to begin with.”

Truth to be told, Baker was leery of this time-travel stuff. “When I first saw the story outline, I was concerned it could be hokey and that we might fuck it up,” the actor says. “This is tricky business. We need to forget about the relationships we established over all these years and reset the series completely. We have to show how Jane got in the door at CBI in a believable way—not easy since he annoys everyone so much.”

This back-in-time device also threw Tunney. “It’s a very clever notion, but also kind of scary,” she says. “How as actors do you try to come off eight years younger? Simon and I were like ‘uh, could someone hit the Benjamin button?’ Inevitably, you just throw your hands up and hope the audience is with you and believing you.” Tunney did ask permission to wear lots of padding. “I wanted Lisbon to be really heavy—like a ‘Shadow Hall’ thing—and just not comment on it. It would have been hilarious, but they wouldn’t go for it.”

There were serious talk of giving the extra poundage to Owain Yeoman’s character, agent Rigsby, however. “I weighed quite a bit more when we started the series,” says Yeoman, who has since taken up a vegetarian life style. “They wanted to go back to that, but in addition to a fat suit, they wanted a beard and glasses. I said, ‘What is this—Rigsby meets Santa?’ “ Nixing that idea but still needing something to suggest a time jump, Yeoman tried an artificial goatee “but wound up looking like Ming the Merciless.” He settled for growing his own.

The CBI offices underwent a retro-makeover with touches both major (the place looks pretty dumpy) and minor (Arnold Schwarzenegger’s photo is back on the wall, since he was governor). The retro CBI set was “a shock,” says Yeoman. “Rigsby’s desk was missing!” Gregory Itzin makes a return appearance as CBI boss Virgil Minelli, who retired in Season 2. And while there’re hints of the fan-fave bromance that will develop between Risgby and Agent Cho (Tim Kang), don’t go looking for agent Van Pelt (Amanda Righetti). She hadn’t joined yet the CBI team. In fact, Jane gets punched in the nose by her hot-headed predecessor, agent Hannigan (Gary Basaraba), which creates the job opening Van Pelt will eventually fills.

It’s the same punch—and the possibility of a lawsuit—that helps secure Jane’s position as a criminal profiler at CBI. “He realizes this is a place where he can stays on top of the Red John case and it brings back his confidence,” says Baker. “By the end of the episode, you start to see the Jane we all know. The guy is back on his horse!”

“Fans will love the nostalgia,” says Tunney of the episode. “So much is different, but one thing doesn’t change. Simon is still ridiculously handsome, damn it.”

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Source: TV Guide and OCD Ephemera.
Big thanks to @Aleee_O for heads up.

Saturday, October 6, 2012

|SPOILER| Matt's Inside Line: Scoop on Cho, Van Pelt and Rigsby

The Mentalist | Dipping into the mailbag, Laura asks: “Can I have a scoop about other characters from The Mentalist, like Van Pelt and Rigsby?” I relayed your request to EP Tom Szentgyorgyi, who for starters promised we’ll meet “someone new in Van Pelt’s future.” As for Rigsby, “He will cross paths with his father again, and continue to cope with his new life as a single dad.” (As show boss Bruno Heller previously teased, the Rigsby men’s “very conflicted and difficult relationship… comes to an epic head in Episode 4.”) As an added bonus, Szentgyorgyi shared that “Cho will start moonlighting with a second CBI unit, which leads him to a surprising encounter with someone from his past.” Scoop need sated?


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Source: TV|Line.

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