Tag Archives: True Blood HBO

Video: HBO Teases Fans With Another True Blood Season 5 Clip

Waiting Still Sucks but a New Teaser Makes it a Little More Fun:

As fans eagerly await the June 10th premiere of HBO’s True Blood Season 5, another teaser clip has been released. This video, the fifth released so far, is 37 seconds long and features Alcide (Joe Manganiello) and Sookie (Anna Paquin).

The clip is a scene from an upcoming Season 5 episode of True Blood. It is set in Sookie’s kitchen and is a conversation between Alcide and Sookie. When questioned, Alcide says he’s come to warn Sookie that Russell Edgington is on the loose. Sookie is confused since she believes that Russell is dead. The video ends as Alcide says, “You mean they didn’t tell you?”

We can’t wait for Season 5! How about you?

The clip can be viewed at HBO and YouTube.

Source: HBO

Video Source: You Tube

 

Stephen Moyer to Host Friends Without a Border Gala Event

Stephen MoyerOn December 10th, True Blood‘s Stephen Moyer (Bill Compton) will be one of the celebrity hosts at the First Annual Friends Without a Border Gala benefiting Cambodia’s Angkor Hospital for Children, founded in 1995 by photographer Kenro Izu.

The event will take place at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. During the event, there will be an auction of works from National Geographic photographer Steve McCurry as well as several other extraordinary photographers to help raise money for the charity. Tickets range from $300-8000, and for an additional $500 donation, guests will receive a museum-quality copy of the auction catalog.

According to event organizers, there will be a silent auction with cocktails from 7:00 PM – 8:15 PM followed by a Video Presentation, Live Auction, Hollywood Domino, Musical Performances and After-party from 8:15 PM – 1:00 AM.

According to Friends Without a Border:

One child out of 15 dies before the age of five in Cambodia.  This number jumps to one out of nine in rural areas. This is due primarily to limited access to quality and affordable medical care and insufficient knowledge of preventive care. The Angkor Hospital for Children (AHC) offers comprehensive pediatric care to every child that walks through its doors. On average, 400 children arrive at AHC every day in need of treatment. Additionally, numerous outreach programs to treat and educate, including HIV/AIDS/Homecare, reach hundreds of thousands of children and their families in rural villages. AHC is the second largest HIV/AIDS facility in the country. As an officially recognized teaching hospital, AHC staff has trained thousands of healthcare workers, who will help shape the future of care for the children. AHC research has also been published in internationally peer-reviewed medical journals, affecting and effecting policy and procedure in the country and beyond. Since opening in 1999, Angkor Hospital for Children has provided about three quarters of a million child treatments.

Other celebrity hosts include Ali Larter, Hayes MacArthur, Amaury Nolasco, Anne Hathaway, Eva Longoria Parker, Jennifer Morrison, Josh Jackson, Kate Hudson, Molly Sims, Paula Patton, Robin Thicke, Rebecca Gayheart and Eric Dane.

If you would like to attend the event you can contact Mayanna Prak by e-mailing her at mayanna@fwab.org or calling 323-843-2870.  You can view the invite here.

Want to get into a deeper discussion about this article?  Let others know and join them on our forum. Click here to be taken to the discussion area on our forum for this article.

SOURCES: Friends Without a Border and photojournalist Karl Grobl’s blog

(Photo Credit: VMAN Magazine via JustJared)

Sam Trammell Talks True Blood at West Virginia Hometown Fundraising Event

SamMerlotteSeason2BeyondHereLiesNothingThis weekend, Sam Trammel returns to his hometown of Charleston, W.Va., to help support the town’s East End Main Street historic preservation program by participating in the city’s HallowEast fundraising festival.

Born in Louisiana, True Blood’s Sam Trammell (Sam Merlotte) spent a large part of his childhood in Charleston, W.Va., and many of his friends and family, including his parents, still live there.

“I consider Charleston home. My mom and dad still live there. I really miss it, and I’m excited to see all my friends and family. It’s great to be coming home. …Downtown Charleston and the East End are just amazing. Today, when you look at the ballpark, the Clay Center and Capitol Street, you understand the revitalization has been great. I want to see it continue.

It’s [the fundraiser event] a good fit for Halloween. If you’ve read the Charlaine Harris books (on which the show is based), you know she introduces a whole host of fantastical creatures. For sure, it’s a Halloween sort of show.”

On Oct. 30, Charleston’s Cultural Center hosted two receptions with Sam. He then moved to Kanawha Players at 309 Beauregard Street, to sit down for an Inside the Actor’s Studio style interview, answering questions posed by David Wohl, dean of arts and sciences at West Virginia State University.

According to event organizers, money raised during the festival will be used to help neighborhood businesses in downtown Charleston to promote and preserve the historic district.

While in town, Sam spoke with Bill Lynch of The Charleston Gazette about his experience working on True Blood. According to Sam, the most difficult aspect of working on a show like HBO‘s True Blood isn’t the bloody effects.  It also isn’t the late nights, though he says that they start shooting around 5 p.m. for all night shoots that last until dawn and he is sometimes sleep deprived from the schedule.  Sam expected all of that since, after all, it is a show about vampires.  Sam says that the thing he has the hardest time adjusting to is:

“…the cold, believe it or not. I don’t like the cold.”

Trammell, a George Washington High School graduate, remembers one particular night this past season when they were shooting a scene involving an orgy and a bonfire. Some of the townspeople of Bon Temps (the fictional town where the show is set) were under the sway of an evil temptress. There was a lot of bare skin and everyone had to pretend it was a sweltering, summer night in Louisiana.

Of course, they’re not filming in Louisiana but in a canyon in Malibu, where it gets down into the 30s.

“I didn’t have to be naked or anything,” he said, “but I was in short sleeves. It was pretty cold.”

Sam, 38, is mindful of just how chilly it gets because of the nature of his character, Sam Merlotte. Merlotte is a shapeshifter who can turn from a man into a dog, a bull and who knows what else. The side effect is that he tends to lose his clothes in the transformation and gets to do scenes in the buff.

In addition to talking about last season, Sam also spoke a little bit about working on season three and what it is like to work with Alan Ball.  According to Sam, Alan tends to work in advance, so the scripts for next season are probably already finished.  This kind of advance preparation isn’t always the case, however, says Sam:

“Most TV shows, you get scripts a week before you shoot them.  You might get pages the day before you shoot.”

Often, a show begins its season with only some of the episodes completed. This especially happens with shows like Lost and Heroes, which have broad storylines but are open to making changes later in the season based on earlier rating successes or failures.Ball doesn’t work that way.

Alan likes to have everything done,” Sam said. “He wants to finish shooting the season before it airs — just in case he needs a re-shoot.”

So what’s coming up next for Sam Merlotte?  Sam didn’t give much away, but he did tell the Gazette:

“I think Sam is going to go toward the vein of trying to find his biological parents. That will definitely end in some bad stuff.”

I hate to think that we’ll have to see Sam crying once again.  The season finale, “Beyond Here Lies Nothin’,” was heart rending for his character from beginning to end.  Perhaps we will learn a little good news for Sam in season three from this Q & A event but more than likely, we will simply have to wait until June 2010 for the answers we want.

Jessica Ralston from WSAZ had the chance to catch up with Sam and discuss his homecoming and True Blood.

SOURCE: The Charleston Gazette

(Photo credit: HBO Inc.)

Sookieverse Stories in A Touch of Dead are Good to the Last Bloody Drop

Sookie StackhouseAll summer long, Alan Ball’s True Blood vampire mystery series has garnered sky-high ratings, getting us all hooked on the characters and story line. The end of Season 2 has left True Blood fans thirsting for more, feeling, as Charlaine Harris puts it, that there’s “Sookie, Sookie everywhere, but not a drop to drink.” However, with the release of Charlaine’s Sookie-centered short story collection, A Touch of Dead, Truebies can feed their cravings.

The stories are additions to Charlaine‘s bestselling Sookie Stackhouse Southern vampire mystery series, and while these stories have been available elsewhere in various collections, this is the first time that they have been put together into one bound edition.  The original publication dates of the collected short stories as they fit into the novel series are as follows:

A Touch of DeadDead Until Dark, 2001
Living Dead in Dallas, 2002
Club Dead, 2003
“Fairy Dust”, 2004
“One Word Answers”, 2004
Dead as a Doornail, 2005
Definitely Dead, 2006
All Together Dead, 2007
“Dracula Night”, 2007
From Dead to Worse, 2008
“Gift Wrap”, 2008
“Lucky”, 2008
Dead and Gone, 2009

The five stories have been placed in chronological order as they fit into the timeline of the novel series.   All of the stories take place after the action Book 2, Living Dead in Dallas, which was the springboard for True Blood‘s second season.

Ginnie Graham of Tulsa World raves about the collection, stating that:

“Arkansas native Harris brings humor and a straight-forward writing style to her unique twist on the paranormal romance genre, blending fantasy, science fiction and a healthy dash of sexual tension.

She has a knack for moving her stories along quickly, but without sacrificing the complexity she gives her characters. And just when action gets serious, she brings in some levity to keep it from becoming completely morose or disturbing.”

While several of the short stories (“Fairy Dust”, “Gift Wrap”, and “Lucky”) will refer to characters and events that True Blood HBO fans will not be familiar with unless they have also read the Sookie novels, there are two which do not require as much background knowledge and in which True Blood fans might find particularly intriguing (“One Word Answer” and “Dracula Night”).

Without revealing too much about the plot of the stories, I can give you a few tidbits to whet your appetite.

  • In “Fairy Dust”, Sookie is called in to use her telepathic powers to help solve a murder at a strip club.  This tale is a major spoiler for some important information TV viewers are not yet privy to, so I can’t tell you any more than that without ruining the surprise.  Those who have read the novel series, however, will be in on the secret and will be able to step right into the flow of the story without difficulty.
  • True Blood fans who can’t wait to know more about Sophie Ann, the vampire Queen of Louisiana, and Sookie‘s cousin, Hadley Hale, will definitely want to take a look at “One Word Answer” in which Sookie meets the Queen for the first time.
  • “Dracula Night” gives a humorous look at the Viking vampire, Eric Northman, who is revealed to be a superfan of Count Dracula as he prepares to celebrate his icon’s birthday and waits for his appearance the way Peanuts characters wait for “The Great Pumpkin” to arrive on Halloween.  There is much to love in this sweet little gem of a story, including the tender relationship between Pam and Eric, and Sookie finds herself touched by the childlike vulnerability she sees in the normally composed and strong Sheriff of Area 5.
  • Revealing more details from the tiny town of Bon Temps, “Lucky” deals with an insurance agent whose magical ability runs roughshod over his competition, forcing Sookie to step in and get to the bottom of the mystery.
  • The final tale, “Gift Wrap,” brings a werewolf into the mix.  There is a jaw-dropping twist at the end that will leave you wondering about what might come next for our beloved Sookie.

While Charlaine‘s delightful short story collection will not totally fill the void left during the hiatus of True Blood until June of next year when Season 3 begins, it will help keep the cravings at bay and give you a fuller appreciation for the world which Charlaine created and which Alan Ball and the cast and crew have revealed to us week after week.

The next novel in the Sookie Stackhouse series, Death in the Family, is due out in 2010.

SOURCE: Tulsa World

(Photo credits: HBO, Inc. and charlaineharris.com)

Sheriff Bud Dearborne Deals with True Blood Vampires

Matt Fowler from tv.ign.com had the opportunity to speak with William Sanderson who plays Sheriff Bud Dearborne on Alan Ball‘s hit HBO TV series True Blood.  Mr. Sanderson returns for season two and spoke to Mr. Fowler about the upcoming season and his guest star appearance on LOST recently.  TrueBloodNet.com would like to thank Mr. Fowler for allowing us to reprint his interview with Mr. Sanderson in its entirety here on our website.  To get the latest information on your other favorite tv shows please visit Matt Fowler at tv.ign.com.

Although his name might not readily rush to the tip of your tongue, you definitely know William Sanderson.  As a TV and film veteran in projects that range from Blade Runner to Deadwood, Newhart to The X-Files, Sanderson has made a career of playing offbeat characters. You can catch Sanderson on HBO‘s bold and bawdy vampire series True Blood when it returns for its second season on June 14th. Playing the Sheriff of Bon Temps, Louisiana, Sanderson is one of the few “normal” characters wading in a sea of supernatural sex and unwashed prejudice.

Sanderson also popped up on IGN’s radar when he appeared on LOST this season as Oldham, a DHARMA wing nut who tries to get a few answers out of Sayid in “He’s Our you.” No one’s sure if Oldham will be back, but we do know that on the same episode, during “the present,” we were shown a building that had a sign that read “Oldham Pharmaceuticals.”

IGN TV: Some of the characters on True Blood head off to Dallas in Season 2. What about your character, Sherriff Bud Dearborn? Does he get to leave town, or does he stick around the home front?

William Sanderson: Heh, I’ve got to be careful. They’ve told me not to reveal too much. I get emails from True Blood, and from Lost, telling me not to talk too much about it. But he (Bud)…well, I don’t know if they really need him in Dallas. It’s a good question though. I don’t mean to be evasive. Bud’s a little lazy, if that helps at all. I don’t want to say anything to get me in trouble with HBO, they’ve been very good to me (laughs). I did Deadwood with them and they were so great. I’m just so happy. He (Bud) is a normal character. Yes, I’m playing a normal character right now and it’s the hardest thing I’ve ever done.

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IGN: We did see you on Lost this season (“He’s Our You”), so with that and True Blood you’re now a part of two different serialized genre shows that have a rabid internet following.

Sanderson: I don’t ever want to forget the fans. You guys have been so great.

IGN: Were you aware of the Charlaine Harris novels? Did you try to read them before you started shooting Season 1?

Sanderson: Of course. I couldn’t get them fast enough. I saw that this was a fun part. Often, over the years, I wouldn’t get a role until the last minute and I couldn’t do research. I looked in the books a bit to see if he survived.

IGN: That’s funny. I’ve heard Rutina Wesley (True Blood‘s Tara) say that too.

Sanderson: She’s wonderful, man. Beautiful girl. I love it when I get to be in a scene with her. The books though, they’re a loose blueprint for the characters. And a character’s “survivability” doesn’t always follow the blueprint. He may not get killed but…Sheriffs also do get replaced in real life. And how exciting is he, really? He doesn’t have any vices. I have every one in life, but he probably doesn’t have any.

IGN: Does Bud really hate vampires?

Sanderson: I think he really loathes them. Yeah. But underneath that is fear, right? I’m just speculating and going by the book. In the book, Sookie – Anna Paquin, a wonderful actress, – says that killing a vampire who hasn’t attacked you is against the law. Bud says “I don’t agree with that, but I’ll uphold the law.”

IGN: On LOST, we saw that you played a character named Oldham. You had an interrogation scene with Sayid where you gave him a truth serum. It seems like this might be a character that we’ll only get to see once, but on Lost you never can tell. Did they tell you what this guy was all about?

Sanderson: The writers did tell me something. One of them told me that this guy was like a Hunter Thompson-like character and that he might have taken a few too many of those drugs himself. He was doing bio-chemical interrogations and he claimed he’d done it to the Viet-Cong – and he worked at Berkeley. There were a few pieces that got cut out, but you know, that’s the story of my life. The writers had talked to my agent a few years ago about doing a running role, but that didn’t work out. Believe me, I was disappointed. But that was before this came along.

IGN: I had a chance to speak with Michael Emerson a few months back, and his wife is on True Blood with you…

Sanderson: He’s terrific, isn’t he?

IGN: He told me that when he first began his role on Lost, he didn’t know he was going to turn out to be a main character on the show. He thought he’d only be on for a few episodes. Do you think that Oldham might be back in some form?

Sanderson: I’m almost certain he won’t. I say that to protect myself in some aspects. To entice you to do roles sometimes they say that the part is “possible recurring” and then you get there and it doesn’t happen. But there was no talk of that even happening. But you know…I’m available (laughs). I’ll put it that way. You know, it’s like having a date with a pretty woman. Don’t think about the next date.

IGN: You, throughout you career, have been a part of a lot of projects that we here at IGN have been big fans of. A lot of “genre” shows. Sci Fi shows. Westerns. What’s your favorite type of project?

williamscifi

Sanderson: Someone once said that Sci Fi was the modern Western. What’s my favorite? Well, anything that needs a misfit. I don’t have a real favorite. My dream is to play something different. I was happy to be clean shaven in this one. When you play so many outcasts and derelicts, or even a murderer, you need to play someone healthy.

IGN: You recently were a part of a documentary on Starz called The Face is Familiar. It’s all about character actors. Actors we’ve seen in many projects, but their name might escape you. Do you often get recognized a lot?

Sanderson: Depends on if you’re in New York or out here (L.A.). Newhart ran the longest and it was great to have a regular role, but I run into a lot of film fans and they ask me about Blade Runner. I was grateful to be a part of that. Ridley Scott’s a visionary and I got to wear two hours of latex, but really…more people have been asking me about Lost than anything else recently.

SOURCE:  tv.ign.com

(Photo credit:  HBO Inc. and tv.ign.com)