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"I want to see if there truly is a change of direction and spirit that is consistent with what people are feeling now," says Michael Emerson, who plays Benjamin Linus on "Lost." "I'm also curious to see where "Lost" is going because God only knows how it will all look in the end."

Source: USAWeekend

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Michael give an interview to Empire Magazine. Scans of the pages are available here



http://michaelemerson.net/coppermine/thumbnails.php?album=447

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AcessHollywood.com—2008 Nominee—Michael Emerson's Reaction to Being Nominated


http://michaelemerson.net/coppermine/thumbnails.php?album=398

Teaser:

[image]

and


AcessHollywood.com—2008 Emmy Nominee—Michael Emerson's Mom Calls


http://michaelemerson.net/coppermine/thumbnails.php?album=399


Teaser:

[image]



 
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"I was laying in bed and I heard the phone ringing and I jumped up outta there because I thought, `Oh god, I know what this is.' My agent would've let me sleep, I think, if I had not gotten the nomination. I figured it was the beginning of a busy day. To start with, I couldn't find the phone! So I wasn't able to answer, so I called him back and he gave me the news." — "Lost" star Michael Emerson, nominated for supporting actor in a drama series.


Source:  http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5ittu1DWMqF4ymGN8EBWRJpNMSNmwD91VO7SG0
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Per bobdoc of MEFB forum,

 Michael and the director of Ready? Ok! gave a brief interview to a local LA station, at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MPNoSG0K_iA 

And a more full length talk with Michael is at the station's website at
http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/media?id=6260060
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Where?

http://michaelemerson.net/vp.html

Click on the square listed as 20080529_lost

Enjoy.
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by Will Glover
The News Herald Panama City


As Ben Linus in ABC's hit drama "Lost," Michael Emerson is cunning, intimidating and mysterious, with a gentle, measured and sometimes eerie voice. In a conversation with the actor last week, Emerson was engaging, enlightening and insightful, as he hinted at what's to come in the highly anticipated final episodes of the season.

"Lost" returns a week from tonight, and Emerson, who earned an Emmy nomination for his role, said viewers' perception of his character may change by the end of the writers' strike-shortened season. (Five episodes are left this season, including a two-hour season finale May 29.)

Emerson, speaking from Hawaii, where the superb show is filmed, told me the cast is about "midway" through filming the final five episodes, one of which likely will include a "Bencentric" episode, when we'll find out something about Ben's past - or future (or both).

"Ben has a lot to do in the next few episodes, and he does it in a lot of different places," Emerson said with a mischievous laugh. "We will move around in time: forward, backward and sideways. It's going to be pretty interesting."

Emerson said some new characters will be the catalyst to altering viewers' perception of Ben, seen by Jack (Matthew Fox) and John Locke (Terry O'Quinn) as the enemy leader who also is a valuable hostage.

"We have new characters coming in that are so wicked and dangerous. . . . That naturally, sort of, tips the sympathy scale a little bit. So, I think you're going to like Ben a little bit better just because there are some guys so much worse than him, and you begin to sympathize with his position and his mission, which continues to be sort of . . . murky. But the waters of the show are very muddy right now. . . . I find I have to go back and rewind and watch things just to keep stuff straight in my head."

A preview of tonight's episode shows Ben's "daughter," Alex (Tania Raymonde), in potentially mortal danger, and she pleads with Ben for help. So far, viewers have been left to debate the nature of their relationship, which Emerson described as a bit complex.
"I think every human contact Ben has, has control issues involved. By the same token, I don't think that means that Ben is incapable of empathy, or a feeling of tenderness, a wish to care for or nurture a person. He's a complex character. It's one of the pleasures of playing it, actually."

Emerson has played Ben longer than any other role in his acting career, which has its roots in Florida. "Acting is my second career. I used to be a magazine illustrator in New York. At one point in the '80s, I sort of decided to give up the rat race, and I was with someone at that time that was a Floridian. So I moved to St. Augustine, and eventually I found myself doing community theater work in Jacksonville and St. Augustine. I realized this is my, sort of, true calling. "So, Jacksonville was my base of operations for the first . . . eight or 10 years of my actor life. I did a lot of plays there; I did a lot of plays around the South, you know: Little Rock and Jackson and Montgomery." (For tourists visiting here from the Magnolia State and other Mississippi transplants like me, Emerson once performed at the New Stage Theater in Jackson.) "Eventually," he continued, "I got to the point where I had a lot of experience and I thought I was a pretty good actor and I wanted bigger challenges, so I had to make a decision between going to New York and starting up there, or trying to find one of these conservatory programs that I was hearing about. My brother-in-law was a graduate of the Alabama Shakespeare Festival, and he seemed to have an enviable career, like doing classical plays all over the place. Well, I thought, maybe that's what I should do." He spent two years getting his masters in fine arts at the University of Alabama-affiliated program in Montgomery before returning to New York and working in theater.

He later won an Emmy for a guest performance on "The Practice," and a few years later, he's intriguing us with Ben, who Emerson called a "long-range strategic" planner with a "great understanding of human psychology." And Ben seems to be doing what he thinks is best for the island, Emerson added.

"I think you're going to find a stronger sympathy with Ben's mission, whatever it is, as you watch these next several episodes," he said.

Viewers also will continue to see the rivalry and power struggle between Ben and Locke. "I think they have a sort of essential, psychological sympathy for one another. John Locke always seems to hear what Ben says, and Ben always seems to hear what Locke says. At the same time, they are competitors, and I think Ben has known that about John Locke as long as John Locke has been around. And now, there seems to be a competition, or a battle, for who is representative and spokesman for the island, or for the powers of the island. And I think Ben feels that he's losing his grip, and John Locke is on the rise."

But don't count Ben out, Emerson said. "For the most part, Ben doesn't give way to emotions, and he's a pragmatist. You'll notice how anytime a door is closed for Ben, he doesn't sit down and cry about it; he looks for the next door. He has a sort of gracious acceptance of fate."

So what is the fate of the islanders? For Ben, regret seems to play a factor.

"You're going to see that Ben has many massive regrets," Emerson said.

"I could tell you right now what I think Ben's greatest regret is, but in a new episode he will have greater regrets," he said with a laugh that indicated to me something big's about to happen.

"These next few episodes are full of events. Many explanations are coming. But you know how 'Lost' operates. Every time they answer a couple of mysteries, they also impose another set of mystery. It's like two steps forward, three steps back, I guess."

Indeed.

If you view

What: "Lost"
When: 10 p.m. Thursdays
Network: ABC
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 Michael Emerson recently had  a telephone interview with Metro Editor Will Glover. In the interview he discusses some spoilers for the rest of Season 4. During the interview, you can hear Michael Emerson trying to do his best to try and not spill the beans too much by taking an extra second to think before he answers the question, but he still provides us with some minor spoilers.

Most of the info we already know. However, he does say that the show will move forward, backward and "sideways" in time! Is he hinting at possible alternate time lines?

Here is a summary of the spoilers:
1) Ben has a lot to do in the next few episodes in a lot of "different places"
2) Ben will get some good airtime
3) We move around in time, forward, backward and "sideways"
4) Remaining episodes are violent and gaining speed down hill
5) New characters are very "wicked" and "dangerous" so you will like Ben more because he is not as "bad"

There is a little more to the interview and, unfortunately, the sound quality is not the best, but it is still always good to listen to Michael. Emerson.

 




 

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http://michaelemerson.net/sounds.html


Click on the Kevin & Bean Morning Show embedded Quicktime plugin.
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On 'Lost,' little is known about Michael Emerson's sphinxlike character, Benjamin Linus. Once simply the ruthless and manipulative leader of the island's Others, viewers now aren't sure what to think of the man who warns against this season's impending rescue. Villian? Hero? Victim? Prophet? Only time will tell.

What we do know about Emerson is that he is an urbane, music-loving New Yorker who prefers the crossword to the surfboard while he's on location in Hawaii. "I'm like Woody Allen in the jungle," he told Jimmy Kimmel.

Spinner's spies have spotted him at a few rock shows around town including last summer's Television reunion at Central Park. Most recently, we spotted him at Town Hall, enjoying the lovely melodies and stage banter from the Magnetic Fields alongside wife and fellow actress Carrie Preston, who also played his mother on 'Lost' -- a situation he called a "Freudian nightmare."

Emerson, who won an Emmy for his role as a serial killer on 'The Practice' and previously held illustrating jobs for such high-brow publications as the New York Times, also discussed his musical tastes with Blender. He cited Bach, the Beatles, the Stooges, Radiohead and Bob Dylan as favorites, but expressed an amusing disdain for Elton John's 'Bennie and the Jets.'


Source: Spinner

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