Archive for the ‘Interviews’ Category
NO SOONER HAD Josh Holloway told us that he’s ready to do movies than reports broke out that Marvel Comics is in talks with him to appear in “The Avengers.” In a press con, Josh said he’d like to take a break from TV for at least “a couple of years.”The long-haired actor said that with his earnings playing Sawyer in “Lost” and with his Indonesian wife Yessica Kumala taking care of the books, he can afford to concentrate on getting his movie career off the ground.
We’ve always thought that it was only a matter of time before Josh became a movie star, too. He was considered for the role of Gambit in “X-Men: The Last Stand,” but his “Lost” commitment prevented him from seriously pursuing the part.
In these excerpts, Josh talked about his future and life with Yessica, a charming, free-spirited character whom we first met in a dinner with the “Lost” cast in Hawaii in 2006. (Click here to read more…)
Josh Holloway, star of Lost, has a sexy smile, down-to-earth charm, and some fun dating advice for you.
What are you going to miss most about Lost?
The crew and cast—we’re all a family now. The set is my comfort zone and much of my social life. But now it’s time to explore. I hope something cool will come up. I would love to do a romantic comedy, because drama can be harsh.Your character, Sawyer, is quite a con artist. What’s the sneakiest thing you’ve ever done in the name of love?
I had a girlfriend, but I agreed to go to another girl’s prom at a different school. My girlfriend busted me and broke a picture frame over my head. I believe it was a montage of photos of us. I didn’t need stitches though. It was a nice, clean smash.What are some things a man might find in a date’s home that would scare him away?
One stuffed animal is fine, but if there are a lot, that’s scary. Another warning sign is when a woman has too many pictures of herself around. And the worst: baby and bridal magazines!
What’s the sexiest item of clothing a woman can wear?
The hottest thing is lingerie. The least sexy outfit is baggy sweat pants and a large T-shirt. And granny panties!
Cute, pretty, or hot—which type of girl does it for you?
It’s nice if a woman has a bit of each. Cute is the fun part you play around with every day. Pretty is nice to look at. And hot is sex.When are men happiest?
The times we’re not under pressure of any kind, particularly from our relationship or work. When we’re chilling and popping a beer at the end of the day. I call it man juice!
Josh Holloway has revealed that he is pleased with the way Lost ended. (Click here to read more…)
Josh Holloway, who has played James “Sawyer” Ford across six seasons of Lost, made it alive through the penultimate episode. Whether his character will survive all the way to the end of Sunday night’s big finale, or will be made, by the show’s writers, to pay for his character’s many sins, is anyone’s guess. I’m betting it’s so long, Sawyer, both on the island and in sideways world.
Holloway has been a key cast member from the very start, lighting up the small screen with his charming wise-assery from the J.J. Abrams-directed pilot onward. In the show’s early years, he was the perfect foil to the more sensible and heroic Dr. Jack Shephard, played by Matthew Fox, and he was just right as the bad boy in the ongoing Kate-Jack-Sawyer love triangle. Later on, Sawyer had a domestic phase, as the contented partner to Elizabeth Mitchell’s Juliet character, before returning to his angry-goofball-con-man roots.
The surprising thing about Holloway is this: Prior to joining the cast, at age 35, he had made his name as a male model, with acting roles here and there; but from the start of Lost he took charge of his character, displaying a range and charisma he hadn’t shown before. He has perhaps proved himself the most versatile performer on the series. He hasn’t won an Emmy, like his classically trained cast mates Terry O’Quinn and Michael Emerson, but he has been more than persuasive as an action guy, lover boy, and truth-telling fool. With his he-man physicality, male-model looks, and comic touch, he might end up a persuasive lead in romantic comedies or straight-ahead action pictures. If things break the right way, if he selects decent scripts, he could have the film career Matthew McConaughey should have had before he hopped the train to crazy town.
I watched Holloway on the Lost soundstage for two days in February. He seemed to be one of the most popular cast members with the crew; he’s a friendly dude, with nothing of the pampered star about him, and he had some sort of inside joke for almost everyone he passed. We spoke on the metal steps of his trailer on the day he was shooting the big submarine sequence, during which a mistake made by his character leads to a few of his fellow castaways going kablooey. He was having a smoke as he talked. Through the trailer door I spotted his guitar. He seemed humble, with more than a hint of the actor’s insecurity, as if he couldn’t believe his luck. (Click here to read more…)
Thanks to deej240z I’ve added in the gallery 2 scans from Men’s Health. And on Men’s Health site there is an interview. Enjoy!
Gallery Link
Magazine scans > 2010 – June: Men’s Health
Josh Holloway spent 6 years playing Sawyer on Lost. He loved it — and he’s making sure he won’t play him ever again.
Josh Holloway and Sawyer don’t have a hell of a lot in common. Just the accent, a love of beer, and the instinct to go for it — do it, seize it, taste it. Definitely taste it.
“I taste everything,” Holloway says. “I even tasted the cream on my daughter when she came out of the womb. I am a taster.”
Wait. What? (Click here to read more…)
Josh Holloway is featured in the June issue of Men’s Health. In the interview he talks about Hawaii, family and beer guts.
On adjusting to ocean life in Hawaii: “I almost peed my pants, if I can say that. I’ve been out there in conditions I should not have been out there in. I’ve learned a lot from this ocean, and I have a lot more to learn. If you’re going to be taunting her in that way, she will smack you down. You can never disrespect the ocean.”
On being a family man: “As men, we protect and provide by our nature. And when we find something bona fide and validated, it’s hard to break out of. … I always wanted a wife and child, so I geared my life that way.”
What’s next: “I like the growth that happens to an artist in transition. A lot of growth takes place throughout your insecurities, through having to reevaluate something you thought was working and finding a way to make it work differently. All of that is very uncomfortable.”
On getting older: “I love the comfort zone. In my mind, I am a 70-year-old man with a fly rod in one hand and a beer in the other. But that’s not the world of creativity. I’m not saying you can’t enjoy the comfort when you’ve found a zone. But you must always evolve.”
On having the requisite beer gut at 70: “I will be! And I’ll be unapologetic. You want to do a Men’s Health cover then? I would be happy to show you my Buddha gut, because it will certainly be out. And I will have earned it.”
While we wait for the scans, thanks to nefretiriii we can have a look inside the magazine!
Gallery Link
Magazine scans > 2010 – June: Men’s Health
On the season four finale reveal, and his role in concealing it:
“I was [filmed] in a coffin when they were trying to keep Terry O’Quinn’s secret. They put me in a suit, and they put me in the coffin, and they shot it. I got to tell you, it pissed me off. Because even if you know you’re not dead, you feel like you’re dead for a minute.”
On the comedy in Sawyer’s dialogue, and how it plays off the show’s drama:
“[Before Lost] I played some large, animated-type characters. They let me play with that a lot with Sawyer, which I liked. It was part of trying to find his humanity as well, because he was [in the early episodes] such a dick. He could be such a dick! He was that salty asshole that just told it like it was. Which was fun for a while, but you’ve got to find some likability in the guy if he’s going to continue on. The nicknames helped. They gave me some great ones…
“But to make it live you also have to come to terms with who he really is. And he did some bad shit to people… The Island forced him to grow and he learned to care about people in ways that were completely foreign to his way of survival.”


















