Monday, June 14, 2010, Rajab 01, 1431 A.H  
   HOME
   News in English
   News in Urdu
   Program Profiles
   GEO TV
   GEO UK
   GEO USA
   GEO ME
   GEO CANADA
   GEO EUROPE
   GEO JAPAN
   GEO SUPER
   AAG TV
   Corporate Profile
   Geo Tariff
   News Archive
   Contact Us
   FAQ
   Feedback
   GEO SKINS
   GEO RINGTONES
   GEO NewsAlert
   GEO Wallpapers
   Transcripts of Program
   Team GEO
   Exam Results
 
 
 GEO Entertainment
 'True Blood' star really wanted to be a physicist
 Updated at: 0924 PST,  Monday, June 14, 2010
 LOS ANGELES: Sam Trammell planned to become a theoretical physicist, but was forced to lower his sights while studying at Brown University after realizing he was not a genius.

He certainly never imagined himself an actor, let alone one who plays a shape-shifter on a hit HBO show about vampires. The series is "True Blood," created by Alan Ball based on the novels of Charlaine Harris, and Trammell is enjoying the unexpected development.

"I wanted to stop thinking," he says of his career switch. "I wink when I say that. You have to be smart to be a good actor. But acting took me out of my head and back into my body."

He admits that early in his career, he had a condescending attitude toward television. He would not have considered auditioning for the small screen. But he now thinks TV writing -- especially for cable -- is far superior to most film writing, calling our current era a golden age for television.

His featured role on "True Blood," now in its third season, is a career turning point. Appearing in Eugene O'Neill's "Ah, Wilderness!" with New York's Lincoln Center Theater was pretty good too, he admits. After all, it earned him a Tony nomination. But his current gig has a huge weekly audience that crosses demographic lines.

"It's a totally original show, a character drama set in a fantastical world. Usually genre dramas focus on genre, but Alan Ball is a genius and he writes about character. He is wired into the Zeitgeist and bridges genres. The show is campy, funny, serious, sexy, bloody, and it's a gothic romance. And Alan casts really well. With the exception of Anna Paquin, the cast is largely an eclectic group of unknowns, which makes it easier for the audience to buy into this world."

For Trammell, the challenges of the show are twofold: the nuanced complexity of the writing and mastering a Louisiana accent. He is, curiously enough, a New Orleans native and grew up all over the South. Nonetheless, he says, he hasn't spoken with a Southern accent in 25 years: "It's not new to me, but I have to go back to it and put it on and then have to keep it up."

Trammell kicked off his career in New York, where he bought a copy of Back Stage and hit the ground running, attending as many open calls as he could. He also dropped off headshots and resumes in person at casting offices and agencies around town, freelanced with a couple of agents, and got signed after screen-testing with Al Pacino for "Scent of a Woman."

Regional theater productions and indie films followed. "I took whatever came along," he says. "These were low-budget films but really good experience, and I got better each time."

He made his Off-Broadway debut, playing an out-of-control gambler, in Patrick Marber's "Dealer's Choice" and then played a gay man in Kevin Elyot's "My Night With Reg." "New York is a club," Trammell says. "You have to earn your way to do theater in New York, unless you do TV," he says with a laugh. "I auditioned for Lincoln Center for years before I got 'Ah, Wilderness!'"

Trammell decided to try his luck in Los Angeles seven years ago and relocated to the West Coast. "L.A. helped my career," he says. "L.A. is a one-horse town. It's all about the TV and movie business. That's good because it keeps you focused. It's bad because there's no outside energy coming in. In New York, there is more stimulation. It's a whole different vibe. There's a street life. Also, there's more respect for theater. In L.A., theater is generally not on anyone's radar, and in L.A. there is no humidity, and initially that feels fake."
ShareThisBack     |    Send this story to friend
» GEO Pakistan
Rajab moon sighted
One Pakistani killed, 15 abducted in Kyrgyzstan
No water for Pakistan from glaciers after 2060: UNDP
Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline project inked
Kundi rules out clash of state organs
   
» GEO World
Israel's Gaza blockade breaks law, says ICRC
Five dead as blasts hit Kenya political rally
Israel announces commission to investigate Gaza flotilla
Thousands flee ethnic bloodshed in Kyrgyzstan
12 killed in series of bombs near Iraq's central bank
   
» GEO Business
Rs500bn plus Punjab budget today
KSE-FBR talks on CGT unfruitful
Rs6.6bn allocated for health projects in KP budget
Rs204mn earmarked for social welfare
Rs294.2bn KP budget 2010-11 presented
   
» GEO Sports
Super-charged Steyn leads South Africa to victory
Preview: Cameroon Lions ready to devour Japan
Preview: In-form Paraguay hoping to catch Italy cold
Preview: Dutch must guard against over-confidence
Clinical Germany put squeeze on Australia
   
» Geo Entertainment
'True Blood' star really wanted to be a physicist
Top 10 movies at the box office
Bebo, Bips friends again
3 Idiots: Idiots in a box
Catherine Zeta Jones recieves CBE
   
» GEO Health
China syphilis infections up 30% each year: report
Women working out together lose weight early
Race against time to sanitize lead-epidemic hit Nigeria
One-shot radiotherapy ready for breast cancer
Swine flu death toll at 18,156 a year after pandemic: WHO
   
» GEO Amazing and Interesting
World's deepest swimming pool
Ball shaped mushroom in Brazil
Obama lauds Indian woman who came to build her dreams
Google honors Jacques Cousteau
US woman aims to become world's heaviest
   
 
Copyright © GEO TV. All rights reserved.