Sam Trammell Joins ‘Long Time Gone’

Sam Trammell of “True Blood” has joined the cast of indie drama “Long Time Gone” alongside Virginia Madsen and Anthony LaPaglia.

Smokewood Entertainment is producing the film, with co-founder and producer Sarah Siegel-Magness (“Precious”) making her directorial debut.

Production began Sept. 12 in Los Angeles. Trammell began work Monday.

“Long Time Gone” also stars Zach Gilford, Amanda Crew and newcomer Graham Rogers. Karen McCullah (“The Ugly Truth”) wrote the screenplay based upon April Stevens’ novel “Angel, Angel.”

Story follows a broken family who must cope when the husband (played by LaPaglia) leaves his wife (Madsen) for another woman. Their sons have no idea what to do when their mother refuses to come out of her bedroom for days and then weeks.

Trammell plays an easy-going landscaper who hires one of the sons as a day laborer and befriends his distraught mother.

Bobbi Sue Luther, Gary Magness (“Precious”) and screenwriter McCullah are producing. Andrew Sugerman and Seth Jaret are exec producing.

Shooting will continue until Oct. 25.

SOURCE: Variety

True Blood Featured in USWeekly

Our friends over at True Blood News sent over these scans that were found in the June 20th issue of US Weekly…

Click on each picture for a larger view.








SOURCE: USWeekly via True Blood News



Official TRUE BLOOD Season 4 Premiere Date Announced…


We just learned that True Blood’s 4th season will return to us on June 26, 2011!!!
And that’s the official word from the folks at HBO!!!


Alexander Skarsgard, Eric Northman, Sam Trammell, Sam Merlotte, Stephen Moyer, Anna Paquin, Bill Compton, Sookie Stackhouse, True Blood, Skarsgård

There’s a very exciting season in store for us this year and until the day arrives…we’re certain HBO is going to love torturing us with Behind the Scenes Peeks, Waiting Sucks Videos (cuz waiting truly does suck!), trailers, pix, & posters OH MY!!!



Check back here often for updates…teasers and more…



The date is set…get ready…





Are you ready????




A Request From Our Friends at CRF…

Call for help

I’m sure most of you know about True Blood’s Deborah Ann Woll’s boyfriend, EJ Scott who’s been diagnosed with Choroideremia and has been fighting for a cure for several years now.
Well our friends at the Choroideremia Research Foundation have requested our help…

What do they need??? Just your vote!

For what…for whom???
Jeff Benelli, CHMer and a semi-finalist in the Energizer Bunny ‘Keep Going’ Hall of Fame!


FROM THE PRESS RELEASE…




Kansas City resident Jeff Benelli was today announced a semi-finalist in the Energizer Bunny ‘Keep Going’ Hall of Fame – which celebrates people who make a positive impact and inspire the world through their perseverance, determination, and boundless energy. Benelli, who is legally blind, having been diagnosed with the degenerative eye disease Choroideremia (CHM), has run a total of six marathons in the past five years while raising more than $106,000 to fund a cure for himself, his nephew, and others.

“This is an incredible accomplishment, and I am truly honored to place among the top 100 applicants in the Energizer Bunny ‘Keep Going’ Hall of Fame,” says Jeff Benelli. “However, I am even more honored to be recognized for raising awareness and funding for a cause that not only has the potential to save what’s left of my eyesight – but the sight of my 11-year-old nephew and so many others out there who are going blind because of this disease.”

Benelli has completed 6 marathons since 2005, finishing in the top 7% of his age class in each, and has raised more than $106,000 for the organization currently funding research for a cure – the Choroideremia Research Foundation (CRF). The CRF, which aims to support scientific research for a treatment or cure for CHM, has recently announced notable progress in the search for a cure – and plans to fund Phase 1 of the FDA-required clinical trials in December of 2012. These trials mark an important first step in the process to research, establish and provide a cure.

If named a finalist, Benelli will win a $1,000 donation to the charity of his choice, the CRF. The grand-prize winner will win a $5,000 donation, $10,000 cash, and a trip to St. Louis, Missouri. If named the grand-prize winner, Benelli plans to donate the entire $10,000 to the CRF.

Facebook users will choose one of the ten finalists by visiting facebook.com/energizer starting March 17, 2011 and voting for their favorite candidate. Once the finalists have been announced on April 4, 2011, individuals can visit www.energizer.com/halloffame to place their vote for the grand-prize winner. For more on Jeff and his complete story visit jeffbenelli.com.





Vote for Jeff Benelli to raise awareness for the CRF!!

(On the FB page hit CLICK TO VOTE then type Jeff’s name in the search bar)
















For more information on Choroidermia , visit Choroideremia.org



True Blood in TV GUIDE

You can click on the photo above for a larger view, but in case you have trouble reading it, the full text is shown below.






Bloody Good It sounds like blood will be boiling over in Bon Temps when True Blood’s fourth season premieres this summer. Among the scoop let out of the casket at PaleyFest: Joe Manganiello used the word “sandwich” to describe a sexy scene involving his werewolf, Alcide, Eric (Alexander Skarsgård) and Sookie (Anna Paquin). “Obviously when werewolves shift back they don’t have any clothes on,” teased Paquin. “And Eric’s in a somewhat compromising position.” Shape-shifter Sam (Sam Trammell) and his wayward brother Tommy (Marshall Allman) may be taking to the skies for a falcon-versus-owl face off. “We’re really going to be twisting the mythology of the shape-shifter,” says Trammell. Also watch for Eric to lose his memory, resulting in a new, more innocent personality, which Kristin Bauer (Pam) claims makes Skarsgård “even more adorable.” How’s that possible?–William Keck




SOURCE: True Blood News (Tack Jody love!)






Sam will be at PaleyFest 2011

True Blood’s Sam Trammell has confirmed he will be part of the True Blood panel at PaleyFest 2011 on Saturday, March 5, 2011. The panel will be at the Saben Theater in Beverley Hill, CA. Individual tickets are on sale now and can be purchased here.

True Blood Cast to attend Chicago’s C2E2

Sam Trammell, Kristen Bauer & Brit Morgan have signed on to attend the Chicago’s C2E2 Expo March 18 – 20, 2011 at McCormick Place!

The Chicago Comic & Entertainment Expo – also known as C2E2 – is a convention spanning the latest and greatest from the worlds of comics, movies, television, toys, anime, manga and video games. From a show floor packed with hundreds of exhibitors, to panels and autograph sessions giving fans a chance to interact with their favorite creators, to screening rooms featuring sneak peeks at films and television shows months before they hit either the big or small screen, C2E2 brings the best of popular culture to downtown Chicago.

More info as it comes in…

Thanks to our sistah’s at TB News at the Nest for the heads up….

HBO renews True Blood for fourth season…




True Blood’s third season may have only just begun, but HBO seems to be happy with all the sexy werewolves and naked vampires: Entertainment Weekly reports that the campy drama has just been renewed for a fourth season.

“The new season of True Blood is off to a terrific start, as enthusiasm for this unique show continues to build among both subscribers and critics,” said HBO president Michael Lombardo in a statement. “We’re looking forward to more chills from (executive producer) Alan Ball and his gifted team next year.”

Ball also expressed his excitement over the news.

“I am beyond thrilled to be able to continue working with this amazing cast and crew,” Ball said, reports EW. “This is the most fun I have ever had.”

HBO’s decision isn’t exactly a surprise: True Blood’s Season 3 opener earned 5.3 million US viewers, up a whopping 38 per cent over the Season 2 premiere.




SOURCE: Canada.Com

“True Blood” Star Really Wanted to Be a Physicist

LOS ANGELES (Back Stage) – 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.”

MAKING THE ROUNDS

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.”

Climate challenges notwithstanding, Trammell rolled up a number of TV credits. After Ball saw his audition tape for “True Blood,” he arranged for Trammell to test for the network executives. “These tests are very stressful for everyone,” the actor says. “It’s basically testing whether the actor can handle the pressure. Before you go in, you have to sign a contract that says you’ll be committed for five years. You learn your salary and deal points. Reading and signing legal documents before an audition is very heavy. Then you go in and there are 20 to 25 executives sitting in big swivel leather chairs. Everyone is nervous. Nobody likes it. And it’s up to the actor not only to kill, but also to make everyone feel okay. You do your best to keep your cool. For ‘True Blood,’ I read with the casting director, and I felt it went fine.”

“Fine” is an understatement. Within four hours, Trammell heard that he’d gotten the role (usually it takes several days to get a response). “I was in my car and I literally screamed,” he recalls.

He is fascinated by the show’s appeal. Vampires are in vogue today, not unlike superheroes are in the film world, he says. But he is not convinced that the escapist phenomenon is only a response to hard economic times. “Perhaps fantasy is just the antidote to the 24-hour news show,” he says.

Either way, Trammell is hopeful that “True Blood” will lead to high-quality movie roles. In the future he’d also like to try his hand at directing, and he wants to return to the stage. “I’d love to act in Chekhov and Ibsen,” he says.

SOURCE: ABC News Entertainment

Trammell Teases True Blood Season Three

With summer arriving. It’s a matter of time before television fans in the USA will get to sink their fangs into the third season of True Blood, and according to actor Sam Trammell who plays the role of Sam Merlotte in the series. Fans can look forward to some juicy happenings in the third season.

In a conversation with USA Today Trammell revealed that we’ll get to meet his characters family in the coming season of the HBO series.

“They’re an itinerant, very poor and sketchy family,” he said. “He finds out who these people are and why they’ve given him up. It’s sort of like a Pandora’s box, that he thinks he can go and meet them and then leave. But he can’t put the top back on the box.”

Meanwhile, the show’s creator Alan Ball explained that the third season focuses on identity.

“Each character is coming to terms with who or what they are,” he explained. “We’re finding out what makes them tick and what they’re willing to do and what they’re willing to fight for and not willing to fight for.”

Ball added that the most important element to the show is remaining true to the characters.

“We might as well have a sign in the writers’ room that says, ‘It’s the emotions, stupid’. We try to make sure the characters’ emotional lives are what’s driving the story. Otherwise it’s set pieces and special effects. We have such good actors that they can play the romance, the yearning, the weaknesses, the upsets, the disappointments and the triumphs.”

The third season of True Blood begins on June 13 on HBO.

SOURCE: SciFiPulse.Net

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