Nick and Lulu Wonderland (News Stand)

This site provide news items for "The Guardian" about the televison drama series. Please let me know if you share my enthusiasm or enjoy my site!

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This web page is about Nick & Lulu in "The Guardian" for fans. This is a site devoted to our favorite TV couple, Nick Fallin and Lulu Archer.

Thursday, July 28, 2005

Baker's thinking of Oz

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True blue: Australian actor Simon Baker lives in Los Angeles but is considering returning home.

From:Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia
Date:26 Jul 2005
By Sarah Wotherspoon

AUSTRALIAN actor Simon Baker hates the term "un-Australian" and is considering returning to where it all began.

Baker, who lives in Los Angeles with actor-wife Rebecca Rigg and their three children, said he was still an Australian at heart.
But the star of The Guardian said the term un-Australian riled him.

"I'm Australian and that's where my heart is and for (Prime Minister John Howard) to tell me that I'm not Australian because I don't believe in his politics or that I shouldn't voice my opinion on something I don't agree with, that just got my hackles up."

In town to promote Land of the Dead, the fourth zombie movie from George Romero, he said Romero's movie paralleled today's society.

"It plays around with the different notions of fear and how fear can be exploited in certain ways to create a purer society," he said.

But Baker has not ruled out a return to Sydney, where his eldest daughter Stella is enrolled in school.

Baker's romantic comedy Something New will screen next year.

From Melbourne Herald Sun.

Wednesday, July 27, 2005

Pretty boy Baker

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Actor SImon Baker admits that his looks have helped him get roles in America.

From:The Age
Date:July 26, 2005

Australian actor Simon Baker knows his looks have opened doors for him.

"It is Hollywood, it is all about aesthetics," Baker says, adding tongue in cheek: "Do you think I would be having a career if I was really ugly?"

"This is the reality of it.

"Thankfully I am just a guy that likes physical activity so I have always remained in reasonably good shape."

Baker, who will be 36 on Saturday, has lived in Los Angeles for 10 years with wife Rebecca Rigg and their three kids.

He is back in Sydney this week to promote his latest feature film, Land of the Dead, which opens nationally on August 4.

"I could turn into the fattest bastard there is because I love food and I love wine," he said.

"The fact that I have got to stay in reasonably good shape is kind of the thing that keeps me on the straight and narrow."

In Land of the Dead, Baker plays Riley, a man trying to escape a world where zombies are returning to life.

In his quest to stay alive, Riley is joined by Slack (Asia Argentos) and goes up against bad-guy Kaufman (Dennis Hopper) along with thousands of zombies, referred to as "stenches".

"He is the moral compass of the film," Baker said of Riley.

"I wanted to establish the guy in a sense that he was a leader but didn't want to be responsible for the people that followed him."

"I wanted to make the guy complex and conflicted."

Land of the Dead is the fourth instalment in the George A Romero directed 'Dead' series, following on from Night of the Living Dead, Day of the Dead and Dawn of the Dead.

Although a fictional story, Baker said Land of the Dead was extremely complicated with comparisons to the current world.

"Every little moment for me, there was some kind of parallel as to where we are in our society at the moment," the father of three said.

"It is pretty much about the elite eradicating the middle class and keeping the underclass down."

Locally, Baker is probably best known for appearing in television series from E Street to Home and Away and Heartbreak High.

He moved to Hollywood in 1996 and was first noticed after making a cameo appearance in Oscar winning film LA Confidential.

Baker has since starred in a number of films including The Ring Two, Book of Love, The Affair of the Necklace, Red Planet and Secret Men's Business.

He became a household name in the US playing lawyer Nick Fallon in hit TV series The Guardian.

In his next film, Baker will play a landscape gardener in an inter-racial love story, called 42.4 Percent.

"I don't want to take myself too seriously as an actor because I think it can be kind of limiting for your career.

"I just want to have fun and do different things and be prepared to fall flat on my face and to take a few risks because it is one life."

From The Age.

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

New SAG Race Is On

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From:E!online
Date:Jul 22, 2005
by Josh Grossberg


After two consecutive terms heading up Hollywood's actor's union, Melissa Gilbert is calling it a day.

The former Little House on the Prairie star announced on Thursday that she will not seek a third term as president of the Screen Actors Guild after three contentious years that Gilbert herself acknowledged were marked by bitter internal feuding.

"It is no big secret that there are problems within the leadership of SAG. There are rifts that may very well be irreparable," the 41-year-old actress said in a statement. "All of that aside, I still believe the Screen Acto's Guild was, is and will always be the most powerful performers union in the world and I want the future leaders of my beloved union to know that I will be watching them--like a hawk."

Gilbert's exit sets up what is likely to be a tough election campaign between at least three high-profile thespians: Wild Wild West man Robert Conrad, '80s TV siren Morgan Fairchild and Alan Rosenberg, the 54-year-old actor-hubby of CSI star Marg Helgenberger.

"It might be a dogfight, but I will do my best to keep things civil," Rosenberg, who also serves on the SAG national board, told the Los Angeles Times. "It's impossible to get anything accomplished unless we speak with one voice."

"We have to quit fighting each other and fight for our members," said Fairchild, 55, also a board member. "I'm trying to get unity back into this union."

If there's anything they can all agree on, it's that the SAG presidency is a pretty thankless gig--lots of hard work for no pay. The president is charged with serving as the face of the union when it comes to contract negotiations, ensuring its 120,000 dues-paying members get their of residuals, lobbying states for production incentives to curb runaway production, and fighting against piracy.

Gilbert, who shot to fame playing Laura Ingalls Wilder on Little House, defeated former Rhoda star Valerie Harper in a disputed election in 2002 to become the 23rd president in SAG's 72 year history, following the likes of Ronald Reagan and Charlton Heston. She was only the third female to hold the post.

But the former child star was unable to achieve many of her stated goals. Gilbert hails from a moderate wing of the guild called Restore Respect, which favors negotiations and compromise over more aggressive tactics. On her watch, the guild failed to win a dues increase, and one of her signature proposals--a merger of SAG with the smaller American Federation of Television and Radio Artists union--fell short of the necessary 60 percent member approval by a slim 2 percent.

She did actress successfully led SAG to negotiate a solid increase in film and TV contracts with Hollywood studios and producers and she scored higher earnings for the guild's health and pension plans. She reorganized field offices to reduce costs and rein in deficit spending. Gilbert also helped strengthen protections for child actors.

Gilbert is scheduled to step down Sept. 23. Voting for the new SAG boss will take place next month once ballots are mailed out to union members.

From E! Online

Friday, July 15, 2005

Tackling the zombies of Hollywood

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Simon Baker in Land of the Dead.



From:Sydney Morning Herald
Date:Jul 15 2005
By Mary Colbert

It's a long way from Summer Bay to Land of the Dead, but Simon Baker has no regrets.

As a kid, Simon Baker was never a fan of horror movies. "I had too vivid an imagination; they freaked me out too much," he says. And when he saw a George Romero zombie horror flick as an adolescent kitchenhand and surfer on the Gold Coast, he didn't know what to make of it.

"I'd just inhaled a funny cigarette and it was like, 'Man, what's this?"' He pauses and adds, "Are they likely to put me under house arrest for that admission?"

Yet the former Australian soap dish (E Street, Home and Away), who rose to international fame as the troubled lawyer Nick Fallin in the American TV series The Guardian, finds his biggest American movie role yet is in Romero's upcoming Land of the Dead.

"I never imagined myself doing a zombie movie ever. But I like the idea of not limiting myself. The aim is to mix it up and have fun."

There's still a lot of the surfie about Baker: tanned, slightly freckled, sun-streaked hair, with a laid-back irreverence and, at 35, exuding the boyish adrenaline prompted by his latest cinematic adventure and first action role.

When Baker met Romero, the connection was Pittsburgh - the writer-director's home town and Baker's professional base during the three years of The Guardian series. They knew the same people, spent time in the same hang-outs and discovered they shared similar political views.

"That first meeting inspired me to watch all his films," Baker says. "And then I became really intrigued. I realised they weren't just about zombies, blood and splatter, but a subversive take on American society. It's really a wolf in sheep's clothing.

"The current political climate often makes you want to scream. And I thought what better way to do it than through entertainment, which is pretty much how we've been sold the bill of goods that we have now. I loved [Land of the Dead's] political undertone and allegory, though some critics just don't get it."

Baker co-stars with Dennis Hopper, John Leguizamo and Asia Argento in the long-anticipated sequel to Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead. Romero is regarded as the father of the modern horror film, redefining the genre with explicit violence and satirical overtones in what became cult movies.

Throughout The Guardian years, Baker simultaneously attempted to straddle a movie career. His brilliant three-minute cameo in LA Confidential as the gay actor who had his throat slit gave him some prominence. But co-starring roles with pedigree actors such as Adrien Brody and Hilary Swank in Affair of the Necklace (2001), fellow Australian Frances O'Connor in Book of Love (2004) and close friend Naomi Watts in this year's The Ring Two did not bring him major film kudos.

"I'm not a mainstream guy," Baker admits. "I'm not what you'd call a movie star. I'm a working actor who's always going to have to work hard to make a living. But the beauty is that I get to take a few more risks. A lot of people are bigger than their movies, and I prefer to disappear a bit.

"It's tricky because since the huge success of Australians like Mel Gibson and others after him, we're almost like Olympic athletes now ... I'm not representing my country as an actor but as an individual, though the sporting, competitive side of me makes it feel like a footy game and I have to tackle someone to win. But power is really to be happy within yourself."

Considering the celebrity status induced by The Guardian, Baker seems to have attained an enviable balance. It could be attributed to his working-class background, his real-life training in odd jobs as a nursing student, bricklayer, pizza maker, time-share salesman and pub cellar worker, or it could be the influence of his family.

It may stem, too, from lack of a professional master plan. "I went [to LA], in all honesty, because I was sort of bored." He'd done his share of modelling, music videos, commercials and soaps, but Australian feature films eluded him.

At 26, he left Australia for Los Angeles with his "bedrock and soul-mate" Rebecca Rigg, an actor and now his wife and mother of his three children. (She's a close friend of Nicole Kidman, who is the godmother of their youngest child, and Naomi Watts, their bridesmaid.)

"The Americans make a lot of stuff; some of it's good, some of it's crap, but at least there are a lot of options," Baker says. "In Australia, that wasn't happening for me. We had a child, enough money in the bank for three months and I said, 'Let's just see what happens.' And we're still there."

The pair didn't take Tinseltown by storm. "Since we've been discovered as some freaky genetic talent pool, an actor can arrive with one Australian film and get work. It wasn't like that back then."

How tough was the struggle? "I don't look at it that way," he replies. "Instead of reading one good script in three months, I was going to three auditions a day. It was invigorating."

Then The Guardian transformed Baker's life. "It was a blessing in many ways. With three children, some acting choices are based on pragmatic survival. I did it for a sense of stability."

The effervescent Baker is the antithesis of the show's emotionally detached protagonist, a corporate lawyer in his father's firm sentenced to serve 1500 hours of community service at the children's legal service for a drug arrest.

"I loved that he was a flawed character struggling with issues. The first year I had an absolute ball but continuing to play the same role for two more seasons became difficult.

"One of the reasons I became an actor was that I despised the idea of a regular nine-to-five job. I come from a working-class family and I've always felt that acting was one of the ways of expressing myself and communicating with people ... But for an extended period I was working from 5am to 9pm. Sure, you get paid very well but I'm not obsessed with money so I began to wonder, 'Have I signed a pact with the devil here?"'

After three gruelling years, Baker was somewhat relieved when the series was cancelled. As an actor without formal training, Baker gained confidence from the series' professional relentlessness. "There's a lot to be said for being on set and having to deal with scripts and different directors and the immediacy of it." It set his family up in a house in Malibu, where he surfs regularly, increased his visibility and opened doors. One of them led to Land of the Dead.

Baker plays Riley, a paramilitary leader of mercenaries. In an apocalyptic struggle for survival in a devastated world ruled by ruthless opportunists, survivors live in anarchy behind fortified city walls. Outside, an army of the dead is on the rise and mercenaries have been called in to protect the living.

"I didn't want to do it as a fist-pumping kind of American action hero," Baker says. "[Riley] is more of a throwback to the '70s, a loner who feels responsibility for his people though he doesn't relish it."

Baker can be seen next in Something New, an interracial romantic comedy drama set in LA and directed by Sanaa Hamri. And according to the local industry grapevine, he's been approached for two Australian movie roles, pending financing, rumoured to be in Clancy of the Overflow and Bruce Beresford's Tent Hill Road. But Baker refuses to confirm any speculation, saying simply he'd love to "return for an Oz film".

He would love to make a movie that his kids could see. He would love to live in Europe. Or try directing - "If I ever grow up, that is!"

From Sydney Morning Herald