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Wentworth Miller

Here is the Wentworth Miller interview in Coure magazine

and some nice pictures

Hope you like it

Wentsexybw.jpg



What were you doing this summer? Did you do any films?
No, I was relaxing. I had been working hard all year during the first
season of the show and when I finished I was burnt out. I spent all of
my energy travelling by car from Chicago to Los Angeles.

- The famous Route 66?
I took a route parallel to it, just me and my small Corolla. It was a
fantastic trip that gave me some perspective on my new reality. I saw
the lives of strangers that had nothing to do with Hollywood. These were
people who didn’t care about how much money their last film made or
whether they were going to be on for another season. I needed to
disconnect and detoxify myself from Hollywood.
Wentworth_Miller_Cuore_inte.jpg

- Has your life drastically changed in the last six months when the
show became a success in America?
Television is a powerful medium. Now I have “friends” in every city
in the U.S. Everyone wants something from me. They know me but I
don’t know them (laughs). A lot of people talk to me on the street. I feel
different now. I feel that I have lost my privacy and this is very
strange for me because I am still the same person inside, with the same
fears and insecurities that I had before.

- Do women now give you their phone numbers without you having to ask
them their names?
It is now easier to pick someone up in certain situations and yes, they
do give me their phone numbers without me having to ask them their
names. However, occasionally I have been in situations in which women have
been more attracted to the character that I play than with me.

- What does Wentworth look for in a woman?
I believe that confidence is the key to many things. One can talk about
a sense of humour or style but the most attractive aspect of a woman is
her confidence; that she feels comfortable in her own skin. Ideally, I
would like to find a woman that understands what it is like to be with
an actor without being an actress herself. I want a woman who keeps my
feet on the ground and holds my hand while I am off going around in
circles. Like somebody who works in the accounting department of a film
company. (laughs) …

- Have you already found her?
No. Not yet …
Sounds like he was talking about some specific person, don’t want to start any rumors here but it smells like already found someone.

- If women were divided into two camps, blondes and brunettes, which
camp would you chose?
I like brunettes. For many years I was in love with Angie Harmon, the
actress from Law and Order.

Sorry Blondes, I'll take it from here.

- What has been the best offer that you have received from a woman?
Up until now it has not happened. Many people hesitate before talking
to an actor, but my character has received a lot of mail (and some of
them using steamy language.) My character has had more success than I
have had (laughs). When I am walking down the street, women ask me for my
autograph, a kiss and take pictures with their cell phones.
- Have you had an experience where you have been called Michael in bed?
No, but I do remember that they have called me Michael at the dry
cleaners. I am good enough in bed that women yell out my name and not
Michael.

Photos: Wet for Went & Wentworth Miller Online Gallery

source: http://www.gossiportruth.com/2006/12/14/wentworth-miller-interview-in-cuore-magazine/
 
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Ooohhhh...:

- Have you had an experience where you have been called Michael in bed?
No, but I do remember that they have called me Michael at the dry
cleaners. I am good enough in bed that women yell out my name and not
Michael.
 
everybody spread love

:flower: :heart:






love his feet
give me some more

all pics from flickr.com​
 
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do you like what you see?

aaaah his body! i love that his not all build up,
but eforthlesly cool and handsome, almost to perfect in real life,
I really fell for his caracter in prison break​

havent seen these before
wentworthmiller040107020.jpg

source ohlalaparis.com​

his style is casual and sporty i like it but
prefer the style in his GQ fotoshoot, a bit grungy its suits him​
spaceball.gif


sweet


:flower:
flickr.com​
 
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went on the set filming prison break
that seems to be a ciggie in his hand
i love him
vfjmeg.jpg

source on picture
 
i like to say hunk he is
crazy I am
"Prison Break" cap... "Odd Man Out".

xdzdjp.jpg
 
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New interview from today's Times:heart: :flower:

Caught in the spotlight

The new Brad? Not yet, Wentworth Miller tells Stephen Armstrong

trans.gif
Waiting to interview Wentworth Miller at the Cannes television festival, I notice something strange. The seafront outside the hotel is jammed with women. It takes me a while to work out what they are doing there. After all, Cannes is a trade fair. Actors are there to promote their programmes to the industry. The general public is not invited, and rarely shows up. So to see a swarm of semi-hysterical beach babes forcing their way past the door staff is almost unprecedented. Wentworth Miller clearly has an unusual appeal.
Since the American drama Prison Break broke onto the world’s screens in August 2005, Miller’s portrayal of the brooding lead, Michael Schofield, has catapulted him from off-the-shelf beefcake (playing the love interest in a Mariah Carey video, for example) to verge-of-superstardom, bona fide heart-throb. In series one, Schofield broke into prison to rescue his death-row brother, getting tortured, beaten and abused by most of the inmates for his pains. Miller’s “hottie du jour” status was helped by a plot that saw him tattoo the plans of the prison all over his body, and thus stand around shirtless for a large part of every episode. Even so, says Prison Break’s producer, Paul Scheuring, sex-symbol status is almost never conferred on unknown actors over the age of 28 — and Miller is 34.
NI_MPU('middle');“In Hollywood, there are only a few actors who could possibly be a leading man, and if they are really the guy, if they really have the chops, they’re already making movies,” he explains. “So when we were casting for a 30-year-old, there were all these journeymen actors — good-looking, quite clever, but had never really caught on. We saw thousands. Suddenly, Wentworth came in, and the room lit up. It was like, ‘Where has this guy been?’”
Miller now stands just about where Brad Pitt stood after Thelma & Louise: his next decision could put him right up in the firmament or leave him rotting as the hottest face on cable reruns. The imminent second series of Prison Break sees the gang of convicts on the run, in the style of The Fugitive, hunted by a remorseless FBI man. Given the fatality rate — a cast member is gunned down every couple of weeks — it’s hard to see the story stretching out over another four series. At some point soon, then, our boy will have to make that big script choice, and he’s fully aware of its importance. Indeed, it seems to trouble him so much so that during the series’ three-month hiatus, he opted to turn down every movie offer thrust at him and effectively vanish, driving across America from the Chicago set to LA. It proved a sobering experience.
“I thought I knew how powerful TV was, but I had no idea,” he explains. “In Chicago, I was used to people tagging us on the street, recognising us — I thought, well, we’re filming here, so of course they’re aware of us. But when you’re pulling into some gas station in the backwoods of Idaho and you find there are fans of the show everywhere you go... well, it was weird. I’ve lost my anonymity. There’s no more wandering into the next town and putting on a French accent just for show, for amusement.”
I tell him that I’ve never had to push through a foyer full of eager women to get to an interview with a television actor before, and his face briefly flickers, as if he’s grateful someone else thinks it’s crazy. “This is a new experience for me, the women over here.” He leans forward, as if it’s a secret. “I’m not sure if it’s confidence — they’re much more comfort-able introducing themselves and making their needs known.”
It’s almost endearing how alarming he finds it. You’d expect an actor to crave such attention, but Miller’s private life is very private indeed. There are whole internet sites devoted to working out who he might be sleeping with. Isn’t he ever tempted to take advantage of his status with one of the sun-tanned lovelies queuing outside? He shrugs and spreads his hands out on his knees. “Right now, my work comes first,” he says, speaking slowly and thoughtfully. “I’m a workaholic, which is the sad truth of it. I did manage to go on a couple of dates over the past year, but I’m happiest when I’m on set, so I really need to get all of that out of my system before I can turn my attention to more personal matters. I try to lead a low-key life. And sometimes you just want to go to Chili’s and have a margarita and some chicken fajitas, and not have the experience wind up on a website somewhere. It’s a little bit strange, all that sex-symbol stuff. The fact is, I look the same as I’ve looked for the past 10 or 15 years. My eyes aren’t suddenly a more compelling shade of green. People go on about the ‘brooding look’ a lot, but usually I’m just squinting because my eyes are sensitive.”
Perhaps he’s so awkward with the trappings of fame because his background is about as far from Hollywood as it’s possible to get. Although he was brought up in Brooklyn, he was born in Chipping Norton, just outside Oxford. His father was a Rhodes scholar, studying psychology amid the dreaming spires, and young Wentworth grew up surrounded by academics. It was expected that he would go to a good university, and he studied English at Princeton. Despite performing in an a cappella group, the Princeton Tigertones, he quashed his childhood acting ambitions while there.
“Princeton is very conservative, and all my friends were looking forward to Wall Street or law school or med school. If you said you were going into the arts, well, that was something you did as an extracurricular activity,” he explains. “I moved out to LA to work in film development. Just watching all our video footage got the juices flowing, so I decided to quit and give acting a try. All my father knew was that I had a lot of free time on my hands, and that’s never a good thing.” He smiles. “Let’s just say my parents had their concerns.”
It took him a long time to make it. “People have referred to me as an overnight success,” he smiles wryly, “but I’m an overnight success that has been 10 years in the making. A lot of times, being an actor in Hollywood feels like you’re pissing down a well. I’ve had 500 auditions, and I have 13 credits on my resumé, so I’ve heard ‘no’ an awful lot.”
Now that he has that success, however, he actually seems worried. “It’s just in my nature not to be a part of the Hollywood scene,” he says. “It’s never held any kind of lasting satisfaction for me. I think it’s dangerous, because now there’s so much media attention — 24/7 on every cable channel, papers and online — there’s a real hunger for information, and people can get to feel as though they know you when they really don’t.”
His conversation is littered with this sense of danger, of being trapped by attention and celebrity. The project he feels most attracted to, for instance, is one he’s developing himself about Dracula. “There’s something identifiable in that character,” he says earnestly. “The Dracula story is really, in my interpretation, a story about someone schlepping through the ages trying to find love. Alone. Malformed. A social outcast. Dracula picks his bride to be, and there’s a part of us that wants them to get together. But then the blond, beefy hero comes in at the end and puts a stake through Dracula’s heart. I think it’s kind of tragic. Dracula is about wanting community, wanting to be understood, wanting some kind of connection, someone to accept you, fangs and all.” Then our time is up, and I have to push my way through the foyer into the blinding light of a Cannes afternoon. Looking back, I see the smoked-glass door of the bar where Miller sits, waiting for the next journalist to step into his gloomy lair. The beach blondes stare at the same door, hoping he’ll come out and join them, but it’s as if the sunshine and the attention are fatal — that if he’s directly exposed to them, he’ll writhe and wither away until all we’re left with is his fangs.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2101-2539795,00.html
 

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