Geroneja(05/27/04 15:39:01)
Но вернемся к новостям )
12 dirty вопросов к Каризме от "Плейбоя" *может, тут рейтинг NC-17 поставить? *:
"Posing in Playboy is about finding joy, liberation and warmth," said Charisma Carpenter, Playboy’s newest nude celeb. "I’m shy and I really came out of my shell."
You certainly wouldn’t know she’s bashful from her body of work. Charisma shook her pompons as an NFL cheerleader before rubbing Buffy the wrong way as stuck-up prom queen Cordelia Chase on Buffy the Vampire Slayer. But it was when she branched off into a meatier role in Angel that she sent our libidos into the stratosphere. And now, she flaunts her heavenly body in an all-nude, 10-page Playboy pictorial. With her Playboy issue currently on newsstands and her pictorial in the Playboy Cyber Club, Charisma confides about having sex at an Oscar party and which co-star’s neck she wouldn’t mind biting.
1. When you were a cheerleader for the San Diego Chargers, did your costumes ever make it off the field and into the bedroom?
Charisma Carpenter: Yes, I believe they did. And, let’s just say I never had to use the falsies -- I’m exposing cheerleader secrets here.
2. Of all the women you appeared with on Buffy and Angel, who would you most like to film a girl-on-girl scene with?
CC: I’ve never thought about it. I don’t want anybody to feel left out. Well, I think Stephanie Romanov is pretty beautiful and sexy. She’d be a good choice.
3. What music do you listen to during sex?
CC: Rolling Stones and Ben Harper. I don’t have a stereo in my room so I haven’t had music playing during sex in a long time. But the last time I had music playing it was Tattoo You and Diamonds on the Inside.
4. Is there a rock star you’d like to go back to the tour bus with?
CC: Because I like their music so much, I want to say Mick Jagger, but he doesn’t do anything for me sexually. Talent overcomes a lot, but I don’t think it will ever overcome that much.
5. What celebrity would you most like to have sex with?
CC: Viggo Mortensen. He reminds me of my husband.
6. What’s your favorite part of the male anatomy?
CC: Hands. Hygiene’s important. Clean, round, soft, tan hands are cool.
7. Ever have sex in a public place?
CC: Yes. At an Oscar party in the bathroom.
8. What’s the most unusual place you’ve had sex?
CC: On a highway in a moving automobile. I wasn’t driving. It worked out quite well, but I don’t know how it did. I was young and stupid.
9. What’s your favorite sexual act?
CC: The act itself. Intercourse.
10. Do you prefer giving oral sex, or receiving?
CC: Giving. I have a hang-up. I don’t enjoy receiving it as much.
11. Any nicknames for your vagina?
CC: These are good questions. I call my vagina "punani." My period is "Wilma" because it’s the ugliest thing ever. An ex-boyfriend named his ex-girlfriend’s boobs "bumpers" because they were huge, but I’ve never had that problem.
12. Ever have a three- or more-some?
CC: No, no. I’m a little bit uptight that way. I don’t like to share.
Фото Эли Ханниган и Люка Перри ))
Сканы журнала Dreamwatch, интервью с Фьюри и Беллом ))
Интервью ДБ для Dreamwatch, transcripted by Karen:
When David Boreanaz made his debut as Angel in the opening episode of Buffy, he had no idea that he was destined to play the tall, dark and brooding bloodsucker for eight years. But after three seasons of Buffy, Boreanaz went on to topline its spin-off series Angel for five years of heroic adventures.
Boreanaz has mixed feelings about saying goodbye to the handsome vampire. While he's sad that the series is over, he's looking forward to pursuing new projects and spending more time with his wife, Jaime Bergman (who guest-starred in the late season five episode Time Bomb), and their son, Jaden Rayne. And, as he tells dreamwatch, Boreanaz is also thrilled that Angel is leaving the screen on the back of one of the show's strongest years...
Angel's cancellation took a lot of people by surprise. What was your response to the news?
I really wasn't shocked or surprised. This is the way the business is. Like I said when I started the show, I work on a scene-to-scene, episode-to-episode basis. My commitment is to 22 episodes a season, and when they're done I consider it over. Things like this happen every day in this business and it's not about who's right or who's wrong.
But I felt bad for the fans, I really did. I felt bad for the fans that they [the WB Network] took the show and they retooled it in a way that saw it go in a different direction. When they do something like that, it's the responsibility of the network to put a keen interest on it for that specific time. So I don't think they handled it in the classiest way.
The show has been faced with the threat of cancellation since the end of its fourth season. How did you feel when Joss Whedon told you that the uncertainty was over and it was definitely cancelled?
It was a big relief for me. It gave me a really good sense of freedom and I felt like a big weight was lifted from my shoulders. When you're carrying a show, it's a lot of pressure. You're taking on a lot. People rely on you for their job - the camera people, the craft services people, the lighting people... So I just felt that I didn't have to hold that cross any more. But I feel bad for the fans. These are the people the network really screwed over.
How did the news of the show's cancellation affect the on-set atmosphere?
When people in the cast and crew found out, they were pretty sad for the first day. But when you work in a business like this you have to be confident in yourself that you're going to get another job. If you don't think you can, you shouldn't be in this business. So the morale was fantastic.
What's your personal verdict on Angel's fifth season, and how do you feel it compares to previous years of the show?
The writers got into the fifth season and totally retooled it. I was amazed at how they did it because I had some questions about how the relationship between Angel and Spike would work out. I was asking myself, 'Does that make sense? What is all this going to mean?" But I think that the episodes that we've done this season top any other season.
You made your directorial debut with the fifth season episode Soul Purpose. Did you enjoy the experience?
It was great. I had such support from the cast and crew. Everybody really supported me. From my perspective, it wasn't so much about me telling these guys what to do - the actors know what they're doing and what they bring to the table and I allowed them to be creative. I was pleased with the outcome, although, of course, the edited cut is very different from the director's cut.
Angel's original leading lady, Charisma Carpenter, made a special guest appearance as Cordelia in Angel's 100th episode, You're Welcome. Was it nice to work with her again?
It was cool. It was great to have her back because the show started with Charisma and not having her on board this season was difficult. We just missed her presence and her energy. It was hard.
Were you disappointed that Sarah Michelle Gellar didn't reprise the role of Buffy in Angel's series finale, especially after you appeared in Buffy's closing episode last year?
I hoped that she could come back for ours, but that wasn't my decision. I've actually always been bad with reunions. I only want to go forward in my life rather than backwards. Reunions don't sit comfortably with me and it took a lot to get me to do Buffy. At one point I really didn't want to do it, but as a favour to Sarah I did.
After playing Angel for nearly eight years, are you at all worried that you won't be able to break away from the character?
I've never thought of it that way. When you're going into a series, you kind of say that you're going to be pigeonholed because you're playing a character for 'x' amount of years. I feel blessed that I've played this character on this show for five years. What's great about Angel is that his character is multi-faceted and he's got a range of personality traits. And to get to 100 episodes is a huge feat and a great testimony to the people who were behind it and whe were supporting it.
People always identify you with specific roles, but as an actor you just have to hold on the that and instead of having it work against you, you've got to use it to your advantage. So I don't go out feeling that I have to get away from this character and change my whole look.
Is there anything you're particularly looking forward to doing now that Angel has finished?
I'll definitely spend more time with my wife and child. I'm looking forward to that. I'm also really looking forward to travelling somewhere outside of the US. I've been doing the show for five years and we didn't travel much with the show. I like to be on location.
There's been a lot of speculation about an Angel TV movie being made...
God, not in my mind! I don't think that's going to happen.
Looking ahead, would you consider doing a movie with Sarah Michelle Gellar someday?
It would depend on what it was and who was involved... I can't just say, "Yeah, I'll do something with her again," even though she was great to work with.
Do you ever question the choices you've made in life?
Never. I know exactly where I am. I know exactly where I'm going. I know exactly what I can do and I'm very confident in all that.
The best thing about it is that I know there will be pitfalls and I'll fall down. Those are the moments when you find out the most about yourself because you become stronger.
---------
Marstersverse Buffy and Angel in Ukraine The Watcher's Library