Friday, April 9, 2010

Everyone auditioned for Bill Compton role on True Blood

Digital Spy says .....FYI Everyone at the Paley last year said they auditioned for Bill. I think even Nelsan and Anna ...ha!

Alexander Skarsgård originally auditioned for the role of Bill Compton on True Blood, creator Alan Ball has revealed.

The Swedish actor, who eventually won the role of Eric Northman on the HBO vampire drama, was keen to play Bill, but the part was later won by Stephen Moyer.

Ball told Details: "Alex wasn't quite right for Bill, but I remember that he was giant and also beautiful. So when it came time to cast Eric, I thought of him."

Skarsgård also told the magazine that his audition for Eric was done on tape from a hotel room.

"I thought, 'Oh, vampires - I don't know', but then they said Alan Ball was behind it, and I was a huge fan of Six Feet Under and American Beauty. I auditioned on tape from my hotel room in Mozambique."

here

Happy Birthday Bill Compton !


William Thomas Compton b. 9 Apr 1840, ( 1835 in TB)

Vampire Diaries "Under Control" Promo

Ethical Vampires, Part I by Emily Colette Wilkinson

Vampires figure the anxieties of their cultural moment. They come out at night—and during periods of social and political turmoil, and their habits and looks mutate to personify the fears of the age in which they appear. Bram Stoker’s Dracula dramatized Victorian fears of sex as morally corrupting and fears of English culture as threatened by invading foreigners. The vampires of Anne Rice’s Vampire Chronicles, published primarily in the 1980’s, shared a certain kinship with the ruthless, amoral financier characters of the age, Gordon Gekko of Oliver Stone’s Wall Street and Patrick Batemen of Bret Easton Ellis‘ American Psycho, but their most striking feature was their homosexuality. Rice’s vampirism as blood-borne pathogen also came to seem a metaphor for AIDS—a taunting metaphor, since her beautiful men could not die.

So what about our vampires—the vampires of Charlaine Harris‘ Sookie Stackhouse novels or those of Stephenie Meyer’s ubiquitous Twilight? Our vampires seem a domesticated, morally evolved breed. Meyer’s vampires have been defanged altogether (Meyer only agreed to sell the film rights with the caveat that the Cullens could not be depicted with fangs in any film version), while the vampires of Charlaine Harris’ Sookie Stackhouse novels (better known as HBO’s True Blood) have discretely retractable fangs. Both authors’ vampires are committed to humane, sustainable diets. Indeed, if Michael Pollan wrote for vampires, he might recommend the diet devised by the vampires of Meyer’s Twilight. The members of the Cullen household, the forward-thinking vampire “family” at the center of the series, forswear feeding on humans. “I don’t want to be a monster,” Edward Cullen, Meyer’s teenage vampire hero explains to his human beloved, Bella Swan, when she asks him about his diet.

read on

True Blood Music Video of the Day: Living Dead Girl by Rob Zombie



Living Dead Girl by Rob Zombie

Thanks, ToddMarty