Posted October 17, 201212 yr Tracy Spiridakos is a Canadian actress who stars as Charlotte "Charlie" Matheson in the NBC post-apocalyptic science fiction series Revolution. Spiridakos was born in Winnipeg,Canada to Greek-born parents, George and Anastasia Spiridakos, who are restaurant owners. She has two brothers. The family moved to the Greek village Skala, near Sparta, when she was four, and returned to Canada when she was nine. She strongly identifies with her Greek heritage. She is a very promising actress&she is so beautiful!
March 6, 201312 yr Author David Lyons & Tracy Spiridakos: 'Revolution' PaleyFest Panel! Tracy Spiridakos , Billy Burke , and David Lyons arrive at the 2013 PaleyFest Panel for their show Revolution on Saturday (March 2) at the Saban Theatre in Beverly Hills, Calif
March 26, 201312 yr Author REVOLUTION INTERVIEW Tracy Spiridakos The Revolution star on taking the lead, going Method and surviving the apocalypseβ¦ Already a massive hit in the US (where itβs just returned to NBC after a winter hiatus), Revolution makes its UK debut on Sky1 HD this week. Produced by geek legend JJ Abrams and the brainchild of Supernatural creator Eric Kripke, itβs set in a future USA where everything that requires power (iPhones, cars, food mixers, Tamagotchi) has stopped working. With national borders redrawn and society ruled by militia, Charlie Matheson enlists the help of her Uncle Miles (a man with plenty of secrets) to track down her abducted brother and maybe (just maybe) find out why the power went out. We spoke to Tracy Spiridakos, who plays Charlie, about the showβ¦ Were you familiar with the other Abrams shows and Eric Kripkeβs Supernatural? Yeah, I was obsessed with Alias, obsessed. And Eric Kripke didnβt know this at the time, but he hired me for one of my first jobs ever on Supernatural, I was in an episode in season three or four, so he was looking at my resume and he was like βSupernatural, wait a minute, what?! When were you in my show?β Youβre the lead in Revolution β has that been a different experience to the other shows youβve been in? Yeah, it is very different. Thereβs also the things that come along with it β Iβve never been recognised before, you know going to the grocery store and people stop you and say they love the show and theyβre so excited. Itβs really amazing. And the workload and all that is really fun and huge [laughs], but we have a really great crew and wonderful cast. We spend a lot of time together, so Iβm actually really surprised we get anything done β we just laugh non-stop! How much of Charlie was on the page when you started? Have you been able to put much of yourself into her? I think at the beginning, I just thought that sheβs very well built as a character. Eric and I had a good conversation about her when we first started and as the story progresses we kind of get to know her even more, and Iβve been so fortunate to get to watch her grow. But specifically I wouldnβt know what to put my finger on, itβs just been an all-round kind of growth and Iβve really enjoyed it. I love that sheβs flawed, she makes mistakes β you watch some of the series and youβre like βNo, what is she doing?!β But thatβs her way β sheβs stubborn and sheβs different and thatβs what I love about her. How much warning do you get about whatβs happening in the next episode and future story arcs? We get the script and itβs a surprise. We usually get it a few days before we start filming. We do know certain things, I mean if weβre curious about a specific character development question that we have to kind of work on in this one episode then theyβll kind of hint at certain things but Eric likes to keep it secret. He doesnβt tell us much which is funny βitβs like, βwhy donβt you trust us?β But itβs kind of fun getting it last minute. Charlie has to do a lot of crying in the show. Is is hard work to get yourself in the right place? Surprisingly β because I donβt like to cry on my own in real life β in the show it kinda comes easy. I just really feel for everything thatβs gone on in her life. She starts in a place where she goes through a lot of very damaging things quite quickly, and just reading the script my eyes started to well up so getting to do it naturally and working with all these wonderful actors it kind of poured out of my eye sockets. I didnβt even want to be crying β I just couldnβt stop myself! You film the show in Wilmington, North Carolina (Dawsonβs Creek country), miles away from Hollywood. Does that make the production feel like its own little unit? Itβs great because it feels like its your own little town, a little community. I love filming there, I really really do. And itβs cool because itβs a city that I probably would never have found on my own and itβs a beautiful spot. The premise of the show is that all technology has stopped working, so do you go βMethodβ and stop using your cellphone or TV while youβre filming? I do guiltily use my cellphone when I am filming but I donβt know that thatβs the part, the message for me. But I try not to use my phone on the set, because I just like hanging out with everybody, actually talking and spending time together rather than sitting and texting. But I do rely on electronics because I miss my family. I miss my family and my fiancΓ© β Iβm always finding out whatβs going on on the other side. The Walking Dead, The Hunger Games, World War Zβ¦ Thereβs a lot of post-apocalyptic stuff on screen at the moment. Why do you think thereβs such an appetite for the end of the world? I think a big thing was 2012 coming around, I think a lot of people had their head wrapped around what they would do in that situation, and I think itβs just kind of that fantasy world where you kind of look at the world that youβre living in and you wonder what it would be like and how you would survive. But Revolution is a show about hope, itβs a show about love and family and community. And certain characters β my character, for example β doesnβt miss the power, isnβt trying to get the power back on, thatβs not what she cares about. She cares about family, she cares about the fact that her brother has been taken and sheβs trying to get him back, and I think that thatβs what makes Revolution a little different is that itβs not necessarily about trying to survive in this world. Itβs more about loving the people that youβre with and uniting loved ones together. sfx.co.uk
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.