BBC America's conspiracy clone thriller Orphan Black was renewed for a second season, and we recently chatted with Jordan Gavaris about his character Felix, how he got involved on the show and much more.
Read on to check out the full interview, and catch an all new episode of Orphan Black on May 18th.
Amanda Dyar: Can you tell us how your career in acting got started and how long you have been doing it?
Jordan Gavaris: I started acting in my senior year in high school. I was working at a local video store and, at the time, was fascinated by counter-culture directors like Terrence Malick, Robert Altman, and Brian De Palma (even though, at 17, I didn't fully understand their work). I was convinced I was going to be a director. I wanted to learn more about an actor's process, so I enrolled in a local acting studio.
Read on to check out the full interview, and catch an all new episode of Orphan Black on May 18th.
Amanda Dyar: Can you tell us how your career in acting got started and how long you have been doing it?
Jordan Gavaris: I started acting in my senior year in high school. I was working at a local video store and, at the time, was fascinated by counter-culture directors like Terrence Malick, Robert Altman, and Brian De Palma (even though, at 17, I didn't fully understand their work). I was convinced I was going to be a director. I wanted to learn more about an actor's process, so I enrolled in a local acting studio.
- 5/17/2013
- by Amanda Dyar
- DreadCentral.com
The effort to rescue 29 miners trapped in New Zealand is now on hold because of fears there will be a second blast. Greer McDonald on the families' anguish and two brothers-one trapped, the other blown clear.
In the small, remote mining community on New Zealand's West Coast, news of the explosion at a coal mine that trapped 29 people underground was received with dread.
Related story on The Daily Beast: The Facebook Gaming Revolution
Many people here in Greymouth work in the mines or have loved ones who do.
For the Rockhouse family, the accident at the Pike River mine brought both heartache and relief: one son is still trapped underground while another son was one of the two survivors after Friday's explosion.
Daniel, a 24-year-old coal-load driver, received only moderate injuries in the blast, and was discovered unconscious by an electrician who went to investigate the cause of a power outage.
In the small, remote mining community on New Zealand's West Coast, news of the explosion at a coal mine that trapped 29 people underground was received with dread.
Related story on The Daily Beast: The Facebook Gaming Revolution
Many people here in Greymouth work in the mines or have loved ones who do.
For the Rockhouse family, the accident at the Pike River mine brought both heartache and relief: one son is still trapped underground while another son was one of the two survivors after Friday's explosion.
Daniel, a 24-year-old coal-load driver, received only moderate injuries in the blast, and was discovered unconscious by an electrician who went to investigate the cause of a power outage.
- 11/20/2010
- by Greer McDonald
- The Daily Beast
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