Skin Health Experts Formal Launch Party

New pictures from the Kate Somerville Skin Health Experts Formal Launch Party held on September 27th.

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us
Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

Source

posted by Lisa @ 1:21 PM, ,






McSteamy Now a McRegular on 'Grey's Anatomy'

Eric Dane and Kate Walsh on 'Grey's Anatomy'
LOS ANGELES -- Judging by the comments on the "Grey's Anatomy" writer's blog after Thursday's episode, fans of the show were rather pleased to see Dr. Mark "McSteamy" Sloan again.

Better news for those fans, a number of whom made references to jaws dropping: He'll be sticking around for a while.

Eric Dane, who made his first appearance on the show last season and closed Thursday's episode by walking out of a hotel bathroom wearing only a towel, is joining the cast full-time, ABC says. His appearance Thursday closed a scene in which Dr. Derek "McDreamy" Shepherd (Patrick Dempsey) was breaking up (for good, apparently) with his estranged wife, Addison (Kate Walsh).

Sloan, of course, was the reason Derek moved to Seattle in the first place, when his former best friend slept with his wife. His ongoing presence will either set up two interlocking love triangles (Meredith-Finn-Derek and Derek-Addison-Sloan) or one big love pentagon. Or, if the Shepherds' marriage really is done for good, at least give Addison a new man.

Source

posted by Lisa @ 4:04 PM, ,






Kate On Ellen - Download.

Greys-Media.com just updated the media section with Kate on Ellen!

Click here and scroll to the very end of the page!

Or watch it on YouTube!


I uploaded some captures at the KWalsh-Uncut Photobucket.



Click here for more.

posted by Lisa @ 4:08 AM, ,






Kate on Ellen!

Info 1. The Ellen DeGeneres Show: Actor Robert Downey Jr. and producer Sting (“A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints”); actress Kate Walsh (“Grey’s Anatomy”). (N) (WLTX-19) 5 p.m.

Info 2. “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” – Robert Downey Jr. and producer Sting (“A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints”); Kate Walsh. 4 p.m. on WISE, Channel 33.

More Info here >> ellen.warnerbros.com/thisweek/

Wednesday, September 27
ROBERT DOWNEY JR. & STING
ELLEN has the exclusive talk show appearance with ROBERT DOWNEY JR. & STING! They chat about their marriages and how they help keep them grounded and how it was working together for the first time on the upcoming film ”A Guide To Recognizing Your Saints.” Ellen finds out what’s on their “Life Lists.” Plus, the lovely KATE WALSH from the hit series “Grey’s Anatomy” visits with Ellen and chats about the new exciting season. Ellen is also joined by “The Wisconsin Grocery Bagging Champion.” And, don’t miss more of Ellen’s “Wednesday’s Wonderful World of Web Videos!”


Click here to check your local listings.

posted by Lisa @ 11:03 PM, ,






Grey's ladies


Seattle Grace Hospital may be loaded with medicine's most mesmerizing males, but it's the female doctors who make Grey's Anatomy a McDreamy attraction for viewers.
Of the average 20 million who tuned in each Sunday last season, two out of three were women, even though overall TV viewership is more evenly split. That distaff devotion has helped make Grey's, which moves to a new night tonight for its season premiere (ABC, 9 ET/PT), television's No. 3 scripted series overall, and No. 2 (behind Desperate Housewives) among women 18-49.

For actress Ellen Pompeo, there's certainly no gray area when it comes to understanding why female viewers check in for their weekly dose of these multiethnic, complex femmes.

"Most of the time on television, we're used to seeing women being bimbos or tramps — anything but flawed but also smart and professional," says Pompeo, 36, who portrays the often-whiny yetprodigiously talented (and bed-hopping) Meredith. "In the past, you'd have to go to cable to see a character so raw."

The creative talents behind the show resist categorizing Grey's. "We don't actually tend to think of it as a 'chick show,' " says executive producer Betsy Beers. "We like to believe that the themes and issues we deal with on Grey's are universal. For example, how does one juggle long hours at a demanding job and still try to have a successful personal life? Half the men and women I know wrestle with that on a regular basis, as do I."

But, Beers adds, "having said that, I can't deny there is a strong female voice in the writing as it was created by, and is run by, a woman" — executive producer Shonda Rhimes.

Fan Renee Dechert, an associate English professor at Northwest College in Powell, Wyo., was pulled in right from the start of the pilot by the voice of Meredith, which opens and closes each episode, much like Sex and the City's Carrie Bradshaw or Desperate Housewives' Mary Alice Young.

"Obviously, a female perspective is shaping how we'll see what we're about to see," Dechert says. "And just to make sure that we've got it, she'll do a closer at the end. Such a narrative technique is entirely in the tradition of Sex and the City, a show equally based on feminine fantasy."

To be sure, the Grey ladies are no wallflowers or saccharine sisters bonding and giggling over cafeteria Jell-O. They struggle. They make mistakes. They compete. They support. They commit. They cheat.

And each character's choices affect the audiences' affection. Viewers have come to both love and loathe not only Meredith Grey but also tough-talker Miranda Bailey (Chandra Wilson); snarky, abrasive commitment-phobe Cristina Yang (Sandra Oh, who declined to be interviewed); emotional train wreck Izzie Stevens (Katherine Heigl); deeply ambitious and bossy Addison Shepherd (Kate Walsh); and the mysterious hospital-basement dweller Callie Torres (Sara Ramirez).

'Strong, unique voices'

To Walsh, the show's appeal to women is as glaringly obvious as her character's scarlet lipstick.

"Every character has such a strong voice, a unique voice," says Walsh, 38. "It's really rare, as a woman, to see women interestingly and accurately portrayed on television. You get relegated to the mom or the long-suffering wife or the whore or the cop. To actually see women with all the complexities and facets of the male characters we've seen through the years ... people didn't even know they missed it until they saw it."


Wilson, 37, received an Emmy nomination for playing "The Nazi," the interns' not-so-affectionate nickname for their supervisor. A serious soap opera fan, she consumes four hours of daytime viewing every day. "I'm sitting here going through my tapes right now," she says, speaking from her home. She believes Grey's qualifies as a soap "like Knots Landing or Dallas was — where you want to come back next week and see how each situation resolved itself."

But unlike the often one-dimensional divas on traditional soaps, Grey's women don't get involved in petty catfights. The cast credits Rhimes for consistently keeping their characters respectable and believable.

Wilson reminds that when there was a locker room brawl (over a syphilis breakout), it was between characters Alex and George, not the ladies.

"It's encouraging a different experience for women and showing that it is entirely possible we can be friends and still be competitive," says Heigl, 27, whose emotional intern Izzie quit the medical program in last season's finale after getting involved with a heart patient and committing medical misconduct in her struggle to keep him alive.

Bring back Izzie!

In the new season, the women unite in a campaign to get Izzie reinstated. "And that's fascinating, because that just does not happen very often," Heigl says. "We're all competing for the medical cases or to get the best surgeries, but they also all helped Izzie at a time when she was making a crazy decision and basically throwing her career away. They stood by her and didn't abandon her."

Rhimes, 36, also has assembled prime time's most colorful cast. And that, too, accounts for the show's appeal, says Ramirez, a Latina whose orthopedic surgeon (and the object of George's affections) becomes a regular this year.

When Ramirez, 31, met Rhimes in New York last year to discuss her role, she said she was elated to discover "that Shonda was an African-American woman. She reflects on TV what I see as my experience in the world. She's got people of different races and backgrounds, but doesn't make a big comment about it. They are characters who have flaws, and — oh, by the way, they're African-American. Or Asian. Or whatever."

By all accounts, this diverse cast has bonded off-screen as well. Walsh says she's closest to Heigl and in fact had drinks with her and co-star T.R. Knight (George) the night before this interview. "It's safe to say that we totally love each other," Walsh says, laughing.

"It's a very fun atmosphere on set," echoes Pompeo. "It would be too difficult if we didn't have fun with the hours we have to put in."

For one episode, real-life knitters Wilson and Heigl taught Pompeo how to handle needles and yarn. Walsh and Heigl live near each other and often meet for drinks and prior to awards shows get gussied up together in one of their homes.

"There's an unbelievable amount of support and encouragement among these women," says Heigl. "We're very much there for each other in a way I haven't experienced outside of my very, very close friends that I've had since childhood. And I've had past working relationships with women that haven't been that supportive ... that have been more competitive."

Heigl recalls receiving a phone call at home from Pompeo after last season's finale showed the emotional scene in which Izzie broke down and climbed into bed with her beloved, dead patient, Denny.

"Ellen was so incredibly supportive and complimentary," Heigl says. "That meant so much to me because I'm so critical of myself and value her opinion. It made me want to cry."

Still, the actors have separate lives off-screen. "We don't have (much) time to hang out," admits Pompeo. "We spend all day together, and it's not like we're going to run home and hang out together, too. We all have things to do ... boyfriends, dogs to take care of."

Pompeo lives with longtime boyfriend Chris Ivery and their two poodles. Walsh is single. Heigl became engaged in June to musician Josh Kelley. Ramirez says she has a beau. Oh split from her Sideways director, Alexander Payne, after a brief marriage. And though Wilson declines to discuss the nature of her relationship with the father of her three children, daughters Serena, 13, and Joy, 8, and son, Michael, 10 months, keep her quite busy.

Wilson realizes what fans truly want to know is who their favorite characters will be hooking up with.

"The setting, the medical emergencies, the individual quirks of the characters, the humor — that's all secondary," says fan Petra Otto of Neenah, Wis. "In the end, I'm tuning in every week to watch them find love ... and hope that they all get loved in return.

"Heck, I even want McDreamy to make the right decision so that he, too, can be happy. But the sly writers added a twist here, didn't they? McDreamy can't be happy without breaking one of the gals' hearts."

On the strict orders of tight-lipped Rhimes, the cast has been given a gag order about revealing anything plot-related.

This season "you see everybody stand on their own a little bit more," says Walsh. "You get to see a different side of all of us. A little more history of where they've come from and where they're going. Every character in the show takes on a different direction. It's a lot more in-depth but still in the structure of the hospital and cases."

And Otto will be happy to learn the messy, misguided love triangle of Derek "McDreamy" Shepherd (Patrick Dempsey), his wife Addison and lover Meredith will be resolved. And a new twist will come via the arrival of Derek's sister.

Fans caught up in the action

Viewers feel so passionately about all these hookups, breakups and entanglements that some have even accosted Walsh in public to offer insight and encouragement.

"I was doing this event in Chicago, and this woman who'd had a few drinks came up to me, grabbed my arm like she knew me and said, 'You need to let McDreamy go! Let it go. It's done,' " recalls Walsh.


Not even Pompeo knows how the triangle will play out. "I don't know that I end up with anybody," she says. But Pompeo would be just fine continuing without a clear resolution, allowing Meredith to play the field, as many a man would do. Sex and the City aside, it's something rarely seen on television.

"It's what a lot of women do, anyway," Pompeo says. "But guys get a pat on the back, and women get a reputation."

Heigl believes female viewers are responding to such sexual liberation. "We've all been in those circumstances where there's been a double standard, where a man can act any way he wants, but if a woman behaves in a similar way, she's labeled something," Heigl says. "I think a lot of women appreciated that Meredith stands up for all women in a way."

Heigl says she still hears from female fans "how much they loved Meredith's speech to Derek that 'you don't get to call me a whore!' "

Heigl pauses.

"Was it 'whore' or 'slut'? I can't remember. But anyway, people loved it."

Source

posted by Lisa @ 8:24 AM, ,






Trading Up From Ikea


Kate Walsh of “Grey’s Anatomy,” second from left, with Corinne Kingsbury-Donovan, far left; Sara Morris, in red; Jamie Denbo, in aqua; and Sally Brooks, at Cut, the new Wolfgang Puck restaurant in Beverly Hills.

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.

HERE’S the thing about network television money: It changes everything.

Take cats. When Kate Walsh, who plays Dr. Addison Shepherd on ABC’s popular drama “Grey’s Anatomy,” arrived for dinner with her closest girlfriends recently at Cut, Wolfgang Puck’s new Beverly Hills steakhouse, she was still punchy from having just put vinyl nail caps on her kitties’ claws.

“The problem is,” Ms. Walsh said, somewhat sheepishly, “I just moved to a new house and bought furniture I actually care about.”

“Kate bought a second-season table,” deadpanned Cynthia True, a television writer who has known Ms. Walsh since her Ikea days.

“You laugh,” Ms. Walsh continued, “but I didn’t want it scratched up. So my assistant held down the cats while I put the tips on.”

“Your assistant?” Sally Brooks, a voice-over actress, said with mock disapproval.

Before Ms. Walsh could defend herself, Mr. Puck himself appeared at the table to welcome them and pay special respects to TV’s hottest neonatal ob-gyn. Ms. Walsh, who was originally signed to just five episodes of “Grey’s Anatomy,” made herself indispensable after delivering the line of Season 1 (Gently paraphrased: And you must be the woman who’s been sleeping with my husband) to the program’s namesake character, Dr. Meredith Grey, played by Ellen Pompeo. The show’s third season began on Thursday.

Ms. Walsh, 38, comes from the comedy world; she wore a fat suit to play one of Drew Carey’s girlfriends on “The Drew Carey Show.” But she finds she can actually get richer laughs in her current drama. She said, “As a woman in sitcoms, you’re either a drunken whore or a mothering appendage,” neither of which characterizes Ms. Walsh, despite the four bottles of wine on the table, her friends said.

“Kate is wickedly funny, but also really grounded and independent,” said Jamie Denbo, an actress, who said she’s known Ms. Walsh through “all her hair colors.” (Currently a redhead, Ms. Walsh said she’s naturally “a medium-to-light mouse.”) Ms. Denbo added, “And now that she’s famous, she can get us free stuff.”

The perks of stardom still feel new to Ms. Walsh, who said she “grew up scrappy,” the youngest of five siblings, in San Jose and Tucson. When she set off for Hollywood, in her mid-20’s, her mother’s only advice was, “Honey, don’t do those kinds of movies.”

As if to demonstrate how far she has come, seven waiters arrived to lay down plates of chops and $120 Kobe steaks. The subject turned to Ms. Walsh’s new car, and a slight blush, perhaps from the cabernet, came across her face. “Listen, I’ve only had practical cars, like station wagons, so stop it,” she said to theatrical moans. It turns out she bought a 1985 Aston Martin. A convertible. And red. “But guys, you know me,” she said. “I’m still the one at the Emmys with the Bevnap stuck to the bottom of my shoe.”

Ms. Walsh said she understood the ribbing. “Listen, I used to judge people,” she said, stabbing her pork chop. “ ‘I can’t believe so-and-so-suddenly-famous-person hasn’t called me back.’ But at some point, if you’re successful or lucky, you become incorporated. You become like a C.E.O. You have people working for you. You get a business name.”

And what, by chance, would Ms. Walsh’s new business be called?

“Kitty Likes to Scratch,” she said, and with that buried her head in her hands.

Source

posted by Lisa @ 5:08 AM, ,






13th Annual Premiere Woman in Hollywood Event - Picture




Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

posted by Lisa @ 3:52 AM, ,






EXCLUSIVE: Backstage Tour with Kate Walsh

ABC.com just renewed the GA wesbite and added an exclusice video of Kate Walsh 'trying' to show you the set of the show.

Click here.

posted by Lisa @ 3:48 AM, ,






TV on DVD: `Anatomy' gains weight; DVD has many extras

Akron Beacon Journal By R.D. Heldenfels (MCT)

Both "Grey's Anatomy" and "The Office" hit DVD this week with packages aimed at fans who can't get enough of the shows.

Since I'm in that category in both cases, I'm generally happy with what was offered.

Although, as is so often the case with the ABC medical drama, I have some caveats about "Grey's Anatomy: The Complete Second Season Uncut" (Buena Vista, 27 episodes, six discs, $59.99).

It's a lot of episodes, since ABC held back some of those made for the first season and televised them in the second. (That made the first-season DVD set rather paltry.)

Extras include four episodes in a longer form than their original telecast, although that doesn't really make them uncut.

In a commentary on the show's Thanksgiving episode -- expanded by about six minutes for DVD -- series creator Shonda Rhimes notes that there was yet another scene she had planned for the show that didn't even make it to the expanded cut. Also, while the box promises "scenes too steamy for TV" in the expanded versions, the Thanksgiving show simply appears longer and more textured -- and still really good.

Speaking of the box, be wary of the segment where "stars answer fans' most burning questions." It has some nice material from Kate Walsh, Justin Chambers, T.R. Knight and James Pickens Jr. But the biggest stars of the show are noticeably absent from the section. And the audio commentaries are mainly by behind-the-scenes folks.

Other DVD extras include deleted scenes (some revealing, some not), a set tour and a look at Dr. Bailey. Then there is the show itself, often wonderful, almost as often infuriating, consistently watchable.

"The Office: Season Two" (Universal, 22 episodes, four discs, $49.98) is full of gems from the comedy that can make you laugh and make you squirm, sometimes simultaneously. The second season had, among other things, the "booze cruise," the Christmas gift swap, Dwight's speech and the office Olympics.

It also does a nice job with the extras, which besides commentaries and a blooper reel include the hilarious parodies of NBC's "The More You Know" spots done by the cast and the complete recent serial of "Webisodes" made for www.nbc.com.

You can also see the uninterrupted, complete Faces of Scranton presentation video (from the Valentine's Day episode). And the DVD has the interstitial segments from an "Office" minimarathon, in which Steve Carell interviewed himself, to promote "The 40-Year-Old Virgin."

Source

posted by Lisa @ 2:02 PM, ,






Dr. Strained Love

...Or, how 'Grey's Anatomy' fans learnedto stop worrying and adore Kate Walsh By Laura Debrizzi


"You must be the woman who's sleeping with my husband."

With that line, Kate Walsh, playing Dr. Addison (Addy) Shepherd on TV's hit "Grey's Anatomy," click-clacked her heels into television infamy. It was two years ago, at the close of the drama's first season, and Walsh's Addison had marched toward her estranged spouse, Dr. Derek Shepherd (Patrick Dempsey), and the program's protagonist/narrator, resident Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo), in the halls of fictional Seattle Grace Hospital.

Addison was an unexpected face from Derek's not-too-recent past, and Walsh was an addition to the ABC show, which, with her onboard, established its signature love triangle - and then got some unplanned-for results.

Because instead of being just a black-clad, wronged wife with her hair coiled tight, Addison became a thinking woman's heroine. She, too, had guilt issues - she had previously slept with Derek's best friend - but was also sympathetic; a dedicated prenatal ob-gyn, she had come to Seattle Grace ready to make amends. And while the character flits between steely and humane, alternating some biting put-downs with a comforting bedside manner, the woman who plays her likes to break the mold in a very "Grey's" kind of way.

"Originally, I knew very little about this character other than the fact that she supposedly had an affair," says Walsh, who joined toward the end of the show's debut half-season. "My only job was to rain on Derek and Meredith's parade ... but on 'Grey's,' you never do know what's going to happen next.

"And then I think a lot of people [behind the scenes of the show] became a tad ... concerned that women throughout the country would stone me."

Quite the contrary. In fact, as the new season opens on Thursday, Sept. 21, at 9 p.m., the question on many fans' minds is, will Derek - aka "Dr. McDreamy" - come to his senses and choose the complex Addison over the now-seen-as-somewhat-whiny Meredith Grey?

"[We've] shown a tender side to Addison - her human side as well as her professional one," says Walsh about her character's appeal. "Originally, I think more teenage girls rooted for Meredith, but older women and men sort of identified with the struggles Derek and Addison [were going through]. The Shepherds are seemingly great people who are really trying to make it work by hanging in there."

In last spring's season two finale, as Derek and Meredith emerge from a particularly risqué moment in a supply closet - only legally blind viewers would have missed what color underwear Meredith had on under her cocktail dress - Addison stands in the hospital corridor with Meredith's current boyfriend (guest star Chris O'Donnell), sad and horrified. Who will wind up with whom is left up in the air.

Scenes such as these - along with Walsh's likability - are making many root for an Addison/Derek reunion, and are helping to make the show a smash. By the end of last season, it was drawing a bigger audience than its Sunday-night lead-in, "Desperate Housewives." And not even "ER" makes medicine so sexy.

The show's creator, Shonda Rhimes, has given that old chestnut genre the medical drama an infusion of sex appeal, with some extra brainpower to boot. Viewers love the personal and professional crises of Seattle Grace's residents and staff, and an army of female McDreamy fans have risen up to give Dempsey a career lift.

The fact that producers called on Walsh to further quicken the show's pulse was a shock to the 38-year-old Tucson native, one of five siblings raised in an Irish/Italian Catholic home. The only performer in the bunch, she attended the University of Arizona and did regional theater before moving to Chicago to study at the Piven Theatre Workshop - run by "Entourage" cast member Jeremy Piven's parents, who also taught John and Joan Cusack and Lili Taylor, among others.

And though Walsh studied drama, she remembers telling everyone within earshot that her break would come via comedy. They should have listened: In New York in the '90s, Walsh was a member of an improv group called Burn Manhattan, and, in 1997, joined "The Drew Carey Show."

"'Drew Carey' was my first sitcom, and I remember a director stopping me as I was about to make an entrance [on stage] and asking, 'Kate, you know to hold for the laughs, right?'" she says with a smile. "Of course I knew! That's like saying, 'You do know to keep your eyes open when you talk?'"
After more TV comedies (HBO's "Mind of the Married Man," Norm MacDonald's "The Norm Show") and filming Will Ferrell's 2005 soccer-parent goof "Kicking and Screaming," Walsh signed on to "Grey's Anatomy."

"Kate has succeeded in making Addison very sympathetic, which was not initially the easiest thing to do," says one of the show's executive producers, Betsy Beers. "Her comedic talent has helped add another dimension to the character. And she has no fear of taking chances."

Walsh has made Addison essential to the DNA of "Grey's." The reaction to Addison and Derek was so strong, in fact, that producers junked scenes Walsh and Dempsey had already filmed, fearing that they might overpower the Derek/Meredith story line.

"Patrick and I have so much fun together, it was frustrating for us [to have those scenes cut] - because we were starting to feel like we were in a miserable marriage," Walsh says.

"It's very hard to play [an unhappy couple]. It's challenging for us, whether these two characters are going to work things out. We were both like, 'C'mon, let us have some fun! Let us connect!' "

Heart rate

The tussle of love between Meredith Grey, Derek (Dr. McDreamy) Shepherd and his wife, Addison Shepherd, shows zero signs of cooling this season. When last we saw TV's favorite and juiciest romantic mess, Meredith was fresh from coital bliss with McDreamy, in an empty room at the hospital, no less. And sweet, kind, too-good-for-her Finn (Chris O'Donnell) was lovingly beckoning to her.

But after one and a half seasons of penance, has Addison been punished enough? Sure, she cheated on her husband - with his best friend. And yes, that may have driven him into the arms of another woman. But how much longer will she be chastened by guilt now that they're both guilty?

So, who should end up with whom? Herewith, the anatomy of this triangle's two female sides.

Addison Shepherd

What we love about her: She cheated! On television, the philandering-spouse role is usually reserved for men. But Addison shows a kind of independence and devil-may-care indulgence that every woman can cheer for. And having paid her debt - by witnessing her husband's affair - she's trying to save her marriage. There's something noble (if misguided) about that. Plus, she's also a neonatal surgeon. What job could be nobler?

What makes us cringe: Well ... she cheated. Viewers aren't programmed to overlook such indiscretions in TV heroines. And she's a touch too noble. Worse than her cheating may be her putting up with his cheating.

Why she and Derek wouldn't work: He probably doesn't love her, given all that she's done, and all he's done in response.

Why they would: Unlike Meredith, she's an adult. And they've both strayed, so they can scratch that off the "marriage inevitables" list. Then it can be smooth - if uneventful - sailing into the sunset.

Meredith Grey

What we love about her: She's real. She's utterly flawed. She's striving. And the fact that she gave in to lust and hooked up with McDreamy yet again in the season finale makes Meredith - much to the postfeminist collective chagrin - totally relatable.
What makes us cringe: Her mopey, self-indulgent side. Her inability to make a decision. Her lack of self-control. Her painfully obvious self-destructive streak. And her sloppy sexuality - why, again, did she hook up with George (played by T.R. Knight)?

Why she and Derek wouldn't work: She doesn't know what she wants, which means she's sure to break his heart. She seems predisposed to do the wrong thing (sleeping with George, if it has to be said again ...). She's selfish. And there's a distinct possibility that she longs for McDreamy precisely because she knows in her heart that he's the wrong choice.

Why they would: There's only one reason, and fans will have to wait to see if it's true: McDreamy is hopelessly, dumb-struck, slack-jawed, no-one-else-exists in love with her.

Originally published on September 10, 2006

Source

posted by Lisa @ 1:59 PM, ,






Grey' Party Talk Turns to Love Triangle

The Associated Press By MICHAEL CIDONI September 06, 2006

So you see a resolution to the love triangle and you see all of the characters on their own a little more, myself included The doctors were in, as cast and crew of the hot TV medical drama 'Grey's Anatomy' converged Tuesday night for a celebration of the DVD release of the show's second-season episodes.

The cast was generally tightlipped about third-season plot developments, but word did slip that the Meredith-Derek-Addy love triangle would finally be resolved, at least to some degree.
'Well, I think that you do see it, there is definitely a resolution, otherwise it becomes a really strange isosceles triangle,' Kate Walsh (Dr. Addison Shepherd) told AP Television.
'So you see a resolution to the love triangle and you see all of the characters on their own a little more, myself included,' she added. 'The relationship becomes in it's proper proportion. You see them who they are as a person and who they are professionally in a whole new and different way.'

There was also talk of some casting news: Diahann Carroll and Richard Roundtree will appear in recurring roles as the parents of Dr. Preston Burke (Isaiah Washington)
'Grey's Anatomy: The Complete Second Season _ Uncut,' which also includes about five hours of extras, hits stores Sept. 12. The show begins its third season on its new day, Thursday, Sept. 21 on ABC.

Source

posted by Lisa @ 10:50 AM, ,






online   /   hits

Links

Affiliates

Archives

Previous Posts

Powered By

Powered by Blogger

Ads