grant bowlerA month ago Grant Bowler was signed to play Coot, a biker werewolf, in Season 3 of True Blood and right now, life couldn’t be much better. Below is an interview with him where he talks about his previous roles, breaking into Hollywood and getting the part in True Blood.

New Zealand born Bowler had made his mark on Australian TV with standout roles in Blue Heelers, Pacific Drive, Medivac, Stingers, All Saints and Canal Road. He was also host of the reality series The Mole and was the narrator of Border Security and a star of popular New Zealand comedy Outrageous Fortune.

All of that homegrown success came relatively easy for Bowler, but breaking into Hollywood has been a different story.  During his five year effort in Hollywood, things came slowly causing financial collapse which took a toll on his wife, actor Roxane Wilson (Stingers), and their two children, Edie and Ezekiel.

The 41-year-old finally started making producers sit up and take notice with his roles in the HBO series 12 Miles of Bad Road and the adventure drama Lost. Now he’s winning acclaim in Ugly Betty as an Australian businessman named Connor Owen, who becomes involved with Mode magazine.

Do you put down your recent True Blood signing to your role on Lost, Ugly Betty or something else?

To be honest, and this is something my wife Roxane and I were talking about yesterday afternoon over a cup of coffee, my path in the United States wasn’t the dream that you read about in magazines. We went broke more than once and we lost a home. I had come so close to getting stuff (roles) and whenever it came down to that coin toss it went the other way every time.

Did Roxane ever ask you to give up on the dream?

All my mates were saying: “You are going to have to decide that that’s enough because you are going to be broke for life.” It was horrible. We were broke and we were living in horrible joints with borrowed furniture and stuff I had picked up from St Vincent de Paul or on the side of the road.

Is the audition process in Hollywood soul-destroying?

I remember going over there for an audition in the first few years and, I kid you not, the guy kept me in a hallway outside his office next to the photocopier room and no one talked to me and when I went in to read for the part he was answering emails. He never once looked at me and when I had finished he didn’t look up. I said thanks and off I went. That cold. When you’re that cold in LA there is no feeling quite like it. You die a little inside every time and wake up and try to shake it off and go to the next one, but it doesn’t always work.
Grant Bowler is having the time of his life with a new role in hit US drama True Blood

How has the experience changed you?

It’s changed me as a man for the good. I think I always needed to go through that in one form or another, whether I wound up being at home or staying over there. I wish I was a quicker learner and wish I could have gone through what I needed to learn faster and that it cost less. But no matter how much it cost or how long it’s taken I wouldn’t go back for anything. I am different now. It’s just growing up. I had a kind of gilded cage at home where I wasn’t doing what I wanted to be doing, but I was making a good living. But I was never going to do what I wanted to do if I didn’t push myself.

What’s it like working on Ugly Betty?

I love those guys and there isn’t a diva among them. We filmed in the Bahamas for 10 days and it was an example of what that cast and crew were like. They didn’t have to call anyone to set because we were all lying around on banana chairs on set and two would get up and do the scene. Then we’d go out to dinner every night, so we were together 18 hours a day and everyone wanted it that way. We never wanted to leave one another’s company.

What type of scenes or characters are you most attracted to?

There are three that I absolutely adore. I never get tired of the man/woman stuff, that stuff about relationships and love. Then there is the man/child stuff. It’s really close to my heart because I have young kids. Then flogging guys is the third. Just bashing guys is what I love.

Source

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5 Responses to “Grant Bowler talks about his new role as Coot on True Blood”

  1. Rowena says:

    What a tough road he has had over here. I’m really happy for him that things have turned around. I very much look forward to seeing Grant on True Blood. He says he enjoys playing a character who bashes guys. Interesting statement. I think he’ll have plenty of opportunity to do that as Coot.

    Thanks, Lynn, for posting.

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  2. Anjanette says:

    So, even though I know he was only in the book Club Dead for a little bit, I don’t remember Coot much from the books. I hope they expand on the charachter and make it a little more interesting. He seems like he’d make a great Were…so it’d be nice to see his character stand out somewhat!

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  3. callonmebill says:

    I know you will get lots of opportunity “flogging guys” in your upcoming role as Coot the biker werwolf. I’m glad you persevered and hung in there in Hollywood with your family intact.
    Grant welcome to True Blood.

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  4. Elizabeth says:

    Grant is a good bloke who is thankful for what he has been given. Good onya Grant!

    [Reply]

  5. sshellzp says:

    I love him! go the aussies/new zealanders. I love Outrageous Fortune too.

    [Reply]

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