Archive for the ‘Michael McMillian’ Category

The Season 5 couple, Russell Edgington (Denis O’Hare) and Rev. Steve Newlin (Michael Mcmillian) will both be attending November’s Vampire Ball 4 in London.  Previously we reported that Denis O’Hare would attend, but recently, Michael McMillian has been added to the list of stars attending.  Not only is the site for the event listing Michael as an attendee now, but he also posted the following information on Twitter and Facebook recently:

@McMillzz: London! I am coming to see you this November with some fellow vamps! #VampireBall #trueblood

revnewlin

The fourth annual Vampire Ball, is a 3 day event celebrating vampires in the media and will be held from November 8 to 10, 2013 at the Thistle Hotel Heathrow in England.

 

 

 

Preview of True Blood Comic 9 by Michael McMillian

Posted by Lynnpd On February - 18 - 2013

Rev. Newlin, our own Michael McMillian, is back writing another True Blood comic. In this preview of True Blood #9, we learn that he has again scripted a tale from a story he created with the help of Annie Nocenti, and featuring art from Michael Gaydos and Beni Lobel. In the story we find that the vampires and werewolves are working together and it seems that when you shoot a werewolf, it goes back to being a naked human.

tbcomic9

See more photos from the comic at: craveonline.com

True Blood Season 6 Premiere script has been sent out to the cast

Posted by Shadaliza On December - 4 - 2012

With casting calls and the first news about True Blood season 6 starting to pop up, the anticipation for the new season has already started to built up.

A tweet from Michael McMillian (Steve Newlin) reveals that the scripts for the season premiere have been sent out to the cast. The first episode is written by Raelle Tucker and will be directed by Stephen Moyer.

 

The Vault Wishes Michael McMillian a Happy Birthday!

Posted by Lynnpd On October - 20 - 2012

The Vault wishes Michael McMillian, (Steve Newlin) a Happy Birthday – October 21!

True Blood is rich with cast members that delight us over and over, but the character of Steve Newlin is one of our favorites that always pleases.  Played delightfully by Michael McMillian, Steve has always been a joy to watch.  His evilness while wearing a big smile was even more delightful this season since he had been turned into a vampire.  His performance, in my opinion was one of the best of the season.  And, not only does Michael personify the Reverend and the religious right on True Blood, but he also is a versatile writer and has co-written many of the True Blood comic books as well as his own, Lucid.

Below is excerpts from Part 1 of an interview with Michael from Assignment X where he talks about True Blood and his character.

 

AX: Which came first, the comic book writing or the acting?
MICHAEL McMILLIAN: The acting. Unless you count the comic book writing I was doing in the third grade at home. I’ve been out inL.A. working as an actor for about ten years now, and started [acting] before that when I was in college. But writing is something that I’ve always loved to do, and I started publishing comics about two years ago.

 

AX: When you went in to audition for Steve, did they tell you what they were looking for?
McMILLIAN: The audition process was pretty quick and easy. In a version of the scene that I had that would eventually show up in Season Two, when Sookie comes to visit the Fellowship and find out about Godric, it was just a really well-written scene and I just went with what was on the page with my gut. I got one note from [TRUE BLOOD series creator] Alan [Ball], and that was to play the scene again, but smile the entire time. And I did that and he was like, “Great, thank you.” A few hours later I got the call that I booked the part, so I guess it worked [laughs]. It’s still a major part of the character.

 

AX: When Steve was first introduced in Season One, he originally was only seen on TV, right?
McMILLIAN: Yeah. Actually, I think my first appearance was on a sort of Bible chat show with a Tammy Faye Bakker lookalike, talking about my father being killed by vampires. I think the next time we saw him, he was giving a speech, kind of rallying humanity against vampires, and then finally we saw him at the end of Season One, preaching in his church and catching the eye of Jason Stackhouse. And I’m not sure – I guess in the beginning of Season Two was one of the first times that Nan Flanagan [the previous Authority spokesperson, played by Jessica Tuck] and Steve Newlin faced off [on a television news show]. Season Two really marked Steve Newlin’s arrival as we know the character now.

 

AX: When you were cast in the first season, did they say to you, “Now, in second season, you’re going to be one of the main villains”?
McMILLIAN: Yeah. I had known that the role was going to be pretty small in the first season and the plan was to make him a much larger role in the second season, which is one of the reasons I wanted to try out for it, but also, I just loved the idea of playing this right-wing Christian evangelist who hated vampires. It was such an out-there idea and such a great character, but also something that I thought was really relatable and really relevant to today. It was a really fun, satirical role.

 

AX: Have you and the writers discussed what being vamped has done for Steve’s view of theology?
McMILLIAN: Not so much. We really haven’t had a lot of those specific conversations. That’s something that I’ve kind of navigated through myself. And the best I can say is that, in that first episode of Season Five, Steve says, “I’ve been blessed with the gift of immortality.” I think that’s really the way he sees it. I think that he thinks whatever happens to him is divine. It doesn’t necessarily erase his theology, it just sort of redefines it.

 

AX: Did you know in Season Two that Steve Newlin was gay and closeted at the time?
McMILLIAN: I think that actually came out of the way I was intentionally playing the character in Season Two. Nobody said, “This character is in the closet, so try that.” It had just become really clear, the dynamic that was being created between Ryan Kwanten [as Jason] and Anna Camp [as Steve’s wife Sarah], there was a really fun love triangle taking place. And I think that Steve was fascinated with Jason Stackhouse, and that was in the script. [Steve] hand-chose [Jason] to be this prime Soldier of the Sun. But I think Steve, whether he knew it or not, was falling in love with that guy. And I was definitely playing that in my mind, and keeping it a bit of a secret. And I think it showed a little bit in the performance, but it was never on the page. But when he came back, I think the writers who knew that I had that take on him and just ran with it.

 

AX: How did you like doing those scenes with Deborah Ann Woll as Jessica, where Steve gets into a physical fight with her over Jason?
McMILLIAN: Oh, it was great, it was a dream come true. I love Deborah, we became friends back in Season One. There’s such a long list of actors I’d love to work with on the show, and she was at the top of it, just because we get along so well, and I think there’s a similarity there between Jessica and Steve. They both come from these religious backgrounds, possibly both turned against their will. Jessica’s much further down the line than Steve is, but she grew to embrace her vampiric side, and I think that Steve does, too, but he’s rushing into things and he’s just a sort of big, horny, virginal teenager. He’s just a giant hormone at the moment.

 

AX: Did you know when you were told that Steve was coming back as a vampire that he was also going to become the spokesman for the Authority?
McMILLIAN: Oh, that was news after. I didn’t find out about that until I read the third episode script. We’ll hear a little bit of this or that and a few hints maybe ahead of time. There are some things that I like to know going into it, like I asked who my Maker was before we started shooting this season, just because that’s something that Steve would already know. But a lot of what happens to the characters down the line, the actors just kind of find out when we get the scripts, so it’s always a bit of a nerve-wracking experience [laughs], because the fate of your character is always hanging in the balance.

It’s funny, because Steve tells Jason that his turning was a punishment. And Salome [Valentina Cervi] says that Steve was brought in to be a tool for the Authority, and I think that that’s probably true. I think it was a little mix of both, to be honest. I think that they went, “Let’s get this guy, and then let’s turn him, let’s flip him.” He’s a master of spin, and that’s why he’s good at his job and that’s why they would put him in front of the cameras. When you put him in front of the camera, you give him all the attention, he’s really good at what he does.

 

To read the complete interview part 1 with Michael go to: assignmentx.com

Michael McMillian talks True Blood, Comics and Gay roles

Posted by Shadaliza On August - 24 - 2012

Michael McMillian, who shines this season as Steve Newlin, speaks with the Windy City Times about True Blood, his love for comic books, Steve Newlin as a vampire and gay roles.

WCT: You wrote your own comic, though?

Michael McMillian: Yes, a comic called Lucid that was produced by Zachary Quinto’s production called Before the Door and is published by Archaia Entertainment. That collection came out last summer. It was a miniseries and has been optioned by Warner Brothers. It is being developed into a feature right now.

WCT: That’s huge.

Michael McMillian: It is pretty cool but these things take a long time and sometimes get lost in development. From everything I hear it is moving forward. It won’t move into a film until it is green lit and who knows when that could be. I think everyone is optimistic that it will happen eventually.

I have been writing for the True Blood comics on and off for the past few years.

WCT: Do you have to get approval from the show?

Michael McMillian: Oh, yeah. Alan Ball approves all of our scripts and outlines. Now Mark Hudis is taking over for season six. I had to go back to the drawing board on issue five because he said they might cover some of the stuff we were getting in to in the next season.

WCT: You conveyed a lot of emotions in a small little opening scene this season.

Michael McMillian: Thanks. Most of that had to do with the scene that was written by Brian Buckner. He did such an excellent job. I had been dying to get back to Steve. I had created an inner life for him in season two that was not allowed to be on display. The wonderful thing about Steve returning is that he allows himself to reveal what is under this big personality facade.

I love as an actor playing the balancing act between seriousness and comedy. That is what I loved about that scene because it was so funny but he also coming from a genuine place. He is completely desperate but that doesn’t make what he is going through any less real.

WCT: Are you similar to Steve?

Michael McMillian: Not really at all. Steve is a little less of a villain in season five but he can still do horrible things. I guess I can relate to him on the level of not always being socially graceful and I have been in the situation where I have dealt with unrequited love, putting yourself out there and being rejected. Those are things we can all relate to.

Being out in LA, I get so frustrated to see what a long road this career really is. I feel like Steve is really trying to make something of himself in both of his lives. I think is a very human character. To me, he is a total fool and a clown character in the True Blood universe. If it were a vaudeville show, he would get the pie in the face!

If Eric and Bill are the sexy vampires then Steve is the vampire we actually would be. He is trying to find his place in the world and that I relate to 100 percent.

WCT: At least you are not the bitter vampire, like Tara is these days.

Michael McMillian: Right, but I think Tara’s transformation this season is the vampire in her killing off the bitterness. I think that is Pam’s role as a mentor—to make her not a victim and bitter.

WCT: You played a gay character in a movie a while back.

Michael McMillian: I did—Dorian Blues. It was the first movie I ever did. I was still in college at Carnegie-Mellon. It was a great experience and a great film. I look back on that fondly. It was a great time in my life where I could branch out and shoot a movie. The director went to Carnegie in the ’80s so he came back to cast out of our school. I wish more people had seen that movie. For anyone reading, this it is out on Netflix.

Read the complete interview at the source.

Michael McMillian Reprises His Role on “Hot in Cleveland”

Posted by Lynnpd On August - 12 - 2012

This season we’ve seen a lot of Michael McMillian as the newest baby vampire, Reverend Newlin. But, Michael is also doing other things in his acting career and we’ve just learned that he will reprise his role of Owen on Hot in Cleveland, the long-lost son that Joy (Leeves) gave up for adoption.

 

 
 
 
 
 
 

source: marketwatch.com

True Blood’s Steve Newlin (Michael McMillian) has successfully planted himself in a place of power within the Vampire Authority. And, he has also been able to rouse the interest of none other than the former King of Mississippi, Russell Edgington (Denis O’Hare). How will the formerly vampire-hating baby vamp survive in the impending battle between the mainstreamers and the Sanguinistas? TVGuide.com turned to McMillian to get the scoop, including the future for Steve and his human crush Jason (Ryan Kwanten), and Bill (Stephen Moyer) and Eric’s (Alexander Skarsgard) involvement with the Authority moving forward.

SPOILER ALERT!

Steve Newlin began cozying up to Russell Edgington in last Sunday’s episode.
Michael McMillian: Well, it’s sort of a May-December romance. [Laughs] Russell’s a much older and more powerful vampire. It’s interesting because when Steve was human, Russell was somebody that Steve targeted as the example of an evil vampire, but I think Steve’s very attracted to power. He’s suffering a heartbreak from Jason Stackhouse. Here comes this distinguished gentleman into his life. I think he’s quite taken.

 

How does their new friendship compare to Russell and Talbot’s (Theo Alexander) relationship?
McMillian: I think that there’s a spirit in common with Russell and Talbot’s relationship, but Russell and Steve kind of have their own thing, which is fun. You’ll see there’s some great stuff coming up between the two of them. But ultimately, as with Steve coming out and being with Jason, he’s a really funny character. I always try to ground him in reality and always try to keep the emotional truth alive underneath the humor.

 

With the war between the Sanguinistas and the mainstreamers ramping up, is it a good idea for Steve to be hanging around the ultimate enemy right now?
McMillian: That would depend on whether or not Russell really is the ultimate enemy. I think the two of them are both acting in their personal best interests. You’ll see that as the season plays out. I think Steve is really happy that he’s not being killed off and is allowed into the Authority. I think he just can’t believe his luck. He’s a survivalist. He is going to go wherever he thinks he’s going to do best.

 

Is he completely over Jason or will we see more interaction between the two of them?
McMillian: There’s more Jason and Steve. Whatever happens, I think Jason will always be that first love in Steve’s eyes. I don’t think you ever really get over that person.

 

Since Steve is the new Nan Flanagan (Jessica Tuck), how will he spin the Authority’s killing spree in New Orleans?
McMillian: That’s a really good question. That’s where his mastery of spin comes into play. He’s definitely going to be called upon to do that in the next few weeks as things heat up between vampires and humans. It’s really fun how that plays out and how that goes down.

 

Because the Authority is going public in saying they’re no longer trying to mainstream, will more vampires who were following the rules start to fall in line?
McMillian: Possibly. We’ll see how this authoritarian influence plays out because basically Roman has been the letter of the law for the past how many centuries. Roman was dictating how vampires should behave. It was really his movement to mainstream. We’ve seen over the past few seasons that mainstreaming itself has been very ambiguous. There are characters that have cut the corners with it. Vampires who were mainstreaming because they’re following the letter of the law are now going to go, “OK, they’re saying this is OK now so I’m free to do whatever I want, I guess.” That’s really what the second half of the season is about.

At the same time, we also know from the established mythology that vampires who get together and form in nests can really start to behave in really terrible ways. That’s kind of what’s happening already within the Authority.

 

Yes, and Eric is already trying to turn against it.
McMillian: Well, I think Eric actually has more in common with Russell and Steve in the sense that I think he’s definitely a survivalist and he’s always acted in his best interests. Really what that moment when he sees Godric is about is less about killing all these humans in this bar is wrong and more about saving Nora, his vampire sister, and getting her out of that situation. I think that’s really what Eric cares the most about. We’ve seen Eric tear humans limb from limb in seasons past, but I think that Eric falling into a nest and Eric being dictated to is something that he’s never really gelled with. I think his interests really lie in getting Nora out of this cult mindset.

 

Do you think Bill will fall into it?
McMillian: It’s interesting because I think that Bill has always clearly been a mainstreamer at heart. As far as we know, the only people he’s really fed on are people that he’s been in a relationship with. I think everyone’s playing a game at this point. I think he keeps his cards close to his chest. Obviously, he was keeping a secret from Sookie for three seasons that he had been sent there by Sophie to spy on her originally. Whether or not Bill is falling into step with the Authority and the new agenda is a bit of a mystery in the second half of the season.

 

But Steve has definitely fallen into it.
McMillian: Yeah. Steve’s a baby vamp. All he wants to do is eat, kill and sleep around. His hormones are going crazy right now as a vampire. He has absolutely really no control over his own impulses. He’s been invited to sit at the big kids’ table and they’re telling him he can do whatever he wants. He’s thrilled. But he’ll have to juggle that with this sort of public persona and this responsibility that he has as the head of the AVL. Whether or not he can juggle those two worlds will come to a head.

 

source: tvguide.com

That doesn’t mean of course that there will be another 4 seasons…. only Lilith (and HBO) know how long this ride will last.

In recent interviews with Wallstreet Journal Michael McMillian gave his view on Steve Newlin.

Steve Newlin is charming everyone this season as a spokesperson for the Authority. How did you approach his character this time around?

The question of whether Steve would be a self-loathing vampire was at the forefront of my mind. If he were to come back as a vampire, it would be more interesting to play him as an empowered one. I’m glad the show is going that way. Steve has always been attracted to power and is a complete narcissist. As much as his personal life is falling apart, I think he’s really good at his job. He’s really good at getting people to listen and follow.

How come Steve can be privately gay as a vampire, but not publicly, and how come he couldn’t be privately gay as a human?

The vampires act as metaphors for outcasts in society. A lot of people have drawn the connection that the show uses vampires as allegory for homosexuals. But the show is more interesting than just that. I think the show is saying to its audience that things aren’t black and white. People are ultimately really complex animals. Sure, Steve will come out to Jason and have a heartfelt scene but there’s something about him that’s afraid to come completely out.

It’s hard enough coming out as a vampire for Steve. Coming out as gay would be even harder.  He’s more afraid of that than being a vampire, ironically. He obviously has a massive support system as a vampire; vampires are very liberal at the end of the day. It’s a really good glimpse because he does have a public persona and a private one and they are very different people. I don’t know if the show is making a broad statement about life in public but juggling a personal and private face is very difficult. It’s no accident that he’s a figure that’s full of hypocrisy.

I don’t know if Steve really knew he was gay until he was turned. Becoming a supernatural creature unlocked things for him. A lot of that stuff that was repressed came pouring out. He was attracted to Jason and I think he just felt that Jason was the greatest thing ever. That’s a brand new feeling for him. I don’t think he equated it to love or to attraction. He was probably too scared to go down that road. He was a married man. His love for Jason will be in the forefront of his story line in the entire season.

How much longer do you think “True Blood” will be around?

I have been shocked to see where the season goes.  I think what the writers are doing is a big game changer. They’re setting up for the final act of the series — whether it’s one more season, or two more seasons or three more seasons..i think after viewers finish this year we’ll be heading in a bold new direction. I’m signed on for four more seasons.

Read the complete interview at the source.

Last Friday, July 13, 2012, I met up with Michael McMillian, a.k.a., Reverend Steve Newlin at the IDW booth at Comic Con.  Michael answered a few of my questions in this short video interview about his True Blood character, his comic book Lucid and his continued work on the True Blood Comics. We previously reported that Lucid has been picked up by Warner Brothers, and Michael talks about it being made into a feature film.

 

 
As Micheal reminds us in the video, Steve Newlin’s wife Sara was supposed to be in Season 5, but the scene got cut from episode 2. Here’s the script showing the scene with Sara Newlin that was cut courtesy of Inside True Blood’s Blog.
 

 
He signed my hard bound copy of the True Blood comic, The French Quarter and Lucid, as seen below.
 

 

Thanks to Shadaliza for the video editing.
 
 

Lynnpd
Lynnpd has an avid interest in the entertainment industry from classic movies to all things True Blood. With a background in art, she enjoys creating in Photoshop, running web sites and finds the internet an exciting place to be. Lynn lives in the LA area and attends as many Hollywood related events as she can. She has covered events for the both websites in the LA area; read all about it at http://lynnpdexclusives.com.
Lynnpd
Lynnpd

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