
Kiele Sanchez, Lostpedia.com
Kiele Sanchez (pronounced Kee-Lee) played the character of Nikki Fernandez during Lost’s third season. Sanchez, Rodrigo Santoro, and Elizabeth Mitchell were the newest members joining the cast of Lost for Season 3, along with former guest stars Henry Ian Cusick and Michael Emerson.
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Background
While growing up in Chicago, Kiele performed in her first play in high school and was hooked. She continued performing in Chicago’s renowned theater productions until a few years later when, while watching television, she saw a commercial asking for people to audition for MTV’s Video Jockey (VJ) contest. Excited about the possibility of expanding her career beyond Chicago, Sanchez flew herself to New York and ended up being the first runner-up (out of 4000 people) in the contest. Little did she know that flying to L.A. (a prerequisite of the contest) would lead to the biggest acting breakthrough in her career.
Soon after arriving on the West Coast, Kiele appeared in three pilots and in the film Class Warfare. Last season she starred in the ABC series That Was Then, which was her first regular series role.
Now a resident of Los Angeles. Kiele is Married to Director Zach Helm and enjoys Yoga and spending time with her friends.
Kiele can be currently seen on the hit series ‘The Glades’ on A&E
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Matt Passmore, Kiele Sanchez, The Glades
A Synopsis of The Glades.
Alligators, palm trees and bodies, it’s all in a day’s work for Jim Longworth (Aussie Matt Passmore) an attractive, brilliant, yet hard to get along with homicide detective from Chicago who gets shot by his captain after being wrongfully accused of sleeping with his wife.
Exiled from the department, Longworth relocates to the sleepy, middle of nowhere town of Palm Glade, Florida, where the sunshine and golf are plentiful and crime is seemingly at a minimum. Only this town outside the Florida Everglades isn’t quite as idyllic as he thought, as he finds people keep turning up murdered. Each case pulls Longworth off the golf course and reluctantly into his element as one of the sharpest homicide detectives to wear a badge.
Between practicing his short game, trying to get a date with Callie – a quick-witted, beautiful medical student with a 12 year-old son and a husband in prison – and trying to solve countless homicide cases, Longworth’s transition to his new surroundings is a bit more difficult than expected.
Welcome to The Glades, where it’s sunny with a chance of homicide.
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30 Days of Night: Dark Days, Kiele Sanchez
“30 Days of Night: Dark Days”. Silly suckers! Here’s the lowdown:
Synopsis: After surviving the incidents in Barrow, Alaska, Stella (that chick) relocates to Los Angeles, where she intentionally attracts the attention of the local vampire population in order to avenge the death of her husband, Gary Numan.
Here’s hoping that Sony will follow through with its plans to produce the filmic third and final chapter of the trilogy based on Steve Niles’ 2004 graphic novel 30 Days of Night: Return to Barrow. Dark Days leaves the possibility wide open, and while the sequel’s stunning finale is most satisfying, there are threads left to be tied. This reviewer would like to see the final knot.
Stars: Kiele Sanchez, Rhys Coiro and Diora Baird
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30 Days of Night: Dark Days
Steppin’ to 30 Days of Night starring Josh Hartnet and Melissa George was a horror smash hit and it was only a matter of time before a sequel followed and it came under the title, 30 Days of Night-Dark Days.
The film would follow Melissa Georges character Stella however the director wanted a new actress to play the role. Initially it was sited they wanted someone younger and with more of a name to play the role but they ended up with Kiele Sanchez. I know who! She apparently was in ‘Lost’, ‘Samantha Who’ and is currently starring in ‘The Glades’. However she is no Melissa George.
Dark Days is set in LA so doesn’t quite have the same feeling of threat to it. It follows the character of Stella as she tries to expose Vampires to the world. A group of renegade Vampire hunters recruit her to go after Lilith, the Vampire Queen.
This plot-line was reminiscent of the Borg Queen in Star Trek, she comes out of nowhere and is the brains of the operation. When Stella discovers there is a new ship setting sail to the Arctic Circle for the next 30 days of night she brings the fight to them.
As a Vampire film the feature isn’t bad, L Words/Vampire Diaries ‘Mia Kirshner’ brings an element of horror to the film as Lilith but Dark Days works more as an action movie than a horror. Stella is now an ass kicking femme fatale in the same vein as Milla Jovovich Alice in Resident Evil.
That is why as a sequel to 30 Days it doesn’t fit. It’s no longer ordinary people fighting for their lives but seasoned hunters out for revenge.
The film is well worth watching but as a franchise movie it pales in comparison to the first installment.
Apparently there is going to be a third as they initially always wanted it to be a trilogy and that working title is ‘Return to Barrow’
It went straight to DVD in the States so expect the same here and can be currently viewed on line.
by candlemansa, Gaycork.com
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Kiele Sanchez
A number of American reviews for The Glades have drawn parallels between Simon Baker and Matt Passmore in his lead role in this A&E Network drama.
Let’s be clear: they are both Aussie actors playing Americans in crime procedural, and they’re both pretty convincing. That’s about where the parallels end.
Whilst Baker’s Mentalist role is steeped in quiet observation, Passmore (Underbelly, McLeod’s Daughters, The Cut) is a cocky cop from Chicago. He talks so fast and drops the wisecracks that he probably has about 50% more lines to memorize.
In The Glades he plays Det. Jim Longworth, a homicide detective from Chicago who relocates to Florida after being wrongfully accused of having sex with his former captain’s wife (none of this back-story is dramatized in the Pilot).
But when a headless torso is found floating in a gator-infested swamp by two hot kids who were making out in their car, Longworth gets his first assignment. We meet him when he is playing a relaxing round of golf, interrupted by the call to investigate. Bad day to be on the green.
Longworth likes to work alone, dressed in little more than a t-shirt and jeans. While he consults regularly with a Latino forensic pathologist (Carlos Gomez), he is a lone wolf, preferring to piece together clues with a mix of experience, hunch and bravado. Why didn’t they make him a Private Eye?
Most of the minor players here, who are clearly hired just for the weekly crime, take a back seat to Passmore. It’s very possibly the best thing he has done.
Complementing the procedural crime, which isn’t really engaging enough as for a first episode, is Jim Longworth’s pursuit of attractive nurse and single mom Callie Cargill (Kiele Sanchez). It comprises the majority of his personal interest but there are hints of deeper issues linked to his exodus in Chicago. These could possibly further a bigger arc across the series.
The Florida backdrop, already a key feature of crime shows including Dexter, Burn Notice and of course Miami Vice, will lend itself well to stories of drug cartels, alligators, beaches, swamps, seniors, hotels, partying, illegal immigrants and more.
So far it doesn’t boast the style of Burn Notice nor the plotting of Dexter and without Passmore it would border on pedestrian.
But Matt Passmore is confident in the role and eminently like able. He even has the Chicago accent down pat. Already approved for a second season, there’s every reason to think he may yet make something of this series which should ultimately work as a summer diversion.
The Glades premieres 8.30pm Sunday December 5th on W.