Interview with Alex for the CBS WATCH! magazine (June 2017 issue / Ryan Devlin)
Road less traveled - An interview & photoshoot
Thank you to interviewer Ryan Devlin and photographer Nino Muńoz for their kind (and true) words about Alex in this short introduction (bold print):
"Hawaii couldn't have happened to a nicer guy than Alex O'Loughlin", says Ryan Devlin, who interviewed the actor for the feature on page 66 of the magazine. "He told me, 'I don't know what I did in my last life to deserve this. I look up to the blue sky every day and just say a little thank-you."
"Few shoots have been as epic as this one with Alex O'Loughlin", says photographer Nino Muńoz. "There were horses, a vintage motorbike, a campfire and an old tent, all set in extraordinary landscape. O'Loughlin reminds me of Steve McQueen, stylish and authentically cool. He's a legend in the making."
It was early 2010, and the Australian actor had
just been offered the lead role in the reboot of the classic crime drama Hawaii
Five-0, stepping into the shoes of the legendary Jack Lord to play the 50th
state’s taciturn top cop, Steve McGarrett. Accepting meant moving to Oahu, in
the center of the planet’s loveliest island archipelago. It should have been a
no-brainer. Cue that big wave and the theme song by the Ventures:
Dum-duh-da-da-da-dum …
“I was conflicted,” Alex O’Loughlin says, reflecting on the decision from his
house in Waikiki’s idyllic Diamond Head. “I’d done two network shows before
that, neither of which had gone past a season.”
He’d played vampire/private investigator Mick St. John on the short-lived 2007
supernatural romance Moonlight. A year later, he was Dr. Andy Yablonski on the
medical drama Three Rivers, canceled after just eight episodes. Though anything
seemed better than being penniless in Los Angeles, to suffer through another
failed show in the middle of the Pacific, 2500 miles from the mainland, was a
risk he wasn’t sure he wanted to take.
“I didn’t know anything about Hawaii. I asked everyone, "What do I do? Is this
the right move?” O’Loughlin says. “Everybody was like, ‘Are you crazy? What’s
wrong with you?’.”
He took the gig, staying at the Hilton Hawaiian Village during the first month. For fans of the show, that’s where McGarrett and partner Danny “Danno” Williams were recently snookered into a joint spa weekend with their significant others.
“It was beautiful, but I didn’t get to see the real Hawaii,” O’Loughlin says “I
got a glimpse of something that wasn’t what Hawaii is. The weird touristy, crazy
hotel part. I still didn’t know how I felt about it, but the pilot felt really
good.”
It was and remains a really good pilot. In the nail-biting prelude, naval
commander McGarrett’s convoy comes under rocket fire in the mountains of South
Korea by baddies out to free arms dealer prisoner, Anton Hesse. Amid the attack,
McGarrett listens on his satellite phone, as his father, John, is killed on
Oahu by Anton’s brother, Victor – though not before the Honolulu Police
Department veteran leaves his son a few cryptic last words.
By the time that wave
breaks, and the opening credits roll, you're hooked: McGarrett has a vendetta
and a mystery to solve, and you’re coming along with him. Reboots are tough, but
this show’s depth, coupled with O’Loughlin’s chiseled portrayal of McGarrett,
made the 21st century Hawaii Five-0 an instant hit. Suddenly Oahu started
feeling more certain.
“People say these islands either embrace you or push you away. I found myself, as a gift from the islands, being blessed in and given a Hawaiian name. I found all sorts of things drawing me in deeper and deeper.”
With a full season to shoot, he started to learn the local rhythms from friends, like fellow cast member Daniel Dae Kim, whose knowledge of Oahu stretches back to his days filming Lost. He took up surfing. A few years in, he flew in some friends from back home in Australia to help him rebuild a mid-century modern home he’d found in Diamond Head that had “spectacular bones.”
Then he met the Hawaiian surfer and model Malia Jones. The couple had a son, Lion, in 2012, and later married. The house filled with boys. O’Loughlin brought to the family his teenage son, Saxon, and Jones brought a son from a previous marriage, Spike.
“I’m about to use the G word to embrace the scope,” O’Loughlin says “I don’t know what's out there. I don’t know whether there’s a God or whether there’s lots of gods or whether there’s just universal energy, but I know from what’s happened that there’s something bigger than me.”
As O’Loughlin’s life was progressing on Oahu, so was McGarrett’s, albeit down a much rockier family path. He avenged the death of his father. His mother, Doris, believed to be dead for 20 years, turned up alive, having faked her death to escape threats from her CIA past.
He vanquished his true nemesis – the nefarious crime boss Wo Fat – who over the course of seasons framed him for the murder of Hawaii’s governor, kidnapped and tortured him and revealed himself to be McGarrett’s virtual half-brother. He had two romantic relationships and has spent a lot of time shirtless and even more time kicking sundry bad-guy ass.
Hawaii Five-0 seasons are epic – each a whopping 25 episodes. Multiply that by six and you wind up at 150 episodes. Playing a character for that long does things to you. O’Loughlin is in a territory where few actors ever get to tread. “It’s such a massive volume,” he says, “This has been a master class for me. I can definitely drop into McGarrett’s head space anytime. I have a bible of who he is in my soul, in my mind.”
With Wo Fat and his family issues somewhat in the rearview, McGarrett seems to be finding a modicum of peace on the show. “This season has been more of an easy-peasy McGarrett,” O’Loughlin says. “He still misses his dad, and the thing with Doris still hasn’t totally left him. But it’s not all like, "Argh! I’ve got to save the world!”
Still, O’Loughlin is happy to leave the character behind when shooting wraps. “He’s a proper tough guy and a Navy SEAL. He’s always ready to go, walking into rooms like, "What are we doing? What do we get? I’ve had the great fortune of being exposed to a lot of Navy SEAL’s, who’ve helped me with the character. They’re terrific guys. But being like them requires a specific sort of energy, and I have to manufacture that energy,” he says. “At the end of the day, it’s like "Keep calm and have another cold one.”
Paradise hasn’t been all surf and breathtaking sunsets. McGarrett may be a SEAL
and a Teflon supercop, but O’Loughlin isn’t, and injuries have taken their toll.
In the first few seasons, he elected to do most of his own stunts, which he says
was a mistake. He rattles off a litany of fractures and lacerations that could
rival a snapshot collection of charts in any emergency room.
“I blew one of my knees, I’ve torn ligaments and tendons, ankles, both shoulders, both wrists,”
he says “I’ve knocked my front teeth out. I’ve got fake front teeth. I tore my
right shoulder to pieces – three external tears, a labrum tear and a detachment
of the bicep tendon. My current favorite injury is two herniated disks in my
lower lumbar, which I am receiving stem cell treatment for to avoid surgery.”
The last injury spooked O’Loughlin. Always athletic, he
had to give up everything
except swimming. The pain was so great, he could barely rouse himself from bed,
and he worried about being able to throw a football with his grandkids. Signed
on to Hawaii Five-0 through eight seasons, he began talking about walking away
while he still could. But recently, he’s felt his workload lighten, and those
stem cell injections? They’ve been “magic,” he says. Does that mean he might
challenge Jack Lord’s record 12 seasons as McGarrett?
“That would be a miracle,” says O’Loughlin with a laugh. “But I can see coming
back and doing another season or two. I think this show is everything. It’s the
core of it all.”
One thing is certain: O’Loughlin has found his home.
“The majority of my important memories are now Hawaiian memories,” he says. “You’ve just got to look around. You’ve got to watch the waves in the winter here. There’s something bigger than me in the world, and I feel like that source or whatever that is had something to do with the whole journey for me because now it all makes sense.”
THE END
BTS-video with Alex talking about
Hawaii and how it inspires him
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZ98JSh5z-Q
BTS-video from the photoshoot
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Ku364RLp-I
Video clip: Story time with Alex - He's reading a
children's book
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LjH_IQd6cfY
:-)
Back to Start | Back to News | Back to Aktuelles |
Designed, created & owned by: Angela Gerstner