miss_blue
Lab Technician
Yep I do (finally my 7 years of studying it are useful) If someone needs the translation, I'll be more than happy to help out
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Carmine Giovinazzo: “ I was a stripper, I’d strip down at night and audition during the day. Of course I’m kidding.”
Thanks Orison they are great interviews.
The bits about he stripper make me wonder if it was a bet between the boys or something the way its done. And dramatic, ahh could be hinting at the return of Rikki etc... definately sounds interesting.
Thanks for the translation, Orison! You rock.
Carmine Giovinazzo: “ I was a stripper, I’d strip down at night and audition during the day. Of course I’m kidding.”
:lol: He's a funny guy. Although, I'm thinking he could have made a lot of money doing that...Just a thought in case he ever needs to consider supplementing his income... :devil:
More Danny drama. Sweet. *whistles innocently*Carmine Giovinazzo: “I’d rather not anticipate anything. My character will go through some pretty dramatic stuff so I don’t want to say anything.”
The second spin-off of the famous series: CSI: Crime Scene Investigation which is set in New York arrives at The Rome Fiction Fest with its protagonists: AJ Buckley (the lab technician Adam Ross), Eddie Cahill (homicide detective Don Flack) and the muscular Carmine Giovinazzo (Detective Danny Messer).
Q: How does it feel to be working in a successful spin-off?
C.G: It allows me not to be unemployed. It gives me a great opportunity, and it erases the question “what will I do next” from my head. I am playing the part of Danny Messer, a detective that has raised many controversies and he's torn by his past, and it is a very challenging task from an actor’s point of view.
E.C: I was very nervous when I was selected, but in the same time very happy to participate in a successful TV series.
AJ: For me the situation is different. I came from other TV shows such as Boones and The Collector, so I knew a little bit what I should be expecting. My character is a lab technician who does the scientific research and appears in the second series of CSI:NY
Q: Eddie, do you find yourself more comfortable in comic parts or more serious ones?
E.C. : I don’t have any preferences, but all in all I like it when the roles diversify. CSI gave me the opportunity to experience both sides of the coin, so to speak.
Q: Why is this series so successful?
C.G: I think it’s because it’s very innovative and enthralling. Many people ignore what happens in the scientific part of the investigation and this TV show allows the people to know the fascinating and adventurous side of this job, although it’s a bit exaggerated.
AJ: For me it’s incredible how they can reconstruct a crime scene with the help of a fingerprint, a hair, a nail thanks to the ingenuity of the detectives and technology. Isn’t this made just to attract the public?
Q: Some newspapers say that since CSI has arrived on the screen, the criminal are a bit more informed and they take cautions. Is this true?
E.C: I disagree. In my opinion if you are a criminal, you commit crimes and you don’t expect that a TV show to inspire you and get away without any consequences.
Q: Is it a challenge not knowing how your characters evolve?
C.G: It’s like the metaphor of life. Who can say what is going to happen in the next day? We don’t have any idea about what is going to happen, we just try to read the script and act it.
Q: After finishing shooting, doo you have the habit of watching yourselves?
C.G: I don’t always watch myself, just when there are many critics about my performance.
E.C: Watching yourself is useful for realizing whether you are on the same page with the others.
CSI:NY is aired in America on CBS and it has finished the fourth season, while in Italy Fox Crime (Sky) is airing the third season.
Eggs and potatoes?? Is there a nice dish you can make from eggs and potatoes?? :lol: