@ Lukes | Press Reviews

This blog contains press articles that are related to Gilmore Girls and/or its cast members, published since the show first started airing in 2000. The articles are archived according to the date they were added to the blog. Their original publishing dates are posted in their titles.

Thursday, May 12, 2005

(2005) Romance is hot for ‘Gilmore Girls’ (w/ Scott Patterson)

WB's Tuesday-night drama holds its own in ratings


This season, things finally heated up between Luke Danes, played by Scott Patterson, and Lorelai Gilmore, played by Lauren Graham.

The Associated Press
Updated: 5:26 p.m. ET May 11, 2005

LOS ANGELES - The jilted woman sits in front of the TV set and fast-food cartons, watching Judy Garland belt out “The Man Who Got Away” and wallowing in heartache.

There’s an insistent knock on her door. It’s him. A torrid glance, an embrace, the music swells. Fade promisingly to black.

For hopeless romantics, the destination of choice is WB’s “Gilmore Girls,” which saw its ratings grow as the relationship between Lorelai and Luke heated up in the fifth season.

Lorelai Gilmore, sexy single mom to Rory, and Luke Danes, hunky diner owner, finally evolved from pals to lovers, only to break up and then get together again.

Meanwhile, aspiring journalist Rory has boosted the R.Q. (romance quotient), suffering through her own roller-coaster fling with fellow Yale student and newspaper scion Logan.

In its highly competitive 8 p.m. ET Tuesday time slot against Fox’s powerhouse “American Idol,” “Gilmore Girls” has repeatedly ranked No. 2 among its target audience of young adults 18-34 and young women.

The series also has seen a respectable increase in overall viewership, drawing 4.7 million total viewers for the season so far compared to 4.1 million last year.

As the finale approaches (Tuesday, May 17), the future is looking uncertain for Luke and Lorelai: New opportunities threaten to take her away from her tiny Connecticut town and love. There are hints, however, that other pressures may be building.

For Rory (Alexis Bledel), an internship with Logan’s (Matt Czuchry) media tycoon father forces her to doubt her career choice and more.

Scott Patterson, who plays Luke, doesn’t need to track the ratings to know their direction. Viewer fervor is his measurement of interest in his on-screen fling with Lorelai (Lauren Graham).

“The kind of fan mail I get, the kind of response I get out in public is stunning,” Patterson told The Associated Press. “People love this show. They think it’s really happening. It’s wild.”

'Moonlighting' syndrome
There’s known danger when TV characters convert desire to action. Call it “Moonlighting” syndrome, a reference to the hit 1980s Cybill Shepherd-Bruce Willis series that fizzled after their characters gave in to lust.

“Gilmore Girls” benefited from the unfulfilled longing between Luke and Lorelai, Patterson said, but he wasn’t worried that the show would “jump the shark” — lose its way — if they got together.

“I never thought that because I know how good the writing is. Now there’s a new tension created,” he said.

His confidence is based on the stellar talent of Amy Sherman-Palladino, the show’s creator and executive producer (the latter title shared with her husband, Daniel Palladino).

Patterson’s relationship with the show began slowly. He was cast in the pilot, then was offered two episodes, then four. Now he’s been in just about every episode, playing the perfect square-jawed, big-shouldered hero, albeit a cranky one.

Among the show’s delights is the clever repartee, the sort of rapid-fire banter that film buffs savor in classics including 1940s’ “His Girl Friday” with Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell.

The challenge for Patterson is to keep it real when Luke is confronted by motormouth Lorelai.

“The big trick, if there’s any trick, is not to get caught up in her rhythm or in that fast-banter thing, because when you do you lose the character. That’s not Luke.”

'I never take rejection personally'
The 46-year-old Patterson, who grew up in New Jersey, turned to acting after seven years in minor-league baseball. He played in school, including Valencia Community College in Orlando, and turned down scholarships at Arizona State and USC when the Atlanta Braves drafted him.

Traded after three years to the New York Yankees, he says the four years he spent with that team’s farm club ended up killing his dreams of a big-league pitching career.

“It was not a good experience, all in all, to be in that organization in the early ’80s,” he said, calling the Yankees’ front office “asleep at the wheel.”

An extended visit to Europe helped him shake off the disappointment, but the sour experience prepared him “for just about anything. ... I never take rejection personally.”

He tried acting at the urging of a New York couple he’d met abroad and “fell in love with it. I found something I could train at, something that would challenge me. I could see I could take my work ethic and make up for a lot of lost time.”

Supporting TV and movie roles led to “Gilmore Girls” and sudden celebrity. One reward is the chance to help charities, said Patterson, who focuses on those that serve ill youngsters and is helping raise money for Johns Hopkins children’s facility.

The extraordinary bravery of the kids he meets lends perspective “if you ever complain that the hours (at work) are too long, or whatever you come up with.”

© 2005 The Associated Press.
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/7820125/

- Submitted by Trisha

(2005) Jennifer Wilbanks Was in Good Company: Top 5 Runaway Brides on Television

From the May 16 Issue of INSIDE TV

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 11, 2005--

INSIDE TV, the new weekly magazine for television fans, picks the Top 5 "Runaway Brides" of television, who, like Jennifer Wilbanks, the Duluth, Georgia woman who fled to New Mexico and faked her abduction in order to avoid walking down the aisle, wore running shoes under their wedding gowns:

RACHEL on "Friends"
Rachel Green (Jennifer Aniston) was about to get married in the middle of Central Park to her boring fiance Barry (whom she compared to Mr. Potato Head), when she fled the scene to start a whole new life in New York City.

LORELEI on "Gilmore Girls"
While Lorelei (Lauren Graham) celebrated her upcoming nuptials to Max (Scott Cohen) at her bachelorette party (which was held at a drag club), she realized she just wasn't into marrying him. Instead of walking down the aisle the next day, she and daughter Rory bolted from Stars Hollow and went on a mystery road trip (which ended at Harvard).

AMY on "Judging Amy"
Things seemed doomed from the start for Amy (Amy Brenneman) and Stu (Reed Diamond), since she didn't even have time to plan her own wedding. On the big day, the bride had a full-blown panic attack at the altar and realized she couldn't go through with it.

VALERIE on "What I Like About You"
When Val (Jenny Garth) reunited with her high school sweetheart Rick (Edward Kerr), she was in heaven. But, when her sister Holly (Amanda Bynes) informs her as she's walking down the aisle that Rick has been seeing his ex, Val decides to pull the plug on the wedding mid-ceremony.

DAPHNE on "Frasier"
The day before Daphne (Jane Leeves) was set to marry Donny (Saul Rubinek), she discovered that Niles (David Hyde Pierce) was in love with her -- and acknowledged that the feeling was mutual. On her wedding day, Daphne showed up in her wedding dress on a Winnebago with Niles, and the two sped off together.

INSIDE TV (http://www.insidetv.com/) is a weekly magazine designed exclusively for television fans. Created by the TV Guide Publishing Group, INSIDE TV provides breaking news and stories on television's hottest shows and stars, and behind-the-scenes information on the latest styles, fashions, and trends influenced by television.

- Submitted by Trisha