I was pretty exhausted. I did the day before. Jack Bender, one of the producers, presented me with a paddle that had been made by the crew and the cast, and said a little speech about working with me on the show. He said some beautiful things and gave me the microphone, and I had a really hard time trying to get out exactly what I wanted to say without my voice faltering. That was probably the most emotional thing. And then I had to keep my head down and get on with business, you know?
What was the toughest part of shooting the drowning sequence? The cold. My teeth were chattering and my voice was faltering in places. Do you think drowning was a good way for Charlie to die? Or would you have preferred another way? I thought it was quite beautiful. He now thinks that he has a second chance at life and he has nothing to lose. He has to get a message across to Desmond before he dies, which he does, and then in the way that you can be okay with drowning, Charlie was.
Is this plot twist good for the show? Do I feel by leaving the show that the show will be better? And also the producers. Any desire to come back, be it in flashback or in some other trippy form?
That would be a question for [exec producer] Damon [Lindelof]. How are you feeling about leaving the show? You get bored, you get frustrated, you get lazy, and your work suffers. And there are other things out there. Charlie was also very religious, so he probably felt that if he did this, he would be worthy of going to Heaven. Charlie had endured so much loss and tragedy over the past few years before landing on the island, and instead of dying of a heroin overdose, alone and miserable somewhere, he was able to get clean, come to terms with his past, and attempt to change for the better.
Claire gave him a new reason to live, and by coming full circle and getting all of his friends saved, he would go on to become the biggest hero of all the survivors of! The reason Charlie chose to die was because that was the way Desmond said it was meant to happen. Flip the switch, drown, Claire and Aaron get saved. After he flipped the swtich and realized Mikhail was about to break the Looking Glass, he knew that this was Desmond's vision - his destiny. Since he knew what would happen, he decided to allow it to happen and prevent Desmond from putting off his death for another day or two again.
But, to be honest, as an actor I've been kind of frustrated for a while. I've wanted to do a little bit more. The difference between how much the audience got to see Charlie in Season 1 as opposed to how much they got to see Charlie in Seasons 2 and 3 was significant. It's been kind of frustrating for me for a while. So I think it's time for me to move on, you know. It must've been a little emotional when you finally got the "We're definitely killing you off" call.
Monaghan: More than anything else, I was just relieved. It's been so long for me to be sitting with the potential of the decision. You know, I got to a point where I just wanted to know. I've been trying to plan the rest of my career, and there's a whole bunch of opportunities that have been up in the air because I couldn't commit to them because of Lost.
It was a little bittersweet to be leaving behind surfing and palm trees and beaches, but I think I probably squeezed the last amount of enjoyment I could've got out of that for a while. More than anything else, I have to [go] where the best work is going to be for me. And some of the best work for me [on Lost ] was going to be done in my leaving the show.
Monaghan: I think that was to allow the audience to sit with it long enough to prepare themselves for what was going to happen [in the finale]. I think I benefited from the fact that the producers knew it was going to be a big deal with me leaving, so they wanted to make it as significant as possible.
But by the end, he'd evolved into someone who was willing to sacrifice himself to save everyone else. How involved were you in that transformation? Monaghan: I was pretty passionate about that. I was pretty gung-ho about, "If I'm gonna go, if that's how it's gonna be, then I have to go out like a hero. I have to go out all guns blazing.
I think he was trying to work out who he was supposed to be and what his purpose was. And it turned out that this was his purpose, and I think that gave him a great feeling of serenity. To know that his legacy is that he saved [all these] people's lives is something that allowed him to die with dignity. Monaghan: Lots of people were coming over to me saying, "How do you feel?
Are you sad? About halfway through the day, our director, Jack Bender , made a speech and gave me a canoe paddle that they'd written on. He [talked] about what I've brought to the show, and that was probably the emotional peak for me. It was upsetting, and I hugged all the people around me that I loved, and I kind of said something back. Were they really dead the whole time?
While de Ravin had never been pregnant, she was able to learn of the experience from her two older sisters. Aaron was left behind by Claire in the jungle for unknown reasons when she followed his grandfather, and Aaron was passed through multiple survivors Sawyer, Kate, Sun until he made it to the freighter where he was then picked up by the helicopter.
In order to let go, everyone had to resolve issues they had in life. Sarah Shephard is the former wife of Jack Shephard. Jack met her after she was badly injured in a car accident. Her maiden name is not known at this time. Back in season four, Claire was taken away mysteriously by her dead?
Unlike most of the other couples in the show, this allowed them to be a couple both on and off of the Island. He and Walt were the main characters and the only ones of the original characters not shown to have died by the end of the series.
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