Thursday, April 02, 2009

Tricia Helfer on Chuck

Tricia Helfer was recently on an episode of Chuck in "Chuck Versus the Broken Heart".



Various photos of Tricia on Chuck.

5 comments:

D said...

Oh man was it a bad performance. She was so awesome in BSG and not too bad in Burn Notice but this was a pretty bad performance. Not to say that she is entirely to blame because it could have just been the source material.

Anonymous said...

I heard that she was annoyed at having to play Head Six, but Head Six was far less objectifying a role than this. I'm immensely attracted to her and I find her gorgeous in these photos, but if she was so insistent on moving away from sex objet roles, she could have done better than to act on a fairly lame show with some laughs, but mostly cheesy roles for women on a series by Josh Schwartz.

Seriously, if the reason we had so little of Head Six in Season 4 was because of this reasoning of hers, I'm pretty upset with her for not letting us see such a great BSG character only to fall for this total shallowness.

Logan Gawain said...

I've never heard that she was annoyed by playing head six. That's news to me, and I'm usually on top of that kind of thing, so I find it doubtful, and suspect. Sounds quite dodgy.

Everything that I've heard is that she loved BSG, and loved playing every different incarnation of Six.

Unknown said...

McG probably was just a rabid fanboy of BSG and wanted to play out his fantasies of Tricia playing a scantily clad secret agent.

Anonymous said...

Lord Gawain, I heard it from a friend who got me onto BSG, who told me around Season 2 that she was finding the role repetitive or something. So, there's nothing solid to it. However, there was a marked decline in her character's presence and, except for Gina, none of her other characters had quite the sense of depth of Head Six, including Caprica 6. I really missed her interaction with Baltar. Didn't you?

Even when she appeared in Season 4, a lot of the texture of their relationship -- the humorous moments and innuendos -- disappeared.