Monday, June 13, 2011

Maggie Q and boyfriend David Leitch

Nikita star Maggie Q and her boyfriend of a year Hollywood stuntman David Leitch shopped for greens and grass at a local farmers market in Los Angeles, California on Sunday, June 12th, 2011. The thirty two year old beauty looked comfy in a pair of rolled up jeans, a long sleeve plaid shirt with a baggy cardigan over it. She finished off her ensemble with a pair of moccasins and a knitted cap.
When Maggie visited the Monte Carlo TV Festival last week, she opened up about her characters personal life. So what is in store for Nikita and Michael (Shane West) in the future?
“We are going to see more relationship stuff for her, which is great because, you know, she’s got to get laid, too,” she also added, “Nikita needs love. So there’s going to be that.”
Woo Hoo! I’m glad they are going to be getting to this point already because the tension is really more than I could take.
Nikita was renewed for a second season in mid May.

Self China Photoshoot - June 2011





 



 


Friday, June 10, 2011

Variety - Minority Actresses Still Face Issues

In “Nikita,” Maggie Q can body slam three assailants at once, shoot with deadly precision and slip neatly into a one-piece bikini. But those abilities pale in comparison to her most incredulous feat: Headlining her own series as an Asian-American woman.

One could argue that it’s the best atmosphere yet for minority actresses, thanks to diversity-conscious shows such as “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Desperate Housewives.” Just last year, “The Good Wife” co-star Archie Panjabi became the fifth minority to win an Emmy for supporting actress in a drama. But when it comes to the lead category in drama, no minority woman has ever won.

“I get goose bumps when I hear that,” Maggie Q, less than a week after finding out her CW series had been picked up for a second season. “It really bums me out and gives me so much drive. There’s really no reason for it.”

One theory is that in these tough economic times, it’s too risky to go against the grain and give a minority female so much of the spotlight.

“My guess is that the people who put these shows together are conservative and not in a political sense,” says Carlos Cortes, a history professor at UC Riverside and the author of “The Children Are Watching: How the Media Teach About Diversity.” “Once a bankability formula is set up, it takes a lot of courage to challenge that. It’s all about risk aversion.”

When someone does take a chance, and it bombs, execs are likely to retreat even further into the bunker. Last year, NBC boasted to anyone who would listen about its putting a black couple front-and-center in “Undercovers.” It ended up being one of the season’s first casualties.

But the problem with the drama may have less to do with casting and more to do with the execution.

“J.J. Abrams’ ‘Undercovers’ is a woebegone spy drama with nary a hint of intelligence,” wrote Mark A. Perigard in his review for the Boston Herald. “Call it ‘The Quantum of Stupor.’? ”

The next series that will surely get the same kind of scrutiny: ABC’s “Scandal,” a Washington, D.C.-based thriller starring African-American Kerry Washington. It’s no coincidence that the series, targeted for midseason, was shepherded by Shonda Rhimes, an African-American showrunner who has long given her casts a strong multicultural and multiethnic mix.

Joy Bryant, who plays Dax Shepard’s on-again, off-again girlfriend on “Parenthood,” says she’s dismayed by the low number of minority women in Hollywood in positions of power. That’s one of the reasons she’s spending much of her hiatus developing and writing her own projects.

She says it’s clear that auds are ready to embrace all kinds of storylines that might have been considered taboo in the past.

“How cool is it that on our show we have an interracial couple and an interracial child and there’s not a big stink about it?” Bryant says. “Ten years ago, the show would have all about that: ‘He’s white! She’s black! And the comedy ensues!’?”

Perhaps the best evidence about the aud’s appetite comes courtesy of “The Game,” a sitcom about the African-American athletes and their girlfriends and spouses that was canceled in 2009 after three seasons on the CW. Despite the long gap, BET started airing new episodes in January and, despite being a cable outlet, drew nearly three times the viewers that tuned in when it was on broadcast.

“I think what it proves is that people want to see good product, regardless of race,” says Robi Reed, VP of talent and casting for original programming at BET. Following on the success of “The Game,” BET is developing a one-hour drama.

Despite progress, there’s still work to be done, as Maggie Q was reminded a few weeks ago. She got a call asking her to do a indie film with a star who had just been in an Oscar-nominated film. She asked to see the script. There was a female lead, but she wasn’t being asked to play that part.

“They wanted me in the role of an Asian nurse who comes in three or four times in the film to change IVs and walks out,” she said. “I mean, I have my own TV series. It’s unbelievable. Things haven’t really changed yet.”

SOURCE: Variety
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118037867/
by Neal Justin

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Maggie Q - Monte Carlo interview

(not the whole video is Maggie Q) the part is she is in, she briefly explain she two arm tattoos.

http://t.co/B9U33sH

Maggie Q Interview link

Maggie Q Video Interview (via http://twitter.com/Nikitarules1111)

 

Maggie Q signs to romantic movie?

By Marcus Lim

Executive Shuffle News
After 20 years of working in film and television overseas, two native-born producers are returning to Singapore to establish a production and talent management entity, it was announced yesterday.

Sukee Chew (pictured left), producer of Jesus Henry Christ, which plays at a gala red carpet screening on Friday, and Andrew Ooi (黃佑穎), manager for a host of talent including Chin Han (黃經漢), Archie Kao and Maggie Q, are setting up the COcreative Company.

Chew and Ooi have already planned a slate of films, including a biopic starring Maggie Q, a romantic comedy and an action thriller to be shot in Singapore.

"We are delighted to welcome The COcreative Company to the home of the founders," said Aubeck Kam, CEO of Singapore's Media Development Authority (MDA).

"I hope that we will see more of such links established between the vibrant Singapore media industry and it's dynamic diaspora of Singaporeans in the global media industry."

Source: http://www.filmbiz.asia/news/chew-and-ooi-return-to-cocreate

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Nikita Stars tease 'Mikita' future

The stars of Nikita have hinted that Nikita and Michael’s romantic reunion could be short-lived.
Executive producer Craig Silverstein previously teased that future episodes will test the pair’s repaired relationship.

Shane West (Michael) told TV Line: “It’s very easy to bring two people together, and it’s very hard to pull them apart, [but] having these two characters together now is going to be difficult.”

Maggie Q (Nikita) added that showrunner Silverstein “wants to create friction” between the couple, who are on the run from a revamped Division.

“[He'll] gut them, then make them happy, and then gut them again,” she suggested. “That’s his plan.”

Maggie Q recently claimed that Michael and Nikita will face “new threats” in the upcoming second season.

“It’s not just Division now,” she said. “I think you’re going to see Percy (Xander Berkeley) go into a different world. You’re going to see Amanda (Melinda Clarke) be in a different world with Alex [and] there are going to be other threats that pop up too.”

Nikita will return to The CW in the fall, airing in a new slot on Fridays at 8/7c.

source: http://maggie-q.us/ @MaggieQOnline