Prison Break Season 4 The Last Season
November 23, 2008 by Nikki Katz
Wentworth Miller chats about his view of Prison Break Season 4 being the last season. It’s hard to hear him over the translation, but you get the idea!
Wentworth Miller Interview
September 12, 2008 by Nikki Katz
All Access chats with Wentworth Miller on the set of Prison Break. It’s the season of resurrection because you’re never quite sure who is dead and who is alive!
So what about Sara, does Michael really only want a girlfriend for his life? Wentworth says that Sara is the “silver lining” and Michael needs something to look forward to. He can’t go back to his white-collar existence, so he has to create something else, something new.
Wentworth also chats about Michael being practically super-human with his toes being chopped off and that tattoo removal!
Wentworth Miller on Michael’s Potential for Redemption
August 25, 2008 by Nikki Katz
Part 2 of a press conference call with Wentworth Miller. This clip is of the two questions I got to ask!
Thanks to everyone who submitted questions in the earlier thread. On the call they told us to keep it all related to the show, so I didn’t ask any personal questions. Other interviewers covered some of the other questions, so I chose to use some of what Photogirl11 and Rebecca posted. Thanks again to all of you!!!
Additional parts coming soon and you can view much of the transcript here.
Wentworth Miller Interview (Voice Part 1)
August 25, 2008 by Nikki Katz
Part 1 of a press conference call with Wentworth Miller. He chats about Michael & Sara, Sarah Wayne Callies return, the tattoo, his hair, and more!
Additional parts coming soon and you can view much of the transcript here.
Wentworth Miller Chats About Privacy
May 16, 2008 by Nikki Katz

Wentworth Miller recently chatted with the Mirror about his privacy and family life.
“If it’s a fan it’s a very different situation than if it’s a paparazzo with a camera,” says Wentworth. “I’m happy to meet the fans, but it’s a different kind of attention when you notice the same van has been trailing your car for the last five hours.”
When he became an international star from Prison Break Wentworth definitely thought to himself that he had become a sex symbol. “I’d be lying if I said I didn’t! From time to time it was flattering, all that good stuff. Michael’s not particularly sympathetic, and yet what followed was kind of incredible. But I’d like to believe I have more to offer than what you see before you.”
As for his family, he says they haven’t had to cope much with him being a celebrity. “But I do feel responsible for them, for their privacy. If someone were to come after a person I love – God forbid – I think I
would see an overlap between me and my Prison Break character.”
Image used with permission from Newscom
Wentworth Miller - Short Interview at Swedish Awards
March 20, 2008 by Nikki Katz
Wentworth Miller, glasses and all, comments on his love for Sweden!
Wentworth Miller Interview
March 14, 2008 by Nikki Katz
Wentworth Miller gives an interview during his trip to Israel. He starts off with a word association game. A couple of them I found strange!!
Wentworth Miller Interview
October 29, 2007 by Nikki Katz
Nothing new… but Wentworth chats about Michael’s motivation, Whistler, Sona, Lechero and more in Prison Break Season 3. He sure says “um” a lot in the beginning!!
Wentworth Miller on His Acting Background
September 20, 2007 by Nikki Katz
Another Wentworth interview!! This one talks about his acting background and how he unwinds…
How do you lighten the mood when you are working in 104 degrees heat or a disused prison?
The people I have the most antagonistic relationships with on screen are the ones I get on best with. Wade Williams, who plays Bellick, is an old theatre ham, so we have a good time. Dominic Purcell, who plays Lincoln, always seems so serious but he’s a real crack-up. And Peter Stormare, who was Abruzzi, was a great one for smearing peanut butter under tables, so you’d be in the middle of a scene and suddenly find it.
How do you unwind?It’s become a routine for me to cap off a season and relaunch my life that I drive back across America to my home in LA. It’s a great way to get my head in the right space to catch up on the life I’ve neglected for the last 10 months.
Do you regret not being able to take up movie offers?
I’m only 35 and at the beginning of what I hope is going to be a long career. In the course of 48 episodes I’ve developed some acting muscles I didn’t have before. I’ve done a car accident, bedroom scenes, someone dying in my arms, I’ve been shot and done fight scenes. Those are more extreme moments than you would ever get in a feature film.
Wentworth Miller on his Celebrity Crush & Personal Life
September 20, 2007 by Nikki Katz
Wow, a super long article, but there is some GREAT Wentworth info here!! Learn about his personal life, his celebrity crush, and his writing!
You’ve said you’re more of a loner than a social butterfly. Has that changed since you’ve become so well known?
Yeah. It’s a luxury I can’t afford. I would never describe myself as a people person but I spend my days on a set putting together a show that involves hundreds of other people or off promoting that show and meeting hundreds of other people. I saw an old interview with Jack Nicholson where he said that the average celebrity meets more people in one year than the average person meets in their entire life and that feels true to me. I don’t know if it’s true scientifically or it would be possible to prove percentage wise but it just feels like the truth and consequently, when I have a weekend off or a night to myself, it’s a choice between hanging out on my couch watching a video or going down to the local bar and inevitably being cornered by someone and grilled about the tattoo for two hours, I’ll choose the former. I think it’s important to have a little bit of balance. I think people, myself included, or myself especially, need time to gather your thoughts to process what is happening to you, especially since my life has changed in many ways so dramatically over the last year and a half. It’s a lot to process.
What are the other negatives and positives of being in a hit show?
I’d say the most significant positive is not only is it a great show, I have a place to go to every morning, a steady paycheck, which as an actor is a rarity and a luxury, but it’s opened so many doors for me. The feature film world in the US its all about, “Do they know you overseas?” because it does matter how well a movie does domestically but the foreign markets count for a great deal and the fact that Prison Break is this international hit, and my name now means something in Korea, and South Africa, and Australia, only helps me as far as getting in the door on certain feature film projects that I couldn’t, or didn’t, have access to before, which is great. Of course, the down side is that you’re working on a TV show that’s 22 episodes a year, it takes eight days to film an entire episode, all of those days are between 14 and 17 hours long, so when I have my two months off in which I can go do a movie, I’m too tired. And that’s fine because Prison Break is kind of my priority, it’s my baby, and that’s where my attention goes first and foremost. As far as the negatives, there’s a certain strange identity theft that seems to be more and more prevalent. It’s only natural in the business of fantasy, so people have fantasies about you, and some of them are based on some kind of truth, some of them are not, but it doesn’t matter whether they have any kind of accuracy, they’re online, or in magazines, people can print anything about you, say anything about you that they want, and there’s really nothing you can do it about except, I suppose, go to court if you have enough time and money. And mostly it amuses me. There’s a billboard in Korea, apparently, where they’re using my image to advertise tests for prostate cancer for a Korean hospital, and they’ve just picked a random photo from some shoot for GQ I did a couple of years ago and without my permission are using me to push their particular cause, which is kind of funny actually but then my agent gets phone calls from people wanting to know which myspace page is mine, and the truth is I’ve never been on myspace but there are maybe a dozen Wentworth Miller myspace pages, and people answering fan mail as me, blogging as me, and it’s a little disturbing. I don’t care that they’re doing it. I do care that someone who might actually like the show and want to communicate with me in some way, shape or form turns to one of these other outlets and starts communicating with someone who’s not me. I’m very protective of the fans and their experience of the show and people on the show and I certainly wouldn’t want some innocent 10-year-old to fall into the wrong hands communicating with someone they think is Wentworth Miller and they’re not.


