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Lost actess Emilie de Ravin has married someone I’ve never heard of.
Emilie de Ravin, 24, who plays Claire Littleton on the ABC hit series Lost, wed actor Josh Janowicz on June 19 in a small, private ceremony in Melbourne, Australia, with family and friends on hand. The groom wore Hugo Boss. For her walk down the aisle, de Ravin selected an ivory Monique Lhuillier Chantilly lace scoop neck top with cap sleeves, paired with a satin paneled trumpet skirt and accented with a cameo ribbon sash.
The couple dated for three years before becoming engaged on January 1, 2005, while visiting de Ravin’s family in Australia for the holidays.
Though Lost is filmed in Hawaii, the couple reside in Los Angeles, California, with their pet dog, Bella. De Ravin recently starred in the thriller The Hills Have Eyes. Janowicz, 24, has appeared in the film The Chumscrubber and will next be seen in the film On the Doll.
Via US Weekly blog, where the readers have apparently not heard of de Ravin, either, and are mad that anyone is posting about it. Consider this my stance in solidarity with US Weekly and Z-list stars, everywhere.
“Lost” hearthrob Josh Holloway is apparently not all that different than the character he plays, according to an interview with the New York Post:
Josh Holloway, who’s in ABC’s hit “Lost,” admits he considered dumping his fiancée when his star began to rise. “There’s a Hugh Hefner that lives in all men,” happily married Holloway tells Men’s Health. “So when ‘Lost’ took off, part of me thought, ‘Do I cut and run?’ I still like to look around, but respectfully and with no intentions. ‘Married, not buried,’ I always say.” Still, he can’t help fantasize about bachelorhood. “If I were single?” Holloway muses. “Damn, I’d have one girl doing my laundry, one shaving me, one bringing me a cocktail and another one coming out of my tent all hung over.”
Todd thinks he might get his wish sooner rather than later. Minus half his loot, I would add.
   
Todd provides several photos of Holloway and his wife, (longtime love, Yessica) which provokes several comments about the wife’s skill set. I’ve shamelessly stolen a representative one, thumbnailed leftmost above. I’ve added two others found on the Web.
As to whether Holloway is a pig, an aspersion cast by several, I would note that 1) he is a man and 2) he is a rich, famous former model stuck in Hawaii for weeks at a time with Evangeline Lilly, Emilie de Ravin, Michelle Rodriguez, and, until recently, Maggie Grace. If he’s not cheating on Yessica now, he never will.
    

Apropos of nothing in particular, I nonetheless find it amusing that Holloway’s IMDB profile informs, “His first job was picking up dead chickens at a farm.”
Emilie de Ravin, who plays Claire Littleton in “Lost,” is this month’s Toro pin-up. She’s promoting her upcoming role as Brenda Carter in a remake of the movie “The Hills Have Eyes.”
She is the fragile one, the small one, the one they want to save. She walks slowly, delicately, with full red lips and pale, lustrous skin. Yet there’s always something more with Emilie de Ravin. Something taut, inside, as if each step could end with a demi rond de jambe. De Ravin was a ballerina before Hollywood got her. She will always cause our hearts to soubresaut. That she’s also the yummiest of television’s mummies? Maybe we’ll just take that bit as gravy.
Twenty-five now, she skipped from dancing with a ballet company in Australia to Hollywood in her teens. She started out as The Demon Curupira, prancing around the Gold Coast jungle in green body paint and an elf outfit that somehow managed, in spite of itself, to look comely. Who else could have made a show called BeastMaster watchable? Then on to Roswell, as the alien babe who suddenly found herself with child.
You’re more likely to know her from Lost. She’s Claire Littleton, the amnesiac Australian beauty, the screamer. She’s the one with the baby, that armful of newborn fright.
[...]
But then I mention an advance publicity photo I’ve seen from The Hills Have Eyes, the upcoming remake of the clash-of-civilizations horror that made Wes Craven famous. De Ravin plays Brenda Carter, the daughter, in an upright American family. The Carters take a driving trip across the California desert. All goes well until the inbred cannibals strike.
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