Together again for the fans….Henry Ian Cusick and Paige Turco! Don’t miss them this Sunday at the Dream It At Home Virtual Con 15. Examples of Ian’s event options, and the Kabby event options, captured below. We anticipate a calendar of times soon.
HEADLINE: A Lost soul finds his dream island BYLINE: Jenny Eden
Henry Ian Cusick, a star of the hit American TV series, has discovered his own little piece of paradise in Hawaii, writes Jenny Eden
When Henry Ian Cusick looks out of his window each morning, the sky is so blue he could be living in a digitally enhanced travel brochure. Opposite his Hawaiian home is a paradise beach with flawless sand. He rarely goes anywhere without a towel and a pair of swimming trunks thrown into the back of his car.
It’s a long way from Glasgow – nearly 7,000 miles – and the biggest career gamble of his life. Two years ago, he had no money, no job, no auditions and his long-term girlfriend, Annie, had become breadwinner for the whole family. He was faced with having to give up acting and find a job that would pay the bills. But he decided to take one more chance, leave his family behind and go to Los Angeles for 2 months.
“It was a last throw of the dice for me because I was approaching 40 and I thought I couldn’t keep on,” he admits. “I was banging my head thinking: ‘I can’t even get a bloody audition in this country.’ So eventually I thought: ‘Either I pack it in now or take one more chance and go to LA.’ I didn’t have any money and I was crashing on someone’s couch, but it felt like, despite the bullshit, there was a sense of real possibility there. And within two weeks I auditioned for 24, and the same afternoon they phoned back and said they wanted me for nine episodes.”
In Scotland, when he found work, he had slogged his way through the obligatory Taggart, Casualty and Midsomer Murders, appeared in Two Thousand Acres of Sky and The Book Group. It’s the kind of streets- paved-with-gold story that gets British actors heading hopefully for Hollywood each year. But while most of them return with only a suntan to show for their efforts, Cusick is still pinching himself.
After 24, he was offered three episodes in Lost, the cult show about aircrash survivors on a mysterious island. Cusick had never heard of it, but as it was set in Hawaii he said yes. So began the rise of one of Lost’s most compelling characters, Desmond Hume.
Hume – there is speculation he is named after the Scottish philosopher David Hume – started as the mystery inhabitant of the island’s underground hatch, where he had spent three years inputting a number sequence into a computer. We discover that on the one occasion he failed to do this, the magnetic surge was so great that Oceanic Flight 815 crashed onto the island.
The Desmond character later joins the survivors and it emerges that in his previous life he was sailing round the world in a yacht, had been a soldier with a Scottish regiment, spent time in jail and was hated by the father of his upper- class English girlfriend.
In a coincidence that could come straight out of a Lost plot line, Cusick had already met Carlton Cuse, one of the creators of the series, before he auditioned for the job. He had been staying with the actor Brian Cox, and Cuse was one of his neighbours.
“Brian said, ‘Oh, there’s my neighbour. He’s got a new car, let’s check it out.’
It was only when Cuse looked at the address where he was sending the script that he realised we’d met. It was such a Lost moment.”
As Desmond’s character became more intriguing, Cusick found himself upped from a few episodes in series two to a regular character by the third season. This meant moving Annie and their sons, Elias, Lucas and Esau, to start a new life in Hawaii with him. And for Cusick and Annie, after 14 years together, it also meant marriage. Visa restrictions required her to fly back to Britain every three months unless she was his wife, though Cusick is indignant at the suggestion that this wasn’t the most romantic reason to tie the knot.
“It was something we had talked about, but things were going along fine: 14 years into a relationship, marriage didn’t seem that important. We hadn’t got much money, so instead of a wedding we’d spend it on going on holiday. We talked about doing it, but more as a conversation piece.”
In the end, their wedding turned into a joint leaving party for their friends and neighbours before they moved to Hawaii.
“We did it in Tunbridge Wells register office and had a party back at our place.
I’m more private, so I would have just liked to have taken Annie away on our own, just me, her and the kids, and had a very quiet wedding. I don’t feel I need to have a very public show of affection and say, ‘Look everyone, see what I’m doing.’
To me, it’s a lot more personal, but Annie had a say.”
He gives a good-natured shrug. His white shirt is unbuttoned to show a tanned chest and hint of muscle well accustomed to a Hawaiian beach. He happily admits he is the dreamer in their partnership and it is Annie, a theatre director, who’s the practical one. They met at Glasgow’s Citizens Theatre when she was an assistant director and he was a lowly extra.
Since moving to Hawaii, Annie has taken a break from work and concentrated on setting up their new home. After the past few years, he thinks she deserves the time off – and he is obviously happy his job means he can give it to her.
“Annie has been so supportive – I wouldn’t be where I am now without her. The good thing is she believes in me, and I think you need someone who believes in you and can push you along a bit. There’s not many wives who would say, ‘Go to LA and try and get a job,’ so she must have thought I could do it.”
The whole family seems to have taken to their new lives effortlessly. His two youngest sons are already developing American accents. They have all learnt to surf and, with no television set in the house, the boys are making the most of their new outdoor world.
It’s the kind of ability to adapt that Cusick himself learnt as a child. He was born in Peru, where his Scottish father was working as a minister. The family then moved to Trinidad and Tobago and finally went home to Scotland when he was 15.
“We arrived in Scotland in 1981 in October and all we had were shorts, T shirts and flip-flops. We were very dark-skinned, with bleached-blond hair and very thick Trinny accents. School in Paisley was very scary. The local kids did not know where Trinidad was – they thought it was in Africa and we lived in mud huts. The first couple of years, we had to defend ourselves. We got picked on relentlessly and it was pretty unpleasant.”
It never occurred to Cusick to become an actor until one Saturday tea time when he was watching Michael Praed on television as Robin of Sherwood.
“I thought: ‘Wow, what a great job,'” he laughs. He had never shown any interest in the theatre, didn’t know any actors, and his friends and family were incredulous. But he discovered his unemployment card would get him into the Glasgow Film Theatre for 50p on Friday afternoons.
He got hooked on French art-house films and fell in love with the whole idea of becoming an actor: “I’d lose myself and come out thinking of myself in the film, so I was a total dreamer.”
He tried to turn the dreams into reality by getting accepted at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama. But lateness and selectiveness over which classes he would turn up for got him thrown out. It’s something he admits he doesn’t regret – there are no doubt plenty of more assiduous students who wish they had his success now.
Fit, floppy-haired Desmond has turned Cusick into a big favourite with fans of Lost. He’s up there alongside Josh Holloway and Matthew Fox as the show’s male eye candy, and viewers are constantly coming up to shake his hand and say, “See you in another life, brother.”
“When you’re in Hawaii, you get on with your life. It’s only when you come away from it you notice the attention. As for people calling me a sex symbol, hopefully my wife has always thought I’m a sex symbol.”
Cusick turned 40 this year, and instead of having a midlife crisis, he sat back, looked at how his life had changed and counted his blessings. Although nobody’s future is safe on a show that delights in killing off its best-loved characters, he knows he is back in Hawaii to start filming series four. For now, that’s as much as they are telling him and for him it’s good enough.
“I still wake up in the morning smiling,” he says. “Maybe all that struggle has made me who I am and got me to the place I am today, working on a series that is a little piece of television history.”