Kiwi stuntwoman lands role on Lost
Relevant offers
Kiwi stuntwoman Zoe Bell's acting career is rocketing ahead with a role in the hit television series Lost.
Bell, who grew up on Waiheke Island, makes her acting debut playing herself in the Quentin Tarantino movie Death Proof, which is to open in New Zealand on November 8.
Bell said from Los Angeles yesterday that her next project was in Hawaii filming episodes of Lost, starting next week.
The series, now in its fourth season, follows a group of passengers marooned on a mysterious island after their plane crashes.
Bell described it as "a little acting role" that would involve some stunt work.
She also has two upcoming action movie projects in which she has the lead role.
"I'm injury-free and I've got a Green Card and I'm gonna be an action hero," she said of her rising career as an actress.
"Something new is always exciting. My life has been made up of a series of events that I've chosen to jump at and run with and see where they end up, and I never really know where they're going, but it feels like quite an organic transition and I'm enjoying the ride."
In Death Proof, Bell speaks in a broad Kiwi accent and talks about coming from Auckland.
"Every day I was giving a shout out to home, that made me feel really good.
"And Quentin was definitely giving a shout out to New Zealand because he's definitely a fan of New Zealand and Australia."
The film's most terrifying stunt sequence has Bell straddling the bonnet of a 1970 Dodge Challenger reaching speeds up to 150 kilometres an hour.
"If we'd had a major glitch during that sequence I could've very easily not walked away from it so well."
She said she was concerned by YouTube footage of people trying to emulate the stunt.
"The most I can do is state clearly that there is an amount of illusion involved in all movie-making."
Her first job as a stunt double was jumping out of a car in Shortland Street.
After doubling for Lucy Lawless on Xena: Warrior Princess for three years, she left New Zealand and her big break came when she was signed by Tarantino as a stunt double for Uma Thurman in his Kill Bill films.
- © Fairfax NZ News
Sponsored links
Son watches dad die in boat tragedy
Woman critically injured in hit and run
Kiwi accused in $3m cocaine case
Hi-tech threat to public servants
Lawyer Barry Hart faces misconduct charges
Mum cops $200 fine for truant daughter
Rowing crewmates become rivals at nationals
Robbed retailers want cameras, not flowers
Murder weapon adds to victim's family's pain
Erin Baker our 'best ever', Adams looming fast
Daniel to wave goodbye to Wellington Phoenix?
Son watches dad die in boat tragedy
One dead after SH1 crash near Wellington
Caring for these kids a job for life
Mum cops $200 fine for truant daughter
Woman critically injured in hit and run
Daily trivia quiz: February 14
Dotcom accused van der Kolk 'flabbergasted'
Lawyer Barry Hart faces misconduct charges
Virtual jobs to replace public servants
Ethnic rights advice stuns communities
Paul Henry's disjointed return to TV
NZ, mate, you might have a drinking problem
What should the MMP threshold be?
Warning hearing has power to kill Transmission Gully
Unruly festival-goers 'stretch police'


