Jorge Garcia missed his sister's wedding to shoot this show in Hawaii.
The first season depicts the first 44 days on the island. Locke mentions this when talking to Desmond inside the hatch.
The song played by Desmond in the final minutes before the islanders open the hatch is "Make Your Own Kind of Music" by Mama Cass, and the song listened to by Juliet in season 3 is "Downtown" by Petula Clark. However, the CD case Juliet pulls the disk from is from The Talking Heads' "Speaking in Tongues" album.
Parts of the plane were used as percussion instruments and can be heard in the soundtrack.
ABC opted not to fly the intact N783DL to Hawaii first before dismantling it. Instead, ABC dispatched 40 production workers to Mojave to cannibalize and ship the aircraft pieces. Dismantling took about 5 days in February 2004.
The Airline in this show that flew the ill-fated flight is called "Oceanic" this Airline name has been used before in Executive Decision (1996), and has also been used in many other made-for-TV movies.
The airplane pieces on the beach, depicting the doomed flight from Sydney, are the remnants of a Lockheed Tristar L-1011. She began service for Eastern Airlines (N308EA) in 1972 and was retired by Delta Airlines (N783DL) in 1998 having racked up a total of 28,822 landings and 58,841 flight-hours.
N783DL was bought by Thompson's Aviation Warehouse (Mojave, CA) for $50,000. ABC/Touchstone purchased it for about $200,000.
The first episode debuted on ABC with 18.65 million viewers. The second episode attracted 16.33 million viewers.
Hurley uses the numbers 4, 8, 15, 16, 23, and 42 to win the lottery. During the season 1 finale, as Hurley drives to the airport, the numbers appear on the dashboard as the car stalls. Running to the gate, he passes a girl's soccer team with the same numbers on their uniform jerseys. They also appear on the hatch exterior and the vial Desmond uses for injection.
4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42 all added together equal 108, the total of minutes left to enter those very numbers into the computer each time.
Jennifer Jason Leigh was approached to play the part of Libby, but she declined
Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje came up with his own characters name, "Mr. Eko", while he and the writers were developing the character.
'Yoon-jin Kim' originally read for the character of Kate. The producers felt she was not what they were looking for but decided to create a new character for her along with her character's spouse.
During Charlie's heroin scenes, Dominic Monaghan is actually snorting brown sugar.
Charlie's shoulder tattoo reads "Living is easy with eyes closed". This is a lyric from the song "Strawberry Fields Forever" by The Beatles.
The rocks used in the waterfall cave set are made of rubber so that the sound of the actors, and crew members walking about are not picked up on camera.
The part of Charlie was originally written for someone much older, but when Dominic Monaghan auditioned, the writers and producers loved him so much that they set about re-writing the part to Dominic's strengths.
Plane wreckage scenes were filmed at Mokuleia Beach.
The majority of post-pilot beach scenes are filmed along a more remote, secluded stretch of Oahu's famous North Shore. The sandy shoreline is not private but the access is off the beaten path.
Jungle scenes depicting open, grassy pasture areas at the foot of jagged cliffs were filmed in Kaaawa Valley (first season).
Mokuleia Beach is near Oahu's northwest tip (Kaena Point). Kaaawa Valley is over 30 miles away on the island's eastern coast.
The sound stage where the cave scenes are filmed is at the old Xerox building.
Vincent, the dog, is actually played by a female dog, whose name is Madison.
The symbol that Claire wears around her neck is the Japanese kanji for "love".
The symbol on Boone's shirt is the Chinese symbol for the number 84. Reversed the number is 48, The exact number of Survivors when the plane first crashed.
The shirt that Sawyer wears that has a fish on it is from an actual restaurant. One of the show's creators went to Humpy's in Alaska and liked the logo so much he wanted to use it on the show. They didn't get permission to use it until much later so they took the logo from the site and made their own. No one at Humpy's knew how it got onto the show until much later.
ABC picked up the show before there even was a script. J.J. Abrams and Damon Lindelof had only turned in an outline and based on this ABC picked up the show.
James Cash lost the part of Jack Shepherd to Matthew Fox at the final auditions.
When Jin is at the house of the person he is meant to kill (but only beats him up) Hurley is on the television behind him. If you look (extremely) carefully you can see that he is wearing the grey shirt that he is wearing when the television cameras show up at the petrol station later on in the series
'Jorge Garcia' was the first person cast for the series.
Originally Sawyer was supposed to be an older con man from Buffalo, NY. When Josh Holloway auditioned the producers were so impressed with him that they changed the character to a younger Southern man.
Originally, Michael Emerson was only cast for a few episodes in season two. The producers were so impressed with his performance that they cast him as a regular and rewrote the part of Henry Gale/Ben to feature him more prominently.
Charlie was in a band called Drive Shaft. Their only hit was called "You All Everybody". That song can be heard in the background of an episode of Alias, another show created by JJ Abrams.
The number 42 is the last number in the series of mysterious numbers that is central to the plot of Lost. In the X-Files, Agent Mulder saw Edward D. Wood Jr.'s Plan 9 from Outer Space (1959) 42 times. He also lives in apartment number 42. 42 is the answer to life, the universe, and everything from Douglas Adams's _"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy"(1981)_ .
Michael Keaton was considered for the part of Jack, but turned it down. Had he accepted, he would have been killed off in the pilot episode.
The very first scene filmed on the show was the one in the pilot episode when Charlie was confronted by Cindy, the flight attendant, seconds before the plane crashed. Kimberley Joseph who played Cindy, spoke the very first lines of the show's production.
Evangeline Lilly was one of the last actors to be found for the show, but since she is Canadian, the producers weren't sure if she would be able to play the part. They pushed back all of Kate's scenes when they where shooting the pilot, just to be sure that they could get a green card for Lilly. It wasn't until they had shot almost every scene without the Kate character that Evangeline Lilly was finally granted a green card and signed on. The same day Lilly was put on a plane in Canada and went directly in to shooting.
Josh Holloway was trying to cover up his Southern accent while he was shooting several of his first scenes in the first season. It wasn't until director J.J. Abrams told him that the reason they cast him was BECAUSE of his accent that Holloway changed it. There are still some scenes left in the pilot where Holloway doesn't use his Southern accent.
In the original description for Kate, she was a slightly older woman separated from her husband, who went to the bathroom in the tail-section of the plane. However, that idea ended up being used for the character Rose.
Eko was originally to be named "Emeka".
The character of Sawyer was originally meant to be a slick, suit-wearing city con artist. However, when Josh Holloway forgot a line at his audition and subsequently kicked a chair in frustration and loudly swore, the writers liked the edge he brought to the Sawyer character and decided to write Sawyer as more of a Southern, darker grifter instead.
Jorge Garcia, Matthew Fox, and Dominic Monaghan all auditioned originally for the part of Sawyer as the other characters had not been developed at the time.
'Yoon-jin Kim' originally thought that Sun was too stereotypical and submissive, but agreed to take the role after being convinced by series co-creator J.J. Abrams.
Although in the Lost cast list Sun-Hwa is listed as having her husband last name of Kwon, it is highly unusual for Korean women to take their husband's last name.
Executive Producer Carlton Cuse does the narration for the advertisements for The Hanso Foundation.
John Locke was an English philosopher in the 1800-century, who described the human being as "tabula rasa" - translated "unwritten sheet" or "empty canvas", at birth. It is obvious that the creators of ‘Lost’ were inspired by this when creating the character Locke.
The series began development in January 2004 when Lloyd Braun, then head of ABC, ordered a script that fused the concepts of the film Cast Away (2000) and the popular reality TV show "Survivor" (2000). Braun was unimpressed with the initial effort and the subsequent rewrite so he contacted J.J. Abrams whose series "Alias" (2001) was a hit for the network. Although initially hesitant, Abrams gave it a go in collaboration with Damon Lindelof. Their script was greenlit but because it had been commissioned so late in the 2004 development cycle, it was heavily bound by tight deadlines. Ironically, Lloyd Braun was sacked by ABC's parent company, Disney, before the pilot aired for greenlighting such an expensive and risky project.
The two-part pilot episode was the most expensive in ABC's history, reportedly costing between $10 million and $14 million. The average pilot is usually in the region of $4 million.
When the show first aired in the UK on Channel 4, it averaged over 6 million viewers. This made it the most successful debut for a US series on the channel.
In France, it is known as "Lost: Les Disparus". The additional French tag is due to a governmental ruling that imposes the use of French in all titles.
Each episode -- other than the pilot -- covers 48 hours on the island.
The only member of the principal cast who didn't have to audition for a role was Terry O'Quinn, with whom J.J. Abrams had previously worked on the second season of "Alias" (2001).
The ornate tattoos on Jack's shoulder are Matthew Fox's own.
The original name of Charlie's band was The Petting Zoo. This had to be changed, however, when it transpired that there really is a band called The Petting Zoo.
The fateful journey, Oceanic Flight 815 (Sydney to Los Angeles), flew on September 22nd 2004. This was the pilot episode's airdate on US television's ABC network.
Trivia For Lost
Thursday, November 22, 2007