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DVDs |

Army Wives
The Complete First Season
Order now at Amazon.com |
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Photos |

Natalie McQueen and her daughter, MacKenzie, 5, holding
a "Welcome Home" sign, were extras during filming for
"Army Wives" on May 6, 2008, at Charleston Air Force
Base, S.C. The Lifetime Network show, which normally
films on a former military installation in the area, was
filming the fourth episode of its second season.
(Defense Deptartment photo/Samantha L. Quigley) |

Nearly 200 extras, mostly military family members, spent
May 5, 2008 on Charleston Air Force Base, S.C., under the hot
spring sun to be a part of the filming of Lifetime
Network's top-rated show "Army Wives." (Defense
Department photo/Samantha L. Quigley) |

Air Force Reserve Tech. Sgt. John Patterson, clutching a
bouquet of flowers for his beloved TV wife, got the
opportunity to be an extra during filming for "Army
Wives" on May 6, 2008, at Charleston Air Force Base,
S.C. The Lifetime Network show, which normally films on
a former military installation in the area, was filming
the fourth episode of its second season. (Defense
Department photo/Samantha L. Quigley) |

Amanda Clarke and Army Capt. Gavin McCulley participate
in the filming of Lifetime Network's "Army Wives," on
May 5, 2008, on Charleston Air Force Base, S.C. The cast
and crew of the show, which normally films on an
inactive military base, spent the day working on an
episode for Season Two. Clarke and McCulley were two of
nearly 200 extras. (Defense Department photo/Samantha L.
Quigley) |

Wendy Davis, playing Army Lt. Col. Joan Burton, an "Army
Wives" character, addresses her Soldiers during filming
May 5, 2008, on Charleston Air Force Base, S.C., for the
Lifetime Network series' second season. The show's cast
and crew were on site for about 14 hours. (Defense
Department photo/Samantha L. Quigley) |
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Army Wives |

The cast of Lifetime Network's top-rated
series, "Army Wives," spent May 5, 2008, on
Charleston Air Force Base, S.C., filming the
fourth episode of Season Two. |
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Army Wives
is a television show on the Lifetime Television Network that
follows the lives of a group of military spouses living on a
U.S. Army base. |
Army Wives Website |
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NEWS |
'Army
Wives' Cast Works to Create Realistic Military Parallel
By Samantha L. Quigley
American Forces Press Service
CHARLESTON AIR FORCE BASE, S.C. - Drama can occasionally creep
into the lives of military families, but since last season,
it's been a sure thing for the military families portrayed on
Lifetime Network's top-rated show.
The cast of "Army Wives" was here yesterday filming scenes for
the series' upcoming second season.
The show focuses on four Army wives, the civilian husband of
an Army officer, and a handful of children as they navigate
the high and not-so-high points of Army life at fictional Fort
Marshall, S.C. They, like real Army families, have dealt with
deployment, homecomings and other issues, including
post-traumatic stress disorder.
Out of respect for their real-life counterparts, the cast
members are working to make their portrayal of military life
realistic. One viewer spotted Kim Delaney -- who plays Claudia
Joy Holden in the series -- in a Charleston hotel elevator and
expressed her appreciation for the show in a soft voice.
"She said, 'My daughter married into the military, and he's
over there right now, and they have a little boy, and just get
it right!'" Delaney recalled, raising her voice sternly.
"That's the thing I love about our show. It's extremely
respectful of the military, and we're really proud of what the
military's doing, and it's entertainment, but we want to show
everybody what everybody goes through."
Delaney, who plays the wife of garrison commander Brig. Gen.
Michael Holden, described her character as the "moral center"
of the group during a break from filming of the upcoming
season's fourth episode yesterday. The instruction Delaney got
from the soft-spoken lady in the elevator resonates with the
rest of the cast, as well.
"Now that the show has gotten some success, the military has
come on board, which is great, because now we can get all
those details right," said Brian McNamara, who plays the
husband of Delaney's character. "It's not very often in
television that you actually feel incredibly proud of what
you're doing."
"We went to Fort Bragg (N.C.) at the beginning of this season
and met a number of soldiers," he continued. "They spoke to us
about their experiences, and it just makes you that much
prouder to be doing this and to do it right."
Getting the details right also is important to actor Drew
Fuller, who plays Spc. Trevor LeBlanc.
"We are definitely the young couple on the Army post, so a lot
of how the audience learns about life on post and certain
proper protocol is told through our eyes," Fuller said. "We're
portraying real people. There are many E-4s out there with a
wife and two kids, and it's really important that we do it
right. We've got to make it right for them; we're, as a group,
so proud of what they're doing for us, it's the smallest of
favors that we can do for them."
The TV family endured its first separation last season when
Trevor deployed to Iraq.
Making "Army Wives" as real as possible is a top goal for
Harry Bring, an Army veteran and the show's executive
producer.
"What I hope happens is that we depict it properly," he said.
"(I hope) that we get so much production value out of it that
the audience knows that we are military -- not just a drama
about Army wives, (but also) that we do this stuff for real."
Viewers were quick to take to the Internet whenever the show
missed its target of getting all the details just right last
season, and the blogosphere's remarks about errantly worn
berets during the first season were mild compared to what it
thought of Lt. Col. Joan Burton's methods of coping with her
life after returning from her Iraq. Wendy Davis, who plays
Burton, heard plenty of comments regarding her character's
conduct.
"I don't know if it was the drinking or the dancing on the
bar. It was very interesting to live that out," Davis said of
her character's experience with post-traumatic stress
disorder. "When we went to Fort Bragg, one of the things (the
officers) shared was ... that our soldiers are not throw-away.
It's really about getting them help. That was really great to
hear."
Thanks in part to a former Soldier who's acting as the show's
military advisor, and with tips from military family members
working as extras on the set, the show is now on a truer
military path.
Natalie McQueen, the wife of a deployed service member, has
been a fan of the show since it began last year. She said
she's pleased with the attention to detail she saw during her
experience as an extra yesterday.
"I am a big fan. I really enjoy it," she said with her
5-year-old daughter, MacKenzie, at her side. "They portray the
military family really well. It is very realistic."
Air Force Reserve Tech. Sgt. John Patterson, clutching a
bouquet of flowers for his TV wife, also proudly acknowledged
his appreciation of "Army Wives." He called the show a
credible account of military life.
"I've watched it a couple of times," said Patterson, who's
activated and is stationed here. "It's a pretty good show. I
was in the Army also before I was in the Air Force, and it
does portray [military life] well."
The second season of "Army Wives," which premiers June 8, 2008
at 10 p.m. Eastern Time on Lifetime, promises plenty of
surprises -- just like life in an Army family. |
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