List of Lost characters
The characters from the American drama television series Lost were created by Damon Lindelof and J. J. Abrams. The series follows the lives of plane crash survivors on a mysterious tropical island, after a commercial passenger jet from the fictional Oceanic Airlines crashes somewhere in the South Pacific. Each episode typically features a primary storyline on the island as well as a secondary storyline, a flashback from another point in a character's life.
Out of the 324 people on board Oceanic Flight 815, there are 71 initial survivors (70 humans and one dog) spread across the three sections of the plane crash.[1]
Casting and development
Many of the first season roles were a result of the executive producers' liking of various actors. The main character Jack was originally going to die in the pilot, and was hoped to be played by Michael Keaton; however, ABC executives were adamant that Jack live.[2] Before it was decided that Jack would live, Kate was to emerge as the leader of the survivors; she was originally conceived to be more like the character of Rose. Dominic Monaghan auditioned for the role of Sawyer, who at the time was supposed to be a suit-wearing city con man. The producers enjoyed Monaghan's performance and changed the character of Charlie, originally a middle-aged former rock star, to fit him. Jorge Garcia also auditioned for Sawyer, and the part of Hurley was written for him. When Josh Holloway auditioned for Sawyer, the producers liked the edge he brought to the character (he reportedly kicked a chair when he forgot his lines and got angry in the audition) and his southern accent, so they changed Sawyer to fit Holloway's acting. Yunjin Kim auditioned for Kate, but the producers wrote the character of Sun for her and the character of Jin, portrayed by Daniel Dae Kim, to be her husband. Sayid, played by Naveen Andrews, was also not in the original script. Locke and Michael were written with their actors in mind. Emilie de Ravin, who plays Claire, was originally cast in what was supposed to be a recurring role.[2] Kimberley Joseph's character, an unnamed flight attendant, was originally scripted to be killed off in the pilot, but was brought back in Season 2 with the name Cindy and continued to make guest appearances through to the final season, becoming one of the last handful of Flight 815 survivors.
Cast
Main cast
Recurring cast
Actor | Character | Seasons | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | ||
William Blanchette | Aaron Littleton | Recurring | |||||
Julie Bowen | Sarah Shephard | Guest | Recurring | ||||
Beth Broderick | Diane Janssen | Guest | Recurring | Guest | |||
Byron Chung | Woo-Jung Paik | Guest | Recurring | Guest | |||
Mira Furlan[lower-alpha 8] | Danielle Rousseau | Recurring | Guest | ||||
Andrea Gabriel | Nadia Jazeem | Guest | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | ||
M. C. Gainey | Tom Friendly | Guest | Recurring | ||||
Neil Hopkins[lower-alpha 9] | Liam Pace | Guest | Recurring | ||||
Kimberley Joseph | Cindy Chandler | Recurring | Recurring | ||||
Fredric Lehne | Edward Mars | Recurring | Guest | Guest | |||
William Mapother | Ethan Rom | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | Guest | ||
Kevin Tighe | Anthony Cooper | Guest | Recurring | Guest | |||
Michael Bowen | Danny Pickett | Recurring | |||||
Clancy Brown | Kelvin Inman | Recurring | |||||
Brett Cullen | Goodwin Stanhope | Recurring | Guest | ||||
Alan Dale[lower-alpha 10] | Charles Widmore | Guest | Recurring | ||||
Kim Dickens | Cassidy Phillips | Guest | Recurring | Guest | |||
April Grace | Bea Klugh | Recurring | Guest | ||||
Mickey Graue | Zach | Guest | Recurring | Recurring | |||
Kiersten Havelock | Emma | Guest | Recurring | Recurring | |||
Tony Lee | Jae Lee | Recurring | Guest | ||||
Adetokumboh M'Cormack[lower-alpha 11] | Yemi | Recurring | Guest | ||||
Tania Raymonde | Alex Rousseau | Recurring | Guest | Recurring | |||
Katey Sagal | Helen Norwood | Recurring | Recurring | ||||
Teddy Wells | Ivan | Recurring | |||||
Blake Bashoff | Karl Martin | Recurring | |||||
Andrew Divoff | Mikhail Bakunin | Recurring | Guest | ||||
Brian Goodman | Ryan Pryce | Recurring | |||||
Jon Gries | Roger Linus | Guest | Recurring | Guest | |||
Doug Hutchison | Horace Goodspeed | Guest | Recurring | ||||
Paula Malcolmson | Colleen Pickett | Recurring | |||||
Tracy Middendorf | Bonnie | Recurring | |||||
Lana Parrilla | Greta | Recurring | |||||
Marsha Thomason | Naomi Dorrit | Recurring | Guest | ||||
Robin Weigert | Rachel Carlson | Recurring | |||||
Anthony Azizi | Omar | Recurring | Recurring | ||||
Zoë Bell | Regina | Recurring | |||||
Grant Bowler | Gault | Recurring | |||||
Susan Duerden | Carole Littleton | Guest | Recurring | ||||
Kevin Durand | Martin Keamy | Recurring | Recurring | ||||
Lance Reddick | Matthew Abaddon | Recurring | Guest | ||||
Fisher Stevens | George Minkowski | Recurring | Guest | ||||
Reiko Aylesworth | Amy Goodspeed | Recurring | |||||
Marvin DeFreitas | Charlie Hume | Recurring | |||||
Patrick Fischler | Phil | Recurring | |||||
Brad William Henke | Bram | Recurring | Guest | ||||
Leslie Ishii | Lara Chang | Recurring | |||||
Eric Lange | Stuart Radzinsky | Recurring | |||||
Molly McGivern | Rosie | Recurring | |||||
Marc Menard | Montand | Recurring | |||||
Mark Pellegrino | Jacob | Recurring | |||||
Saïd Taghmaoui | Caesar | Recurring | |||||
Titus Welliver | Man in Black | Recurring | |||||
Sean Whalen | Neil "Frogurt" | Recurring | |||||
John Hawkes | Lennon | Recurring | |||||
Fred Koehler | Seamus | Recurring | |||||
Sheila Kelley | Zoe | Recurring | |||||
Dylan Minnette | David Shephard | Recurring | |||||
Hiroyuki Sanada | Dogen | Recurring | |||||
- The actor was credited along with the main cast members in the series finale.
- Jeremy Shada also portrays a younger version of the character in seasons 2 and 3.
- Credited as a regular up to the first episode of the fourth season.
- Kolawolfe Obileye Jr. also portrays a younger version of the charactert in seasons 2 and 3.
- Sterling Beaumon also portrays a younger version of the character in seasons 3 and 5.
- Maya Henssens also portrays a younger version of the character in season 5.
- Alexandra Krosney and Alice Evans also portray younger versions of the character in season 5.
- Melissa Farman also portrays a younger version of the character in season 5.
- Zack Shada also portrays a younger version of the character in seasons 2 and 3.
- Tom Connolly and David S. Lee also portray younger versions of the character in season 5.
- Olekan Obileye also portrays a younger version of the character in season 2 and 3.
Main characters
Characters are listed alphabetically. "Starring season(s)" refers to the season in which an actor or actress received star billing for playing a character. "Recurring season(s)" identifies a season in which an actor or actress appeared, but received guest star or special guest star billing.
Name | Actor | Starring seasons | Recurring season | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Richard Alpert | Nestor Carbonell | 6 | 3, 4, 5 | ||
Kate Austen | Evangeline Lilly | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | — | ||
Juliet Burke | Elizabeth Mitchell | 3, 4, 5 | 6 | ||
Boone Carlyle | Ian Somerhalder | 1 | 2, 3, 6 | ||
Ana Lucia Cortez | Michelle Rodriguez | 2 | 1, 5, 6 | ||
Michael Dawson | Harold Perrineau | 1, 2, 4 | 6[3] | ||
Mr. Eko | Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje | 2, 3 | — | ||
Daniel Faraday | Jeremy Davies | 4, 5 | 6 | ||
Nikki Fernandez | Kiele Sanchez | 3 | 4 (only footage) | ||
James "Sawyer" Ford | Josh Holloway | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | — | ||
Desmond David Hume | Henry Ian Cusick | 3, 4, 5, 6 | 2 | ||
Sayid Jarrah | Naveen Andrews | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | — | ||
Jin-Soo Kwon | Daniel Dae Kim | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | — | ||
Sun-Hwa Kwon | Yunjin Kim | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | — | ||
Frank Lapidus | Jeff Fahey | 6 | 4, 5 | ||
Charlotte Staples Lewis | Rebecca Mader | 4, 5 | 6 | ||
Benjamin Linus | Michael Emerson | 3, 4, 5, 6 | 2 | ||
Claire Littleton | Emilie de Ravin | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 | 5 (only footage) | ||
Walter "Walt" Lloyd | Malcolm David Kelley | 1, 2 | 3, 4, 5, 6 | ||
John Locke | Terry O'Quinn | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | — | ||
The Man in Black | Titus Welliver; Terry O'Quinn (in Locke's form); Ryan Bradford (young) | 5, 6 | 1, 2, 3, 4 | ||
Charlie Pace | Dominic Monaghan | 1, 2, 3 | 4, 6 | ||
Paulo | Rodrigo Santoro | 3 | — | ||
Hugo "Hurley" Reyes | Jorge Garcia | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | — | ||
Shannon Rutherford | Maggie Grace | 1, 2 | 3, 6 | ||
Jack Shephard | Matthew Fox | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | — | ||
Elizabeth "Libby" Smith[5] | Cynthia Watros | 2 | 4, 6 | ||
Miles Straume | Ken Leung | 4, 5, 6 | — | ||
Ilana Verdansky | Zuleikha Robinson | 6 | 5 | ||
Supporting characters
Minor Oceanic 815 crash survivors
Name | Actor | Season(s) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Leslie Arzt | Daniel Roebuck | 1, 3, 6 | ||
Dr. Leslie Arzt is a junior high school science teacher, who crashes with the fuselage survivors and keeps a collection of native fauna in various jars. Almost all characters continue to pronounce his name "Arts" even though he repeatedly corrects them. Arzt complains about not being included in the various missions of Jack and Locke, finally joining them on a trip to the Black Rock. He dies ironically when a stick of dynamite spontaneously explodes in his hand while he lectures Jack, Locke, Kate and Hurley on how to safely handle it. In the alternate timeline, he is working at the school where he helps Ben to expose the principal of his actions. His name, "Arzt", is the German word for "physician". Despite his early demise, his advice is invaluable to the Survivors, even years later. | ||||
Cindy Chandler | Kimberley Joseph | 1, 2, 3, 6 | ||
Cindy Chandler is an Australian Oceanic Airlines stewardess dating the Flight 815 passenger Gary Troup and is the only crew member other than Seth Norris to survive the crash. She is featured in the Pilot episode as giving Jack a small bottle of alcohol, which is the first thing Jack discovers after the plane crash. She crashes with the tail-section survivors and is taken by the Others in the second season during the journey to the fuselage survivors' camp. Cindy lives comfortably with the Others following her abduction firstly at the Hydra station then at the Temple, caring for Zach and Emma. To avoid death, she aligns with the Man in Black following the temple massacre. She survives Widmore's mortar attack and survives the series to live under Hurley's guard.[6] | ||||
Emma and Zach | Kiersten Havelock and Mickey Graue | 2, 3, 6 | ||
Emma and Zach are two sibling children from the tail section of the plane who live under the care of Cindy, following the pair's kidnapping. With Cindy, they follow the Man in Black. Their ultimate fate is never resolved onscreen. | ||||
Bernard Nadler | Sam Anderson | 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | ||
An American dentist, Dr. Bernard Nadler weds Rose Henderson less than one year prior to the crash. He crashes with the tail section survivors, but joins the fuselage survivors in season two. Bernard stays with the majority of the group after some of the freighter crew arrive. He and Rose are last found to have travelled back in time to 1977 after the island skips around in time. Together they choose to live alone on the beach, avoiding both Dharma and the Others. They later return to the present time and help Desmond out of a well, and after a run-in with the Man in Black, choose to stay on the island at the end of the series. | ||||
Rose Henderson Nadler | L. Scott Caldwell | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | ||
A woman with terminal cancer from the Bronx, New York, Rose Henderson-Nadler marries Bernard less than a year before the crash. She lives with the fuselage survivors and reunites with Bernard in season two. She opts to return to the beach at the beginning of season four when the survivors contact the freighter. She and Bernard are last found to have traveled back in time to 1977 after the island skips around in time. They later return to the present time and help Desmond out of a well, and after a run-in with the man in black, choose to stay on the island at the end of the series. | ||||
Scott Jackson and Steve Jenkins | Dustin Watchman and Christian Bowman | 1, 2, 3, 5 | ||
Scott Jackson and Steve Jenkins crash with the fuselage survivors. They are regularly confused with each other, even after one of them (Scott) is killed in the first season by Ethan. In season five, Steve and the remaining minor Flight 815 castaways are killed by a fire arrow attack right after the island jumps in time (except for two unnamed men, who are later killed by claymore mines at the creek). | ||||
Edward Mars | Fredric Lane | 1, 2, 3, 6 | ||
Edward Mars is a U.S. marshal who is obsessed with capturing Kate, finally apprehending her in Australia. He is critically injured during the crash and dies in the third episode. | ||||
Seth Norris | Greg Grunberg | 1, 4, 6 | ||
Seth Norris is the pilot of the airplane (Flight 815), which crashes on the island. He is found in the cockpit in the first episode by Jack, Kate and Charlie and soon after is killed by "the Monster". | ||||
Gary Troup | Laird Granger and Frank Torres | Lost Experience, 1 | ||
Gary Troup is the New York author of the metafictional novel, Bad Twin,[7] and is Cindy's lover. He dies when he is sucked into the plane's turbine immediately after the plane crash.[8] | ||||
Vincent | Madison[9][10] and Pono[11] | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | ||
Vincent is Walt's yellow Labrador retriever, who is originally owned by Walt's stepfather, Brian Porter. Vincent first appears in the opening scene of the series when he encounters Jack in the jungle. He is left behind on the Island when Michael and Walt leave and, at Walt's request, remains in Shannon's care until she dies. He is later seen accompanying Sun. After the timeshifts and an attack on the survivors, Vincent ends up with Rose and Bernard in 1974. All three make a new home in the jungle and are found three years later by Sawyer, Juliet and Kate. Vincent is last seen at Jack's side in the series finale, recalling the opening scene of the pilot episode. | ||||
Neil "Frogurt" | Sean Whalen | 5, 6 | ||
Neil is first mentioned when Bernard is trying to make an S.O.S sign out of rocks. He is first seen in the mobisode "The Adventures of Hurley and Frogurt". He first appears in the TV series in the season 5 premiere, "Because You Left" and "The Lie". He is on the Zodiac raft with Daniel Faraday when the island shifts in time. He is killed in 1954 when he is shot by flaming arrows in the chest and back. |
The Others
Name | Actor | Season(s) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Jacob | Mark Pellegrino / Kenton Duty (young) | 5, 6 | ||
Jacob is The Others' highest authority and has resided on the island for nearly 2,000 years, most recently in a chamber in the foot of the statue of Tawaret, which is the statue's only remaining component. The backstory of Jacob is revealed in the episode "Across the Sea", which, according to the episode's script, took place in A.D. 44; it also revealed the mysterious Man in Black (a.k.a. the "smoke monster") is his fraternal twin and assumed his current supernatural form after an altercation with Jacob. Jacob is the protector of the Island and is able to visit various Flight 815 survivors prior to their arrival, speaking to and conspicuously touching several of the main characters. It seems he granted Richard Alpert's agelessness by touching him on the shoulder (episode "Ab Aeterno"). Ben initially claims to John Locke that he can communicate with Jacob but later reveals he is lying out of embarrassment for his inability to do so, despite being leader of The Others. The figure in the mysterious cabin, who reacted violently to John Locke's flashlight and later is heard by Locke to say "Help me", is at one point presumed to be Jacob; however, it is later implied it may have been his brother, trapped on the island in his "smoke monster" form by Jacob's presence and, as such, has been scheming to ensure Jacob's downfall. The Man in Black is able to assume the appearance of deceased bodies on the island and, through an elaborate series of events involving him arranging the death of, and subsequently impersonating, John Locke, eventually manipulates Ben into killing Jacob; this represents a "loophole" from the apparent "rule" the two brothers could not harm one another. However, Jacob returns as a ghost on the island and communicates with Hurley. Also, the Man in Black and Sawyer have seen an apparition of a younger Jacob on the present-day island. Eventually, the ghost of Jacob ceded control of the island to his successor, Jack Shephard. | ||||
Alexandra Rousseau | Tania Raymonde | 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | ||
Alexandra Rousseau is Danielle Rousseau's daughter, who is abducted by The Others 16 years prior to the crash of Flight 815. Ben is sent by Widmore to kill Danielle and her daughter, but he is unable to bring himself to do so and raises Alex as his own instead. She aids the crash survivors in various escapes and eventually defects from The Others. She dates Karl, though Ben tries to keep them apart because she would die if she became pregnant. She is later kidnapped and murdered by Keamy in front of Ben, in an attempt to make Ben surrender. | ||||
Mikhail Bakunin | Andrew Divoff | 3, 6 | ||
Mikhail Bakunin lives and works at the Flame Dharma station, and is responsible for The Others' communication with the outside world. He is notable for his one eye, usually wearing a black eye-patch. He is captured by a group of 815 survivors and says he remembers Locke from his past. He is responsible for Charlie's death, blowing a hole in the side of the underwater Looking Glass Station, drowning Charlie inside and killing himself in the process. In the alternate 2004, he works alongside Martin Keamy as an interpreter and has both eyes until he is shot and killed by Jin. | ||||
Karl Martin | Blake Bashoff | 3, 4 | ||
Karl Martin is Alex's boyfriend. In an attempt to prevent Karl from impregnating Alex, Ben imprisons him until he is rescued by Kate and Sawyer. Later, he joins the plane crash survivors, and is able to warn them of an impending raid by the Others. He is killed by the mercenaries from the Kahana in season four. | ||||
Bea Klugh | April Grace | 2, 3 | ||
Beatrice Klugh visits Michael during his forced stay with the Others and is present when they capture Jack, Kate and Sawyer. In season three, at the Dharma Flame station, she is found by Sayid, Locke and Kate and has Mikhail kill her to prevent her from being the survivors' prisoner. | ||||
Dogen | Hiroyuki Sanada | 6 | ||
Dogen is one of the leaders of the Others living in the Temple. He speaks Japanese, but knows English. According to Dogen, he does not like "the taste of the English words" and so he uses an interpreter. He tries to have Sayid killed because of the "infection" claiming Sayid, but Sayid murders him. Before coming to the Island, he was a banker, but when he got his son into a near fatal accident while driving drunk, Jacob offered to save him if Dogen came to the Island. He is drowned by Sayid, who had joined the Man in Black. | ||||
Danny Pickett | Michael Bowen | 2, 3 | ||
Danny Pickett is a violent member of the Others who supervises Kate and Sawyer while they are imprisoned. He is married to another Other named Colleen, who is shot by Sun. Enraged, Pickett takes his anger out on Sawyer, and nearly kills him before Juliet intervenes and shoots Pickett. | ||||
Eloise Hawking | Fionnula Flanagan (old), Alice Evans (middle age), Alexandra Krosney (young adult) | 3, 5, 6 | ||
Eloise Hawking is the caretaker of the L.A.-based Dharma station known as the Lamp Post, which can track the location of the island. Before she is revealed as such, she is introduced as a jewelry store employee who urges Desmond not to marry Penny, and explains the nature of time travel to him. Later, in the monastery Desmond briefly lives in, she also appears in a photograph in the head monk's office. Eloise is the mother of Daniel Faraday, the father being Charles Widmore, and, like Widmore, was formerly a member of the Others. The rat that Daniel trains to run a maze in Desmond's presence is named after her. She instructs Jack, Sun, and Ben on how to get back to the island. In 1977, she is responsible for the death of her own son, having shot him in the back while he was brandishing a gun at Richard Alpert. | ||||
Ethan Rom | William Mapother | 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 | ||
Dr. Ethan Rom is the child of Amy and Horace Goodspeed, and grew up in the Dharma Initiative in the 1970s. After the organization is purged by the Others, Ethan joins the latter group. When Flight 815 crashes on the island, he poses as a fuselage survivor until he is exposed by Hurley, at which point he abducts Claire and Charlie, unsuccessfully attempting to murder the latter. Claire is rescued, and Charlie then kills Ethan in "Homecoming". His name is an anagram of "Other Man."[12] In the alternate timeline he has his parents' last name and examines Claire when she has issues with her pregnancy. | ||||
Goodwin Stanhope | Brett Cullen | 2, 3, 4 | ||
Goodwin Stanhope is married to the Others' therapist, Harper Stanhope. He has an affair with Juliet, which dismays Ben because he too is in love with Juliet. Out of jealousy, Ben sends Goodwin on a mission to infiltrate the tail section survivors, knowing the dangers Goodwin will face. When Goodwin's identity is indeed discovered, Ana Lucia confronts and kills him. | ||||
Lennon | John Hawkes | 6 | ||
Lennon is one of the Others taking refuge in the Temple. He acts as translator for Dogen and was killed by Sayid when he ignored the ultimatum brought forth by The Man in Black. | ||||
Tom Friendly | M. C. Gainey | 1, 2, 3, 4 | ||
Tom Friendly is the second Other the Flight 815 survivors meet after Ethan, when he abducts Walt from the raft and blows it up to sabotage Michael, Jin and Sawyer's escape plan in the season one finale. Tom is later shown acting as a liaison between his group and Jack's in the second season, and in the third season he takes part in many of their operations and conflicts. Initially, Tom wore a distinctive fake beard, as part of the Others ruse to present themselves as uncivilized and undeveloped island natives. He is shot and killed by Sawyer despite having surrendered in the season three finale. In season four, he appears in a flashback episode; revealed to be gay, he recruits Michael as a spy on Widmore's freighter. | ||||
Ryan Pryce | Brian Goodman | 3 | ||
Ryan Pryce is the Others' chief of security after the death of Danny Pickett. Ben assigns him to lead a team charged with kidnapping all women among the 815 survivors. His team is ambushed by Sayid, Jin, and Bernard, but turns the tables and captures them. He dies when Hurley hits him with a Dharma Initiative van. |
Dharma Initiative members
Name | Actor | Season(s) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Amy | Reiko Aylesworth | 5 | ||
A member of the Dharma Initiative whose husband was murdered by the Hostiles. Sawyer and Juliet intervened and saved Amy's life. Three years later, Amy was married to Horace Goodspeed and pregnant with his child. When complications arose during the delivery, Juliet was forced to step in and deliver the child, a boy named Ethan. | ||||
Phil | Patrick Fischler | 5 | ||
Phil is a subordinate of Sawyer (under the alias LaFleur) and works as a security personnel for the Dharma Initiative. Phil discovers Sawyer and Kate handed a young Ben over to the Hostiles, so Sawyer ties him up in his house. He is discovered by Radzinsky and assists in trying to extract information from Sawyer by punching Juliet. Phil is killed during the incident at the Swan Station, when, during a last-minute attempt to get payback by killing Sawyer, several pieces of rebar are dragged by the electromagnetic energy and impale him. | ||||
Pierre Chang | François Chau | 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | ||
Pierre is the scientist in the Dharma Initiative orientation films, who also goes by the names Marvin Candle, Mark Wickmund, and Edgar Halliwax. He appears as an actual character in season 5, where it is revealed he is the father of Miles Straume. Daniel Faraday convinces him that his group is from the future, and gets him to stop the drilling at the Swan Station. Radzinsky, however, overrules him, and Chang's arm is injured when the electromagnetic energy is released. Miles saves his father's life when his arm is crushed underneath a metal component. In the 2004 "flash sideways", Miles mentions his father's work at a museum, and Chang later speaks at an archaeological benefit and gives Hurley Reyes a commemorative trophy. A puppet version built by Jim Henson's Creature Shop appears in Lost Untangled for the final season (played by Allan Trautman), with an appearance by the real Chang close to the end of the series. | ||||
Gerald and Karen DeGroot | Michael Gilday and Courtney Lavigne | 2 | ||
A couple, Doctoral candidates of the University of Michigan, who received funding by the Hanso Foundation in 1970 to create and operate the Dharma Initiative on the island. | ||||
Horace Goodspeed | Doug Hutchison | 3, 4, 5 | ||
The leader of the Dharma Initiative on the island during the 1970s. He is first seen assisting Roger Linus after his son Ben's birth, and he eventually recruits Roger into the Dharma Initiative. Later, Horace is romantically involved with Amy, with whom he fathers a child, a baby named Ethan. Horace also maintains diplomatic relations with the Others, led by Richard Alpert. Horace dies during the Purge, an event during which the Others kill the majority of the Dharma Initiative using poison gas, but he appears to John in a vision many years later. | ||||
Alvar Hanso | Ian Patrick Williams | 2 | ||
A former arms salesman and manufacturer, he is the enigmatic Danish leader of the Hanso Foundation. Hanso can be seen in the show via the orientation film in "Orientation". When Widmore is seen bidding on the Black Rock's ship's log, the log is said to have some connection to the Hanso family. When the Black Rock crashed on the island in 1867, the captain's name also was "Hanso". | ||||
Kelvin Joe Inman | Clancy Brown | 2 | ||
Kelvin is an intelligence operative for the United States government, and responsible for making Sayid torture his former commander in Iraq. Later, Kelvin joins the Dharma Initiative, and operates the Swan Station until Desmond accidentally kills him. | ||||
Roger Linus | Jon Gries | 3, 5, 6 | ||
Roger is Ben's alcoholic father and an employee of the Dharma Initiative. He is distant and cruel to Ben, often ridiculing him for indirectly killing his mother during childbirth, and physically abuses him. Ben later kills him in the Purge. Hurley discovers his corpse in a blue VW van in "Tricia Tanaka Is Dead". In sideways 2004 Roger is living with his son Ben in Los Angeles and is breathing off an oxygen tank apparently suffering from emphysema in "Dr. Linus". | ||||
Stuart Radzinsky | Eric Lange | 5 | ||
Radzinsky is head of research for the Dharma Initiative. In the 70s he worked in the Flame and designed the Swan. Years later he would live in the Swan and press the button every 108 minutes with Kelvin Joe Inman. Kelvin claimed Radzinsky killed himself by putting a shotgun in his mouth. Secretive, testy with everyone he encounters and trigger happy, Radzinsky is a control freak. |
Widmore and employees
Name | Actor | Season(s) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Charles Widmore | Alan Dale (old); Tom Connolly (young); David S. Lee (middle age) | 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | ||
A wealthy industrialist, Widmore is the father of Penelope Widmore and benefactor of Daniel Faraday (later revealed to be his son with Eloise Hawking). Widmore is Ben's predecessor as leader of the Others on the island. He is exiled by Ben, who claims Widmore is an enemy of the people on the island. Widmore admits to Daniel Faraday he staged the find of the false plane wreckage of Oceanic 815, and he sends the freighter Kahana to the Island in order to find and capture Ben, which is unsuccessful. Widmore disapproves of his daughter's relationship with Desmond Hume and is estranged from her. However, when Desmond is searching for Eloise Hawking, it is Widmore who informs him of her location in Los Angeles. He is still actively searching for the Island and tries to assist Locke in reuniting the Oceanic Six into going back to the Island. Later, he returns to the island with Desmond Hume, who he describes as a "failsafe". He gives this information to the Man in Black in return for a guarantee of safety for his daughter Penny, but Ben shoots him dead. | ||||
Penelope "Penny" Hume | Sonya Walger | 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | ||
Penny is Desmond's wife and the estranged daughter of Charles Widmore, as well as the half sister to Daniel Faraday. Before Desmond went missing and crashed on the island she was his longtime girlfriend, although they broke up shortly before. Nevertheless, Penny searched for any sign of him and was alerted to his location when the Swan DHARMA station exploded at the end of season two. At the end of season three she was able to communicate briefly with Charlie after the jamming of communications from the island was lifted. When Desmond made contact with Penelope during "The Constant" the communication was garbled just as she began to tell how she knew of the Island, but confirmed she knew of it. She was able to rescue Desmond, the Oceanic Six and Frank by boat at the end of season four. Desmond and Penny then married and proceeded to have a son, whom they also named Charlie. Ben Linus hunts Penelope down with intent to kill her in retaliation for his own daughter's death indirectly at the hands of Charles Widmore, but he changes heart when he sees she is now a mother. | ||||
Matthew Abaddon | Lance Reddick | 4, 5 | ||
Matthew Abaddon works for Widmore by "helping people get to where they're supposed to be". He is responsible for Locke going on his walkabout that ultimately leads him to the Island. After the crash, Matthew hires Naomi, Miles, Faraday, Charlotte, and Lapidus to go to the Island via the freighter Kahana. He visits Hurley at the mental institution after the Oceanic 6 rescue and tries to gather information on where the other survivors are. Matthew acts as a chauffeur for Locke after he leaves the Island, helping him in his mission to convince the Oceanic 6 to return to the Island. During Locke's mission, Matthew is shot dead by Ben who claims he is a "dangerous person". | ||||
Naomi Dorrit | Marsha Thomason | 3, 4, 5 | ||
Recruited by Matthew Abaddon and employed by Charles Widmore, Naomi is the leader of the group on a mission to capture Ben Linus and remove him from the island. She is the first to arrive on the island and tells the Oceanic survivors of the freighter Kahana. While she claims she is there to rescue Desmond Hume, her true mission is later revealed. Naomi dies of her wounds after Locke throws a knife into her back. | ||||
Martin Keamy | Kevin Durand | 4, 5, 6 | ||
Martin Keamy is the lead mercenary on the Kahana and is a former Marine. Keamy leads a team onto the island to find Ben, killing Karl and Danielle Rousseau and later executing Alex in front of Ben. Keamy eventually tracks Ben down and is stabbed to death by him. His death causes the freighter to explode via a fail-deadly switch that monitors his heartbeat. | ||||
Captain Gault | Grant Bowler | 4 | ||
Gault (first name unknown) is the captain of the freighter Kahana sent by Widmore to find the island and Benjamin Linus. He is originally seen as antagonistic and untrustworthy, but he later becomes an ally of Desmond and Sayid, allowing them the freighter's zodiac boat to ferry castaways from the island to the freighter after he becomes concerned at the lengths Keamy is willing to go to secure Ben. He is shot dead by Keamy after he confronts Keamy at gunpoint in "Cabin Fever". | ||||
Omar | Anthony Azizi | 4, 6 | ||
Omar is one of the mercenaries sent by Charles Widmore to the Island aboard the freighter Kahana. | ||||
Zoe | Sheila Kelley | 6 | ||
Zoe is a geophysicist recruited by Widmore to lead his scientific team. She is first encountered by Sawyer, when she tries to pass herself off as a survivor of Ajira 316. She later leads the team in kidnapping Jin and bringing him to Hydra Island. The Man in Black cuts her throat after Widmore orders her not to speak, his argument being that she serves no purpose if she can't speak. | ||||
George Minkowski | Fisher Stevens | 4, 6 | ||
George Minkowski was the communications officer aboard Widmore's freighter. Although he at first obstructs the survivors' attempts to contact the outside world, he later assists Desmond in calling Penny. He ultimately dies of temporal displacement on the boat. He later appears in the Sideways world as Desmond's driver, where he gives him the Oceanic 815 manifest. | ||||
Miscellaneous characters
Name | Actor | Season(s) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Aaron Littleton | Various; William Blanchette (Toddler version) | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | ||
Aaron is the son of Claire Littleton and her former boyfriend Thomas. Aaron is born on the island and leaves it, then being raised by Kate with the public perceiving the baby to be hers, to follow along with their almost entirely false version of what happened on the island. | ||||
Anthony Cooper | Kevin Tighe | 1, 2, 3, 6 | ||
Anthony Cooper is a ruthless con man, John Locke's biological father and the man who conned Sawyer's parents, leading to their deaths. Cooper cons Locke into donating a kidney to him before abandoning him. He later comes to make amends with Locke when he convinces Locke to help him retrieve money he owes to a couple of heavies. When Locke begins to interfere with one of his schemes, Cooper pushes Locke out of an eighth-story window, paralyzing him. Cooper is later brought to the Island by the Others, and Sawyer kills him as revenge for the death of his parents. In the flash sideways world, he is in a vegetative state following an accident that also paralyzed Locke. | ||||
Bram | Brad William Henke | 5, 6 | ||
Bram is a mysterious person who seems to oppose Widmore's organization. He appeared to Miles in 2004 and asked him not to go to the island. Bram is also onboard Ajira Flight 316 and has an unknown tie with Ilana. They've both asked the enigmatic question, "What lies in the Shadow of the Statue?". Bram was killed by Jacob's nemesis, The Man in Black, in the form of the smoke monster. | ||||
Caesar | Saïd Taghmaoui | 5 | ||
Caesar boards the Ajira Flight 316 along with the returning Oceanic survivors, and when the plane makes an emergency landing on the Hydra Island, he interacts with Ben, Frank, Locke and Ilana. He finds a sawed-off shotgun in Ben's old office and shows it to Ben, who later steals the weapon and uses it to shoot Caesar. | ||||
Christian Shephard | John Terry | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | ||
Christian Shephard, Jack's father, works as the chief of surgery at St. Sebastian Hospital. He loses his medical license when Jack reveals to the authorities that Christian performed surgery on a pregnant woman while drunk, causing her death. Christian then heads to Australia with Ana Lucia in tow to hunt down his daughter Claire, whom he is subsequently barred from seeing. He dies in Australia after days of drinking, after having first met and having a heart-to-heart with Sawyer. His body is being brought back to L.A. by Jack for his funeral when the plane crashes, but when the coffin is later recovered on the Island, it is mysteriously empty. Christian has appeared multiple times on the Island to many different characters, including Jack, Claire, Locke, Hurley, Miles, Michael and even Vincent. He is connected somehow to either Jacob or Jacob's rival, a connection that became less clear when it was revealed that Jacob, whose cabin Christian had been seen in, hadn't actually been at the cabin for some time, but somebody else had. Christian also appears in the well when John is trying to move the island. After the Ajira flight crash, he also advises Sun and Frank that Jin and the others left behind, are now living in 1977. In the season 6 episode, The Last Recruit, it is revealed the Man in Black was responsible for Christian's appearances on the island. | ||||
Diane Janssen | Beth Broderick | 1, 2, 3, 4 | ||
The estranged mother of Kate, she turns Kate in to the police after Kate kills Diane's husband and Kate's father, Wayne. Diane never forgives Kate, but decides not to testify at Kate's trial once Kate returns home as part of the Oceanic Six. | ||||
Nour Abbed (Nadia) Jazeem | Andrea Gabriel | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | ||
Nour Abbed Jazeem, a childhood friend of Sayid's, becomes involved in an insurgency opposed to Saddam Hussein. Nadia is imprisoned and interrogated by Sayid, but he lets her escape. She travels to the West, and in doing so comes in contact with both Charlie and Locke. When Sayid leaves the island, they get married, but shortly after she is murdered. In Season 6, when Sayid doesn't crash on the island, she is married to Sayid's brother. With him, she has two kids, a boy and a girl. | ||||
Jae Lee | Tony Lee | 2, 3 | ||
After teaching Sun English, Jae Lee has an affair with her and as a result, her father sends Jin to kill him. Jin instead tells him to leave Korea forever, but Jae commits suicide by jumping from his apartment building. | ||||
Cassidy Phillips | Kim Dickens | 2, 3, 5 | ||
Cassidy is a recently divorced woman whom Sawyer cons, even though he loves her. Cassidy then goes to Iowa and accidentally meets Kate. Cassidy later has Sawyer arrested and visits him in jail, where she tells him they have a daughter together - Clementine. After Kate returns from the Island, she tells Cassidy the truth about everything that happened on the Island and gives her some of her settlement money from Oceanic Airlines, in order for Kate to keep her promise she made to Sawyer, to look after Clementine. | ||||
Danielle Rousseau | Mira Furlan; Melissa Farman (younger) | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | ||
Danielle Rousseau is a member of a multi-national scientific research expedition whose boat breaks down and who become stranded on the island in 1988. She records a SOS message (in her native French) that continually repeats for 16 years, until the crash of Flight 815. Pregnant when she arrives on the island, and slowly becoming mad, she gives birth to Alex after killing her team because they had gotten "sick" as a result of contact with the monster, though Danielle later comes to blame the Others. Baby Alex is kidnapped soon after by the Others. Rousseau, having been found by Sayid living in seclusion, occasionally helps the Flight 815 survivors. She is shot and killed in an ambush along with Karl while leading Alex to the Temple on Ben's orders. In the fifth season, Jin, who has traveled back in time, meets Rousseau and her crew after he drifts to the Island on the wreckage of the exploded freighter. | ||||
Sarah Shephard | Julie Bowen | 1, 2, 3 | ||
Sarah is involved in a car crash with Shannon's father. Jack performs surgery on her, but informs her that she will never walk again. However, she is miraculously healed. They fall in love and marry, but some time later, Sarah has an affair and divorces Jack. Sometime after the crash survivors are rescued, it is revealed she is pregnant. | ||||
Geronimo Jackson | ||||
Geronimo Jackson has been referenced in six episodes of Lost as well as in The Lost Experience. The producers of Lost have asserted that Geronimo Jackson was a genuine, but obscure, 1970s rock band, which released one album entitled Magna Carta. Aside from sources relating to Lost, there is no evidence for the existence of this band.[13] A search of the US Patent and Trademark Office online database [14] lists "Geronimo Jackson" as a word mark owned by Disney Enterprises, valid for all types of housewares, school supplies, stationery, etc. The mark was filed on January 22, 2009. In "The Hunting Party", a Geronimo Jackson album is found by Charlie and Hurley while they are going through all of the gramophone records in The Swan. The band is also referenced in the episodes "The Whole Truth", "Further Instructions", "This Place is Death", "LaFleur", on a poster in John Locke's locker in "Cabin Fever" and at Hurley's birthday party in "There's No Place Like Home". There is a Geronimo Jackson poster in the backgroup when Jack, Kate and Hurley are in the dining hall in He's Our You. A single on iTunes called "Dharma Lady" has surfaced by the band and appears as a song in the film Dear John. "Dharma Lady" was made available to players of the video game series Rock Band through the Rock Band Network, shortly after the airing of the Lost series finale.[15] Geronimo Jackson is actually San Diego based band, The Donkeys.[16] |
Minor recurring off-island characters
Name | Actor | Main character crossover(s) | Season(s) |
---|---|---|---|
Sam Austen | Lindsey Ginter | Kate's stepfather, Sayid's captor | 2 |
Tom Brennan | Mackenzie Astin (adult) Tanner Maguire (child) | Kate's childhood sweetheart | 1, 5 |
Dr. Douglas Brooks | Bruce Davison | Hurley's doctor | 2, 6 |
Rachel Carlson | Robin Weigert (adult) Savannah Lathem (child) | Juliet's sister | 3, 5 |
Teresa Cortez | Rachel Ticotin | Ana Lucia's mother and boss | 2 |
Chrissy | Meilinda Soerjoko | Some crash survivors' ticket agent | 1, 2 |
JD | John Dixon | Flight attendant in the Oceanic 815 | 1 |
Charlie Hume | Marvin DeFreitas | Desmond and Penny's son | 5 |
Wayne Janssen | James Horan | Kate's biological father | 2 |
Omer Jarrah | Cas Anvar (adult) Xavier Raabe-Manupule (child) | Sayid's brother | 5, 6 |
Mary Jo | Brittany Perrineau | Sawyer's girlfriend, Hurley's lottery vendor | 1 |
Mr. Kwon | John Shin | Jin's father, Sun's father-in-law | 1, 3 |
Nurse Susie Lazenby | Grisel Toledo | Hurley's nurse | 2, 4, 5, 6 |
Carole Littleton | Susan Duerden | Claire's mother, Aaron's grandmother | 3, 4, 5 |
Lindsey Littleton | Gabrielle Fitzpatrick | Claire's aunt | 2, 3 |
Susan Lloyd | Tamara Taylor | Michael's girlfriend, Walt's mother | 1, 2 |
Emily Annabeth Locke | Swoosie Kurtz (adult) Holland Roden (teenager) | Locke's mother | 1, 4 |
Richard Malkin | Nick Jameson | Claire's psychic, Mr. Eko's acquaintance | 1, 2 |
Jason McCormack | Aaron Gold | Ana Lucia's attacker and later victim | 2 |
Michael's mother | Starletta DuPois | Michael's mother, Walt's grandmother | 4 |
Michelle | Michelle Arthur | Flight attendant in the Oceanic 815 | 1 |
Ray Mullens | Nick Tate | Employer of Kate's (later turns her in to Marshal Edward Mars) | 1 |
Randy Nations | Billy Ray Gallion | Locke's supervisor, Hurley's former supervisor | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 |
Helen Norwood | Katey Sagal | Locke's former girlfriend | 2, 6 |
Andrea (Nurse) | Julie Ow | Locke (nurse), Jack's co-worker | 1 |
Liam Pace | Neil Hopkins (older), Zack Shada (younger) | Charlie's elder brother | 1, 2, 3, 6 |
Megan Pace | Multiple | Charlie's mother | 2 |
Simon Pace | Robin Atkin Downes, John Henry Canavan | Charlie's father | 2, 3 |
Ji Yeon Kwon | Jaymie Kim | Sun and Jin's daughter | 3, 4, 5, 6 |
Woo-Jung Paik | Byron Chung | Sun's father, Jin's employer and father-in-law | 1, 3, 4 |
Mrs. Paik | June Kyoko Lu | Sun's mother | 2, 4, 5 |
Carmen Reyes | Lillian Hurst | Hurley's mother | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 |
David Reyes | Cheech Marin | Hurley's father | 3, 4, 5 |
Adam Rutherford | Uncredited | Shannon's father, Boone's stepfather, Jack's patient and the perpetrator of his future wife's car accident | 2 |
David Shephard | Dylan Minnette | Jack and Juliet's son in the flash-sideways | 6 |
Margo Shephard | Veronica Hamel | Jack's mother | 1, 4, 6 |
Marc Silverman | Zack Ward (older) | Jack's friend | 1 |
Leonard Simms | Ron Bottitta | Hurley's friend | 1, 2 |
Big Mike Walton | Michael Cudlitz | Ana Lucia's partner, Hurley's interrogator | 2, 4 |
Yemi | Adetokumboh M'Cormack | Mr. Eko's brother | 2, 3 |
Kevin Callis | Nathan Fillion | Kate's husband | 3 |
Reception
Entertainment Weekly praised the show's fourth season for its "captivating minor characters (tortured Sayid, scheming Juliet, savvy Ben)".[17] In May 2006, McFarlane Toys announced recurring lines of character action figures and released the first series in November 2006, with the second series being released July 2007.[18]
References
- Goddard, Drew (writer) & Vaughan, Brian K. (writer) & Williams, Stephen (director), "Confirmed Dead". Lost, ABC. Episode 2, season 4. Aired on February 7, 2008.
- "Before They Were Lost". Lost: The Complete First Season (Documentary). Buena Vista Home Entertainment.
- O'Connor, Mickey (January 12, 2010). "Lost: Harold Perrineau, Cynthia Watros to Return for Final Season". Seattle Post Intelligencer. Retrieved January 12, 2010.
- Malcom, Shawna (May 30, 2008). "Harold Perrineau Dishes on his Lost Exit (Again)". TV Guide. Retrieved May 30, 2008.
- Godwin, Jennifer (July 25, 2009). "Everything You Need to Know From the Lost Events at Comic-Con". E!. Archived from the original on July 26, 2009. Retrieved July 26, 2009.
- Terry, Paul; Tara Bennett (October 2010). Lost Encyclopedia. Dorling Kindersley. ISBN 978-0-7566-6594-4. Page 85
- Memmott, Carol, (May 2, 2006) "Bad Twin is Lost in Translation Archived 2011-05-23 at the Wayback Machine", USA Today. Retrieved on June 5, 2006.
- Lee, Felicia R., (May 27, 2006) "Bad Twin, a Novel Inspired by Lost, Makes the Bestseller Lists Archived 2017-02-24 at the Wayback Machine", The New York Times. Retrieved on October 21, 2007.
- Tsai, Michael, (November 11, 2004) "It's Doggone Great Being Part of Lost Archived 2014-08-21 at the Wayback Machine," Honolulu Advertiser. Retrieved on July 29, 2006.
- Shawna Malcom. "Lost: The Ultimate Guide" TV Guide Vol. 53, No. 5, January 30, 2005, Pg. 22-28,
- Nichols, Katherine, (March 25, 2007) "Chewing the Scenery Archived 2008-06-14 at the Wayback Machine," Honolulu Star Bulletin. Retrieved on March 30, 2007.
- Keck, William (February 11, 2005). "Evil Ethan of 'Lost' booted off the island". USA Today. Archived from the original on July 19, 2009. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
- "Geronimo Jackson". Archived from the original on 2009-05-01. Retrieved 2011-01-29.
- "United States Patent and Trademark Office". Archived from the original on 2018-02-01. Retrieved 2021-10-14.
- Klepek, Patrick (2010-05-25). "Lost Tracks Confirmed For Rock Band". G4TV. Retrieved 2010-05-28.
- Malinowski, Erik (April 19, 2010). "As Lost Ends, Creators Explain How They Did It, What's Going On". Wired. Archived from the original on December 6, 2013. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
- Aubry D'Arminio, "TV on DVD," Entertainment Weekly 1026 (December 19, 2008): 58.
- Keck, William (May 23, 2006). "These characters are toying with us". USA Today. Archived from the original on August 16, 2006. Retrieved June 20, 2006.