More the female than the blondeness, I think, since both leading ladies on the show are uber-blonde.
Although, in my head, I'm imagining the hilarious scenario of the David Anders' Kensei/Kane and this Elle turning out to be the same person. *G* "Sexy, mysterious" is almost exactly the words used to describe Kane. And for her to be connected to so many characters, and only be a guest star, I imagine this "Elle" must be veeerry important.
I should probably explain that I have a theory that Kensei in medieval Japan and Kane in the modern day (both characters who were associated with Anders) are actually the one "hero".
The Instructions for American Servicemen in Australia During World War II facsimile is available as well. It's quite interesting -- it's a reasonably fair outsider's snapshot of life in Australia c.1942.
I remember reading snippets of a similar manual for Australian soldiers once in a history class - not a facsimile, but someone's actual war memorabilia - although I don't remember whether it was from WWII or Vietnam.
Not sure - I think Bell is a good actress who is, unfortunately, easily type-casted because of her looks. (Blonde, pretty, but not particularly striking.) So I'm glad to see her working in anything that's not a teen horror flick. On the other hand, Heroes doesn't have a great history with its female characters (how is it that two brunettes died, while the remaining two, Candice and Angela, are evil?).
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Although, in my head, I'm imagining the hilarious scenario of the David Anders' Kensei/Kane and this Elle turning out to be the same person. *G* "Sexy, mysterious" is almost exactly the words used to describe Kane. And for her to be connected to so many characters, and only be a guest star, I imagine this "Elle" must be veeerry important.
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