Shannon Rutherford is a
fictional character played by
Maggie Grace on the
ABC drama
television series Lost, which chronicles the lives of
the survivors of a plane crash in the
South
Pacific. Shannon is introduced in the
pilot episode as the stepsister of fellow crash
survivor
Boone Carlyle (
Ian Somerhalder). She is a series regular
until her funeral in "
Collision".
For most of her time on the Island, she is unhelpful and spends
much of her time sunbathing. She forms a relationship with another
survivor from the plane crash,
Sayid
Jarrah (
Naveen Andrews).
During the casting process, she was compared to
Paris Hilton.
Naveen
Andrews, who plays the character Sayid on the show, had the
idea of encouraging the writers to write a romantic relationship
between his character and Shannon into the story. Critics found her
to be an unsympathetic character. Nonetheless, Grace received a
Teen Choice Award nomination for
her role as Shannon.
Arc
Prior to the crash
When Shannon is eight, her father marries Sabrina Carlyle (
Lindsay Frost), and she spends much of her
adolescence with her stepbrother, Boone. She studies ballet and, as
she gets older, teaches dance classes to young girls. When she is
eighteen, Shannon's father dies in a car crash. He did not have a
will prepared, so all of his money and property goes to his wife.
Sabrina refuses to help Shannon financially, despite Shannon
winning a prestigious yet non-paying internship to the
Martha Graham Dance Company in New York.
Unable to come up with the money herself, Shannon moves to France
for a short time to work as an
au pair.
Shannon later forms a plan to con her stepbrother,
Boone Carlyle, into giving her some of the
inheritance she rightly deserved. Playing on her knowledge of
Boone's love for her, she makes it appear that her boyfriend Brian
abuses her. Boone pays Brian to leave her, and Shannon plans to
secretly take half the money.
During one con in Sydney
, her
"abusive boyfriend" ruins Shannon's ruse after Boone cuts him a
check. Boone storms off to his hotel room and plans to
return to the States. When Shannon's boyfriend takes off with all
of the money, Shannon goes to Boone's hotel room in Sydney, drunk,
and Boone allows her to seduce him. After they have slept together,
Shannon tells Boone that things will go back to the way they had
been before. He expresses anger because, as always, they both know
that she is in control of their situation/ relationship. The
following morning at the Sydney airport,
Sayid Jarrah approaches Shannon, asking her to
watch his bag for him. She deftly obliges, but soon leaves it
unattended. Before the doomed Flight 815 takes off, Shannon
rummages through her hand-luggage for her
asthma inhaler, which Boone casually hands to her.
She smiles, the platonic love she has for Boone briefly relieving
her of her misery. Eight hours into the flight, only moments before
the crash, Shannon and Boone are momentarily seen as
Charlie Pace stumbles through their row.
After the crash
Upon landing on the Island, she decides to join Sayid on a hike to
transmit a distress signal, after she and Boone have an argument
about her selfishness. When they discover a
French looped signal already being
transmitted, Shannon's knowledge of the language is used to
translate it. Later, Shannon has an asthma attack, but her inhalers
are nowhere to be found.
Sun (
Yunjin Kim) cures her, by using eucalyptus plants
to help her breathing. Because of her selfish and manipulative
behavior, Boone brands Shannon useless. Sayid enlists her to help
translate the maps that belong to the French woman who made the
radio transmission,
Danielle
Rousseau (
Mira Furlan). Shannon and
Sayid soon form a romantic relationship. After returning from a
romantic night along the beach with Sayid, she learns Boone has
died after falling from a great height. At his funeral, Shannon
does not speak, but allows Sayid to talk instead. Shannon holds
Locke (
Terry O'Quinn) responsible for Boone's death,
and asks Sayid to take action. When he refuses, she steals the key
to the gun case from
Jack Shephard
(
Matthew Fox) and holds Locke at
gunpoint in the jungle. When Rousseau arrives on the beach one
morning to warn the camp of the
Others' imminent arrival, Shannon prepares to
migrate to the caves with the rest of the group. Before leaving on
the raft the survivors have built,
Walt
Lloyd (
Malcolm David
Kelley) gives Shannon guardianship of his dog,
Vincent,
as a means to help her recover from her loss.
At the start of
season two, Shannon
loses Vincent in the jungle. Whilst searching for him, she is
shocked to find Walt standing before her, dripping wet. However,
when Sayid finds her, Walt disappears. Over the next few days,
Sayid builds Shannon a shelter on the beach. He brings her to it
and they soon decide to sleep together for the first time. Sayid
leaves to get a bottle of water for Shannon and in his absence,
Shannon again sees a vision of Walt, standing in the shelter with
her. Sayid brushes off her experience as a dream. She uses Vincent
to try and find Walt, only for him to lead her to Boone's grave.
After a while, she takes Vincent into the jungle again, with Sayid
in pursuit. As it starts to rain, Sayid and Shannon admit their
feelings for each other before both seeing Walt. Shannon runs after
him, only to be accidentally shot by
Ana Lucia (
Michelle Rodriguez), who mistakes her for
an Other. She dies moments later in Sayid's arms.
Personality
During the casting process, Shannon was compared to Paris Hilton,
and
Lost producer
Damon
Lindelof described her as a "bitch." Eirik Knutzen of
The Repository found
Shannon to be "a self-centered twit," and she was also called a
"spoiled daddy's girl." Boone describes her as a "self-centered
little bitch." On her first night on the Island, Shannon is
confident that they will be rescued, refusing to help the others
organize the luggage. She does not care that
Rose (
L.
Scott Caldwell) has lost her
husband, and spends much of her time sunbathing. She manipulates
Charlie (
Dominic Monaghan) into catching a fish for
her, after which Boone apologizes on behalf of Shannon for "using
this poor guy like [she] use[s] everyone else." In "
Whatever the Case May Be," Boone
says to Shannon, "Don't you see the way they look at us around
here? They don't take us seriously. We're a joke. I'm trying to
contribute something. You're just – you're useless." This motivates
her to help Sayid translate maps he obtained from Rousseau.
Development
The producers were looking for someone who had a "Paris Hilton
quality" to play Shannon, but she could not just be shallow, as the
storyline would require more than that. A lot of women were
auditioned before the producers finally settled on Maggie Grace.
She was written to be a bitch in the first season as the producers
needed a character they could use to create opposition and
conflict. The producers thought it would be interesting for there
to be more to Shannon and Boone's relationship than just Boone's
possessive brotherly interest. They came up with the idea for them
to be unrelated stepsiblings, who have a romantic encounter, which
became the twist for their backstory. When Boone is killed at the
end of season one, it forces Shannon into a more adult existence on
the Island. Grace noted Boone is "the only person that ever really
knew and loved Shannon, in spite of herself. Of course, losing him,
especially with so much left unsaid and unresolved, will change her
irrevocably." This freed her up to develop her relationship with
Sayid. Naveen Andrews, who plays Sayid, came up with the idea for
Shannon and Sayid relationship. He thought, "What would really
shock Middle-America? What if Sayid was to have a relationship with
a woman that looked like
Miss America?
The most unlikely pairing… to come completely from left field."
This pairing made Shannon "less flighty... more of a person to be
reckoned with." According to
Lost producer
Carlton Cuse, "The relationships [the audience]
expect on the show are not necessarily the ones that we [the
producers] necessarily are going to give you, but we want to try to
find ways in which characters that you don't expect to kind of
connect to one another to connect in ways that are kind of
surprising."
Shannon's flashbacks in "Abandoned" were used to allow the audience
to get to a "really emotional level with the character, [to]
finally understand ... why she was the way she was." Her death was
planned before the start of season two, as the producers wanted the
survivors in the tail section of the plane, and the survivors of
the fuselage to be forced to come together under difficult
circumstances. Her death was also used to "spin Sayid off in
another direction." Damon Lindelof commented "It's sort of
understood on
Lost that that's what you sign up for.
There's going to be constant character turnover, because the stakes
on the Island are life-or-death." Lindelof felt an "intense,
emotional sense of loss" when watching her death. In her post-death
appearance in "Collision," Maggie Grace was credited as "special
guest star." She received the same billing when she returned in
season three, appearing in
Nikki and Paulo's flashbacks. Carlton Cuse
noted "it was really fun for us to actually have Boone and Shannon
reemerge in the stories."
Reception
Chris Carabott from
IGN was critical of both
Shannon and her relationship with Boone before the plane crash,
commenting "Shannon's ability to 'sort-of' understand French and
Boone's lifeguard training have had little impact and as characters
they bring very little to the table. There are also too many more
intriguing storylines and characters around them that deserve
attention." On their relationship he added, "except for the final
act, when they finally succumb to their lust for one another ...
There's nothing exciting here or anything that will ultimately be
built upon in the
Lost universe." In a later review, for
the episode following Boone's death, he commented "[Boone and
Shannon] were both left with very little to do this season.
Especially Shannon, whose high point of usefulness was deciphering
Rousseau's documents for Sayid. Well, Maggie Grace is given an
opportunity to shine and she does an acceptable job as the
distraught sibling who is now looking for someone to blame for
Boone's death. We finally get to see some real depth to Shannon's
character and her quest for vengeance is believable." According to
Melanie McFarland of the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer,
Shannon is "the least deserving of sympathy of all the previously
known survivors."
C. K. Sample, III, from
AOL's
TV Squad, joked, "Boone's mother is the devil. How
else to make us sympathize with Shannon right before killing her
off of the show." Virginia Rohan of
The Seattle Times thought the "death
of troubled Shannon, just as she was becoming more likable and had
found love with Sayid, was sadder than the first-season death of
her stepbrother, Boone. Still, it would grieve me far more to lose
Jack, Kate, Sawyer, Locke, Sun or Jin." Maureen Ryan of the
Chicago Tribune felt fans
echoed this view, describing their reaction as "muted," as they
were more angry at Ana Lucia for shooting Shannon. Maggie Grace
co-won the
2005
Screen Actors Guild Award
for "
Best
Ensemble - Drama Series. She was also nominated for the Teen
Choice Award for "Choice TV Breakout Performance - Female," but
lost out to
Desperate
Housewives'
Eva
Longoria.
References
- "Before They Were Lost." Lost: The Complete First
Season, Buena Vista Home
Entertainment. September 6, 2005. Featurette, disc 7.
- "Lost on Location - Hearts and Minds." Lost: The Complete First
Season, Buena Vista Home
Entertainment. Featurette, disc 7. Released on September 6,
2005.
- Keveney, Bill, (April 7, 2006) " Death for Boone, Birth for Claire on
Lost," USA Today. Retrieved on December 1,
2008.
- Lindelof,
Damon & Cuse, Carlton, (November 14, 2005) "Official
Lost Audio Podcast November 14 2005," ABC.
- "Lost on Location - Abandoned." Lost: The Complete Second Season -
The Extended Experience, Buena Vista Home
Entertainment. Featurette, disc 7. Released on September 5,
2006.
- Lindelof,
Damon & Cuse, Carlton, (March 26, 2007) "Official
Lost Audio Podcast March 26 2007," ABC.
- Carabott, Chris, (September 5, 2008) " IGN: Hearts and Minds Review," IGN. Retrieved on October 28, 2008.
- Carabott, Chris, (October 30, 2008) " IGN: The Greater Good Review," IGN. Retrieved on December 2, 2008.
- McFarland, Melanie, (November 29, 2005) " Shedding Light on a Lost Villain,"
Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
Retrieved on October 16, 2008.
- SAG, (January 29, 2006) " Screen
Actors Guild Honors Outstanding Film and Television Performances in
13 Categories at the 12th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards,"
Screen Actors Guild Awards.
Retrieved on April 22, 2008.