News from Hawaii's
parishes and schools
 Sections Minimize

    

2010 school tuition
and enrollment chart


Pages for the
young adult Catholic

Our very own award-
winning columnist

Stories about Saint Damien de Veuster
Blessed Damien
Blessed Marianne
 
 2008-09 Directory Minimize

      

 Media Galleries Minimize

    

 Links Minimize

      

 ‘Lost’ finds ‘heaven’ on Sacred Hearts Academy campus Minimize
‘Lost’ finds ‘heaven’ on Sacred Hearts Academy campus

 

HCH photo/Anna Weaver

Sacred Hearts Academy Chapel.

 

CNS photo/Mario Perez, courtesy ABC

John Terry walks out the door of a church in a scene from the series finale of the ABC TV show Lost.

‘Lost’ finds ‘heaven’ on Sacred Hearts Academy campus

The gateway to heaven is through the chapel doors at Sacred Hearts Academy in Kaimuki. Or so one could argue if he or she watched the series finale of the TV show “Lost,” on May 23. Several key scenes in the last episode were shot at the all-girls Catholic school.

The finale’s penultimate scene showed the major characters from the TV show’s six seasons reuniting after their deaths in a church before “moving on” to another life, as character Christian Shephard called it in the episode, named “The End.”

It is Shephard who opens the main church doors, guarded on each side by an angel statue (actually, holy water fonts). Through the doors comes a blazing stream of light that fills the church and engulfs all the waiting characters.

Several other scenes in the episode showed a coffin arriving at the front of the school grounds, characters talking in a lunch pavilion area outside the chapel, and Shephard and his son Jack talking in an office just outside the church.

Despite an attempt to make the scenes seem nondenominational, with Christian and Jack Shephard talking in an office filled with world religious symbols and a multi-faith stained glass window, many TV critics and fans have interpreted the church to be a sort of purgatory and all the characters as moving on to heaven, a very Christian ending to “Lost.”

Sacred Hearts Academy has a few “Lost” fans among its faculty and staff who never missed an episode and were thrilled to see their school featured so prominently in the “Lost” finale.

“When I watched it, I was laughing,” said Toni Normand, director of special programs. “I called my husband in and said, ‘Heaven is right outside of the chapel lanai!’”

“It was fun to think that all those actors were hanging out in our chapel,” said school counselor Lisa Vega. “It just feels special that they picked the final scene to be here with the whole cast.”

She and Normand joke that they can now go to heaven any time they’re on campus.

“Lost” filmed at Sacred Hearts Academy on March 25 and April 16 and 17. Resident manager and maintenance supervisor Misha Roytman was the only school employee at the Academy during filming. He said the “Lost” crew had tight security and kept any extra people from coming into the chapel during shooting.

“They were very polite but very strict with their own rules,” Roytman said. He got to peek around a corner to see a little filming but for the most part didn’t see any of the cast members.

School business manager Randy Iwashita was the go-between with the “Lost” staff as they planned to film at the school, and he said they were professional and cordial. “They asked to use the school cafeteria for a gathering,” he said.

The school was able to grant that and other accommodations, like moving faculty cars out of the front parking lot early on the afternoon before shooting. However, Iwashita said the school had to say no to the crew’s request to build a set near the chapel because of disruptions it would have caused to the school day.

Sacred Hearts Academy’s head of school, Betty White said the Academy doesn’t normally loan out its facilities but had made an exception for “Lost” last year when the chapel was used in season five’s episode “316.”

When “Lost” production staff approached the school earlier this year about filming again at the Academy, White said it was providential timing. She had just received a pricey estimate on repair costs to one of the chapel’s large stained glass windows. In exchange for filming, “Lost” donated the needed amount for repairs. “It was as if God was helping us,” White said.


Posted on Friday, June 11, 2010 (Archive on Sunday, July 11, 2010)
Posted by pdownes  Contributed by pdownes
Return


Email Email this Article

  

 CNS Photo Minimize
CNS photo/Paul Haring
White flower pedals fall around U.S. Cardinal Bernard F. Law as he celebrates Mass at the Basilica of St. Mary Major to mark the feast of the church's dedication Aug. 5 in Rome. The dropping of flower pedals from the ceiling calls to mind the tradition t hat says Mary revealed where she wanted the church to be built through a snowfall in August 358.

    

 Catholic News Service Minimize

What is Catholic News Service?
Catholic News Service (CNS), the oldest and largest religious news service in the world, is a leading source of news for Catholic print and electronic media across the globe. With bureaus in Washington and Rome, as well as a global correspondent network, CNS since 1920 has set the standard in Catholic journalism.

      


Copyright 2008 by Hawaii Catholic Herald  Privacy Statement  Terms Of Use