Lauren Reed

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alias character
Melissa George as Lauren Reed.
Lauren Reed
Gender Female
Affiliation(s) NSC
The Covenant
Held ranks Liaison
Field agent
Current status Deceased
Portrayed by Melissa George

Lauren Reed is a fictional character played by Melissa George in the Alias television series. She is Michael Vaughn's wife on the third season of the show.

[edit] Bio

Lauren Reed is the NSC liaison to the CIA and works in the CIA office where both Sydney Bristow and Vaughn do. She was introduced at the beginning of the third season of the show as Vaughn's wife, having married him during Sydney's two year absence under the control of The Covenant.

Lauren and Sydney have an antagonistic relationship from the start, with Lauren in particular feeling threatened that her husband's former lover is now back in his life. Eventually, Sydney and Lauren start co-operating and even go on a couple of missions together. During one mission, Lauren shoots and kills a man, an act which apparently leaves her distraught.

However, it is soon revealed that Lauren is actually a double agent for The Covenant, working to sabotage the CIA's work against the criminal organization and is, contrary to her air of innocence, a cold-blooded killer. Her first known mission for the Covenant was the assassination of Andrian Lazarey. She was tasked to murder her own father, a United States Senator, when he is given evidence of her true affiliations. Lauren couldn't bring herself to pull the trigger. Lauren's mother Olivia stepped in and pulled the trigger herself, revealing that she too is an agent of The Covenant. Lauren is also quite the adulterer, and becomes involved (both personally and professionally) with Julian Sark, who is also now working for The Covenant. Eventually, her true nature is discovered by the CIA and she becomes a marked woman with both Sydney and Vaughn wanting to kill her, but this doesn't stop her from infiltrating CIA headquarters disguised as Sydney, shooting Marshall Flinkman, and causing major damage to the place before escaping.

In the season three finale, Lauren is confronted by Sydney and nearly defeats the agent during vicious hand-to-hand combat, but she is shot by Vaughn before she can do so. Before her death, she reveals to Sydney the location of a safe deposit box containing vital information about Sydney's family. This information turns out to be evidence that Jack Bristow was authorized by the CIA to kill his ex-wife, Sydney's mother Irina Derevko, an order he apparently carried out.

For reasons not yet explained, the CIA determined that Lauren's death should not be made public knowledge, and the double agent's remains are housed in a special high-security crypt.

In the fourth season episode, "A Man of His Word", Lauren's corpse was shown in the CIA crypt after Sark demands to see her body. Melissa George makes a cameo appearance as the dead woman.

[edit] Fan Reaction

The character of Lauren Reed received quite a bit of animosity from fans of the show, according to series creator J.J. Abrams, in part because she disrupted the romance between Sydney and Vaughn. However, Abrams indicated that the revelation of Lauren being a turncoat was planned from the beginning and was not because of fan response. [1]

Alias
Episodes: Season 1 | Season 2 | Season 3 | Season 4 | Season 5
Characters

Jack Bristow | Sydney Bristow | Francie Calfo | McKenas Cole | Gordon Dean
Elena Derevko | Irina Derevko | Katya Derevko | Marcus Dixon | Anna Espinosa
Marshall Flinkman | Rachel Gibson | Thomas Grace | FBI Asst. Dir. Kendall
Alexander Khasinau | Andrian Lazarey | Dr. Zhang Lee | Kelly Peyton | Milo Rambaldi
Lauren Reed | Renée Rienne | Nadia Santos | Julian Sark | Arvin Sloane | Emily Sloane
Will Tippin | Isabelle Vaughn | Michael Vaughn | Eric Weiss

Organizations

Alliance of Twelve | Authorized Personnel Only | The Covenant
Department of Special Research | K-Directorate | Omnifam | The Shed/Prophet Five

Technologies & Projects

Mueller device | Project Christmas | Project Helix

In other languages