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Archive for the 'actor profile' Category

Jul 01 2008

Transitioning From Child To Adult In Front Of The Camera…

We saw it with Drew Barrymore and then again, years later, with Lindsay Lohan, and perhaps most recently with Mary Kate Olsen.  Current “it” stars like the Jonas Brothers and Miley Cyrus will undoubtedly follow suit in the next few years.  They are child stars that want to turn more legit as they get older, hoping the fans that are, too, growing up will follow them into more adult ventures.  They take on roles in what they perceive as “serious, artsy” films; they change their look to try to separate themselves from their younger image; and they often take behind-the-scenes hybrid titles as producers to get taken more seriously.  Some fail; some succeed; some do one and then the other; and some fall into obscurity somewhere in the middle.  With squeaky-clean Nickelodeon star Josh Peck’s star-turn in this Friday’s gritty coming-of-age drama, The Wackness, he may just be another one in a long line, but undoubtedly he is just the first of this generation to test the waters.

 

When Josh Peck first came into tween girls’ consciousnesses in The Amanda Show almost a decade ago, he was a quick-witted, cheerful if chubby kid.  Well-groomed and seemingly polite in his real life, he was non-threatening enough to warrant Nickelodeon to offer him a starring role in a partially self-titled sitcom called Drake and Josh.  After three years acting alongside Drake Bell, who very quickly got the “teen heartthrob” title of the duo, both boys decided to go their separate ways and try to branch out as much as they could.  For Drake, that meant capitalizing on what was already working (the swoon factor) by turning to music and a small role as the cute older brother in Yours, Mine & Ours, but for Josh it meant completely reinventing himself, which is a risk for any actor to do, let alone one who had cultivated a very specific, very fickle fan following for a number of years.  After losing a bunch of weight, Peck looks like a new person and that will definitely be an advantage to transform him into the slang-slurring, drug dealing, kid from the wrong side of the city in his new venture.  For Peck, it is undoubtedly a pet project and has its roots in his own childhood, and that daring passion is not only something to be admired but also a recipe for success.

 

Peck may be out to prove he’s not just comic relief and can actually handle a meaty character piece, and he wouldn’t be alone in that.  Cole and Dylan Sprouse may be best known for their roles on the Disney Channel’s The Suite Life of Zack and Cody, but they have been working since they were babies, sharing the role of Patrick in Grace Under Fire, Julian in Big Daddy, and Ben in Friends.  As they’ve matured from elementary school-age to pre-teen, they’ve already expanded their horizons simply by branding themselves and creating a line of clothing and comic books.  In 2004, they took on one of those aforementioned artsy films with The Heart is Deceitful Above All Things, but the attempt was premature, as their youth and inexperience really showed through their one-note interpretation of the confused character.  It was just too much, too soon for such a jump in material, and with a script that was colorful with drugs, sex, cross-dressing, and violence, little girls and boys who watched them religiously on the Disney Channel certainly weren’t brought into the theaters.  Though it is only four years later, in terms of adolescent maturity that practically makes them and their fans brand new people, with new interests, new knowledge, and new boundaries.  Yet, the boys are regressing and returning to material made especially for the under ten crowd with The Kings of Appletown, a modern-day interpretation of “Tom Sawyer,” and a Suite Life movie.  Sure, they are exposing themselves to a whole new slew of young fans, but they are most likely alienating some of the ones who are now teenagers and ready to see the boys take on some high school comedies.

 

Miley Cyrus’s over-exposed (pun intended) photo spread in Vanity Fair was certainly an attempt to be looked at as a more mature star than the tween sensation she has recently become.  However, like with the Sprouse twins, it’s a blip on the radar because immediately after the one detour, she has reverted back to entertaining her typical crowd.  Her newest music video, “7 Things,” invites other young girls to share in her bubblegum pop, nonthreatening world.  She is holding onto childhood and those young fans with both hands, perhaps learning a deep lesson from that precocious pictorial. 

 

Jamie Lynn Spears started her career late in the game, especially compared with some of her peers, who have been acting since they were barely out of diapers.  Starting with a cameo in her big sister’s own acting debut, Crossroads, she went on to get primed for life as a young network star with a stint on the sketch comedy show All That.  After getting her feet wet and paying her dues, Spears was given her own series, Zoey 101, about a group of friends living on a boarding school campus.  Zoey placed the young characters in some very adult situations from the beginning, such as the mere fact that they live in dorms and wander the campus unsupervised and unsegregated from the opposite sex, and Jamie placed herself in a very adult situation when she got pregnant earlier this year, forcing her to take some time away from Hollywood now, even if it isn’t nearly as extended a break as perhaps it should be (she has already signed on to voice the title character in Unstable Fables; Goldilocks & Three Bears Show). 

Jesse McCartney is one tween star who has taken a few breaks in his career.  After spending his twelfth year on the daytime hit All My Children, he made a few guest appearances, but really didn’t pop back up again until the primetime soap Summerland in 2004.  During that peak of his intrigue to pre-pubescent girls, he released an album (“Beautiful Soul”) that couldn’t help but draw comparisons to Aaron Carter, both in similar sound and look for the young men.  Though he tried darkening his hair, he opted to take on voice-over work in animation and videogames rather than attempt any darker on-screen roles, which led many to assume he had no interest in appealing to a more mature audience.  And even though today he boasts the singer/songwriter title and has claimed he has written a track he wants Mariah Carey to release, “Departure,” his newest body of musical work is just as fluffy and simplistic as his first two, poking no holes in the theory that McCartney is today’s Peter Pan: he will rely on his floppy hair, freckles, and dimples to remain the Tiger Beat poster boy for as long as he possibly can.

 

With the increasingly critical eye of today’s audiences, let alone today’s youth, perhaps it would be best if the majority of these stars (emphasis on Spears) took a page out of Natalie Portman’s book, who once said that she didn’t care if it was the “popular” decision, but she was going to take some time off from acting and go to college.  She said it was more important to be smart than a movie star, and because in reality many child stars can’t get past the typecasting of their youth, perhaps the smartest thing they can do to have a shot at being a bona fide movie star in their adult career is to take some time away.  They need to learn who they are and what they want for themselves and their career away from the blinding lights and obscene paychecks or else it will be all too easy for them to just settle for roles that pigeonhole them due to past success.

 

Transitioning from child to adult in private and coming back a fresh, new person and in turn a fresh, new actor may be our advice, but one young star who probably wouldn’t agree is Shia LaBeouf.  Starring on Even Stevens when he was only thirteen labeled him as the curly-haired goofball who seemed to annoy more than draw admiration.  In 2006, just three years after his Disney Channel run came to an end, he had his own star turn in the meaty indie, A Guide To Recognizing Your Saints, where he played a foulmouthed confused kid from the streets, and suddenly casting directors saw him as a man (and more importantly a leading man) at only twenty years old.  Taking on psychological thrillers (Disturbia) and big budget action films (Transformers) even garnered him attention from Steven Spielberg, who has been so adamantly vouching for the young star’s talent and work ethic, it seems not even an odd, late night Walgreens arrest or a few smoking citations can hamper his plans as the first of his young peers to join the A-List (unlike how it ostracized Edward Furlong).  LaBeouf has certainly set the bar high for what can be accomplished (and it appears Peck hopes to follow in his footsteps), but now the pressure’s on to see if he can stay consistent for the rest of his career.  That’s a nearly impossible for thing for any actor to do, let alone ones who start so young!

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Jun 26 2008

Supporting Superhero: Jason Bateman

Published by danielletbd under actor profile Edit This

In the early part of his career, Jason Bateman was known as the cute sandy hair boy from the wholesome TV family. Beginning with Little House on the Prairie and taking it through Silver Spoons (where as the best friend character, he became part of the extended family) and Valerie, he wore that role like it was his own skin. Only as he aged (like with 2001’s Some of my Best Friends) did he start to include sarcasm into his portrayals, opening up a world of possibilities for him to steal scenes in a number of feature films.

In 2002’s The Sweetest Thing, Bateman’s crass, horndog brother was the perfect snort-worthy anecdote to Thomas Jane’s dry goofball. In a movie filled with overly dramatic and dislikeable characters, Bateman brought a level of sincerity to the silliness, making it impossible not to laugh out loud when he got escorted out of the club, told his brother not to “be gay in God’s house,” or sang a remarkably sober wedding band version of “Eternal Flame.” Where it would have been easy for a lesser actor to get lost in the female buddy comedy, Bateman’s knack for comic timing and delivery was actually a positive for the film as a whole, taking the tone down a notch and making at least one relationship (that between him and Jane) feel believable. While the film itself certainly didn’t break any records, it set Bateman on track for a long and lucrative big screen career.

As Pepper Brooks in 2004’s Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story, Bateman was back playing the cocky, pompous, self-assured d-bag one can only love in the movies. His sideline commentary was completely nonsensical, as he chomped on gum and grinned like he just didn’t care that Gary Cole was shooting him annoyed looks from the adjacent seat. His carefree attitude and wide smile made you love him, and every time you shook your head in response to some inane comment he made, you laughed, too.

Playing a character (Rip Reed) pent up in a hotel room in 2006’s Smokin’ Aces, Bateman could have been a metaphor for the frenetically charged, high octane, tweaker of a film itself. He spoke in drawn out, seemingly Tourette’s induced monologues; sweaty and squinty-eyed, he was manic and A.D.D., and despite all of the chaos, he still managed to command attention during the mere minutes he was on screen. With so many characters flitting in and out—and so many bullets flying around– they were all expendable, but Bateman grabbed onto something in the audience and implanted himself in their subconscious. Even if his character was not so lucky, his scenes would stick around in their memories.

2006’s The Ex, a blink-and-you-missed-its-release romantic? comedy about a guy (Zach Braff) who becomes increasingly, insanely jealous of his wife’s ex-boyfriend when they are forced to move back to her hometown, and he is forced to work alongside the ex (who is, of course, Bateman). In this case, Bateman is just one in a sea of fine supporting actors (Charles Grodin, Amy Poehler, Paul Rudd), but he manages to stand out for the earnest way he once again plays a sleazebag. Even though you should be rooting for Braff to keep his marriage afloat, when the “other guy” is Bateman, that’s damn near impossible. Maybe it’s incredible method acting or maybe it’s his natural boyish charm, but everything he touches turns to gold.

2007’s The Kingdom was a slightly different side to Bateman, who was still comic relief but this time in a very serious setting. Playing a member of a government team sent into Riyadh to investigate the bombing of an American base, for the first time, his sometimes snide humor was gentler, subtler, and quieter. He offered a chance to smile warmly as a break from the suspense. And with his proven track record at spicing up everything from gross-out comedies to heavy, based on real life dramas, there is no doubt Bateman’s yet another supporting role in Hancock (taking theaters by storm July 2) will be a hit with critics and fans alike. Though it can be said that really all he’s doing is just playing the same character over and over again, how can one argue with such a winning formula?

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Jun 22 2008

Celebrities Who Share My Birthday…

My birthday is tomorrow, June 23, and to celebrate I will be giving myself a day off from celebrity blogging and celebrity news in general. Jamie Lynn had her baby last week, and by all calculations, Angelina isn’t due until August, so it seems like I’ll be okay to turn off the laptop for one hot Monday and give my bleeding brain a break. Though I have a feeling the withdrawal symptoms may prove too great to keep me away for too long.

As I dig into my Carvel ice cream cake (the five year old in me still loves the crunchies!), feel free to peruse a list of celebrities who share my birthday. One of them even shares the year, but I’ll leave it up to you to figure out which one. ;)

Duffy (1984)

Memphis Bleek (1978)

Jason Mraz (1977)

Emmanuelle Vaugier (1976)

Selma Blair (1972)

Joss Whedon (1964)

Frances McDormand (1957)

Randy Jackson (1956)

June Carter Cash (1929)

Bob Fosse (1927)

Alfred Kinsey (1894)

You can see a complete list here , and yes, my name is included on it, too!

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Jun 15 2008

What Were They Thinking? Odd Celebrity Marriage Choices

Published by danielletbd under actor profile Edit This

A few weeks ago when word slowly started to spread that Mariah Carey had wed Nick Cannon in a small and secret ceremony in the Bahamas, a few questions were raised: Is she pregnant?  Is this Pop Fiction?  Is this a publicity stunt to promote her new video?  But just about everyone had to ask: “What was she thinking!?”  And she definitely wouldn’t be the first one.  From Carmen Electra’s quickie Vegas wedding to a white-dress-and-veil-wearing Dennis Rodman to Britney Spears’ quickie Vegas wedding to a jeans-and-tee-shirt-wearing country boy Jason Alexander, it seems celebrity marriage choices are more often odd than they are… not.  We think we’ve seen it all, and then come along these head-scratchers, which compile the Top Oddest Celebrity Marriages.

Michael Jackson and Lisa Marie Presley first met in the 1970s when a still-teenage Michael was performing with his brothers in Las Vegas, and the reconnected almost twenty years later through a mutual friend.  Their “courtship” (no pun intended) was short-lived and mostly long-distance, as the accusations about Jackson’s sexual misconduct with young children first began to arise.  At a time when things were looking their bleakest yet for Jackson, he proposed over the phone, and despite everything, Presley accepted, and they married in the Dominican Republic in 1994, divorcing eighteen months (and quite a few awkward public appearances) later.

Speaking of flamboyance, Liza Minnelli turned heads for more than just her gravely voice and sequined frocks when she married concert promoter? David Gest in 2002.  Bug-eyed and Botox-infused, Gest was an odd choice for the theatre, film, and solo star, who certainly didn’t need him for further fortune or fame.  Though they separated after a year, their divorce was not final until 2007, after a drawn-out public battle during which the only things weirder than their initial nuptials were the accusations that flew, such as Gest implying Minnelli gave him herpes.

Following in his good friends’ (and sometimes-mentors’) footsteps, emancipated seventeen year-old Macaulay Culkin married fellow teen, Rachel Miner, in 1998.  The reclusive pair stayed together for just under two years, and neither got back to work for at least a year after their split.  Not much is known about their marriage at all, but the consensus seems to be that they were both just too young to make it work.

While involved with actress Mia Farrow, Woody Allen fell for one of her adopted children, Soon-Yi Previn.  Though he never adopted Previn himself during his twelve-year relationship with Farrow, their subsequent affair is just as creepy as if he had.  Not only is Allen more than thirty years Previn’s senior, but also during custody hearings between Allen and Farrow, Farrow alleged Allen’s behavior with Previn was inappropriate long before the girl turned eighteen.  Allen and Previn married five years after he and Farrow split, in 1997, and they now have two adopted children of their own.  Try explaining to them how he could have been their grandpa!

Renee Zellweger and country star Kenny Chesney’s blink-and-you-missed it relationship in 2005 had doom spelled all over it from day one, simply because of their competing schedules and different worlds. Zellweger had a couple of films in various stages of production, and Chesney was in the middle of a cross-country tour.  When the news announced their annulment four months after the wedding, more were surprised they were even together in the first place rather than the new “revelation” that they were splitting up.

Many more than not were shocked when Catherine Zeta-Jones and Michael Douglas started hooking up, not merely because of the age difference (she is less than a decade younger than his oldest son), but because his opening line to her was “I’d like to father your children.”  A normal woman would have been sent running, despite the fact that the man standing in front of her was a movie star, but Zeta-Jones was intrigued, to say the least.  Their Plaza Hotel wedding in 2000 was one for eyebrow-raising, as well, because they asked their guests to donate money to an unnamed charitable fund—one which, when their son turns eighteen, will be chosen by him.  Huh?  So as of now the money is just sitting around in a no-named “charitable” fund on which a child is named the executor?  Crazy in love or just plain a little bit crazy?  But really, can’t that be asked of any of those who made this list?

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May 27 2008

A Missing Person In Hollywood Can Be A Good Thing

Published by danielletbd under actor profile Edit This

Considering she was seen in the bubblegum pop musical Hairspray only last year and has been quietly designing her own clothing line for tween girls, Amanda Bynes hardly seems a likely candidate for a Whatever Happened To…? segment. However, considering she mastered the art of multi-tasking at the early age of thirteen, embarking on a career that had her bouncing back and forth from television show to television show to movie, this recent change of pace has left her always sunny demeanor and manic peppiness sorely missing in action on both screens alike.

Beginning her career on the Nickelodeon hit All That!, Bynes quickly proved herself as quite the little sponge, soaking up as much as she could from those that went before her in similar roles (the title may have been flippantly tossed at Debra Messing a few years ago, but Bynes truly is the next Lucille Ball), as well as all she could from the set. Though she entered into this business at a young numerical age, Bynes’ wide eyes were not merely with awe; she was overly alert, the wheels turning as she took careful note of how things were working around her and how she could work to improve and further her talent.

Bynes just as quickly won over young fans, as well as their parents, for her girl-next-door appearance and clean sense of humor, which garnered her her own headliner, aptly named The Amanda Show. There she spent two years introducing sketch comedy to a new generation before taking on her first feature in Big Fat Liar, opposite fellow child star Frankie Muniz (ironically, someone who just announced his retirement from entertainment). Bynes’ popularity began to take off like a snowball rolling down a hill, and while voicing a character on the (also Nickelodeon) animated favorite Rugrats, she was given her second show, What I Like About You with Jennie Garth. Finally Bynes was playing to girls her own age.

Proving time and again she is not just another trendy but dumb member of the Young Hollywood elite, Bynes has always chosen her parts carefully, picking scripts that allow her to shine as both a comedienne and a role model. She knows where her talent lies, as well as where her limitations do, and she embraces both, determined to do the bet she can do. She is exceptionally professional, but she is also smart about her decisions; from day one, she was creating a brand, and now she has expanded to do so in the most literal (and lucrative!) sense with her fashion line. Additionally (and exceptionally importantly today), she has kept her personal life out of the flashing paparazzi bulbs, as well, focusing on her work instead of what club she’ll hit tonight. She poured herself into cute and personable turns in teen chick flicks like What A Girl Wants, Lovewrecked, Sydney White, and even a modern day take on Shakespeare with She’s The Man, a group of films which helped parlay her onto the list of the Richest People Under 21 (in 2007).

Perhaps this break, then, is just Bynes choosing to follow in Natalie Portman’s footsteps, someone who said she choose college because “[she’d] rather be smart than be a movie star.” While Bynes may not have enrolled in a university (or maybe she has but has managed to keep that from the press as well), she is undoubtedly off learning something, whether it’s about how to successfully transition from child star to adult actor or just some new things about herself. In that way, she is an even bigger breath of fresh air. Maybe she’s holding out for the perfect script; maybe she’s finally slowing down and taking a much deserved break; or maybe she’s considering pursuing a life in another field altogether. Whatever the case may be, Bynes’ choice to walk away while she was still climbing to the top is admirable; she is a breath of fresh air when she is working and also when she is not.

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