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Dallas Morning News article
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Thanks to Lark for sending this in, and to squanto for forwarding it from his sick bed! You better get well soon squanto! The caring teens on WB’s ‘Roswell’ really are from a different planet January 29, 2000 HOLLYWOOD — There’s a new girl for Max! The Crashdown is where Max Evans, sensitive alien boy, saved the life of Liz Parker, skeptical Earth girl, launching one of the TV season’s most intense romances on one of the season’s best new shows. As played by Jason Behr, 26, and Shiricq Appleby, 21, you’d never know that Liz and Max are different life forms. Rarely have two young actors created this kind of chemistry on a screen of any size. That chemistry reaches a new level of intensity on Wednesday night’s groundbreaking “Sexual Healing” episode, complete with metaphorical After that, it’s difficult to imagine anyone else catching Max’s eye, but it will happen this month — and into the May sweeps — when Katims introduces an outgoing new student as a potential love interest. “Liz is ready for some action, too,” jokes a dolled-up Appleby shortly after driving onto the Paramount lot to film her “Blind Date” episode. “She’s so over the alien.” Based on a series of children’s books called “Roswell High,” “Roswell” is among the latest wave of teen shows unleashed by the WB network, home to “Felicity,” “Dawson’s Creek” and “Buffy the Vampire Slayer.” Katims is new to sci-fi, though he’s getting help from David Nutter, an early “X-Files” director and Roswell executive producer. “Most of the time, I’ve been putting three people in a room and waiting for them to cry,” says Katims, who cut his teeth on the seminal but short-lived teen series “My So-Called Life.” “Roswell” combines the genres almost seamlessly. The aliens’ fear of getting found out by the authorities, along with an almost primal search for their roots, drives the plots. But it’s the relationships In the pilot episode, Liz is shot at the Crashdown in front of Max. (Her father owns it, and she works there as a waitress.) No longer able to hide his long-standing crush on her, Max risks exposure by using his Converging story lines have followed: Liz gets the truth out of Max —he and his sister Isabel (Katherine Heigl) and best friend Michael (Brendan Fehr) were in pods aboard the alien spaceship that crashed in This makes Isabel and the brooding Michael paranoid, especially since the town’s Sheriff Valenti (William Sadler) has become suspicious about the healing incident. Valenti also has an ax to grind: His father, the former sheriff, was a laughingstock for his belief in the alien crash. On another teen show, this situation might be used to propel the six kids apart, mimicking the cliques and hallway politics that dominate “Compared to other relationship shows, you have high stakes,” Katims says. “In adolescence, everything seems like an emergency. Well, in this show, we use the fact that they are in danger, that there is a Between scenes. Majandra Delfino and Katherine Heigl are sitting in a booth at the Crashdown, finishing each other’s sentences. The diner, which mocks the town’s alien-crash mythology, is painted a The “specials” board lists a misspelled “Extra Terestral Taco Salad” and a “Chocolate Milkyway Shake.” “Today only,” it says, “add Unidentified Fried Objects to any sandwich for 25.” Both Delfino and Heigl say they’ve been recognized in public since the show started, mostly by little girls at malls. Delfino has also been noticed in her Miami hometown. “In South Beach, I’m big with the gay men,” she says. “I walk down Lincoln Road, and they’re like, ‘Oh my God, we love Maria!’ But Miami’s weird.” Only 19, Delfino has been busy. She was a regular on “The Tony Danza Show” and appeared in the film “Zeus & Roxanne.” She also has three other movies in the can, including a parody of the rampaging Heigl, 21, is even more of a veteran. A model by age 9, she’s been acting since she was 12. She played Gerard Depardieu’s daughter in “My Father the Hero,” Peter Fonda’s daughter in the TV movie “The Tempest,” as well as having roles in “The Bride of Chucky,” “Under Siege 2” and “There’s nothing worse than not doing anything,” Delfino says. Like Liz and Max, both their characters are up for a little romance. In fact, when her intense makeout sessions with Max cause Liz to have visions, some of which may be clues to the aliens’ origins, Maria gets jealous and seeks out Michael. But their mashing produces only the usual results. Heigl, whose character also seeks out a little experimentation before the episode is over, doesn’t seem to know much about the story line. “We’ll talk about that later,” Delfino tells her. Shiri Appleby’s cat is biting her on the head. Then the phone interview is interrupted twice more when call-waiting beckons. “This is the rudest thing,” she says upon returning. “I’m sorry. If it rings again, I’m not going to answer it.” Then it does. But she said ...“I know, but I have to (take the call). I’m a girl!” Appleby confesses that she was nervous about these latest love scenes, “not only because Jason and I are just friends but also because of having to put this on tape and having people see it, like my parents.” She and Behr discussed her fears, and once the cameras rolled, “it was a really amazing experience,” she says. “It was OK to feel insecure and feel nervous because this person was going to hold your hand and do it She also credits Katims for not pandering to the teen audience. “He doesn’t write trying to sound like a teen-ager or what he thinks William Sadler, the veteran stage and movie actor who plays Sheriff Valenti, also has a love interest on “Roswell”: Maria’s mother. More importantly, Valenti is not the standard bad guy. “That was my big question,” Sadler says. “Where’s this guy going? At the end of every episode, is he going to be standing in the dust, going, ‘Curses!’ That would’ve gotten old real fast.” Despite being the only non-teen-age regular, Valenti is not without his young admirers. Sadler recently received a pair of red boxer shorts from the online Valenti Admiration Society, a reference to the outfit he was wearing when his character died in the film “The Hot Spot.” “What I’m finding fascinating,” he says of “Roswell,” “is how they’re sewing together the two genres, the “X-Files”-ish suspense and the relationships, the alienated kids finding each other. I have not seen it done anywhere else.” --End-- |