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Sarah Michelle Gellar
An interview with the Vampire (Slayer)
by Jessica Shaw
it's one of those damp and gray early winter mornings in New York City, the kind that wipes out any memory of last summer's tanks and Dr. Scholl's sandals. Then Sarah Michelle Gellar walks into the studio for this photo shoot wearing huge Audrey Hepburn shade and radiating enough Pacific Coast perkiness to warm up the room. She's talking rapid fire about how she was supposed to hang out the night before with Jerry, Neve and David (that would be O'Commell, Campbell and Arquette)--you'd think she'd inhaled the entire Starbucks East Coast supply on the way over. But no, she explains with a smile, "I just hate doing interviews, so the faster I finish, the better it is for me."
Well, um, okay. Gotta grab another sweater after that icy gust
Still, it's hard not to have a tiny little drop of sympathy for 20-year-old Sarah. consider her weel: "I workerd all day Monday, I came in at 6 A.M. on Tuesday and worked until one in the morning, went home, fed my dog, packed my bags, went back to work at 7 A.M., worked until 2 A.M., got on an airplane, got here at 3 P.M., got up at six to Regis & Kathie Lee, did the Got Milk campaign, went on Letterman and did MTV Live." (By the way, all that was said without any oxygen intake.) "Right now I'm probably working toward an early grave," Sarah sighs, seated in the makeup chair with a script on her lap. "I'm tired and I complain sometimes, but this is my career and I love it."
What's not to love? The Buffy the Vampire Slayer star has not only made TV fun to watch again, she's also scored in a double shriekfest this year--I Know What You Did Last Summer and Scream 2. Since landing a Burger King commercial at age 4, Sarah has been gearing up for this moment. After a string roles that included portraying a young Jacqueline Onassis in in A Woman Named Jackie (for which she missed the eighth-grade trip to Busch Gardens), Sarah landed on All My Childern--where she won an Emmy for playing Kendall, the sanity-challenged daughter of diva Erica Kane. "As soon as Sarah walked in the door, I knew she was something special," recalls AMC casting director Judy Wilson. "She has that combination of possessing terrific range, being adorable and having a little spice."
Sarah seemingly slays everyone with her talent. "We had first cast Sarah as Cordelia," says Buffy creator Joss Whedon. "She has said that she had to audition nineteen times for Buffy, but that's a total exggeration. It wasn't more than seventeen." In any event, he was psyched about his casting choice. "The show couldn't happen with anyone else," he says. "When Buffy's fighty, silly or addled, it's more charming because Sarah brings so much intelligence and depth to the character."
Indeed, Sarah has turned what could have been a vapid Valley Girl (as Buffy was portrayed in the movie that inspired the TV series) into a five-foot-three-inch powerhouse with killer clothes who kicks, stabs and punches her way through Liberty High. She's funnier than Dharma. Better dressed than Rachel. And could teach Scully a thing or two about alternate universes. "Not everyone can relate to these beautiful, rich, popular girls on TV," Sarah says. "Buffy's not the most popular girl, she's not the smartest, but she's like, 'This is who I am, and I like me.'" Oh, and there's that little added perk of successfully smooching with the enemy, the chiseled bloodsucker Angel. (Look out Buffy and Angel to "take that very special Buffy mnext step," Sarah says cryptically.)
Not that Sarah can find time for in-person inspiration to play love scenes. "Like any job, there are sacrifices," she says. "Yes, everyone misses having boyfriend, but I'm twenty years old and right now my career comes first." Sounds convincing, but she lauches into a vehement venting session when February 14 is mentioned. "Valentine's Day is a masochistic holiday," she fumes. "If you're in relationship, then this is the one day you're supposed to say I love you and send gifts to ensure that it means more than the other 364 days of the year; and if you're single, you feel miserable." Breath. "There you have it." Breath. "My biggest complaint is in school when it's Send the Roses Day--somebody's always left out. I always got roses, but I would give them to someone who hadn't gotten any."
You can tell Sarah's the type to value girl bonds. She's still way tight with her childhood best friends, Brittany and Ashley. And the Buffy set doubles as the Friday night preparty when Sarah's posse swings by. At work Sarah mostly hangs with costar Alyson Hannigan, who plays the nerdy hipster Willow. Lately they've been swapping gifts, and Sarah is pondering what to bring back to California for Alyson. Recent gifts were a Hanson poster and a talking tree. "Alson gave me this man with his pants down; when he farts, he blows bubbles," she laughs hysterically. "It's horrible. Mine were funny, hers were disgusting."
Even the makeup artist, who wields an eyelash-curling torture device, laughs at the flatulence description. He's finished face-painting, which signifies the completion of this not-fast-enough chat. Visibly relieved, as if she's crossed one more thing off her to-do list, Sarah hurries over to pose for the camera. Then she's on her way to an exceedingly hectic 10 hours of appointments.
How long Sarah--who has recently miniaturized to a size 2 despite a penchant for California Pizza Kitchen--can endure this grueling pace in uncertain. "She comes in and she's like, 'I'm exhausted today,'" says Whedon. "And I'm like, 'What a shock!' But as soon as the cameras roll, she gives 100 percent, every time." When Buffy wraps in May for the summer Sarah will film two or three more movies. One likely contender is Cruel Inventions, a romantic drama costarring Ryan Phillippe, her costar in I Know What You Did Last Summer. And then it's back to high school for at least one more season.
"We're going to keep doing Buffy as long as we have good stories to tell," she says. "This is a show that needs to go out at its highest point." Before that happens, there's at least one story line that Sarah's just dying to explore. "I want to do Buffy in a coma," she deadpans. "It'll be a two-parter."[ ]
on the set of Buffy the Vampire Slayer
by Eliza Bergman Krause
Torarnce High School, Torrance, CA. The students are gone and the campus is overrun by the zombie-like citizens or Sunnydale, USA. In other words, Buffy the Vampire Slayer has arrived and set up shop for an episode in which the stars become possessed by an evil force and turn on one another. Alyson Hannigan, 23, who plays the brainy Willow, escorts the gorgeous Charisma Charpenter (Cordelia), 27, to meet a gaggle of young fans, proving she is much nicer than her snobby character is. Moments later Sarah Michelle Gellar, the kick-boxing slayer herself, sits on a staircase massaging Nicholas Brendon's temples. Nicholas, whose Xander wants Buffy in a big way, hit his head after falling off a wall during filming.
"We spent fifteen minutes before [he did that] going, 'Nicky, you should really put a mat down because you're going to get hurt,'" explains Alyson affectionately. "But he's got that male ego kind of pride, like, 'No, I'm tough, I can make it.' And he's got all these girls concerned for him. I think he was just milking it."
While Buffy is classified as a horror show, the seies has been beefing up its romantic story lines this season: "The relationships that were forming in the first season had to go somewhere," explains Anthony Stewart Head, who plays Buffy's mentor, Giles (and the romantic male lead in the Taster's Choice ads). "You can't have people yearning all the time--some of it has to be requited." The cast members do most of their requiting at the production's home base in Santa Monica, CA, where permanent sets such as Giles' library and the Bronze, the local club, are stored.
The actors hang with one another outside the soundstages. "There's not a lot of ego running around--who has what trailer," says David Boreanaz (Angel),26. "If we were in a [big] studio lot, it would really break up the show. With the amount of time spent applying makeup and setting up special effects, it's good that we have a camp like this. It's our own little home."
There are times, however, when even the best of friends need a break from one another: "You have to know everyone's idiosyncrasies," says Sarah, referring to her costars. "No one gets along twenty-four-seven. When I was having a bad day, everyone stayed away from me. My hairdresser came into my trailer and we watched soap operas. I felt better."
The cast members are on the job five days a week (like most people) but often work into the night. "My mom had never been to the set to see me work," says Charisma, while walking a dog, which relieves itself on the set's makeshift graveyard. "So she was with me for four days. [On a] day that I worked sixteen hours, she quit after twelve. She was like, 'I'm going home, I can't take this anymore.'"
Even when they're not on the job, Buffy's stars enjoy meeting their millions of fans. "I love it when kids recognize you," says Alyson. "It's so sweet--their faces light up. I was at Jamba Juice [a local chain] the other day, and this little girl saw me and she's like, 'It's Willow!'" Even when the fans turn up at the unlikeliest places, the Buffy cast can deal. "Nicky and David went to a strip club once and they were recognized," Alyson says. By a stripper? "No, by a customer," says Nicholas, 26. "He's like, 'Guys, best show on TV, thanks!' Then he went back to the other show. It wasn't a strip club, it was a bikini parlor--just to clarify that."
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