Buzz over new cut
By BILL BRIOUX
Toronto Sun, 1/00
PASADENA -- Not since that incident between Samson and Delilah
has there
been this much fuss about a haircut.
We're talking about Felicity's Keri Russell, who cropped her
magnificent
cascading locks at the start of this season.
The new 'do was the main topic of conversation during a visit to
the
Felicity set by about 70 TV critics from across North America.
The entire
cast sat on directors' chairs on the main sound stage, right in
front of the
Dean & Deluca cafe.
"I think it was a good idea," says Russell about her
haircut. "For the
character it was a brave, crazy, sudden, extreme thing to do.
Those are all
things a girl in college might do. I think it was quite
appropriate."
Russell says it made sense for her as well as her character.
"Just moving
outside your comfort zone is a good thing and definitely that
long hair was
how I was identified. It was liberating for me."
The idea for the close-cropped look came after Russell sent
executive
producer J. J. Abrams a postcard of herself sporting short hair
last summer.
"It was a wig," says Abrams. "The card said, 'They
say it will grow back by
fall. I'm having the best summer ever.' I nearly had a heart
attack."
The rest of the cast seemed a little less interested in the hair
questions.
"I'm shocked it's that big a deal," says Scott
Speedman, who plays Ben. "I
know she had beautiful hair but, hey, she looks pretty good now,
don't you
think?"
The former Toronto resident looked as though he didn't even comb
his hair,
let alone cut it. The dude had major bedhead happening for the 9
a.m. press
conference. The wrinkled white shirt with the permanently rolled
arms added
to the casual look.
Speedman's a lot less casual about his career. He co-stars with
Gwyneth
Paltrow, Maria Bello and Paul Giamatti in the upcoming feature
film, Duets."
I play a Zen-ed out cab driver," says Speedman, who shot the
film in
Vancouver.
He says he won't even read any of the Scream 4 scripts that come
his way.
"All the stuff I want I'm going to have to fight with the
big kids for,"
says Speedman, 24.
He says his own character is going to start drinking and getting
into all
sorts of trouble. "He's going to be more of a kid,"
says Speedman. "It's
just more realistic. I know I got into trouble all the time when
I was at
college," says Speedman,who left school to pursue acting
full time after his
first year.
Abrams acknowledges that he and the other producers may have
wrapped up the
Ben-Felicity story too quickly this season, and that, for a few
episodes at
least, the entire show had lost its focus. "When we realized
that the
stories weren't quite jelling the way we wanted them to, we went
to UCLA and
just wandered around and talked to college students," says
Abrams. "What was
amazing was that they were all going through what we were writing
about.
They were lost; they didn't quite know what they were doing; they
were
having sex with people they didn't want to have sex with; they
were going to
parties; they felt stupid; they were cutting their hair; they
felt ugly --
it was like, oh great -- this isn't helping at all."
However, ultimately, it did help. "We have to make sure
Felicity feels
directed again," he says. Translated, that means less
emphasis on sex, more
on self awareness.
That doesn't mean that the only risks they'll be taking is
cutting hair or
cutting classes. Towards the end of the month, an entire episode
will be
shot in black and white in the style of the old Twilight Zone
series.
ed. note: Thanks to Laura Pardy for transcribing this.