WB's Teens Turn Preppy - USA Today Article
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WB's teens turn preppy
By César G. Soriano, USA TODAY
BALTIMORE Inside a gritty warehouse in the city's industrial marina
district, a glamorous teen TV drama is being manufactured.
Meet Young Americans, the WB network's latest foray into teen consciousness,
premiering Wednesday (9 p.m. ET/PT).
"I think they made soap here," says show creator and producer Steve
Antin. Now, they're making a soap opera here: The rusting building by the railroad
tracks contains the lavish mahogany set of the fictional Rawley Academy, an
elite New England school for boys.
The show is being shot in Baltimore partly to keep costs down, and partly
because the city already had an experienced crew base left over from Barry Levinson's
Homicide: Life on the Street, the NBC show that was filmed in Charm City
for seven years.
Young Americans is the first show from Antin, 35, a former film and
TV actor who has appeared in The Accused and NYPD Blue.
The show's premise was born two years ago when he was driving through New
England. "I came upon a gas station and there were three girls working
there. A convertible pulled up with these young prep school guys. The imagery
was so beautiful in this bucolic little town. I just thought, 'Oh, my God, this
is the show. It's town vs. gown.'
"I wanted to write a show about what it felt like to be a teenager, that
tiny window between 15 and 17 when the possibilities seemed endless and I felt
invincible, when everything seemed so monumental and melodramatic" Antin
says.
Antin has been involved in everything from casting to makeup and hair. "The
kids are always asking if they can do this or that with their hair, and my answer
is always an absolute 'Not!' It crosses my mind with what happened with
Keri Russell on Felicity," he says, recalling the negative fallout
after the actress cut her trademark mane. "I wouldn't want my characters
to do that, and they know better."
Like Antin's characters, the show's actors come from blueblood-meets-blue-collar
backgrounds:
Mark
Famiglietti plays Scout Calhoun, the rich, attractive, popular kid. Famiglietti's
background isn't much different. The New England native was raised on theater,
was class president of his Clinton, Conn., high school for two years, and was
captain of the baseball team. He's best known for his role as the popular kid
on Hang Time, NBC's Saturday teen sitcom.
Rodney
Scott, 22, isn't far out of his element. He plays Will Krudski , the local boy
attending the school on scholarship. In reality, Scott is a local boy who grew
up in Berlin, Md., a small town outside the beach resort of Ocean City. "I
only took drama in high school because my girlfriend and friends were in the
class," Scott says. Two years ago, he fled to Hollywood to search for stardom.
He started at the bottom, working at Mann's Chinese Theatre. "If I ever
do a movie that premieres at Mann's Chinese, I can be one of the few who say
I used to work there," Scott says. On Friday, he throws out the first pitch
at a Baltimore Orioles game.
Katherine
Moennig, 22, plays a girl who masquerades as a boy, Jake Pratt, to gain admission
to the all-male school. Sound familiar? Moennig also was up for the starring
role in Boys Don't Cry, which earned Hilary Swank an Oscar. "I'm
a little worried about being pigeonholed," says the self-avowed tomboy
with short black hair. To play the part, Moennig has to wear a constricting
sports bra and bodice. "I'm not hugely well-endowed anyway, so I don't
worry about it."
Ian
Somerhalder, 21, who plays the dean's son, Hamilton Fleming, is no stranger
to the camera. The Louisiana native has modeled for 10 years for such labels
as Guess and Versace. "It was just a job. . . .I don't want to be one of
those model-turned-actors." The future filmmaker spends his off-days writing
scripts, not sightseeing. "I don't mean to badmouth the city, but the restaurants
stink."
Ed
Quinn, 30, was a professional rock musician for several years. "All the
kids on this show probably have more experience than I do," he says. Now
he plays Finn, the teacher and mentor. "We don't know if Finn is his first
or last name. He's a bit of a rogue, bit of a romantic, a bit of a renaissance
man."
Kate
Bosworth, 17, says it's sometimes hard being the show's only true teenager. "All the cast think I'm a baby. It's hard when everyone is going out to bars and I'm like, 'Awww, man. I gotta be by myself,'" says Bosworth, who plays Bella Banks, a gas station mechanic. The first feature you notice are her striking eyes: one is blue, one is brown. Bosworth has appeared in three films, including The Horse Whisperer with Robert Redford, while trying to maintain a normal teenage life. Bosworth is a junior at a Boston public high school, but she missed her junior prom. "That was an issue!" she shrieks. "I couldn't go because we were shooting. In my contract, I'm going to have that in next year: Must have time off for senior prom!"
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