Interview
1
When
Alyssa Milano makes her first appearance on "Melrose Place"
this spring, viewers might not recognize the girl they knew
from "Who's the Boss?". Now 24, Milano's moppet days are over.
Since her long-running sitcom ended in 1992, the Brooklyn-born
beauty has moved on to decidedly more racy projects. She posed
nude in "Bikini" magazine, starred as Amy Fisher in a 1993 made-for-TV
movie and played yet another promiscuous teen in last year's
big-screen thriller "Fear." A résumé like that will surely
help her hold her own against Heather Locklear, Laura Leighton
and all the other "Melrose" vixens. Before she ran off to the
set, Alyssa gave us the scoop on her naughty new role, her "Who's
the Boss?" cast mates and what it's like to have two dads.
| Question 1: |
Tell
us about your new character on "Melrose Place." Is she
a bad girl? |
| Alyssa: |
Well,
she's, you know, Michael Mancini's younger sister, so
apple trees make apples. She's definitely gonna follow
in his devious footsteps, I think. I think that, you know,
from what I've been told, she's intelligent, and her naughty
side comes from a very manipulative side, which, you know,
she finds out what people need from her and she gives
it to them in order to get what she needs from them. So...
and that's about all I know. |
| Question 2: |
What
attracted you to the show? |
| Alyssa: |
I
think that [in the] last five years Aaron [Spelling] and
I have met over four times about different projects. I've
always wanted to work with him and I sort of felt that,
you know, it's a very hard age that I'm at right now in
the business, in that parts are usually for your 18-year-olds
or your leading ladies. There is no in-between. So, here
was a role on a great show that would be fun that was
actually playing my age and that was really sort of intriguing
to me. |
| Question 3: |
Do
you ever watch reruns of "Who's the Boss?" |
| Alyssa: |
I
do, and you know, it's really -- I did the show from when
I was 11 to 19, and the weirdest thing is sitting and
watching a rerun and not remember ever filming it because
I was so young. And not remember the storyline or what
my character was doing at that time or, you know, a sweater
that I wore. Just not remembering any of it. So, it's
like watching, you know, someone completely different.
|
| Question 4: |
Do
you keep in touch with Tony Danza and your other "Who's
the Boss?" costars? |
| Alyssa: |
I
actually just got a message from Tony this morning. He
calls about once a month to check in and to make sure
I'm OK. I spoke to -- I actually didn't speak to her,
but Katherine Helmond left me a message yesterday. I do
keep in touch. It's a weird thing because you work for
eight years with these people, and I was so young that
I sort of treated it like I was graduating high school
and, you know, a lot of the times you don't keep in contact
with those people so, being young, you know, I'm very
lucky that I do stay in touch with most of the people.
But there's a big abandonment issue when you're young
and in this business because you make these families and
then all of a sudden you don't hear from them again. |
| Question 5: |
We
hear Tony still thinks of himself as your dad. |
| Alyssa: |
Absolutely,
and I'm grateful for that. You can never have, you know,
too many dads. I grew up with two Italian fathers. It
was hell. |
| Question 6: |
What
TV shows did you watch when you were a kid? |
| Alyssa: |
There
was a really big chunk of time that I didn't watch any
television, and that was probably from, probably the last
three years [of "Who's the Boss?"], 15 to 18, where I
sort of boycotted. I was like, you know, "Television is
bad and evil." I just felt that, you know, I was developing
my own sort of views on the business and here I was on
this television show and I didn't really know if I believed
in everything that the television was out there portraying.
|
| Question 7: |
OK,
then -- what did you watch before the boycott? |
| Alyssa: |
Oh,
I loved "The Brady Bunch" and I will still sit through
reruns, and "Gilligan's Island" and "The Partridge Family."
All of those shows were so fun. |
| Question 8: |
Could
you sing us a TV theme song? |
| Alyssa: |
[Sings
the theme from "Gilligan's Island."] |
| Question 9: |
So,
while you're waiting to join the cast, what's it like
for you to watch "Melrose Place"? |
| Alyssa: |
When
I watch "Melrose Place" I'm overwhelmed by how cute they
all look. After I finish watching "Melrose Place" I want
to pluck my eyebrows and paint my nails. |
Interview
2: Maxim Magazine
On
growing up on "Who's the Boss":
"When I started developing, they wrote
an episode called 'Sam's First Bra.' The writers were like,
'Okay, she's 13 and she has boobies now. We better address
this issue.' And that was hell for me! I mean it's hard enough
going through puberty by yourself, but to do it in front of
millions of people!"
On
her tattoos:
"I have five. Rosary beads on my back,
a vine of flowers on my right ankle, an angel holding a cross
with my ex-fiance's initials SRW---which now means 'Single
Rad Woman'---on my left ankle, a fairy on my stomach, and
a big sacred heart on my lower back. I've always gotten them
at times when I was sad about something... relationship problems
or the fact that it had rained every day for a month. But
I've always thought they were really beautiful."
On
being single:
"I've talked about being single so much
in the press that it has become my thing. And now I'm getting
thousands of proposals on my E-mail every day. But it's funny.
I meet some of the most amazing, successful women, 21-35 years
old, and they're all in the same boat. So it may have something
to do with men's inability to deal with us."
On
her Melrose Place character:
"My character isn't really bad. She just
doesn't have a mental editing process. She says exactly what's
on her mind, like, 'That outfit is horrible! Why did you put
that on? I'm worried about you.' And the thing is, she really
cares! But it's a great acting exercise. Truthfully, anyone
can be good in an Ang Lee film, but if you can pull off an
episode of Melrose Place, you've got talent!"
On
the success of Melrose Place:
"I don't mean any disrespect to the guys
by this, but it's a show that's run by women. The men are
the bimbos. The women are the ones who have the companies
and dominate the relationships, which I think is an interesting
twist."
|