|
- Jessica Alba, the sultry new star of James
Cameron's new action series, Dark Angel, could single-handedly
make prime time worth watching again
Being
a television casting director must be a rewarding job most days.
And it's gotta be especially rewarding when director-producer
James "Terminator" Cameron tells you to find an incredibly beautiful,
genetically enhanced super-warrior for his new Fox sci-fi extravaganza,
Dark Angel. Still, it's hard to imagine the search went
much beyond the moment Jessica Alba picked up the script. Now
19, Alba has been acting for half her life, stretching back
to an early episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 and a starring
role in a Flipper syndicated series and extending to
more recent gigs in the horror-comedy Idle Hands and
then the teen-themed Never Been Kissed (with Drew Barrymore).
Needless to say, the plum role of Max, a sexy, tough-talking,
motorcycle-riding cat burglar on the fun in post-apocalyptic
Seattle from the secret government agency that spawned her,
required a somewhat more lethal combo of beauty and guts. But
as we learned between rounds of retro video games at the Nova
Express Café, L.A.'s sci-fi themed pizza parlor, there's quite
a tough cookie beneath Jessica's glamorous gaze. Of Mexican,
Spanish, French, and Danish descent, and raised in a nomadic,
military family, Jessica grew up a sports fanatic and terrorized
her teachers and grandparents alike with her rebellious behavior.
We predict that with Dark Angel, she'll be raising even
more eyebrows.
Your
character, Max, is a cat burglar, among other things. If you
could sneak into any place and not get caught, where would it
be?
Hmmm, I prefer being right up-front with people,
but maybe I'd find out what a prison is like, or I'd go into
some laboratories to see just what they're doing with animals
in tests. Because I have a sick fascination with medical stuff
like that. The ultimate would be sneaking inside the human body.
Like, how amazing would it be to see the stomach and the heart
and the brain from the inside?
Dark Angel
is
packed with action scenes, and you spend a lot of time leaping
between skyscrapers and dodging bullets. How intense was the
training?
It was pretty rigorous. Every day for a year,
I went to martial arts, then to gymnastics, then to motorcycle
riding, then to a hard cardio workout and stretching. I practiced
moves over and over so I wouldn't think about it. My theory
is that if you look confident, you can pull anything off - even
if you have no clue what you're doing.
That's
really you on the motorcycle?
Yeah. I ride a Kawasaki Ninja 350 on the show.
I tried out a 650, and it was amazing, but you really have to
respect something that powerful - one wrong move and you're
done. But it's excellent! You can totally peel out. It's a rocket.
Do
you own a motorcycle in real life?
I've been obsessed with Harley-Davidsons since
I can remember. There's just something about a Harley that drives
me crazy. But I think it's just a little too dangerous to ride
the streets in Los Angeles. People here just don't know how
to drive. <![endif]>
Why
do we get the feeling you were somewhat of a tomboy?
I played sports with the neighborhood boys
growing up. I loved baseball. I was a catcher and a pretty good
batter. But when I turned 12, they made me play softball, and
I was like, forget that. I'd much rather play hardball.
It's faster.
So
you don't throw like a girl?
I never threw like a girl. My dad wouldn't
let me. I could throw the ball from home plate to third without
getting off my knees. I toss a football fairly well, too. I
wanted to play football with the boys, but then I started getting
my, you know, girly bits, and that can be a problem when you
get tackled and stuff.
Ever
been in a fight?
When I was in fifth grade, this sixth grade
guy kept grabbing my butt. He was like, "I want to see you;
I want to kiss you" -- really harassing me. So one day I punched
him in the face. We had to go to the principals office because
I gave him a black eye.
Your
ancestry reads like a United Nations roll call. Do you identify
more with the Latino or European side of your family?
Well, I grew
up more with my father's family, so I would have to say that
I feel closer to the Latino side. But I'm not trying to represent
Latinos. Everyone keeps wanting to pigeonhole me as something,
but I'd rather be known as an American. I could just as easily
say that I'm French or Danish or Canadian, because that's where
my mother's side of the family is from. I mean, I don't even
know how to speak Spanish, so how can I represent Latinos?
Your
family moved around a lot when you were growing up, right?
Yeah. My dad was in the Navy. We lived in
California, then moved to Mississippi for a few years. I even
had an accent for a while. Hey, y'all! Then we moved
to Texas and I picked up another accent. When I was nine we
moved back to southern California. I think I went to eight or
nine schools.
So
do you relate to the loner side of Max?
I personally relate
to feeling isolated, because even when I was in school and among
my peers and friends, I never felt like I was really part of
the group. Max is distant because she has to be; she can't let
anyone find out who -- and what -- she is. It's really a simple
matter of survival more than anything else.
How
about her problems with authority? Is that based on you, too?
My teachers all hated me. I had asthma and
took this medication, which was basically like speed, that made
me bounce off the walls. Plus I was a total smarty-pants, like
I knew the answer to every question. But my biggest issue was
that I refused to call teachers "Mr." or "Mrs." They were just
people to me, so I wouldn't address them that way. They hated
it.
Ever
have any nicknames?
Oh, yeah. My grandmother called me muchacha cochina pestosa,
which means "dirty little girl." I did some crazy things
to get attention when I was a kid. Like, my family would be
having a barbecue, and they'd be talking about boring grown-up
stuff, and I'd walk right in the middle of the group and just
let out this nasty burp. Or I'd put on my bikini and pull my
bottoms up my butt and walk around like that. For my grandparents,
who are totally Catholic and conservative, that was pretty shocking.
My grandmother would be, like, "iAy muchacha cochina pestosa!!"
How
does a dirty little girl win the lead role on a huge new TV
series?
I wasn't even interested at first because
I really wanted to concentrate on film -- it was just another
audition. Then I read the amazing script that Jim Cameron wrote.
Max was so cool. That was it. I knew they wanted to cast someone
who was a lot like the character, then write the script around
that person. And I was a lot like Max.
Dark
Angel takes place in 2020, after an economic and
social collapse. Are you scared that Cameron's vision might
come true by then?
Not really. Actually I don't think that's
such a bad world, even though everything is torn down and people
are in economic despair. Because it's starting over. I mean
we [in the series] may not have the freshest vegetables from
around the world, but then again there aren't 20 jean commercials
either. Instead of people using material things as a crutch,
it simplifies everything. I think that's kind of cool.
You
just finished making an independent movie in Malaysia. How did
you like paradise?
Oh, man, it was kind of wild. We were working
in a full-on jungle with monkeys, tigers, and grasshoppers the
size of birds. And they have this other bug that's like a gigantic
bumblebee. I swear, it's bigger than a hummingbird, and it's
really loud. And the Malays will catch them right out of the
air, put it on a stick, tear the wings off, toast it, and eat
it.
How
did it taste?
No way! Those things have worms and stuff.
Two people on our crew tried it and they got sick for days.
Still,
you were OK hanging out in the jungle with the guys on the crew.
I've always been like that: hanging out with
the dudes, sticking up for my beliefs, throwing it down when
I needed to. Like, I'm really good at being sarcastic with guys.
That's the best way to hang out with them, because that's what
guys are like. They don't want the quiet, prissy little things.
I never liked girls that complained about everything and refuse
to do anything about it. That drives me crazy.
So
what makes you interested in hanging out with a guy instead
of the guys?
I like smart and interesting guys. Looks are
much less important. Especially smart guys who understand life
and are not so uptight about it. Like, there's a certain type
of guy that's in a certain groove, and he's interesting because
he likes to read and exercise his brain. And I'm not talking
about a total academic person, but someone with a natural curiosity.
Someone who can hang out with the president of the United States
and a cab driver in Jamaica and not treat either one
differently.
What
type of guy falls for you?
Well, yesterday a 60-year-old
Arab tourist with gold chains came on to me. I was driving
along, and this old man kept driving alongside me, trying to
get me to pull over. Like, I'm going to stop and jump into this
guy's car? People are so weird sometimes. But really, I don't
get asked out on a lot of dates. That used to bother me; then
I realized, Whatever, it's just not my time.
Do
you have any other dating rules -- besides not jumping into
strangers' back seats?
Not to go on dates with just anyone. Not to
give it up too soon. Don't give your heart too soon. Don't give
too much of anything too soon.
How
do you know you're supposed to go on a second date with a guy?
When I want to hear what he's going to say
next.
Maybe
I should stop talking now.
Maybe. Give it a shot.
|