From catch-clarissa-errors@tcp.com Wed Mar 4 19:32 MET 1998 Message-Id: <1.5.4.32.19980304182648.006a9ac4@pop.mindspring.com> X-Sender: wolfbat359@pop.mindspring.com X-Mailer: Windows Eudora Light Version 1.5.4 (32) Mime-Version: 1.0 Errors-to: catch-clarissa-errors@tcp.com Precedence: bulk X-Resent-by: catch-clarissa-errors@tcp.com X-Admin-Addr: Majordomo@tcp.com X-List-Software: mlist v2.6 by James Lick with Majordomo Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Length: 5000 From: Donald L Ferry To: clarissa@tcp.com Subject: TV's Sabrina stretches out with drama roles Date: Wed, 04 Mar 1998 11:26:48 -0700 http://www.phillynews.com/inquirer/98/Mar/04/entertainment/TVFIL04.htm TV's Sabrina stretches out with drama roles By Susan King LOS ANGELES TIMES HOLLYWOOD -- It's late Friday afternoon on the set of ABC's hit comedy Sabrina, the Teenage Witch, and Melissa Joan Hart is in the makeup room explaining how she is trying to segue to adult actress while still starring in a children's series. "It's kind of a good thing to experiment with my acting and take different roles," says the peppy and personable 21-year-old. "I really enjoy doing TV movies for the experience and the characters," says Hart, who came to fame as a teenager in the 1991-94 Nickelodeon series Clarissa Explains It All. "If I'm going to do TV movies, I don't want it to be the same characters everyone has seen me in. It's going to be to help my career and move my career along in different areas." Hart's latest TV movie, Silencing Mary, airing Sunday on NBC, is about as far removed from Sabrina as possible. Executive-produced by her mother, Paula, who also wears the same hat on Sabrina, the drama finds Hart playing a scrappy college student who becomes a one-woman crusader for justice when her roommate gets raped and the star football player who committed the crime is not prosecuted. Hart's 19-year-old sister, Trisha, came up with the idea for Mary. Trisha is the film's coproducer. "She sort of developed the whole thing," Hart says. "She goes to Miami University in Ohio." In researching colleges, the actress says, her sister discovered that schools do not have to list rapes and other crimes of violence in their safety statistics if the perpetrator was not convicted. So "most colleges, if not all colleges, have higher incidents than they reported," she says. Hart says it was her mother's idea not to have the heroine also be the victim. "That really drew me to the role," she says. "It's different." She hopes her young fans won't be upset that she's trying more mature roles like Mary. " Sabrina is just done for entertainment purposes," Hart explains. "This is my career, and I have to make decisions for my career. I try to be careful of my audience, but it's also that audience who is going to grow up with me. I don't want to get stuck [ in the same roles ] ." Although Hart frequently appeared on stage as a teen and made her Broadway debut at 15 in The Crucible, she's more comfortable doing comedy. "I've done comedy for the last six years," Hart says. "I find drama really challenging to me, like not to use my eyebrows [ to express emotion ] and be real and find the truth behind every line. So, to do something like this movie, where there's emotion involved, is so great. I am a very high-energy person on the set. I need to be friends with the whole crew and be a clown. That works here [ on Sabrina ] , but on this movie there were a lot of emotional scenes, and to learn to take the time to calm down and be, like, 'OK. This is what I have to do' was [ challenging ] ." While she's pushing herself as an actress in more adult roles, Hart still enjoys playing a teenager Friday nights on ABC's Sabrina, now in its second season and already renewed for two more. "I have a 17-year-old sister, Elizabeth, and she's my inspiration," Hart says. "I study her. Everything is scary to her. She's a very teen 'angster.' A lot of Sabrina was based on her at the beginning and still sort of is. I don't think it's hard playing 17 at all." Despite her hectic schedule, Hart is enrolled at New York University. "I attend right now through correspondence," she says. "Hopefully, we're set to wrap Sabrina in June of 2000 or something. Once it's done, as long as it hasn't been too long, I can go back. But I am afraid of losing my credits. I would be graduating now if I was a regular student." Hart did get to spend one month at the dorm at NYU before Sabrina began. "I had the best time," she says enthusiastically. "It's a bunch of kids living together. How can't that be fun?" Though Hart is still undeclared, she thinks she may major in art and literature. "I can make my own major," she says. "Last year I said I needed three weeks to myself. I wanted to go to school and I wanted to go to Italy. So I combined it all." Hart says she was so taken with Florence that Sabrina may actually film next season's opener there. "It's not definite, but I'm asking for it," she says with a smile. She hopes to do a feature film this summer. "I've a bunch of independent features lined up, possibly studio features," she says. "All different kinds of roles. What I really want to do is an independent film because that is where the really cool roles and directors are."