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5 Questions With Rachael Leigh Cook
Yahoo! News - January 27, 1999
by Carol Deegan
It's 1999. Online
shopping is the ultimate mall. Computers have replaced typewriters. And
yet, some things never change. ... Like high school.
So baby boomers
and their children can relate to She's All That, a new romantic comedy
set in a trendy Los Angeles high school. The film is the feature film debut
of Robert Iscove, the Emmy-nominated director of "Rodgers & Hammerstein's
Cinderella."
Oh sure, backpacks
have replaced book bags. And kids tote beepers and cell phones. But the
class president still rules. Cheerleaders and star athletes are at the
top of the social pecking order. Your status is defined by the car you
drive, the person you date and the people you hang out with at school.
And the senior prom
is THE event of the year.
So when class president
Zack (Freddie Prinze Jr.) is dumped by his social-climbing girlfriend Taylor
(Jodi Lyn O'Keefe), he makes a bet with his best friend that any girl on
his arm will be voted prom queen.
Any girl in the
school? Is this guy's ego big enough?
His friend picks
Laney Boggs, whose father (Kevin Pollak) drives a pickup truck and cleans
swimming pools. She helps with expenses by working part-time at a cheesy
fast-food restaurant. The kids she hangs out aren't part of the most popular
crowd.
Laney has her sights
set on an art scholarship and college.
And she's not about
to let anything or anyone - including the mega-popular Zack - distract
her.
"It kind of surprises
her more than anything when Zack comes up and he wants to talk to her,"
says Rachael Leigh Cook, who plays Laney. "Her attitude is like 'What is
wrong with you? Are you stupid?' It's kinda funny."
From her character's
perspective, Prinze is the loser, lost in a world of parental expectations,
superficiality and trendiness.
"Until you meet
Freddie, you will not realize what a feat of acting this was for him. Because
he's just the nicest guy you will ever meet in your entire life," Cook
says.
Cook and Prinze
met during the filming of "The House of Yes," a dark comedy about a family
obsessed with the JFK assassination.
"We never had any
scenes together but I had little parts opening and closing the film. Freddie
is great in it. He's so funny," she says.
Cook, 19, grew up
in Minneapolis, where she worked as a print model. She moved to Los Angeles
about three years ago. She stars in the upcoming films, "The Hi-Line" and
"The Bumblebee Flies Anyway" with Elijah Wood.
As for life in Los
Angeles, "I read a lot of scripts, I go on a lot of auditions, and I meet
people and whatnot. It's not all that glamorous and everything. The truth
is, it's kind of hard to find your way around, it's kind of hard to meet
people. It's OK. You can't beat the weather. I miss Minnesota, I do."
1. What attracted
you to She's All That?
Cook: I think people were
marketing a lot of the whole 'Scream' idea. And I had a stack of scripts
'this high' of just carnage and cheerleaders. And when I got this script,
it was just like, this is a nice movie, this is a good movie, I feel good.
I'm going to read this script again.
2. How would you
describe the film?
Cook (laughing): It's your
classic 'boy meets girl, girl hates boy, boy loses girl, girl reprimands
boy for everything he ever did and said, boy and girl get back together'
movie.
3. Did you go to
high school or professional children's school?
Cook: I went to high school
until my freshman year. And then things got pretty confusing. I had tutors
who would have to coordinate all my work with the school. But I got a diploma.
It was hard, but I got a diploma. That's why this movie was so funny. It
was like everything that I missed in high school, like the cliques, the
sports teams playing and the prom, and all this stuff, it was just my total
vicarious high school experience. It was great. It was funny.
4. How did you pick
your film roles?
Cook: Actors have like a
hundred different ways of choosing which projects they want to do. But
... the ones I want are the ones where I can just read it, I can so clearly
just see myself saying these lines. I read them on the page and I can hear
my voice in my head and how I would say them. At that point, it's like,
'I have to do this. You might think that there is someone else you might
want for this role, but you don't understand, because I'm going to do this.'
I can just hear these characters in my head.
4 1/2. And what
about She's All That?
Cook: I think it was more
just the language of the film. It's so funny, it's just hilarious, I mean,
I read it late at night, I was just like laughing out loud. And I couldn't
remember the last time I've read a script and I was like actually by myself
laughing.
5. You get the feeling
that Laney could take or leave Zack, that she is going to be successful
in her own life with or without him.
Cook: I'm glad you say that
because sometimes people will say 'Well, here you play kind of a loser
in the film.' And I just get so mad! Like absolutely not! They're sorry
they asked. It's so wrong!