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L i b r a i r i e . .
.
E ! O n l i n e . . .
B u f f y ' s B a
d G i r l G o e s A l l M a r t h a S t e
w a r t . . .
By Kristin Veitch
She's been a cheerleader and a vampire
slayer--and now, she sees dead people. But one thing never changes as
22-year-old Eliza Dushku morphs from role to role: This is one tough
chick.
Earlier this year, the former Buffy the
Vampire Slayer badass turned down the chance to headline her own Faith
spinoff, choosing instead to star in Fox's spine-tingling new drama Tru
Calling. She plays Tru, a med student who takes on the midnight shift at
a morgue and discovers she has a sort of, um, sixth sense for helping
the deceased: She can go back in time to prevent their demise.
The show has generated early buzz as (in
Dushku's words) "Six Feet Under meets Run Lola Run," but she
almost didn't take the role.
Why the initial hesitation?
I always said no, no, no to TV because of the contract--because of the
six years. I really want to go back to school. I mean, with a professor
as a mom, we didn't have a TV. Every morning when we went downstairs, it
was like "What's happening in Bosnia?" We talked about that
stuff all the time, and that's interesting to me. But at the same time,
if the show were to go seven years, I would be, like 27 or 28 years old.
Big deal, I can still start my life there.
Are you nervous at all about
headlining a show?
I have a little bit of what my family likes to call Impostor
Syndrome. I think it's going to get found out any day that I don't know
what I'm doing out there. I never really took acting lessons. I tripped
and fell into this. I was really lucky to be in the right place at the
right time.
And now you're making a name for
yourself as a bodacious badass. How'd you get so tough?
I grew up a tomboy in Boston. I have three older brothers--my mother
raised my brothers and me as a single mom--and she was a full-time
teacher, so I hung out with the boys every day. With boys, you have to
stick up for yourself and be like, "Hey, buddy." You develop a
little bit of a mouth. My mom even washed it out with soap once. I said
a curse word at, like six, and I got a little Dial soap in the mouth.
Is it true you were raised in
the Mormon faith?
I kind of fell out of Mormonism at a young age. My brothers and I were
not completely rebellious, but I remember driving to church in the
minivan on Sunday--church is three hours long if you're Mormon--we would
stop at a red light, throw open the slider [door] and run for the hills.
My mother would be screaming!
What are you most looking
forward to with your new gig?
Consistency. I like knowing where I'm going to wake up and go to work. I
just bought a puppy, and I'm feeling very domestic. Just channeling
Martha Stewart left and right these days.
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