Mix
the enchanting powers of Shannen Doherty, Alyssa Milano and Holly Marie Combs
with the magic touch of Aaron Spelling and - poof! - an instant hit.
LONG BEFORE she was cast as a witch on the WB series Charmed, Alyssa Milano
dabbled in magic. It was last winter, and Milano was approaching the two-year
mark of a man drought. No suitor seemed suitable. Frustrated, she decided to
create fate: She bought a love-spell kit from a New Age bookstore. "I lit
the candles, put the oil in and read a little chant," she says, her story
now sending costars Shannen Doherty and Holly Marie Combs, seated next to her in
an office on the Charmed set, into fits of giggles. "It took half an hour.
And I was like, 'OK, let's see if that worked.' And it did."
A month later, Milano met Cinjun Tate, the lead singer of the Los Angeles-based
rock band Remy Zero, at a mutual friend's house. The two have now been together
for nine months and are sharing Milano's Los Angeles home. Coincindence?
"I think what happened is that I sat down and thought about what I
wanted," says Milano, who turns 26 next week. "I think manifested it
with the spell."
Cue
the eerie music and bring in Robert Stack. Could Milano have conjured up a beau
with an incantation? Perhaps. When it comes to Charmed and its three
bewitching stars, anything seems possible.
Consider this: Without much publicity -- certainly lacking the media blitz given
to the WB's other freshman drama, Felicity -- the enchanting show about a trio
of sisters who discover they are witches scored the highest ratings for a debut
in the network's history. Its premier episode hooked more viewers than the much
hped series opener of Dawson's Creek.
A surprise, yes, but you don't need any special powers to see why Charmed is a
hit. It has the campy sci-fi vibe and the girl-power message of Buffy the
Vampire Slayer mixed with the soapy sexiness of Melrose Place. And like Melrose,
Charmed is produced by that master of fantasy, Aaron Spelling.
As the Halliwell sisters, the stars solve crimes of a paranormal nature using
magic recipe book found in the attic of their San Francisco home -- oh, and they
look fabulous doing so. Spelling even likens them to the crime-stopping babes
from his '70s seires Charlie's Angels. "I'm the one referred to as Kate
Jackson," says Combs, 25, who plays the middle sister, Piper, and is
the most serious of the three during this interview. "I'm not, like, a
typical Spelling babe."
Milano, however, became one of Aaron's angels when she joined the cast of
Melrose Place in 1996 (she left halfway through last season). But Milano wasn't
the first choice for Phoebe, the flaky youngest sister on Charmed. Actress Lori
Lom, who appeared on the pilot episode, left the show for what Spelling calls
"personal reasons." Says Milano, "I got a call from Mr. Spelling
on a Wednesday and started work on a Monday. I was nervous because I didn't feel
prepared, and I was replacing someone that [my costars] might have really
loved."
Doherty, 27, who plays the eldest sibling Prue, says she was
"thrilled" by Milano's arrival. "Not to slight the other girl,
because she's a good actress, but this combo works," she says. The three,
in fact, are similar in many ways. They all smoke. They all enjoy fast food, as
today's feast of french fries and soda attests. And they all grew up performing
on TV: Milano on the '80s series Who's the Boss? Doherty on 1982's short-lived
Little House: A New Beginning and Spelling's Beverly Hills, 90210 for four
seasons; and Combs on producer David E. Kelley's series Picket Fences
(1992-1996).
The women share something else, too: They have all had serious relationships
with men at relatively young ages. Milano was once engaged to Party of Five's
Scott Wolf (and still has his initials tattood on her calf). Milano and Wolf
called it quits in 1994, and now their shows are time-slot rivals on Wednesday
nights.
At
age 18, Combs wed actor Bryan Smith ("Bugsy") in a Las Vegas chapel
after only eight dates. "I thought it was the love of my life, but people
change," says Combs, whose marriage lasted four years. "You need a lot
of time to really know someone, not just what they put forth."
Doherty nods in empathy, having herself had an ill-fated marriage to George
Hamilton's son, Ashley, whom she had known for two weeks. "It was a
ridicilous thing," says Doherty, of the much publicized seven-month union
that ended in the spring of 1994. "It should have never happened."
By now, Doherty is seasonsed in the art of public scrutiny. While her marriage
was ending, Doherty left 90210 amid rumors she fought with castmates, was
chronically late to the set and made unreasonable demands. And her notorious
club-crawling escapades left Spelling no choice but to release her from her
contract. But now that Spelling and Doherty are on the same team again, both
deny that any acrimony ever existed.
"For the most part, it was media hype," Doherty says. Still, she
admits her behavior was problematic, namely, the she partied too much and had
revolving door of boyfriends and fiances (there were three engagements in all).
"One guy would be in, then all of a sudden there would be another. And it
would be, 'No, this is the love of my life. Not the one that was here
yesterday.'
"I was really young, doing a show that I didn't think was going to be the
phenomenon it became," she continues. "It sounds incredibly spoiled to
say that being on the cover of Rolling Stones was a lot of pressure. But it is.
Your life changes. Everything has to be done perfectly, and I didn't follow
that. I lived my life as if I wasn't in the public eye. I thought, 'I'm young. I
have the right to experience new things, and if I want to go to a bar and get
drunk, that's my prerogative.' "
"Shannen was not fired," Spelling says. "We talked to her and she
wasn't happy, and she left. Was she late sometimes? Yeah. Who isn't? Was she so
late we couldn't shoot? Never. And doesn't everyone deserve a second
chance?"
According to Doherty, this year's reunion with Spelling lacked drama. "I
went into his office, and he hugged me and said, 'Welcome back, kiddo. Do you
want to do this together or what?' And I said 'Yeah, let's go for it.' So it was
easy."
So easy that Doherty is even thinking about returning to as her character,
Brenda, whom writers sent off to Europe when Doherty left the show. "I get
so much fan mail about Brenda," she says. "I feel I have a
responsibility -- it sounds sort of cheesy -- to thank the fans that supported
me and have given me a career." (Spelling, however, says a reunion is
unlikely: "Brenda is in the past. We've told her story.")
In the meantime, Doherty says she is "wonderfully, happily single,"
having ended a four-year relationship with writer-director Rob Weiss
("Amongst Friends") earlier this year. "He altered my life and
taught me so much," she says. "It was the most important relationship
I've ever had." She is not, as a tabloid reported, dating Friends star
Matthew Perry. "I've known Mattfor 10 years," she says. "There is
absolutely no thing between us. I wouldn't have a boyfriend right now for the
life of me."
The energy that once went into her nightlife now goes toward her other love,
horses. Doherty owns two and is an accomplished rider.
Still she hopes one day to tie the knot for good. "I'm the marrying kind
and want children so badly," she says. What if her five months of blissful
solitude drag out to two years? Not to worry, Doherty has a plan: She has
already purchased the same love-spell kit Milano did. "But the minute I
bought it, I had a run of bad luck," she says. "So I decided that
somebody was tapping me on the shoulder and saying, 'Shannen, calm down. Be
happy with the place you are now.