Toronto Star

Educating Hollywood

Despite having great gigs, many young actresses are opting for university It’s not entirely clear why the guys aren’t following suit, by Thomas Vinciguerr­a

- NEW YORK TIMES

When students returned for the fall semester at Brown in Providence, R. I., many came fresh from vacations spent working as government interns, editorial assistants or in other entry- level positions. But Leelee Sobieski, movie star and Brown undergradu­ate, had a different experience. She spent the summer in Vancouver, shooting the fantasy Dungeon Siege

with Burt Reynolds, Ray Liotta and John RhysDavies.

“ It’s a big, crazy thing,” she says in a telephone interview. “ I’m dressed in beautiful princess clothes and locked away in a castle.”

Sobieski, whose film credits include Eyes Wide Shut and Never Been Kissed, is just one in a wave of young actresses pursuing not just work and fame, but a top liberal arts education, too. And often they find that trying to have it all is a challenge. Sobieski, with the filming still not complete, is taking this semester off. The roster of matriculat­ing actresses has star quality. In the spring, Julia Stiles graduated from Columbia. Natalie Portman received her degree from Harvard in 2003. Earlier, Claire Danes attended Yale. The list goes on: Reese Witherspoo­n, Stanford; Maggie Gyllenhaal, Columbia; Elizabeth Banks, University of Pennsylvan­ia; Anna Paquin, Columbia.

Actresses with bachelor’s degrees are nothing new, going back to Katharine Hepburn ( Bryn Mawr, ’ 28). Her academic successors include Ali MacGraw (Wellesley, ’60), Meryl Streep ( Vassar, ’ 71) and Sigourney Weaver ( Stanford, ’ 72). But these women became widely known only after graduating. Today many actresses make their profession­al bones as children or teenagers, then trade scripts for books in a way that stars like Shirley Temple or Tatum O’Neal never did. Even if these women make their biggest marks after graduating, a degree from a top university can establish their identity. “ It’s a marvellous way to burnish your credential­s,” says Peter Sealey, a former president of Columbia Pictures and an adjunct professor at the University of California, Berkeley. “It gives you a whole new gravitas. Hollywood seeks that kind of validation by elite institutio­ns not related to show business. “What I can’t understand,” Sealey added, “ is why it applies mainly to women.”

There are exceptions, of course — including Jonathan Taylor Thomas ( Harvard, ’ 04); Gyllenhaal’s brother, Jake ( Columbia, ’ 02); and Fred Savage ( Stanford, ’ 99) — but educators and people in the entertainm­ent industry agree that college does not hold the same appeal for young male actors that it does for their female counterpar­ts, a disparity that mirrors the wider college landscape, where women generally outnumber men. But the actresses may also be choosing college because they, more easily than men, can imagine not acting one day.

“ The career life expectancy of an actress is pretty short,” says Janice Min, the editor in chief of Us Weekly. “ It’s still true that actresses over the age of 40 have an incredibly hard time getting good roles. If they go to college, the skills they learn there can enhance their ability to write or produce or direct. It’s almost like an investment, one of the better ones they can make.” One thing is certain: Few rising actresses are making that investment at less- prominent colleges, people in the industry say. The first wave of collegebou­nd stars began in the early 1980s, when Jodie Foster and Brooke Shields made headlines by going to Yale and Princeton, respective­ly. For Foster, who had starred with Robert De Niro in Taxi Driver, the decision was simple. “ I didn’t think I was going to be an actor, growing up,” she says in a phone interview. “ As long as I could remember, the convention­al wisdom was that when you turn 16 or 17, you’ll never work as a child actor again.” She adds, “ My priority was trying to find something else to do.”

Others followed suit: Laura Linney, Brown, class of ’ 86; Mira Sorvino, Harvard, ’ 89; Jennifer Connelly, Yale, ’94; Amanda Peet, Columbia, ’ 94. And people in Hollywood say the trend is still growing.

“ Two words: role model,” says entertainm­ent lawyer Peter Dekom, the author with Sealey of Hollywood vs. the Future. “ Exploding the ‘ dumb actress syndrome’ in this extraordin­arily powerful and dynamic way is wonderful for the business. The more role models, the more women will be inspired to follow you.”

Colleges themselves can also benefit. Even before they become wealthy, and presumably generous, alumni, these student stars add a bit of buzz. “ Everyone wants their school to be ‘ hot’ as far as young people are concerned,” says William Oliver, a Columbia alumnus and admissions administra­tor for more than 25 years. “ And this is what does it.” But administra­tors at elite schools are quick to say that they do not admit actresses simply because of star power — that a university like Harvard or Stanford hardly needs a movie star to give it lustre. “ These are genuinely intellectu­ally sound young people,” says Lee Stetson, dean of admissions at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. Even if actresses have the advantage of fame, educators say, they are not much different from others who add to a student body’s diversity. “These colleges are looking for interestin­g people,” says George Keller, a higher- education consultant. And sometimes the actresses’ peers are not easily overshadow­ed. “Some of the kids had such major accomplish­ments themselves,” says Sara Gilbert ( Yale, ’ 97), who filmed half of her episodes of the sitcom Roseanne while in school. “ They had played Carnegie Hall and things like that.”

In that kind of environmen­t, fame sometimes cuts little ice. When Stiles appeared on Late Night With Conan O’Brien

as a freshman, she made what she thought was a humorous remark about Columbia cafeteria workers. Many students interprete­d her crack as evidence of smug Tinseltown superiorit­y. A writer in a campus newspaper called her a “ sloe- eyed Hollywood wench.” But such stings are minor compared with the tension that actresses face between work and school. Many feel they cannot afford to stop working completely. “ The pressure is on females to become celebritie­s at younger and younger ages,” says Min of Us Weekly. “ By the time you’re in your mid- 20s, it’s already too late.” As a result, many actresses veer from the normal four- year college track. Stiles took five years to finish her bachelor’s; so did Foster. An extreme example is Elisabeth Shue. Not until after she had starred in Cocktail and Adventures in Babysittin­g, and earned an Oscar nomination for Leaving Las Vegas, did she get her Harvard degree. That was in 2000, 15 years after her expected graduation date. But others have juggled work and classes well. Cara Buono made her profession­al debut at 12 in Harvey Fierstein’s play Spookhouse. Today she has films like Two Ninas

and Hulkand the series Third Watch under her belt. In between, she carried loads of 22 credits a semester at Columbia, graduating in 1993 with majors in English and political science after only three years and a summer session. “ Every semester I was working,” she says. “ I spent my freshman year at Lincoln Center.”

In many cases, however, career trumps classes. Witherspoo­n has put in only a year at Stanford; Connelly transferre­d from Yale to Stanford but has yet to graduate. Neither has Paquin, originally a member of Columbia’s class of ’ 04, graduated, nor Danes, at Yale. Ashley Olsen is at New York University for her sophomore year, but her twin, Mary- Kate, has not joined her. Sometimes college days can end before they begin. Both Katie Holmes and Christina Ricci were admitted to Columbia but did not attend. “ I really, really was excited by the idea,” Ricci says. “ But I didn’t come from a lot of money, and I had been supporting myself and didn’t have a lot set aside. So I felt my first obligation was to work.” That kind of decision often governs whether an actress will complete her degree. Under normal circumstan­ces, Sobieski would have graduated from Brown this spring; instead, she still has two years to go. “ There’s a part of me that says, ‘ Uh- oh, better go back.’ And there’s another part of me that’s been working since I was 11 and wants to get back to that.” But why bother embroideri­ng a film career with a purely optional layer of liberal arts? Sometimes it’s a matter of wanting knowledge for its own sake. “ In a protective environmen­t, you can read great books and learn from lectures, which you can’t do while you’re working,” says Stiles, who graduated from Columbia after appearing in 10 Things I Hate About You

and Mona Lisa Smile. But then there’s the perspectiv­e of John Lithgow, Harvard, ’ 65. He talked about the value of his diploma in a speech at his alma mater’s commenceme­nt this spring. “ Somehow,” he said, “ it never seemed to come in all that handy when I was auditionin­g for a soap opera or a potato chip commercial.”

 ?? PETER POWER / TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Julia Stiles attended New York’s Columbia University, and graduated this past spring. Many actors who are accepted don’t finish.
PETER POWER / TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Julia Stiles attended New York’s Columbia University, and graduated this past spring. Many actors who are accepted don’t finish.

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