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| Thanks again
to Kathy (LuvJox) for sending me the magazine all the way from the U S of
A. Battle On, Sister ! |
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Wonder Women. What could a brainy Borg from the 24th Century possibly have in common with a passionate Warrior Princess from Ancient Times? Puh-lenty, Sister. What happens when the Queen of Sword and Sorcery meets the Queen of Outer Space? It turns out that Lucy Lawless, who plays the title role in the syndicated hit Xena: Warrior Princess , and Jeri Ryan, the part-Borg, part-human Seven of Nine on UPN's Star Trek: Voyager, have more in common than their bodacious, butt-kicking characters: Both are strong yet sexy role models. Both are 31. Both mix work and motherhood. TV GUIDE: You
two have scored tremendous popularity playing smart, fierce, powerful
action figures, so why don't we see a slew of Xena and Seven impersonators? TV GUIDE: You
both came to success in different ways. Xena sort of snuck up on
people, but fans were already buzzing about Seven before her first episode. TVG: Your characters
are also similar and rather unusual in the TV landscape in that their
primary relationships are with women - Xena with Gabrielle [Renee O'Connor],
Seven with Captain Janeway [Kate Mulgrew}. TVG: Both of
you have major lesbian followings. |
TVG: Does playing
tough ever get too tough? RYAN: I had a similar experience. I was sick with something almost every day of my first season -- colds, sinus infections, bronchitis -- and getting only four hours of sleep a night because of the schedule, so by the time we got to this really gruelling, complicated two-parter set in World War II, I was totally wiped. It all came to a head during an exterior night shot when El Nino moved in, and it started to rain on us -- pouring rain -- and I completely broke down. I couldn't function. I just sat down for a long time crying and trying to figure out if being on the show was worth it -- because at that point it didn't seem like it was. TVG: Don't
tears on the job set back the cause of feminism? TVG: Despite
the role models you provide, let's face it, neither of you is June Cleaver.
Sex is still the driving force of your characters. -- Michael Logan Weekend Warrior. Because of
a hectic Xena schedule that frequently has her shooting on location
in the hinterlands of New Zealand, Lucy Lawless usually sees her 10-year-old
daughter, Daisy, only on weekends. The star's ex-husband, Auckland computer
specialist Garth Lawless, whom she divorced three years ago, has custody
of Daisy Mondays through Fridays. "He's a very hands-on, excellent
father," says the actress. "The arrangement is sometimes emotionally
hard on us all, but considering the circumstances, it works out well.
When I'm in America for an extended time, Daisy either comes with me,
or -- if she's in school -- we meet halfway in Hawaii for little vacations.
She's a real water baby." Though Lawless, married since March 1998
to Xena cocreator and executive producer Rob Tapert, intends to
pursue movie roles when Xena ends it's run, she says, "career is
not as important as having a long successful marriage and having more
kids." During Xena hiatuses, she and Tapert flee Auckland
for their new home in Studio City, California. "I love how you can
be as big as you dare in America, and people aren't intimidated by it." Seven's Heaven. Star Trek: Voyager's Jeri Ryan says her recent divorce from Chicago-based banker Jack Ryan "has been quite rough, especially with the tabloids printing every single aspect of it." But the split has simplified matters: For the first year and a half of her Voyager run, the actress made exhaustive, twice-weekly commutes from her home in Chicago to the set in Los Angeles. "Just walking into an airport still puts me into a foul mood," claims Ryan, who now shares permanent Los Angeles digs with her 4-year-old son, Alex. The boy is struggling with his mom's popularity. "The older her gets, the more it affects him," says Ryan. "He used to be all right about my being recognized in public, but now when someone wants an autograph, he says, 'No, you're Mommy! You're Mommy! and he will pull me along. That's very hard." Ryan, born in Germany to a U.S. Army sergeant and his housekeeping wife, says, "I've got a lot of guilt going on here. My own mom didn't go to work until I was 13, and I know I benefited so much from that." |
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