The Prime of Miss Jean Smart Doesn't Lack for Variety
The actress best known as Charlene on 'Designing Women' has since made a career of shining in a wide range of roles.
By: Ray Loynd
Source: L. A. Times - Monday, June 20, 1994
The woman of a thousand faces swung open the door of her sun-dappled Encino home. It
appeared to be Jean Smart, all right--blond, 5-foot-10, bright smile that reminded you of some dairy
queen on the cover of an outdoor magazine.
But if you've followed Smart's blinding array of TV movie personas, you can never be sure who
the real Jean Smart is.
In an industry where most stars' personalities are frozen in place, changing little from movie to
movie, Smart, at 41, stands as one of the most chameleonic actors in television.
In almost rat-a-tat-tat order over the past few years, Smart has portrayed a stern, laconic Florida
swamp farmer (The Yearling); a heartbreakingly lovable borderline-retarded mother of six kids
she nearly loses to the courts (The Yarn Princess); a small-town teacher who has a giddy
romance with a rock star (Just My Imagination), and a twisted killer in Overkill: The Aileen
Wuornos Story.
In fact, her portrayal in this movie (based on a real case) ranks among her best. She assumes a
tough, glazed pallor to play the prostitute who killed seven Johns she flagged down along
backwater Florida roads.
"Jean is the best actress I've worked with in 10 years," says Peter Levin, the director of Overkill.
"She has tremendous emotional power. She's a dangerous actor because she's unpredictable."
And now she's making a return to theater, where she got her start, and the big screen. She will
co-star with Mary Steenburgen in Marvin's Room, a dark comedy-drama about a dysfunctional
family, at the Tiffany Theatre in West Hollywood in September. After some hesitation about
returning to comedy, she has agreed to co-star as a drunken neighbor who's continually coming
on to the eldest Brady boy in Paramount's big-screen version of The Brady Bunch, which starts
shooting in L.A.this summer under the direction of Betty Thomas for Alan Ladd Jr. and Sherry
Lansing.
Not bad for an actress who was so worried about being typecast that she walked away from a fat
paycheck on Designing Women while the series was still going strong. She doesn't regret doing
the series, but five years of playing sweet but slow Charlene were enough.
"I can't pretend it's not the most visible thing I've done," Smart said. "I know networks wouldn't
have offered me so much if I hadn't been on a hit show. But I didn't become an actor to get rich. I
knew it was time to go."
She made a brief sortie back to the stage (Laughing Wild at the Tiffany), appeared in a little-seen
but critically popular movie satirizing Hollywood wanna-bes (Mistress), then discovered a
mother lode in TV movies.
"She's one of America's truly hidden talents. There's a light inside of her that can shine in all
sorts of patterns," said Tom McLoughlin, who directed her in last spring's The Yarn Princess for
ABC.
As she sat in her living room wearing a long, loose white sweater and faded jeans, Smart
occasionally played with her family's latest addition--Max, an 8-week-old puppy who's half golden
retriever, half black Labrador. She had put up a little wire mesh fence for the dog in the corner of
the family playroom that was otherwise scattered with toys belonging to her 4 1/2-year-old son,
Connor. Smart is married to actor Richard Gilliland, whom she met on the Designing Women set.
So how did Smart segue from playing a monster killer to a borderline retarded mother of six?
The question doesn't faze her, but she appears a bit puzzled by it.
"Actors are supposed to be different people," she answers matter-of-factly. "That's what they
taught us in drama school. "My big influences," she continues, "were teachers--Eve Roberts, who
was my first drama coach at the University of Washington and who now teaches drama at USC.
She expected us to act professional, and she hated theater games like 'Now you're going to lie on
the floor, twitter your arms and tell me about yourself.'
"My other big inspiration was my high school teacher in Seattle. I was a cheerleader, but then I ran
into Earl Kelly's acting class. He was tough, and I became smitten with theater."
After college, Smart hit the regional theater trail--the Shakespeare Festival in Ashland, Ore., and
theaters in Seattle, Atlanta, Alaska and Connecticut, where she played the classics. She landed in
New York in late 1980, where she made something of a name for herself playing a lesbian
intellectual in Last Summer at Bluefish Cove, an Off Broadway eye-opener for the time.
That landed her an agent, which led to a role on Broadway in Piaf, which led to Hollywood.
Here she reprised her Last Summer at Bluefish Cove role at the Fountain and the Cast theaters in
1983.
"There's a part of me that thinks, 'Oh, why didn't I go to Hollywood when I was 22?' " she said.
"Instead I did Shakespeare in the rain in Oregon. In reality, I can't stay away from theater. It's
where you learn diversity and to use your whole body. In movies you do things from the neck
up."
Many who work with Smart are baffled as to why she hasn't attracted more attention from major film
producers. She wonders too.
"It's actor's paranoia," Smart said. "I don't want it to be a problem. I've always been a late bloomer.
Also, there seems to be less work in features because the budgets are so big. By comparison,
people forget that as far as exposure and recognition go, a network movie is virtually seen only
one time. It's a one-shot thing for an actor.
"But you have to understand that I didn't expect people to see me in Designing Women and say,
'Let's put her in Out of Africa, Part II. '"
She paused and added: "If I were 25, there would probably be more work."
So she's keeping busy elsewhere, with theater--"My husband and I have optioned an unproduced
play from Kelly Masterson, Into the Light, an extraordinary play that's a cross between Edward
Scissorhands and Equus "--and television.
She just finished shooting the eight-hour miniseries Scarlett, a sequel to Gone With the Wind,
which will air on CBS in November. In it she plays an "outspoken, cigar-smoking" Charleston
woman who is Rhett Butler's best friend, a character minted for the sequel. She gets to "doll up"
and appears (with Timothy Dalton as Rhett and Joanne Whalley Kilmer as Scarlett O'Hara) in three
of the four installments.
"Scarlett was a great deal of fun," she said. "I wanted to play someone who was lighthearted. I
don't know what a shrink would say, but when you shoot a scene and get it right--God, it feels
great."
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