Stay Tuned

January 29, 2011

The Daily Star - Stay Tuned

Issue link: https://www.ifoldsflip.com/i/24104

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 1 of 23

The Daily Star, Oneonta, N.Y., January 29, 2011 2 coverstory Jennifer Love Hewitt and Betty White seek ‘Lost’ love on CBS T BY JAY BOBBIN wo popular actresses of different gen- erations, in a story of romance vanished and recovered. It’s the perfect formula for a Valentine’s Day-season movie, and even more so as a Hallmark Hall of Fame entry. Airing Sunday, Jan. 30, the moving CBS drama “The Lost Valentine” stars “Ghost Whisperer” alum Jennifer Love Hewitt as a television reporter pursu- ing the story of a woman — played by Betty White — who observes a wedding anniversary ritual each year for the husband she lost in World War II. The presumed widow’s grandson (Sean Faris, “The Vampire Diaries”) initially resents the journalist’s intru- sion but relents when he sees the spark his grand- mother shows in recounting her memories. And there may be more to the story, as the reporter tries to have the long-missing-in-action Navy pilot located and brought home, alive or not. “With my middle name being Love, and this movie coming out for Valentine’s Day, I think it works well,” says Hewitt, also an ex- ecutive producer of the film based on a James Michael Pratt novel. “I don’t really do very much reporting in the movie, but I did have fun with that stuff, and it’s one of the things I asked for. I wanted to see (the char- acter) doing her job, having spent so much time with reporters and never having been able to be on the other side.” veteran actress who became last year’s media “It” girl gets plenty of screen time, and her deeply affecting final moments in the movie could well earn her another Emmy Award to go with the six she already has. Hewitt says her new con- nection to White is one she wants to endure. “I grew up watching “The Lost Valentine” airs as a Hallmark Hall of Fame presentation Sunday on CBS. The other big lure for Hewitt was the casting of her main “Lost Valentine” co-star. She claims that be- cause of White’s atypically dramatic performance, “I was in tears, and the crew was in tears, a lot. Like no other actress I’ve ever worked with, every time, she gave the crying 100 percent. That woman works her butt off. She works harder than some 20-year-olds I’ve worked with. “She’s just a beautiful, beautiful human being,” Hewitt adds. “We all know that she’s really funny, but there’s a lot to her as a person. I think she really felt this movie. As she said a few times on the set, ‘This was my war. This was my time. I know what these feelings are, and I know what these women went through.’ She really identified with this.” Indeed, White says she “loved the script, but at first, I said ‘No’ because it meant going away to Atlanta (where the film was made). I can’t get away that long, but my agent said, ‘Just read the script.’ I did, and I was hooked. I just think it’s a lovely story. It brought back so much, I can’t tell you. I knew too many women at that time that this happened to.” Given her trademark humor, now on display in the recently started second season of the TV Land sit- com “Hot in Cleveland,” it’s no surprise White prompts laughs even while talking about doing drama. She reports that Hewitt’s boy- friend, actor-director Alex Beh, was on the set and “calls her Love. I kept think- ing he was just trying to romance her!” Still, White was very pleased for the chance “The Lost Valentine” gave her to do something serious. “It was a challenge,” she allows, “but it was a lovely opportunity to let your heart show a little bit.” White’s “Lost Valentine” character is shown both in the present day and in flashbacks, with Meghann Fahy playing the part in ear- lier years. Nevertheless, the ‘The Golden Girls’ with my grandmother,” she says. “I have the DVD sets of all the seasons ... which Betty has now signed for me, which is just awesome. I’ve always loved her; she’s really a hero of mine, someone I look up to, so I was super-excited to get to be with her off-cam- era as well as on. And she does not disappoint. She’s pretty incredible.” The admiration is mutual, since White deems Hewitt “just a delight. On our lunch breaks sometimes, she and I and her boyfriend would play Scrabble. We’re avid players, and at one time, someone tried to run the word ‘brotes’ through. I said, ‘There is no such word.’ You know, it was one of those Scrabble things. Now our greeting for each other is, ‘Hi, it’s Brotes!’ ” It wasn’t all fun and games, though. “They took me to dinner one night,” White recalls, “and they gave me a little package and said, ‘This is just some- thing we thought you should have.’ It was a Tiffany box, and in it was a chain with a tiny diamond heart. Well, talk about crying! It was just so dear of them. I wear it all the time, of course, and I can’t wait until we get to- gether again.” 2 x 2” ad celebrityq&a It isn’t all ‘Parenthood’ for Christensen now BY JAY BOBBIN Q: I recently saw Erika Christensen in the 2002 movie “Swimfan.” What is she up to these days? —Bart Bartholomew, West Bend, Wis. A: She’s co-starring as Julia in the NBC series “Parent- hood.” She also appears with Jesse Metcalfe (“Chase,” “Desperate Housewives”) in the suspense movie “The Tortured,” which was await- ing an American release date at this writing after debuting on DVD in other parts of the world. Q: I’m hoping you will tell me that “The Good Guys” has not been canceled. It hasn’t been on lately. —Carole Sacks, Glen Bur- nie, Md. Erika Christensen A: That’s because — sorry, but here it comes — it was canceled by Fox. However, the network currently is repeat- ing the existing episodes late Saturday nights. Send questions of general interest via e-mail to tvpipe- line@tribune.com. Writers must include their names, cities and states. Personal replies cannot be sent. 2 x 3” ad

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Stay Tuned - January 29, 2011