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Christina Ricci
Article - RollingStone
Magazine 1998
1998
August 20
CHRISTINA RICCI
Christina
Ricci has made a career out of being fed up. "I don't think I look like
an actress," the eighteen-year-old explains. "When I was little,
I looked like a fucking alien. I wasn't cheerful or cute; I was annoyed a
lot." Ricci's acting breakthrough came at age ten, when she played Wednesday
Addams, the morbid, prickly daughter in 'The Addams Family'. "I loved
doing that part," Ricci remembers. "I wasn't as unhappy most of
the time, because I got to be annoyed on camera." After spending much
of her New Jersey childhood naked ("I'd walk around the house nude, and
my mom would be like, 'Poopsie, we're going into town, you've gotta put on
clothes' "), Ricci stayed dressed long enough to be discovered in a second-grade
school pageant. Soon after, she made her film debut alongside Cher and Winona
Ryder in the drama 'Mermaids'. A string of roles followed, including 'The
Cemetary Club' ("It was some movie about old people"), 'Casper'
("All I did was run around and yell, 'Casper! Casper, no!' ") and
the Disney remake of 'That Darn Cat' ("I couldn't sit through that one").
Ricci's work generated lots of on-set fans along the way: "When I made
'The Hard Way', I remember James Woods and [director] John Badham saying,
'People go to school for years to do what you do.' And I was like, 'Why?'
" Ricci stands five foot three, with wide eyes and a tiny mouth that's
all curdled, wicked disappointment. Since turning critics' heads with last
year's 'The Ice Storm', she has pulled off an acting trifecta: playing a Barbra
Streisand-obsessed runaway beside Johnny Depp in 'Fear and Loathing in Las
Vegas', a plush sex kitten in 'Buffalo 66' and a manipulative femme fatale
in 'The Opposite of Sex'. With roles in John Water's upcoming 'Pecker' (playing
a "laundromat Nazi") and the MTV Films generational saga '200 Cigarettes'
(co-starring everybody), Ricci seems poised to make the rarest of Hollywood
leaps: from child star to star. "I think the main reason a lot of people
don't make it is that it's hard to see someone as cute and then to all of
a sudden see them as having more depth," she says. "I guess I was
just lucky that when I was little, nobody thought I was that cute."
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Starchives -
Christina Ricci - Article
- RollingStone Magazine 1998
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