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Love Lessons Now that she's a ripe old 23, Jennifer Love Hewitt is making a few changes in her life--sure, she's still living with her mom, but she's releasing a new album, has decided to stop kissing and telling (oh no!), and is giving action a try by chop-sueying bad guys opposite Jackie Chan in The Tuxedo. by Stephen Rebello When the swell that was the teen craze crashed quickly in the summer of 2001 after a number of predictable high-school romances failed to bring in even their core audience, Hollywood insiders were placing bets on which teen stars would swim or sink. Jennifer Love Hewitt profited mightily from the teen craze, making plenty of dollars off two I Know What You Did Last Summers, the cult hit Can't Hardly Wait and TV's soggy series "Party of Five." But she was not one of the young'uns people ever thought would disappear. That's because by last summer, Love, as she is called by her friends and peers, had already set into motion her strategy for distinguishing herself from the herd of Young Hollywoodites. In 1999, Hewitt was looking to prove her versatility and grown-up chops, so she launched her own film and TV production company. Though her series "Time of Your Life" didn't last, her biomovie The Audrey Hepburn Story won viewers and sent out the message that she was willing to take risks. |
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In 2001, Hewitt scored a box-office hit in the mother-and-daughter con woman comedy Heartbreakers, costarring Sigourney Weaver and Gene Hackman. Hewitt seemed to be entering a whole new realm when she starred for first-time director Alec Baldwin in The Devil and Daniel Webster, in which she played Satan opposite Oscar-winner Anthony Hopkins. The choice was arty and, at the time, seemed smart--certainly a far cry from screaming for her life in a two-piece in I Still Know What You Did Last Summer. Too bad the film is being held up by legal hassles. Now Hewitt is taking yet another turn in her career--she's starring opposite martial arts expert Jackie Chan in the action film The Tuxedo. With the megahit Rush Hour franchise to his name, Chan is almost guaranteed to bring in moviegoers, which benefits Hewitt nicely. What's more, she's launching a new album, Barenaked, which was cowritten and produced by Meredith Brooks (singer of the chart-topping "Bitch"), that could elevate her to hyphenate status. STEPHEN REBELLO: Jackie Chan seems like an unlikely costar for you. JENNIFER LOVE HEWITT: When you see us in the movie together, you'll know why it works. I've never had such amazing chemistry with any other actor. Q: Is Jackie why you took this movie? |
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A: Yes, I love Jackie more than anything. He made me want to be in the movie. Now that we've worked together, I love him so much more and for so many different reasons. I liked my character, too. I play a CSA agent, a nerd, a water expert with an anger management problem, someone who spends a lot of time with beakers, chemicals, chlorine and is not a people person. She becomes Jackie's sidekick. Q: Did you do stunts? A: They had me do wire training and initially we were going to be this kick-butt fighting duo. Then Jackie said, "Why? Let me be the one to do the stuff people can't go home and try. Let her do the stuff that young girls could try," which made a lot of sense. I do the lame version of what Jackie does. Q: Got any war wounds to show for it? A: I broke my finger on Heartbreakers but I got more fingers broken on this one. I got karate-chopped in the hand and broke my middle finger. We just taped it together and kept filming. There was no room for me to go, "Oh, I need to go home." Jackie was like, "Are you OK? Yes? We shoot!" Excerpted from "Love Lessons" Movieline, September 2002 |