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"I think it is always a little awkward to see your husband kissing another woman, but I know all those girls, and now I watch the show and I watch the characters, so I am,'Yeah, kiss her.'" |
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Click back to the main page where you can view the latest news on Rebecca along with site updates.
Read Rebecca's biography to learn all about the talented and beautaiful actress.
Catch up on Rebecca's latest and past projects with out extensive guide.
Our image gallery currently holds over 5,000 images including scans, captures, event photos and more!
The video vault is a great place to see Rebecca in action with interviews, trailers and clips from her films & TV shows, we have it all!
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Current Projects what lies ahead for rebecca
Vanished
Bunny Whipped
Last Day
Also Coming Soon
Keeping It In The Family pay a visit to our baby sister
Other Sites Of Interest your ultimate fan thrill
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The Library your source for articles, interviews and other written media
Flair - Fall 1999
Six hours after getting up and putting in a half day's work on the set shooting Kevin Willamson's new ABC-TV series, Wasteland, she has not a hint of fatigue in her unaccented, lilting voice as she talks about her role as Sam, a fledgling assistant district attorney from North Carolina now living and working in New York City. As Sam, for instance, she says: "My boss has just told me that in order to be taken seriously as a D.A., I've got to lose the North Carolina accent and those little sayings, like when I have to go to the bathroom I say, 'I've got to tinkle.' 'Can't you just say "pee"?' he says." This dilemma strikes close to home. At 15, Gayheart, who is a mix of Italian, Irish, German and Cherokee, packed her belongings and moved-alone-to New York City from her hometown of Pinetop,Kentucky ("It's got a population of around 800 now," she says), to fulfill her childhood dream (and probably every other young girl's in America) to become a model and eventually an actress. Not long after she had arrived in New York, a casting agent told her to "lose the accent,honey" -which she did. Even now, though, a dozen years later, she can turn it on at a moment's notice-think Dolly Parton without the attitude. "The agent said, with the accent, I'd never make it as an actress. At first, I was resistant. I thought of all these successful actresses who spoke with accents. But she said that the difference was, they could speak without one. So I decided to go to a diction teacher to lose mine. But when you lose your accent, you lose a part of yourself, and that's something you really don't want to do," she says softly. Somehow, you get the feeling that if Gayheart ever did lose a part of herself, she'd find it pretty quick. The words competent, self-assured, focused, and ambitious come to mind. After all, how may 15-year-olds head off to the big, bad city to make their way in the world? And make it she has. From modeling to TV commercials (the aforementioned Noxzema and Clairol's "Glintz girl") to soaps (Loving), to film (Scream 2, Urban Legend, and Jawbreaker), to stage (the L.A. production of Alfred Uhry's Tony award winning play The Last Night of Ballyhoo) and to TV (Beverly Hills 90210 and Earth 2). And to think, it all started in a local mall. "I was 14, and with my mom, when this guy came up to us and said that I ought to be a model. At first, I was embarrassed. I didn't think I was pretty," say Gayheart. At the time, she was 5'7", just half an inch shorter than she is today. But the guy was legit, working with the Elite modeling agency in New York. A year later Gayheart called and asked if she could come up to New York for the summer and try to find work as a model. "My mother was very nervous. But 'can't' was a dirty word in our house. My parents had instilled in us the idea that we could do anything, that we should follow our dreams, so it was hear for them not to let me go." And Gayheart's dreams did not include staying in Pinetop, Kentucky. Even though she had "a very happy, very normal childhood. I had such a grounded family-my mom and dad were middle-class, working people. My mom sold Mary Kay cosmetics, and my father was a coal miner. I have two sisters and a brother-and I was living in the South and having a wonderful time. Cookouts, dinners together-it was bliss as a child, even though we were 'financially charged,' which is a nice way of putting it. But all that's helped me in my adult years. Because of the unconditional love I had from my family, whatever happens to me now, I feel loved." At the end of summer, when it was time to return to Pinetop, Gayheart, who had just turned 16, had other ideas."There was no way I was going home. I got a taste of all the opportunities there were in New York, non of which I could have if I went home to Pinetop." But try telling this to your parents when you're 16. She did. And they did what any parents would do: flew to New York to bring her back. Fat chance. First, Gayheart used reason- she lined up a restaurant job and arranged to enroll in high school. When they didn't go for that, she pulled out her ace-in-the-hole. "I threatened them," she said. If they didn't let her stay in New York, she'd join the rolls of the world's oldest profession and bring shame to the family name. Needless to say, that did the trick - so to speak. Gayheart enrolled in Professional Children's School, where her classmates included Uma Thurman, Jerry O'Connel, and Sarah Michelle Gellar; got a job in Canastel's, a trendy Manhattan restaurant; and moved into a "model's" apartment provided by Elite, which she shared with several other aspiring Cindy Crawfords. "Those first few years in New York were the best years of my life, because I was completely fearless. On the other hand, it was completely frightening - the girl from the wrong side of the tracks in New York City," she jokes. "I wasn't savvy or worldly, and financially, it was really tough." She recalls that she ate lots of peanut butter sandwiches and even jumped subway turnstiles. "It was a hard time, but a fun time. I was an outsider because of my accent and being from the South. I stood out and kept pretty much to myself, but I learned so much." The day she moved into the model's apartment was also the day she met Brett Ratner, a college film student who, it turns out, was to play a significant role in her life. "My bags were literally in the living room floor when he came in to visit one of the other girls. He was 18, going to film school at NYU, and I new right away he was going to be my boyfriend." At first, Gayheart, was a third wheel, accompanying Ratner and her friend out on the town, but eventually they began to date. Today, 12 years later, with only one brief period apart, Ratner, who directed Jackie Chan in Rush Hour, and Gayheart are still together. "We're grounded in our relationship, probably because of my family life. Monogamy is hard for everyone," she admits, "but it does have its unique problems when a couple is in the entertainment business, because of the long hours and long periods apart. But no matter where we are, we try to touch base a couple of times a day by phone." What Gayheart really is excited about these days is her role in Wasteland, which follows a group of people in their late 20s, "going through their second coming of age-finding themselves professionally and personally, about to turn 30 but resisting," she explains. When Willamson sent Gayheart the script, which includes three female roles, she chose the part of Sam - a Southern debutante trying to be taken seriously in New York. She's a bit of an overachiever, and you're going to see her journey, her hardships in the city." Sound familiar? Scans available in the gallery
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