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- <text id=94TT1161>
- <title>
- Aug. 29, 1994: Television:The Clearasil Years
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 29, 1994 Nuclear Terror for Sale
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/TELEVISION, Page 71
- The Clearasil Years
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Thirtysomething's creators focus perceptively on adolescence
- </p>
- <p>By Ginia Bellafante
- </p>
- <p> Angela Chase is a wise 15-year-old whose future we can easily
- imagine. At 25 she will have grown out of her tremulous beauty
- into a more certain one. She will pursue a fulfilling, creative
- profession in a bustling Eastern metropolis and date gentle,
- intelligent young men who resemble Eric Stoltz. But before Angela
- (played by real-life teenager Claire Danes) arrives at this
- promising womanhood, she must cross the emotional hurdles of
- adolescence, and that passage is the subject of My So-Called
- Life, an unusually affecting one-hour drama that will make its
- debut Thursday on ABC.
- </p>
- <p> Produced by Marshall Herskovitz and Edward Zwick, the creators
- of thirtysomething--a show that also skillfully portrayed
- the interior lives of affluent young people--My So-Called
- Life depicts Angela's turmoil at home and in school. In a leafy
- suburb we find Angela perpetually at odds with her mother and
- father. She wants from her parents what all teenagers want,
- the freedom to go to a rave or dye her hair a fiery red. At
- school she is torn between an enduring affection for her childhood
- friend Sharon--a well-behaved clarinetist dressed to her socks
- in pink--and the alluring world of Rayanne (A.J. Langer),
- a girl who wears dangling earrings and possesses a brash, sexual
- confidence. "School," Angela explains in a voice-over, "is a
- battlefield for your heart."
- </p>
- <p> Most of her heart, though, has already been captured by Jordan
- Catalano (Jared Leto). She does not know this boy but reads
- volumes of meaning into his plaintive good looks. "He's always
- closing his eyes like it hurts to look at things," she romanticizes.
- But Jordan's interior life may not be nearly as complex as his
- reserve suggests. He is prone to statements like one he makes
- during English class: "So getting back to that Metamorphosis
- story," he says, referring to the work by Kafka, "it's made
- up, right?"
- </p>
- <p> Angela's endearingly superficial infatuation with Jordan as
- well as the rest of her conflicts could have been culled from
- Seventeen's advice columns, yet the writers of My So-Called
- Life manage to create richly moving story lines from the predictable
- materials of teenage life. When her mother (Bess Armstrong)
- asks Angela to take part in a mother-daughter fashion show,
- Angela is contemptuous of the idea. Mrs. Chase thinks her daughter
- feels above it all, but in fact Angela is too uncomfortable
- in her body to stride alongside a mother she views as stunningly
- pretty. Eventually, Angela reveals the truth to her.
- </p>
- <p> Like the thirtysomething characters, Angela is intensely analytical.
- Her appeal, in fact, is that she is so perceptive and articulate
- for her age. Yet at times the insights the writers attribute
- to her seem implausible. When faced with the chance to be alone
- with Jordan, she doesn't giggle or express vague fear but reasons
- that she may need the fantasy of her obsession more than the
- reality of him. "If you make it real," she says, "it's not yours
- anymore." That is an intriguing perception, but not one likely
- to be made by a girl who still cries in her mother's arms.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-