SARAH MICHELLE
GELLAR INTERVIEW Feb 2000
Sarah Michelle Gellar, star of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, goes for
the heart and speaks out on success, romance and those rumors
about a new angel in her life
On the WB monster smash Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Sarah Michelle
Gellar stars as Buffy Summers, a desperate-to-be-normal teen born
to terminate the undead. She is known as the Chosen One. But off-screen,
it's the 22-year-old Gellar who does the choosing. Arguably the
most popular young actress of recent years, she's a TV superstar,
big-screen scream queen, Maybelline pitch girl, Internet icon and
teenage role model. Yet she is able to maintain a mystique most
other young stars have either lost or never had. Gellar, who
began acting at 4 and won an Emmy at 18 for her role as the
conniving Kendall on All My Children, is notoriously tight-lipped
where matters of sex and romance are concerned. She is even less
forthcoming about her father, Arthur, who divorced her mother,
Rosellen, a former teacher, in the mid '80s. We visited Gellar in
her trailer on the Buffy set, where she decided to lay down her
slayer's stake and open up her own heart for a change.
TV Guide: Your approval rating among young viewers of both sexes
is awesome. What's your take on this? Assess your appeal.
Sarah Michelle Gellar: Assess my own appeal? That's an annoying
question.
TVG: Whoever said this interview would be easy? Let's start with
your female fans.
SMG: They respond to Buffy because for years we didn't have a
character young girls could look up to. Mallory on Family Ties
was an idiot. Carol on Growing Pains wasn't happy being smart;
she wanted to be popular. Those were not role models. And then
you have the actresses, like Nicole Eggert, who are so physically
perfect you can never be like them. Buffy is not the smartest or
the most beautiful. She's kind of awkward, but she is OK with who
she is. The most important lesson we need to learn in our
formative years is that it's OK to be an individual. It's OK to
be you.
TVG: And the guys?
SMG: They see Buffy as a take-charge, kick-ass girl who has never
lost her femininity. The ones who are threatened by that don't
watch our show.
TVG: What about your lust factor? In a recent poll, you were
voted No. 1 on a list of the 100 sexiest women on the planet. Yet
your sexiness isn't overt.
SMG: My sexual fantasy may not be yours, so the trick is to be
sexy to the point where it gets people's imaginations working
and then you let them take it from there. That's why the
movie stars of the '40s and '50s were so sexy. They positively
reeked of sex by only hinting at it. It's one of the reasons I
love [the new daytime soap] Passions. Nobody even kisses on that
show, but I am obsessed with it!
TVG: What did you think when Keri Russell told Jane magazine how
she lost her virginity?
SMG: [Rolling her eyes] Here's my thing: I made a rule way back
when I was on All My Children that there would be a part of me I
put out to the public and a part I keep to myself. This has
caused me problems. It has caused me to lose interviews. But I
need a life to go home to that only my close friends know about.
I am sooo proud of my house, but you will never see it in InStyle.
I don't think people should know what my bedroom looks like. We
give away too much information.
TVG: C'mon! You don't enjoy showbiz dish? You're not curious
about other stars?
SMG: I like to see their houses. I want to know about their jobs
and their hobbies, but I'm not interested in when or how they
lost their virginity. I do not want to see Cameron Diaz's butt
crack on the cover of Vanity Fair.
TVG: Is there jealousy or competition between you and the other
young women of your ilk like Russell, Neve Campbell,
Jennifer Love Hewitt?
SMG: No. Isn't that weird?
TVG: Frankly, yeah. Not even a healthy competition?
SMG: No, but then maybe I'm in my own universe. Love [Hewitt] and
I are so different that if they want her, they wouldn't want me.
We're all so different. Maybe we're not competitive because we
all have our own shows. Now, if one of us didn't have a show... [suddenly
jumps up and grabs a photo taped to the wall] Did you know we
shot my Maybelline commercial at the park in Beverly Hills with
the George Michael bathroom? Here's a picture of me taken by the
famed photographer Herb Ritts [who directed the commercial] in
the very stall George was arrested in.
TVG: What's with your annual Emmy snub?
SMG: I'm OK not being nominated. Honestly. I have an Emmy. When I
needed acceptance back in my soap days, I could not sleep the
night before the nominations. I'd sit there waiting for my phone
to ring. Now my validation comes from the public. What aggravates
me is that our show is always overlooked. [The voters] see us as
a kids' show. They don't think WB is a real network. It's hard to
fight that stuff.
TVG: Let's discuss the most recent rumors about you in the Star.
SMG: Yes, my big affair with [Angel star] David Boreanaz!
TVG: Well?
SMG: It's a complete fallacy. In fact, everyone on the Buffy set
was laughing about the very idea of David and me as a couple.
TVG: The rumor doesn't bother you?
SMG: I brushed that one off. They probably didn't call me for
quotes because [the article] was so horribly inaccurate. It
claimed David and I were together at a Christmas party, when he
was home in Philadelphia and I was in Australia, and how we were
seen eating at health-food restaurants. Well, if I ever saw David
put any food in his mouth that wasn't fried in a fast-food joint,
I'd drop dead. But, hey, you know what? People are talking. I
made the cover of Star and it wasn't because of anything bad or
true.
TVG: Let's discuss your other rumored affairs. You've been seen
at parties and premieres with [Sliders star] Jerry O'Connell. Is
or was that a romance?
SMG: No. We went to high school together.
TVG: And Freddie Prinze Jr.?
SMG: That was never a romance, either. The odds are you will not
see me at one of those events with someone I am romantically
interested in, which is why I'll go with Jerry or Freddie.
TVG: But you have had romances? Ones we know nothing about?
SMG: [A bit indignantly] Well, of course.
TVG: How tough has it been to keep them private?
SMG: Very. It's a lot of work, and unfortunately it puts a strain
on relationships, but that's the way I choose to do it. Going
through a breakup is the most painful, personal experience in the
world. The last thing I want to do is read about it, or have
other people making judgments. I don't know how stars who have
these big public relationships and breakups get through it.
TVG: Are you comfortable not being in a relationship?
SMG: To a degree. No one ever wants to be alone, but my job
sometimes necessitates that. I don't think I could commit to a
really serious relationship for the simple reason that I wouldn't
be there. I haven't gotten off work before midnight in months.
And normally I get out at three or four in the morning.
TVG: Are you scared of commitment? Do you run from it?
SMG: No, I'm not running from it. It's no fun not having someone
to snuggle up with on a rainy day. I'd love to have the perfect
boyfriend right now, but as a society we have to learn that it's
OK not to be in a relationship. Also, I tend to date out of the
business, which makes it that much harder. I try not to date
actors, because I know how insecure and crazy we are. I can't
imagine going out with another one of me.
TVG: Tabloids have claimed you are anorexic.
SMG: Everyone is anorexic! It's like McCarthyism all over again.
I've always been a skinny little thing. Yes, I did at one point
have a little baby fat and I did lose that. But I'm a 5-foot-2,
tiny-boned person. My mother is a tiny-boned person. Besides, I
work like a dog on this show. Maybe some actresses do have
anorexia, but I certainly don't.
TVG: Where do you stand on cosmetic surgery?
SMG: I have a big problem with putting things into your body,
like with breast or lip surgery. But I'm OK with nose jobs if you
get up every day and look in the mirror and your nose makes you
unhappy. If you think that's the answer, by all means do it. I
just hope it is the answer.
TVG: Has anyone agents, managers, producers ever
suggested you get a nose job?
SMG: No. My nose is my nose. But I'm not saying that when I'm 60
I might not want to get my eyes fixed. Some magazine said I had a
boob job. [Cackles and points to her breasts] Lemme tell ya, if I
paid for these, I'd like 'em to look a lot better than this.
TVG: OK, here's the dreaded topic. Will you please say something
substantial about your father?
SMG: [Long silence] There is nothing substantial to say. [Her
face hardens, her eyes begin to tear ever so slightly.] He is not
a person who exists in my life. Just because you donate sperm
does not make you a father. I don't have a father. I would never
give him the credit to acknowledge him as my father. My mother is
the most amazing woman I've ever met. I wanted for nothing. I
never felt a lack of affection. And I am, I think, a perfectly
content and very well-adjusted person probably more so
than most people I know who have two parents. One of the greatest
gifts my job affords me is that my mother, who gave up her entire
life for me, doesn't have to work anymore. Now I can give back.
She can take it easy. She can do whatever she wants. [Flashes a
wide smile] I bought her a house.
TVG: Projecting a clean image to your audience seems very
important to you. Do you feel a responsibility to do that? Is it
ever a drag?
SMG: I think a certain obligation comes with the job. I didn't go
to clubs before I was 21. You will never find a picture of me
smoking. Well, that's because I don't smoke, [though] I did for a
little bit. I hated it. It wasn't for me. But you never saw a
picture of me with a glass of champagne in my hand before I was
21. And I am militant about drugs. You want to do 'em? You're out
of my life. End of story. I have to go to bed at night knowing I'm
a good person, that I've made decisions that are good for me and
make me happy. If, in the process, I can set a good example for
others, great. I don't live my life for other people, but I do
prove something I'm very proud of: You don't have to be a rebel
to be cool.