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WOMAN ON THE VERGE
Alexandra Holden
WHO IS SHE? A blonde, sweet-faced native of Minnesota, 24-year-old Alexandra Holden
has been popping up on TV and silver screens in a steady, teasing
rhythm for years.
WHAT HAS SHE DONE? What hasn't
she done? Her film credits include Dancer, Texas Pop. 81, In
& Out, Sugar & Spice and Drop Dead Gorgeous. She was
the anorexic reigning pageant princess in that deliciously tasteless
film: You may remember her lip-synched performance of Don't Cry
Out Loud while delivering an interpretive dance from her wheelchair.
On TV, Alex played Ross' coed honey and Bruce Willis' daughter on
Friends, the soccer player who lured Eli from his girlfriend
on Once and Again and the aspiring actress who sought Richard
Fish's help last spring on Ally McBeal. Last weekend, she
crossed enemy lines with a star-studded cast in the WWII miniseries
Uprising.
WHY DO WE CARE? She's an angelic beauty from the wholesome
Midwest...with an S&M-tinged text on her nightstand. Need we say
more?
Playboy.com:
You've played high school students of all types: Sugar & Spice
was about cheerleaders; you played an athlete on Once and Again.
Are any of these close to what you were like in school?
Alexandra
Holden: I guess that, like in Sugar & Spice, I obviously
had times in high school when I felt like I didn't fit in. And the
sporty Alex? I kinda got into that junior and senior year -- when
I started playing tennis. My parents are really into tennis. I was
home recently and Wimbledon was on all the time...and if they didn't
see it, they taped it. [Laughs]
PB:
Any good stories about playing Bruce Willis' daughter on Friends?
AH:
Oh, that was cool! You know, I had no idea that I was gonna have
a dad on the show or who it was gonna be, so I was totally surprised
-- that was a good surprise.
PB:
This summer you filmed the NBC miniseries Uprising, which
also features your Friends boyfriend David Schwimmer. Was
it like old times working with him again?
AH:
That was weird, 'cause a lot of my little scenes are with him, but
it was so different than Friends. He's yelling at me with
a Polish accent....
PB:
Tell us about the movie.
AH:
It's about the Warsaw ghetto uprising in World War II. It's a really
good story and it's based on actual people. My character's a young
Jewish girl who looks very Aryan, so she's able to sneak across
to the Polish side and try to pass notes and stuff like that. We
had a historian there to tell us what it was like at the time. We
would do our little "classes" -- it was kinda like school, but in
a really good way. [Laughs] We'd start out in the morning
and we would go practice shooting guns and stuff, and then we'd
have a little Hebrew lesson -- kind of learn some prayers, you know
-- and then we'd go to the set and rehearse.
PB:
Soon you'll be back on the big screen in Wishcraft, starring
Meat Loaf. Was it fun working with the "bat out of hell"?
AH:
The movie's kind of a high school love story, with murder. Classmates
are kind of dropping dead left and right of us. Meat Loaf plays
the detective guy who really thinks he's sharp and is gonna crack
the case, you know? He's gonna figure these kids out. He was cool.
He was a super-nice guy. I didn't have any scenes with him, so I
just saw him here and there on the set.
PB:
You seem to have a habit of doing projects with rock stars without
actually being in scenes with them -- the same happened when you
shot the Aerosmith video for Hole in My Soul.
AH:
Yeah, I know. But I did get to meet Steven Tyler later -- and he
said he liked the video!
PB:
We've seen your characters woo all types of men on the big and small
screens. What do you look for in a guy?
AH:
Somebody who's funny and likes to have fun. I don't want somebody
who's serious, but I don't want a slacker, either. Somebody who's
creative.
PB:
Is it a good thing to date somebody who has the same line of work
as you?
AH:
Yeah, it's great to date somebody like that. But everything is so
situational -- I feel like my whole life is situational. So if I'm
here doing this thing at this moment and then some other guy is
there doing that, too, then that's great...but that situation is
gonna change -- it always changes. So you just gotta keep that in
mind, you know?
So
maybe it's better to not have a relationship with that person. Or
maybe it's fine. But just know that it's gonna change! It's really
funny, I think, when people are like, Oh, the one, I've found the
one I love, it's so so great! And then six months later it's on
the cover of every magazine that you've broken up and it's over!
You know, of course it's over. [Laughs]
I
think it's better -- or easier for me right now -- to just always
keep that in mind: You might as well just hang out and have a good
time and not worry about it so much.
PB:
So what constitutes a good time for you?
AH:
I've been playing tennis; I like to hang out with my friends. I
like to paint, but I'm not very good at it. I like to read and write
about stuff, too.
PB:
What book do you have beside the bed right now?
AH:
Right now I'm reading Venus in Furs by Leopold Von Sacher-Masoch.
It's about men and women and sexual power. This guy dreams that
he's having a conversation with Venus -- and she's dressed in furs
-- and he's telling her that women are cruel and they break men's
hearts, and she's saying, Oh no, men are cruel, and so on.
PB:
Where do you fall on that -- do you think that women are cruel to
men?
AH:
I think everybody's cruel and everybody's really great, too, you
know? It depends. I think everyone's really mean and hurts people,
especially in relationships, but they're always on the flip side
of it eventually.
PB:
OK, one last question. In your second episode of Ally McBeal,
the firm attempted to prevent the release of naked photos taken
of your character. Are there any similar pictures of you floating
around that we should know about?
AH:
No.... [Laughs] I don't think so!
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by Samantha Bornemann
Published 11.01
at Playboy.com
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C O N T A C T | M E
Email samantha@shinygun.com
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