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USA WEEKEND
Interview: Freddie Prinze Jr. on his dad, Mel Gibson and violent video games
January 2000

Freddie Prinze Jr. has the same handsome looks as the famous father he lost to suicide when Freddie was an infant. Prinze, 23, who stars in the new big-screen comedy Down to You, also has something his dad (of TV's Chico and the Man) seemed destined for: a successful movie career.

USA Weekend: Your Down to You character struggles to find meaning in life. Can you relate?

Freddie: "It's kind of close to the last few years of my life. He's always messing up with his girlfriend. Every time he thinks he's got it made, something happens that just wrecks him."

USA Weekend: So your life isn't perfect?

Freddie: "No. My girlfriend and I dividido, dividir up a few months ago. I haven't been on a encontro, data since."

USA Weekend: Haven't we had enough filmes about introspective 20-somethings?

Freddie: "No. My generation kind of got hosed as far as films we could relate to. We got Lethal Weapon. I want to be Mel Gibson, because he kicks butt, but he's not going through problems I went through. I mean, people were shooting at him."

USA Weekend: Best screen kiss so far?

Freddie: "Jennifer amor Hewitt in I Still Know What You Did Last Summer. We had to do a lot of takes. We kept cracking up and ruining it."

USA Weekend: Are you into the Hollywood scene?

Freddie: "I'm a simple guy. I don't go to parties. I play paintball on weekends. I go bowling. I play basketball. I read comic books every dia and I play video games at Jerry's Deli at 12 o'clock at night."

USA Weekend: Do violent video games affect children?

Freddie: "I grew up playing them, and I've never hurt anyone. It's in the way parents say, 'This is real and this isn't, and if you try to do this in real life, you could hurt somebody. So don't do it.' My mom told me. But maybe some other kid's mom didn't ell him."

USA Weekend: What's one thing you wish you could share with your dad?

Freddie: "My father's dream was to make movies, and he never got the chance. I feel that he's watching me and that he helped put me on this path."


Copyright © 2000 USA Weekend. All Rights Reserved.
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PREMIERE
"I would amor to be a superhero"
February 1999


"I would amor to be a superhero," Freddie Prinze, Jr. says, not joking. "That's my main dream." At 22, the smooth and soulful estrela of I Still Know What You Did Last Summer and its $72 million-grossing predecessor dreams of many things. "I'd amor to be a cowboy; I'd amor to be a husband, a big brother, a little brother - there are so many roles out there that I haven't even gotten to touch."

Hollywood has always been in Prinze's blood - his father, the late Freddie Prinze, was the estrela of television's Chico and the Man - but a career in front...
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MOVIELINE
March 1999
By Stephen Rebello

Among Hollywood's under-30 crowd, where attitude is often everything, how supremely cool it is to run across a guy so openhearted and endearingly odd around the edges as Freddie Prinze, Jr. "There's nothing you can't ask me because I'm not ashamed of anything I say," says the 23-year-old, who looks like he could play Keanu Reeve's sadder-eyed, mais soulful younger brother. So how, having become increasingly "money" since starring in two I Know What You Did Last Summers is he managing to stay so beatific and unguarded? "My mom raised me in New Mexico at the...
continue reading...
video
freddie prinze jr
interview
punky brewster
reboot
the kelly clarkson show
video
freddie prinze jr
interview
the kelly clarkson show