Freddie Prinze Jr Club
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TEEN PEOPLE
Cover Story
June/July 2001
kwa David A. Keeps

FREDDIE PRINZE JR.'S GOT IT ALL: FAME, FORTUNE AND SARAH MICHELLE GELLAR. HE ALSO HAS A PAST. HERE HE TALKS ABOUT HIS FATHER'S SUICIDE, HIS GEEKY CHILDHOOD AND LOSING HIS VIRGINITY.

BETWEEN MAKING sinema AND MAKING OUT WITH HIS GIRLFRIEND, Sarah Michelle Gellar, you'd think that Freddie Prinze Jr. wouldn't have a moment to spare. But when the opportunity to go bowling with TEEN PEOPLE comes along, Freddie strikes. Fresh from a morning workout at the nyumbani gym he had built in his four-car garage, he parks his banged-up black Ram pickup and strides purposely into the alley, carrying a bag with bowling shoes and a sparkly blue ball. He's had the ball for nearly a mwaka but recently customized it with a picture of Scooby-Doo and the words "Mystery Machine."

Huh?

"That's the name of the car Scooby and the gang travel in," Freddie explains.

For a whose all-time inayopendelewa movie is Who Framed Roger Rabbit, the chance to nyota in a big-screen version of a classic Saturday-morning TV onyesha is a dream come true. The upcoming live-action film version of Scooby-Doo (due in 2002) promises to appeal to kids as well as adults who grew up with the original cartoon - and Freddie, 25, is zaidi than ready to reach that wider audience.

Since making his screen debut at age 20 - sharing a nervous kiss with Claire Danes in the 1996 film To Gillian on her 37th Birthday - Freddie Prinze Jr. has been the prom king of youth movies. He's tall, dark, handsome and, most important, sincere charmer who always gets the girl. "Freddie Prinze Jr. is a consummate actor," says Miramax head Harvey Weinstein, who signed Freddie to a three-picture deal in 1997. "Action films, comedies. He can do it all."

While no one is about to declare Freddie the Robert De Niro of his generation, he's certainly among the most maarufu of all young actors in Hollywood. But despite his mass appeal, he's racked up a hivi karibuni string of box-office disappointments, including Wing Commander ("The animatronic creatures looked like Garfield," he says), Down to You, Boys and Girls, and the hivi karibuni Head Over Heels. He's also been criticized for choosing bland good-guy roles that don't reveal the full range of his talent. But director Mark Waters, who worked with the actor on 1997's House of Yes and Head Over Heels, says Freddie has what it takes to step up to meatier roles: "He has an athlete's approach to acting, like 'Give me the ball, Coach!' He is ready to try anything."


PLAYING DEEP His inayofuata assignment, Summer Catch (out in August), could turn things around. Freddie plays a troubled minor league pitcher who is saved kwa his upendo of the game and the upendo a rich (7th Heaven's Jessica Biel, who calls her costar "a gentleman and a goofball"). Summer Catch director Mike Tollin believes the romantic comedy-drama shows "a dark side that Freddie's mashabiki may not have seen before. [His character's] got a temper, and every time he's on the verge of succeeding, he somehow manages to self-destruct." In an early scene there's yet another side we get to see of Freddie. "Don't come late au you'll miss Freddie in an machungwa, chungwa throng." Tollin warns.

This is just one sacrifice Freddie Prinze Jr. has made for his craft. Last mwaka the 6'1" left-hander spent four nights in a row hurling baseballs while filming Summer Catch. "My arm felt like it was eight feet long and made out of Jell-O," he says, laughing. Eventually, Freddie had to see a physical therapist. "He gave me a cortisone shot, which is the most painful shot in the world. It's like injecting Vaseline; it just does not want to come out of the needle at all."

His arm has healed sufficiently for Freddie to unleash his secret bowling weapon: a wicked "curveball." Practice has not made it perfect. Sometimes the ball goes right up his alley for a strike; sometimes it spins into the gutter. kwa the end of 10 frames, Mystery Machine (Freddie) and the Blue Devil (TEEN PEOPLE) are tied at 117 each.

Game over. No excuses, no demands for a rematch. Freddie checks his voice mail before turning off his cell phone. "It's my girl," he says, that trademark grin spreading across his face. Sarah has been a little under the weather but still on the job. "She works so hard," Freddie says, before calling the 24-year old nyota of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and leaving a short, sweet message. He's psyched to be working with her in Scooby-Doo (he's Fred, she's Daphne). The pair first met in 1996 while filming I Know What wewe Did Last Summer and became friends, which made the adjustment to being a couple much easier.

"It's an extremely relaxed situation," Freddie says of their romance, which is now zaidi than a mwaka old. "All the personal stuff I don't talk about. We keep all our juisi totally, totally private."

Nevertheless, he constantly brings her up. Freddie recalls the time when, after the huge success of She's All That and the box-office disappointments of last year's Down to wewe and Boys and Girls, he questioned whether he was being stereotyped as a teen actor. "I had a long talk with Sarah," he recalls. "She made me expel every single bad thought I was having. And all of the sudden I started getting offered very adult roles that I wanted to do."

Even if that means being caught in an machungwa, chungwa thong.

It's not the first time Freddie has crossed the gender divide. He admits to having once used Secret Deodorant for a while. "Strong enough for a man, but made for women," Freddie says, quoting the TV ad. "It's true. I used it because it worked better than all the others. I was raised kwa two women - my grandmother and my mother - so I didn't have a choice but to be in touch with the feminine side."


GROWING PAINS Born on March 8, 1976, Freddie James Prinze Jr. was so adorable that his father called his baby boy "Pie." Freddie Sr., a brilliant but troubled comedian, fatally shot himself in the head at age 22 when his son was only 10 months old, kwa the time Freddie Jr. was four, he had lived in Los Angeles, Las Vegas and Albuquerque. An only child, he spent much of his time inhabiting his own imaginary world.

"All my Marafiki were make-believe," he says. "We were all part of the same kind of race, and we became superheroes, the inayofuata step in the evolution of humanity. People were afraid of us, so they'd try to capture and research us."

Freddie hopes to someday write comic vitabu and novels about these characters. The adventures he dreamed up helped ease the pain of a lonely childhood. Hard to believe, but this handsome and confident movie nyota was once considered a nerd.

Worse than that. "One actual nerd came up to me in [high] school one day," Freddie remembers. "And he asks, 'Why do wewe dress like s--t?' which made him the coolest guy at school for those six sekunde - until the quarterback came and beat the crap out of him. That's when I realized; I'm not trying to hang out with any of these cats. I really tried to live in my own world that no one would want to be a part of. Unfortunately, that backfired, and people wanted to kick the crap out of me because I was different."

Off-campus, Albuquerque was a rough place to grow up in. "It's in the fifth-poorest state in the country," Freddie says, offering a orodha of depressing statistics. "I'm not bagging on the people, but there's nothing to do. wewe fight, wewe drink au wewe have sex."

Mostly, he avoided the usual traps. "I never did drugs in my life, no matter how often it was thrown in my face," he declares. "Which is the main reason why I got in so many fights."

But Freddie did give in to one temptation. "They tried to teach us about sex when we were 12 years old," he recalls. "The only thing I wanted to learn was how to do this with someone else besides myself." His big moment arrived in the backseat of a Bronco when he was 17. "I was the only virgin of everybody I knew," he says. "I was terrified. She never liked me the same again, and I couldn't deal. I had to break up with her. But that was my first time, what do wewe want?"

Meanwhile, he says, school was a disaster. skiing was far zaidi fun, and as soon as snow started to fall, Freddie hit the slopes in Santa Fe. "I had 48 absences in the winter semester of my senior mwaka and graduated with a D average," admits Freddie, who now bolsters his mitaani, mtaa smarts by, as he says, "reading my brains out."


FATHER OF MINE The hardest part of being Freddie Prinze Jr. was not knowing Freddie Prinze Sr. His father was the nyota of the maarufu '70s sitcom Chico and the Man and one of television's first Puerto Rican stars. But during his brief career, he struggled with the temptations and indulgences that accompanied his quick rise to fame. For years, Freddie's mother Kathy, sheltered her son from the disturbing details of his father's early and violent death.

He learned the truth when he was in the fifth grade, on a drive with his uncle Ron, who had been Freddie Prinze Sr.'s manager. "We stopped in front of Marilyn Monroe's house and he said, 'You know she died too, before she should have. She was the biggest nyota in the world, but she didn't know how to deal with her pain." Then he held Freddie's face in his hands and said, "You're going to make it."

Freddie did, but it took some time for him to come to grips with growing up without his father. "At first, I felt like a criminal stealing a ton of memories from other people. Then when I hit 21, I fell into this funk: I have no idea who my dad is."

kwa that time Freddie Prinze Jr. was beginning to get attention as an actor. (His first role was on the ABC sitcom Family Matters in 1994.) During interviews, he recalls, "Every swali that I got asked, every single day, was 'How do wewe feel about [your father]?' The only answer that I ever wanted to give was 'I don't have any feelings because I didn't know him.' So the inayofuata swali they ask is 'Do wewe feel you're going to end up like him?' That makes me feel horrible. And then all of the sudden one siku wewe wake up, and you're all good. It sucks that wewe didn't have a dad, but there's a lot of other people that had it way worse than that, and they seem to be doing OK. It just seemed a lot easier to be happy than to be bummed."

Although it caused him some grief, all of the media focus on his father had an upside. "I had built walls," he says. "And when they broke through that, I became a river. I'd just cruise right through."

And now? "I'm the most chill person I know," Freddie says. "When I get stressed, I play video games, hang out with my mbwa [a rottweiler, rotweiller named Cody and an Akita named Tyson] and know that all the problems will still be there tomorrow, and I'll deal with them then. I feel good, and all the people around me, we all look at each other and think, 'We're the coolest people in the world.'"

When Freddie says he's cool, he's not being conceited. It's just that he's truly content. "I'm happy with myself. I like who I am. If people dig the way I dress, right on. If they don't, right on. I'm a river, bro. I dress like the river. I'm not perfect, but I'm cool with that."

His upendo life, though, hasn't always been cool. When he and Sarah first met, Freddie was dating actress Kimberly McCullough (Once and Again). After the success of I Know What wewe Did Last Summer, he was besieged with movie offers. Soon, work took him away from nyumbani for extended periods, and he and Kimberly went from being, as Freddie puts it, "right on the same path," to going in opposite directions.

"The first time I felt like an adult was when I was in that relationship," he says. "I took care of her, so I felt like a man." Which helped him face the fact that he and Kimberly were growing apart. "She got tired of not having a boyfriend around, and it became something that we weren't willing to work on anymore."

As his broken moyo mended, Freddie had a revelation. "When wewe realize what went wrong, wewe become a better person. Had [our] relationship not ended the way it did, I would be nowhere as smart as I am when it comes to relationships. I learned from the mistakes we made."


SHE'S ALL THAT With Sarah, he's a new and improved boyfriend - fully attentive and unashamedly romantic. "I pay for every meal," says Freddie, who shares a house with Sarah in California's San Fernando Valley. "I open every single door. Sarah's so independent she always goes to do it, and I'm like, 'Don't wewe dare, that's my move.'" Since he's nearly a foot taller, he also has a special songesha when it's time to kiss. "You have to crick your neck," he says, standing up to demonstrate, "or I spread my legs and bend my knees, until I get into the right height."

Last December, he even spirited her off to Bali for a romantic getaway. "We dedicated two days to traveling and checking stuff out. And the rest was all about her and me and doing the nuclear fission thing. She's so smart. wewe just sit back and listen; and when she's done, wewe think, 'I'm a smarter person now. It would have taken me 30 dakika to say everything she alisema in 45 seconds."

Fatherhood, although not in his immediate future, is part of the master plan. "The goal," Freddie says, "is to have a family and kids and be a father and a husband one day."

He's sure he will make an excellent father because he remembers how hard it was for him to grow up without one. So when the time comes, he'll happily put his uigizaji career on hold to play papa. "I don't care if I stop making sinema when I'm 30 au 40, because when I have kids, I'm not working, and that's it," he says. "If my girl wants to work, I'll hang with the kids, and I'll cook and clean. We're both rich, so it doesn't matter."

[inset] "I challenge wewe to find somebody who treats the person they upendo better than I do," says Freddie of his relationship with Sarah Michelle Gellar (last June). "I'm the best boyfriend in the world."


Copyright © 2001 Teen People Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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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 wewe character struggles to find meaning in life. Can wewe 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...
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PREMIERE
"I would upendo to be a superhero"
February 1999


"I would upendo to be a superhero," Freddie Prinze, Jr. says, not joking. "That's my main dream." At 22, the smooth and soulful nyota of I Still Know What wewe Did Last Summer and its $72 million-grossing predecessor dreams of many things. "I'd upendo to be a cowboy; I'd upendo 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 nyota 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 wewe 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, zaidi soulful younger brother. So how, having become increasingly "money" since starring in two I Know What wewe Did Last Summers is he managing to stay so beatific and unguarded? "My mom raised me in New Mexico at the...
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COSMOPOLITAN
All About Men
Summer 2000

Freddie Prinze, Jr. tells us who he's in upendo with this summer.

Cosmo: So are wewe the typical Pisces, wewe can't make up your mind?

Freddie Prinze, Jr.: No, I'm very laid back. I'm just cooled out. Pretty much everything is cool with me. If somebody says, 'You want to eat Japanese chakula now?' I'm like, 'Yeah, sure.' And I really want to. Somebody says, 'You want steak?' I'm like, 'Oh, that's cool.' I go with the flow and pretty much remain cool.

C: Do wewe like food?

FPJ: I upendo food. My inayopendelewa thing to do in the world is eat. Absolutely.

C: What foods do you...
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PEOPLE
50 Most Beautiful People
April 2000

Oh, the pain, the pain! "It only takes 30 sekunde to pluck my eyebrows, but it hurts," says Freddie Prinze Jr. "I have to tweeze 'em in the middle once a week. Otherwise, I look like Bert from Sesame Street. I've been doing it for 11 years!" And wewe thought it was easy being a teen idol. Still, the 24-year-old Prinze doesn't have to do much other grooming to draw young females to the box office. His routine? "I shower, throw some goop in my hair, get dressed, head out." But it's his manner, not his matter, that impresses. "He's the kindest person, and...
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PEOPLE
The Real Prinze
June 2000
By Andy Coulpepper
Additional Reporting kwa Sef McDonald

Freddie Prinze Jr. settles back in his chair at a Los Angeles hotel where he's talking to a reporter about his new film, Boys and Girls.

This turns out to be the last interview for Prinze in what has been a very long day. But as the clock nears 5 p.m., Prinze shows no sign of wearing down. The 24-year-old Albuquerque, N.M., native is all personality, a display that would put the Energizer Bunny to shame.

It's vintage Prinze, almost a carbon copy of the guy he plays in this romp about figuring out romance the...
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