'Celeste in the City' Equals Makeovers and Misunderstandings
Author: Kate O'Hare
Date: March 2004
Source: tv.zap2it.com
With rooms, houses and people being transformed left and
right on makeover programs, it was only a matter of time
before a TV movie capitalized on the trend.
That time arrives Sunday, March 14, on ABC Family, with
the premiere of the romantic comedy "Celeste in the
City," starring Majandra Delfino ("Roswell")
as a country mouse forced to turn city mouse when she moves
to New York.
Bespectacled, frizzy-haired college grad Celeste Blodgett
lands a job at a top newspaper, and bids farewell to her
family in Maine to tackle life in the Big Apple. Soon after
arriving, she's dismayed to discover that she's not a reporter
after all, but a fact-checker. Also, her "great"
apartment turns out to be a rat-infested dump.
The only bright spot is her neighbor Kyle (Ethan Embry),
who's handsome, charming and handy around the house. He's
also an interior designer, which leads naive Celeste to
assume he's gay.
Before long, Celeste decides to go along with her mother's
wishes and look up her cousin Dana (Nicholas Brendon, "Buffy
the Vampire Slayer"). He, as it turns out, is gay,
hasn't told his parents about it, and has abandoned the
name Blodgett for the more fashionable Harrison.
He introduces the dowdy Celeste to his style-conscious
pals (Geoffrey Pounsett, Jamie Robinson, Deborah Gibson),
who trash Celeste's look, then take her on as a makeover
project -- with the help of hairstyle expertise and free
clothing.
At the same time, Kyle helps her put her apartment in order.
But Celeste's new look doesn't immediately bring her happiness,
as the assumptions she makes about people cause several
romantic missteps.
Turning the pretty Delfino into the plain Celeste was no
easy feat. "They put on this special lipstick that
made my teeth look yellow," Delfino says, during lunch
with co-star Brendon. "Then they filled in my eyebrows
to make them look shapeless. They would do a certain shadowing
with blush to make my face look sallow. There's a lot going
on with the makeup to make it look like that."
Apparently, the effect was good enough to fool the unaware.
"I went out in public and was treated rather badly,"
Delfino says. "Two girls about my age, early 20s, they
stopped like two feet in front of me. One of them looked
at the other and said, 'Oh, my God, now that is scary.'
Just totally honest.
"It was so sad, because it was one of those things
where they just didn't care that I could hear. I was unstylish,
with frizzy hair, so I deserved to be abused. Isn't that
crazy? At least it gave me something to work from for the
part."
"It was really bad," Brendon says. "We call
it 'The Incident.'"
Brendon had concerns of his own. "It took an hour
and a half to dress me down," he quips. "I had
to be there the previous Monday in order for them to make
me look so bad."
"By day 18, 19 for me," he says, "I was
just done. Had our trailers been closer by the set, I would
have had more time to sit and relax. But when we were on
set, we were there for 10, 12 hours. I was just really uncomfortable
in my clothes, how tight they were. They're not what I'm
used to wearing. My hair was down to here." He points
to a spot in the middle of his forehead. "I had eyeliner
on. I just wanted to leave."
"You wanted Halloween to be over," Delfino chimes
in.
According to Brendon, the original character of Dana went
further than he wanted to go. "I've got members of
my family that are gay. I didn't like the stereotype."
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