This year, Mother's Day is a
major event for Moira Kelly as a mom ... real and fictional.
It's the first Mom's Day for her second child, a son born last
November to Kelly and her husband, and the first one for Kelly
as a star of "One Tree Hill." The WB Network drama series about
lives and loves in a North Carolina town ends its first season
Tuesday, May 11, with Kelly's character -- single parent Karen
Roe -- facing the possible loss of her son, Lucas (Chad Michael
Murray), for the second time in recent months.
After surviving a devastating car
accident, Lucas evidently is about to become a parent with
ex-girlfriend Brooke Davis (Sophia Bush). The resulting strain
has led him to consider moving away with Keith Scott (Craig
Sheffer), the older brother of Lucas' biological father, Dan
(Paul Johansson). Keith long has harbored unrequited feelings
for Karen, who left him devastated by rejecting his marriage
proposal.
Lately, general awareness of "One
Tree Hill" has exploded, which Kelly attributes in part to
network support evidenced by billboards and bus-station posters.
"It's nice to see that they're finally backing the show," Kelly
says. "Networks have a lot of shows they want to put out there,
and sometimes they have a favorite. When that falls short, they
take the money from that and disperse it among the shows that
actually have a life. I don't know whether the WB thought our
show could stand on its own the first half of the season and get
an audience, but I'm just glad it did."
"One Tree Hill" wasn't supposed
to debut until midseason, but it was moved up when the WB
decided not to proceed with the planned adventure series
"Fearless." Kelly explains, "It's been a really hard season,
with long hours, but I think that just comes with the territory
of getting a new show on its feet." The actress has been that
route before, with the short-lived CBS romantic drama "To Have &
to Hold" and the NBC series "The West Wing" (on which she was a
first-year regular).
"One Tree Hill" pays as much
attention to its older characters as to its teenagers, and Kelly
reasons, "That's what makes it a little different from a
'Dawson's Creek' or a 'Beverly Hills, 90210.' The adults'
stories are intertwined with the kids', and I think that's good.
Teens should see that there's a parental presence somewhere in
the younger characters' lives." Not that it's always easy for
the youths: Dan also is the father of Nathan (James Lafferty),
one of Lucas' high-school basketball teammates, often making
things awkward for the boys. On top of that, Nathan is involved
romantically with Haley James (Bethany Joy Lenz), Lucas' best
friend.
Kelly enjoys working with her
young co-stars, and the feeling seems mutual. "I think I'm very
easy on a set," she reflects. "I don't demand too much. I just
love to work, and I love the interaction with fellow actors.
Maybe the kids feel that ease. I wouldn't say I'm on their
level, because I've realized on this show that there definitely
is a gap between 21 and 36, but they're really excited. For a
lot of them, this is their first big show. When we all get
together and have a big scene that we're enjoying, I think that
comes across."
Kelly is familiar with that sort
of excitement, having worked in television and movies for 13
years. One of her early films, the 1992 comedy-drama "The
Cutting Edge" -- a romance set in the world of Olympic figure
skating -- has remained particularly popular via TV repeats and
video rentals.
"That movie has such an old
formula," Kelly says. "The boy and the girl from different sides
of the tracks. I think D.B. (Sweeney, the picture's leading man)
and I really had great chemistry, which is a huge part of a
movie like that being memorable. I don't know why it's so
timeless, but I'm really glad it continues to live on. I get
12-year-olds coming up to me and telling me it's their favorite
film. We had just the best time making it."
To other fans, especially the
very young, Kelly is best-known as the voice of Nala in the
animated 1994 Disney classic "The Lion King" and its
made-for-video 1998 sequel, "The Lion King II: Simba's Pride."
She marvels that "a lot of people recognize my voice. I never
knew I had a unique sound. When parents tell really little kids
I'm Nala, they're completely perplexed. They're like, 'No, she's
not. She's not a lion.' I'd love to do more voiceover work,
because it allows you physical anonymity. You're free to do
whatever you want."
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