MELROSE'S RESIDENT WACKO CROSSES OVER TO EVERWOOD
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Marcia! Marcia! Marcia!
As Dr. Kimberly Shaw on Melrose Place, Marcia Cross decked Mackenzie Phillips at a female-empowerment seminar, stole Jane's husband and Jo's baby (and tried to murder and breastfeed them, respectively), and killed poor Dallas refugee Morgan Brittany by blowing the whole Place up.
So as Cross begins her half-season (or more) stint as yet another doctor on yet another Monday-night drama, it's fair to ask, what's she going to do to our precious citizens of Everwood? ''There won't be any of that in this show,'' she promises.
Playing off one of the show's preeminent themes, Cross' Linda, Dr. Harold Abbott's sister, returns to Everwood after a three-year absence to reconnect with her family. In the process she tries to heal the Hatfield-McCoy fracture between the two town docs—care of a little horizontal mambo with Treat Williams' Dr. Andrew Brown. ''She's been traveling around with Doctors Without Borders and studying herbal medicine in China,'' Cross says. ''She does get involved with Andrew, but there's more to it.''
For the past few years, save for guest appearances on the likes of Ally McBeal, CSI, and Spin City, Cross has been more or less MIA from TV, which is pretty shabby treatment for an actress (Juilliard-trained!) who created one of the most memorable TV icons of the '90s. But the hiatus was partly by choice: Cross, 41, just recently received her master's in psychology from Antioch University (training that comes out when, in a soothing voice, she asks this writer to describe his surroundings). And, of course, the break was also the result of doing her last job a little too well. ''There was a lot of typecasting that I was crazy,'' she says. ''I totally understood it, but I got tired of hearing it. I thought that either I would have a chance at some point or not.''
That chance came courtesy of Everwood creator Greg Berlanti, who—gasp!—had never watched Melrose. ''Marcia comes off a lot like her character,'' he says. (It's true: Cross peppers conversation with references to yoga and Eastern medicine.) ''In TV you look for the actor to embody as many of their character's traits as possible. Since so many times the actor gets the [script] the day before she shoots, there's not really time for a transformation,'' Berlanti continues. ''I think a lot of people will soon only remember Marcia from Everwood.''
Yeah, yeah, yeah, we're all for moving on too, but before we promise never to mention the K-word again, we simply have to know Cross' favorite Melrose memory. Turns out it's one of Kimberly's multiple personalities, Tupperware-toting Betsy. ''I know everyone wants me to say it's the wig moment,'' she says. (Yes, we do!) ''But it's just not.'' Shucks. —Henry Goldblatt (with additional reporting by Dan Snierson)
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