Legal Eagle W bile sitting in a trendy, upscale Los Angeles restaurant munching on a fresh tuna salad, actor Alan Rachins marvels at his TV stardom. "This is what I always hoped for," said Mr. Rachins, who plays the ruthless attorney Douglas Brackman on L.A. Law. "It's incredible how much exposure the show has brought me." As the waitress leaned over to refill his glass, she looked up into his warm brown eyes, paused a minute, and gave him a blushing smile. "That's part of the fun," grinned Mr. Rachins, "you get recognized all the time!" But L.A. Law has given Mr. Rachins more than recognition— it has given him the chance to show off his acting talents. His multi-dimensional character, whose professionalism is balanced by the hu- man comedy of his personal life, has gone from shrewd and sleazy to somewhat vulnerable, and has displayed both normal and bizarre behavior. "At first, Douglas was strictly about bill- able hours and time and money; then this weird personal life flourished; and re- cently he has not been quite so eccentric," noted the soft-spoken actor, who is nothing like his legal alter ego. It is because of the uniqueness of the show that Mr. Rachins jumped at the chance to be a part of the L.A. Law en- ALICE SCHWEIGER semble. After reading SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS Steven Bochco's Pilot script, he knew the show would be well- received. At a time when shallow sit- coms with rapid-fire gag lines and bikini-clad car-chasing teens were sure hits, L.A. Law forged new territory in nighttime tele- vision, both in subject matter and style. "It had a cerebral kind of talk- ing that audiences were not used to," said Mr. Rachins, who has been with the show since the very beginning." And it has lived up to its orig- inal intentions, which is to point L.A. Law actor Alan Rachins reflects on the hit show's spectacular run. out that the law is not black and white. It's not set up where there are good guys and bad guys. We argue both sides of an issue and throw it in the people's court and say to the view- ers, 'you decide." Over the years, there have not been too many subjects that L.A. Law has not tackled—every- thing from AIDS to sex- ual harassment has been covered. Recently, the program even took on the U.S. government in a storyline about Panama. But according to Mr. Rachins, the best part of his job is working with his real-life wife Joanna Frank, who plays his on- camera ex-wife Sheila Brackman on the show. The Rachins have a son, Robbie who is 11. "Robbie takes acting lessons and has gone on several auditions, and if he wants to be an actor one day, that's fine with us. Joanna and I just want him to have a normal child- hood and be happy, and we will be sup- portive, no matter what he pursues." Mr. Rachins wish- es his own father had been just as sup- portive. But he Alan Rachins: Making wasn't. If his father the most of the Law. Mr. Rachins was bit- had his druthers, ten by the acting bug in Alan would have tak- high school, when he en over the family- pranced around the food manufacturing stage as one of the Sev- company, and produced cake dec- orations, ice cream toppings and en Dwarfs in the Latin Club's production of Snow White. flavored syrups. Afraid to study acting right Yet despite his father's wish- away for fear he might fail, he es, Alan was determined to fol- spent two years at the Universi- low his acting dream. Born and raised in Boston in ty of Pennsylvania's Wharton a relatively religious home, he School of Finance. That's when had a bar mitzvah, celebrated all he knew for sure that going into the major holidays, grew up in the family business wasn't for a Jewish neighborhood and him, and he fled to New York learned about Orthodox Judaism City to study drama. It didn't take long before he from his mother's side of the fam- landed a succession of roles ily. An only child, Mr. Rachins NewYork, including the original learned about death at a very ear- Broadway production ofAfter the ly age. His mother passed away Rain and the original Off-Broad- when he was only 11, "the same way production of Oh! Calcutta age that my son is today, and it's —a play that he regrets inviting something that I think about a his father to see. "He didn't ap- prove of the play, to put it mild- lot," he said. ly," laughed the actor. In 1972 he put his blossoming theatrical career on hold when he was accepted as a fellow in the writing and directing program at the American Film Institute in Los Angeles. His writing talents were rec- ognized after completing the AFI program, and he began to sell scripts to a variety of shows in- cluding Hill Street Blues, Fall Guys, Hart to Hart, Knight Rid- er and Quincy. Despite his burgeoning success as a writer, Mr. Rachins returned to acting when he was offered the lead role in Henry Jaglom's film Always, the movie he claims led to the role of Michael Brackman on L.A. Law. As Mr. Rachins sits back in his chair and peers out the window LEGAL page 79 CD U) CD 75