\-1 \‘ • Cl *N. k‘.\ • &M Photo by Paul Dri MICHAEL ELKIN Special to The Jewish News ot iekids r in e college llegke supplement s their income conm part-time Stanford University senior Fred Savage, the former star of "The Wonder Years," got a TV series. Now 20, and years beyond the pinchable-cheek status he once had on the TV series about '60s sense and sen- sibility, the Jewish kid from Chicago is now working on NBC's Wednesday night comedy "Working," which pre- mieres 9:30 p.m. Oct. 8. In playing a newcomer to the job market in this somewhat surreal new series — what Entertainment Weekly referred to as a "live-action Dilbert: ordinary joe just out of college joins a big anonymous corporation' — does Savage relate to the whirl of the work- place? . Has he ever had a non-acting job? "When I was 6 or 7," he laughs of his status as a veteran actor. "There's really never been a need for me to get a job. I was a young kid [during the series]. I was in high school," when "The Wonder Years" ended its run in 1993. "Hey," he says, with a mock defen- sive arch of the brow. "I consider this [acting] a real job." What's real is a bio that bulges with big-time acting credits, dating from when Savage was. age 6 and starring in vitamin commercials. There have been multiple awards for "The Wonder Years" and applause for his other acting ventures in TV's "The Boy Who Could Fly' and such features as The Princess Bride and The Wizard. If there's one thing he's a wiz at it's English/creative writing, his major at Stanford, where he's taken the fall quar- ter off (making room for another celebrity student — Chelsea Clinton). But what if viewers fall for his char- acter, Matt Peyser, and the rest of the series' employees who make 9-to-5 seem like a jail sentence with laughs? What happens if "Working" works out? He'll continue punching the clock at college. "That's not really a question, whether or not I'm going to finish col- lege," says Savage, who attended sum- mer school this year at UCLA. "And I'm going to try to take a class via cor- respondence with Stanford while we're Michael Elkin is entertainment editor of the Philadelphia Jewish Exponent. Fred Savage: "If I didn't continue going to Hillel at school and attending Shabbat services and dinners, I'd never be able to face my grandmother." "Workin Stiff Fred Savage, the wunderkind of "The Wonder Years," debuts in a new TV series. filming in the fall, just because I know I'm going to be missing a lot of school doing the show and I don't want to fall too far behind." Should the series go a full year, shooting will stop before spring quarter at Stanford, so he'll be able to pack up his "Working" computer just in time to plug in a real one at school. Even when he was just a tyke taking the nation by storm in "The Wonder Years," there was never a time for "Fred Unplugged": No tantrums, ego trips, trashing hotel rooms. The "Working" star was always on the job, ready to go. "I have a tremen- dous debt to my parents who are won- derful and really have raised me to be an upstanding young man," he says sweetly. There are others in the family who have kept him on the straight and nar- row. "If I didn't continue going to Hillel at school and attending Shabbat services and dinners, I'd never be able to face my grandmother," he smiles. He faces the future knowing that the sense of Judaism he grew up with has had a major impact on his life. At Stanford, Savage's sense of tzedakah has served him well; he has been active with pediatrics AIDS causes and with "Best Buddies," a project utilizing col- lege students as helpers for the mentally challenged. On the home front, best buddy means playing a big brother role to his younger sib, Ben, star of TV's "Boy Meets World." Did Fred, offer Ben tips when the younger brother met the TV world for the first time? What kind of advice did he give him? The two of them, says Savage, "have gone through identical circumstances. So he'll come and talk to me more about social things or about going to school and working at the same time and how to handle that." How does the former boy wonder of "The Wonder Years" handle the changes in network TV? Isn't "Working" a different workplace than that of his former TV series? "The whole format is entirely differ- ent," he says of going from a one-cam- era shoot on "The Wonder Years" to five cameras on "Working." And so is life. Where once he spent time with tutors ("My last uninterrupt- ed year of school was second grade"), he now relishes the all-nighters and all the wonderful aggravation that comes with being a college kid. "School is the great equalizer, espe- cially when people see you running to class or pulling your hair out over a test just like everybody else." He knows his academic career will stand the test of time. Whether it's magna cum laude or magna cum come- dy, if "Working" doesn't work out, there's always work to do on that degree. "I live in a fraternity with a bunch of other guys at school," he says of his off-set study space. "There will always be a floor I can crash on." 10/3 1997 • 101