Seeing Is Believing Patricia Arquette finally hits her stride playing a psychic on NBC's hit show "Medium." sister Rosanna Arquette, who showed her how to behave in front of and behind the camera. Three years later she was making a liv- ing at the craft, appearing in such fea- ture films as Pretty Smart A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Wan fors and Time Out in relatively rapid succession. Genuine movie stardom has eluded her so far, despite strong appearances in dozens of film projects including True EIRIK KNUTZEN Copley News Service A fter giving birth on Feb. 20, 2003, to her daughter Harlow by actor Thomas Jane, Patricia Arquette took a couple of years off to play a mother — typecast again. The months flew past with blinding speed, but she did have time to read a movie script now and then. And she hated them all. Some stories were too violent. Some featured gratu- itous sex and nude scenes. Some were boring beyond belief. Many were plain stupid. On the brink of giving up, Arquerte finally instructed her agents to look for TV properties. In a flash, the pilot script for Medium hit her desk with a thud. "Before I even read it, Hiked the idea that the show was intended for network television, which means that anyone who can afford a TV set can have free entertainment," said Arquette, 36, born in Chicago and raised on a commune in Arlington, Va., who learned the acting trade along with most of her four sib- lings. "Reading it, I thought, 'Oh, God, this is so well written!"' Created by writer-director-producer Glenn Gordon Caron (Moonlighting), Medium is inspired by Allison DuBois, a 34-year-old Arizona "research medium" happily married to an aerospace engi- neer and the mother of their three young daughters who was working in a district attorney's office and going to law school when she discovered the paranor- mal abilities she'd experienced since childhood enabled her to profile perpe- trators of crime. Arquette — who dialed psychic hot- lines as a lark but doesn't anymore — portrays DuBois in name and spirit as she works with the district attorney's office and various law enforcement agencies on cases ranging from missing persons to serial murders. With shades of Profiler, she sees dead people everywhere and chats with some of them, particularly victims and wit- nesses of serious crime. "I spent quite a bit of time with Allison, who is a consultant for the show but has stepped back from work all over the country in order to spend more time with her family," said Arquette. "But she Patricia Arquette in "Medium" still has a hand in issues from capital cases to jury selections. And found time to write a book, Don't Kiss Them Goodbye (Fireside; $23)." Besides the whodunit aspect of the show, Arquette remains intrigued with her character's family dynamics and how closely her screen marriage parallels that of the three-dimensional DuBois. "Allison's relationship with her hus- band, Joe (played by Jake Weber), is very deep and complex, while they enjoy each other's sense of humor. They're great partners and extremely close friends. It's all out there." The only major departure from the real DuBois' persona is the aura of peace and confidence she now surrounds her- self with — most likely due to a combi- nation of experience and maturity. "She seems to have constructed some type of survival mechanism in her mind that makes her much more comfortable with herself," Arquette explained. "There had to be times near burnout. For dramatic purposes, I wanted to play her at an earlier time in her life, when she wasn't that comfortable with herself and her 'gift.' "It is a psychic ability that goes all the way back to when she was 6 years old and was able to communicate with her deceased great-grandfather. Along the way, there must have been scary moments dealing with intense images from the past and future." Family History Although the granddaughter of late comedic actor Cliff Arquette (best known for his rustic TV character Charlie Weaver), Patricia Arquette still isn't entirely sure why she got into the acting game at the age of 15, when she moved in with Hollywood-based older Romance, Ed Wood, Bringing Out the Dead and Deeper Than Deep. She also learned a great deal about life's vagaries delivering her son, Enzo, now 15, by her previous relationship with Paul Rossi, and during her six-year marriage to actor Nicolas Cage (1995- 2001). The gutsy actress also observed success up close when her brother David Arquette married Friends millionairess Courteney Cox and staunchly supports the activities of her other brother, Alexis Arquette, a man also known as a drag performer at alternative venues. All the Arquette siblings are the chil- dren of a Jewish mother and a Christian-born father who converted to a "New Age" form of Islam, according to the Web site www.jewhoo.com . Growing up, the Arquettes (whose patriarch, Cliff, had a Jewish father) cel- ebrated some Jewish holidays. Today, Rosanna, who is married to a Jewish man, identifies most closely with her Jewish identity, reports Jewhoo. When David Arquette married Cox in an Episcopalian church, he paid tribute to his Jewish heritage and his late mother as he broke the traditional glass at the end of the ceremony. In interviews, Patricia Arquette recalls celebrating Jewish holidays now and then and says she is very spiritual, although she does not seem to identify with any one faith, says Jewhoo. Her son, however, had a bris, a religious Jewish circumcision. The family's unusual background has kept them close. In fact, "in terms of acting," says Patricia Arquette, "the only thing I'd love to try now is working with my sister and brothers in a single proj- ect. We have paired up occasionally, but not all at once. "It would be great because they're all incredibly cool, talented people. We'd be very close even if we weren't related." ❑ rig ; 3/24 2005 47