Two Familiar Faces Shine in the Spotlight Dabney Coleman and Blair Brown act naturally Dabney Coleman is not Slap Maxwell. Blair Brown is not Molly Dodd. But these two actors are so effective, and so natu- ral, that the fine line between person and persona often ap- pears seamless. That's how Jay Tarses, the creator of Slap and Molly, wants it. "I like to sneak into their reality as, close as possible," says Tarses. "I hear Dabney's and Blair's voices when I write the words. If it doesn't sound like it would come out of their mouths, I change it." If screen acting can be divided into two major camps-those who fill their roles with themselves and those who fill themselves with their roles-Coleman and Brown occupy the rar- efied territory in between. They're character actors with enough charisma to play lead- ing roles. Yet, for whatever unfortu- nate reasons, Coleman, 55, and Brown, 39, have seldom been cast in the spotlight. Coleman first gained promi- nence in 1976 as Merle Jeeter, the larcenous mayor of Fernwood, on "Mary Hart- man, Mary Hartman." Since then he's played a series of unpalatable characters, from the despicable boss in the movie "Nine to Five" (1980) to the lecherous soap-opera director in the film "Toot- sie" (1982) to the nasty talk- show host on TV's "Buffalo Bill" (1983-84). Brown, mean- while, has brought subtle intelligence and wit to a number of perfor- mances. On film she's been the concerned wife of William Hurt in "Altered States" (1980) and the natu- ralist in "Continental Divide" (1981) who loves John Belushi. On TV she was a striking Jackie Ken- nedy in 1983's "Ken- nedy" and a trou- bled district attorney in this year's "Hands of a Stranger." De- spite the high quality of their work, how- ever, Coleman and Brown remain famil- iar faces more than household. words. Dabney Coleman was 26 when he met the man who changed his life. A ne'er-do- well law student at the University of Tex- ORMAN as in his native Aus- man tin, Coleman was in- troduced to Zachary Scott, a successful cin- ematic actor. "I was struck by his whole .personality," remem- bers Coleman. "He was the personifica- tion of what an actor can be." The next day Coleman took a plane to New York to study acting. After school, he worked a little on Broadway and a lot in Acting commercials and as a guest star on various televi- sion shows. He even had a supporting role for the first year (1966-67) of "That Girl" with Marlo Thomas. But it was "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" that sparked his career. Impressed enough to wait: Even though Jay Tarses was one of the creators and execu- tive producers of "Buffalo Bill," Coleman says they didn't work together directly that much. Still, Coleman was impressed enough with Tarses to wait more than a year for the writer-producer to become available. "I like his dry sense of humor," says Coleman. "I'm happy with good, and I think that '"Slap"' is good." Blair Brown was a college sophomore when she chose a' career in theater. The daugh- ter of a CIA employee, Brown grew up in the Washington, D.C., area. She attended ju- nior college for two years before transferring to the Na- tional Theater School of Can- ada in Montreal. After gradu- ation she worked extensively on the stage, including the New York Shakespeare Festi- val. In the mid-'70s, she began to work on a variety of mini- series, including "Eleanor and Franklin: The White House Years" (1977), "Cap- tains and the Kings" (1976) and "Wheels" (1978). In the early '80s, Brown had a burst of movie work, including "Al- tered States" and "Continen- tal Divide." It was hard for Brown when she considered taking on a TV series. "I was being a snob about television," she says. But her first experience-a Tarses pilot called "The Faculty" (1985) that never aired-was a good experi- ence. And "Molly Dodd" has been even better. "It's not something you see in tradi- tional half-hour or even hour shows," says Brown. Part of the reason "Molly" works so well, says Brown, is the rap- port between her and Tarses. "Our styles of humor are very much the same. A lot of the time I can hear it the way he hears it." Don't forget, though: Brown isn't Molly and Cole- man isn't Slap. "Sure, you keep the characters in the range of what you think Blair and Dabney are capable of playing," says Tarses. "But they wouldn't be interested in the characters if they had to play themselves." R. G. 4 4 A string f nasty characters: Cole 12 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS NOVEMBER 1987 /