Copyright 1985 by Scott
Hays
Magazine: TV Guide
Topic: Actress Jamie
Rose
Byline: Scott Hays
"I just love it here," Jamie
Rose says, as she stands in the Speed
Queen lavanderia on the bear
Southwest Side of Chicago, her right hand
waving in midair. "I love the way
the smell of bleach permeates the air."
She takes a deep breath, as if smelling
for lingering bleach particles. "Lovely
working conditions, don’t you think?"
She laughs.
Outside the lavanderia, curious
onlookers from this mostly Hispanic community
watch as a film crew and director/series
co-producer Robert Vincent O’Neil
ready camera angles and props for a scene
from the ABC series Lady Blue,
in which Rose stars as the title character,
a tough Chicago cop. Back inside the coin-operated
laundromat, a half-dozen or so neighborhood
niños run around playing
tag in between the tangerine-orange, lime-green
and gold washers and dryers, and the lights
and cameras delicately balanced nearby.
Rose moves to a conspicuously large air-conditioned
RV parked on Loomis Avenue behind the
laundromat—an area where it is rumored
the pizza man refuses to deliver because
of the high crime rate. Safely inside,
she relaxes, protected, if only for the
moment, from the dirty streets, the sweltering
heat and the pressures of starring for
the first time in a television series.
If doesn’t take a CIA operative
to penetrate the defenses used by Rose
in dealing with the new-found tensions
of a major career opportunity. All you
have to do is sit back and listen as she
attempts to relieve the stress by nervously
spewing an endless stream of witticisms.
It’s a relaxation technique she
seems to have mastered.
She can’t really playact the brooding,
self-exiled image made famous by aging
starlets; she isn’t old enough.
Nor can she attack the often rude press
with a barrage of verbal abuse; it would
clash with her otherwise giddy personality.
So Rose tries to stay loose, saving all
the really good drama for the screen.
"I used to be an actress who made
everything a crisis, Rose says. "I
would get way up for a scene and then
come way down. Now I’m trying not
to make it all so up and down, emotionally,
and what has happened is my acting has
improved."
Maybe so. Nevertheless, she admits she’s
still occasionally moody, spontaneous,
sometimes difficult to work with. But
what can you expect from someone with
flaming red hair and freckles? besides,
it wasn’t long ago that Rose experienced
a more devastating kind of pressure, when
her career stalled after she was dumped
from CBS’s highly rated series Falcon
Crest. She says she was surprised her
character, Victoria Gioberti, didn’t
get the boot sooner. "The only kind
of storyline she could have was to be
in love," Rose explains, "and
she was related to practically every character
in the show. Who was she going to go to
bed with?"
Falcon Crest creator Earl Hammer
agrees that Rose’s character had
reached a state of paralysis after two-plus
seasons. "We initially cast Jamie
because she had a certain coloration the
complexion we were looking for,"
Hammer explains. "I immediately sensed
an offbeat, quirky kind of talent that
I liked. She was not your typical Hollywood
pretty girl, although she was that, too.
She also had a special, giggly quality
."
"In the beginning, Falcon Crest
was going to be a sort of family show,
and Jamie was extremely useful to us in
those first two years," he adds.
"But then the network decided on
a more adult show. We eventually married
Jamie off and it was a mistake. There
wasn’t much else to do with her
character."
A year later, executive producer David
Gerber cast Rose as the blood-splattering
maverick cop, Katy Malone, in last season’s
TV-movie "Lady Blue." The film
finished seventh in the ratings the week
it aired and was picked up as a seven-week
series, planned to occupy a Thursday night
slot on ABC’s fall season until
Dynasty II: The Colbys premieres
later this month.
Now, Rose must make her little-girl-with-big-gun
character believable, if the show is to
survive for the long term. And there’s
only one way to deal with that kind of
burden: by keeping the off-camera script
light and cheery. Even Rose will admit
that it doesn’t always work.
"It’s great you’re here
today," Rose says to a reporter,
as they relax inside her RV, "because
when you ask Bob [O’Neil] what I’m
like to work with, he’ll say, "She’s
wonderful,’ because he’s only
been working with me for two days. Ask
him in two weeks and he’ll probably
say, "That -----!"
Rose laughs.
She is dressed casually in blue jeans,
a gray tank top, gray socks and black
high-top Reeboks—athletic shoes
designed for aerobic dancing, but worn
in her case for style and comfort. Or
so she says as she impatiently waits for
the power to come on in the makeup trailer
across the street.
"Great," she exclaims, except
her tone is more like, I can’t
believe this is happening. "As
soon as I get in the makeup trailer I’m
going to have some second AD [assistant
director] running over and telling me
to hurry up when it’s their fault
the power wasn’t on. This kind of
stuff bugs me. I don’t like problems.
I tend to be a very nervous person, I’m
what you would call hyper, and it’s
very easy for me to get involved in all
this conflict.
So much for the light, cheery script.
At 25, Rose has been in the TV business,
off and on, for around 20 years. She was
born in New York, but her family moved
to California when Jamie was a child.
There, she appeared in commercials and
episodes of Green Acres and Family
Affair before retiring at 13 because
she hated the pressures of auditioning.
"At first I abandoned the idea of
being an actress," she says. "I
didn’t think I would be good enough.
I also didn’t want to be judged
any more than I was already judging myself."
But with red hair, freckles, and a father
who kept paying her Screen Actors Guild
dues, Rose moved from Fresno to Los Angeles
at 18 and became self-supporting as an
actress within the year, eventually landing
her first major television role on Falcon
Crest in 1981.
It was four days after purchasing a two-bedroom,
two-bath home in Hollywood Hills that
Rose learned that she had been dropped
from the series. "That was a bit
of a readjustment for me," she recalls.
"I was only 23. I wasn’t like
I was this seasoned pro.
"That was a very crucial change
in my life." She emphasizes: cruuu-cial.
"I had to learn then that you better
have some self-esteem because you ain’t
going to get it with the consistency of
your career.
Fortunately, Rose did not have to sell
her newly purchased home. Thanks to her
savings and the help of a creative accountant,
she and her black Labrador retriever,
Fidel, are still living in the same two-bedroom,
two-bath home two years later.
Ironically, the same afternoon Rose received
word that she would be written out of
Falcon Crest, she and James Orr,
a writer-director, made plans to have
lunch and then visit their mutual accountant.
"It was really interesting that James
was there for this traumatic moment in
my life," Rose says. They met again
accidentally a year later, and now the
couple is engaged and planning a wedding
next May.
When Rose is not working, she’s
usually spending time with Orr, traveling
and eating out at nice restaurants, which
explains why the kitchen of her two-bedroom
home is always so spotless: "I never
cook."
During those two seasons on Falcon
Crest, Rose made three movies: the
TV-movie "In Love with an Older Woman,"
with John Ritter; "Just Before Dawn,"
with George Kennedy; and "Shadow
Waltz," an independent feature film.
"There was a period [post Falcon
Crest] where I really felt like I
had no career. I was just thinking the
end was in sight. But, you know, even
though I didn’t work every day,
I was still a successful actress."
After Falcon Crest, Rose did
guests shots in TV series and appeared
in two more movies: "Heartbreakers"
and Clint Eastwood’s "Tightrope,"
in which she plays a hooker who gets murdered
in the first five minutes.
She was cast in "Lady Blue"
only a week before production began. "I
first saw Jamie on the Lindsay Wagner
[ABC] series Jessie," David
Gerber recalls. "She played an undercover
cop. I noticed her red hair, her Irish
face, and I listened to the way she talked,
and I thought to myself, "Now there’s
a girl you can believe to be an undercover
cop."
"I always had Jamie in mind for
this character in Lady Blue,
but these [network executives] wanted
a big name star" Gerber adds. "So
I just brought Jamie in, unannounced,
during one of our meetings, and had her
read a few scenes. What were they going
to say: 'Hi! How are you? We don’t
want you!’ I was ready to shoot
the following week."
Katy Mahoney is described as "one
tough chick" by Rose’s co-star
Danny Aiello, who plays her boss, chief
of detectives Terrance McNichols. Her
unquenchable thirst for justice—usually
enforced by a .357 Magnum—has earned
her the nickname "Dirty Harriet."
"I love that description," Rose
says. "It’s accurate in a lot
of ways. My character has certainly got
some Dirty Harry in her, but she’s
also a woman. She cries, she falls in
love. So there are a lot of differences,
too. She’s like Wonder Woman, except
she’s a little more real."
For her role, Rose practiced firing a
.357 Magnum with the Chicago Police Department,
then rented all the "Dirty Harry"
movies, drilling herself on Eastwood’s
gun moves and clenched-jaw grimaces.
"I had only a week to prepare for
the role, and I had never fired or handled
a gun before," she says. "So
I went down to the police department and
shot for a couple of hours. Luckily, I
was good immediately. I’m now very
comfortable with a gun. It’s almost
like an extension of my arm." Still,
there were skeptics. As one production
crew member said during the recent filming
in Chicago: "It’s hard to imagine
Jamie Rose’s fragile wrist holding
a large gun like that."
After a good hour in the makeup trailer,
Rose finally comes blazing back into the
lavanderia wearing jeans, a tank top and
a gold jacket. The scene she’s about
to shoot involved Katy Mahoney walking
to the laundromat to question Thomas Riggio
(played by Franklyn Alexander), who allegedly
has been intimidated by a local gang selling
his $200,000 property across the street
for $60,000.
During one of a number of takes, Rose
fumbles around in her purse for a police
badge.
"Why don’t you just keep it
in your hand as you walk in?" director
O’Neil politely offers.
"Good idea," Rose responds.
"How 'about I tape it to my
face and leave it dangling there?"
The show’s star laughs at herself
with the rest of the crew.
"In the beginning of my career I
needed to get my confidence back up,"
she says late that afternoon over a fish
and salad lunch. "But I always felt
like a star. Not star as in, "Oh,
feed me bonbons." But I always felt
like I should have the lead. I have high
aspirations. I don’t want to do
game shows the rest of my life. I want
something more lasting.
"There’s definitely a lot
of stuff going on right now that could
really turn my head," she adds thoughtfully.
"But I just try to remember how really
transitory it all is. Lady Blue
could be a hit and it could not. I really
can’t take any of it seriously."
With that, Jamie Rose, trying to keep
it light and cheerful, gets ready to go
back under the gun.