The West Australian Newspaper -December 18
1997
Prissy
Missy
by Frazier Moore
There's
no accounting for taste. Just ask Renee O'Connor, who plays plucky
sidekick Gabrielle on Xena:Warrior Princess.
"The first season, I was getting these letters from men in prison,"
O'Connor reports. "I'm thinking, 'Hang on! It's Lucy who plays a barbarian
who's exotic and sexy and dresses in leather'."
Her co-star, Lucy Lawless, stands tall as the title character on this
internationally syndicated action hour. But O'Connor, as Xena's best
friend and travel companion, has conquered fans of her own. And -
defying expectations - these admirers include jailbirds less enamoured
of a lusty amazon than O'Connors' 1.62 prissy missy.
That O'Connor is admired by anyone still catches her off-guard, she
confesses during an interview. For instance, when she appeared at
her first Xena fans' convention, she faced an adoring crowd
of 1500.
"I walked out on stage and I didn't know what to do," she recalls.
"I'm not a stand-up comedian. But I just started chatting with them
and they started asking me questions. They knew the show inside and
out."
"It's still too profound for me to absorb right now, because I'm in
it," O'Connor says of the Xena phenomenon. "Maybe later on,
I'll be shocked."
Well, anyone might be startled at the following Xena has won
since its launch three seasons ago. A spin-off of Hercules: The
Legendary Journeys, it's a fancifully feminist romp enlivened
by derring-do, special effects and, with some frequency, a sly wink.
In between righting wrongs, Xena never hesitates to laugh at
itself. After all, where else could you hear in the space of an hour
"Round up those virgins!" and "We've got to talk"; "I dropped my prayer
scroll" an "You wuss!" Stylistically, Xena touches all bases.
Indeed, this is a series that, along with its idiot-proof themes of
good and evil, carries a whiff of cheeky ambiguity for those inclined
to give the question a moment's thought; Exactly what IS the
nature of this friendship?
Especially in the age of Ellen, the TV show with a gay theme,
some members of the audience love to read into Xena a certain
Sapphic overtones. Let them, says O'Connor.
"We've had a good time with that, actually," she allows. "Not that
Xena and Gabrielle are necessarily companions sexually. We just decided
to add a new dimension to our relationship: Before, we were like sisters.
This is something a little more flirtatious and playful."
Born in Houston, the 26-year-old O'Connor made her professional debut
starring in the Teen Angel serial featured on the Disney Channel's
Mickey Mouse Club.
She journeyed half a world to New Zealand to appear in the pilot of
Hercules. Then, back home in Los Angeles, she was cast in Xena.
She had four days to pack her belongings and race to Auckland, where
the filming was about to begin.
Initially the character of Gabrielle was meant to be a sort of a daughter
figure in her late teens.
"When she first started following Xena around, no one watching the
show wanted this little pesky person bothering her," says O'Connor.
"But since Gabrielle started holding her own ground, people respect
her more, which is great for me: I used to have to cry in every episode.
Now the producers let me fight."
Gabrielle has grown up in another aspect. Her earliest costume which
O'Connor describes as a dress "that made me look like a Laura Ingalls
reject", has gone through several modifications en route to her current
sporty ensemble: wraparound skirt, laced-front halter top and boots.
"Oh, boy, is it better!" she laughs with grateful relief. "Before,
the skirt would ride up, and that would be embarrassing."
Suffice to say Gabrielle's garb is a fine complement to Xena's bad-mama
leather sunsuit. But the two mythological hotties are a grand fit,
too, especially from the standpoint of the junior partner.
Xena screens on Channel 10 on Saturday.
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