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Olsens Get Out Of The "House"

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Los Angeles - Thanks to eight years sharing a role on TV's Full House, 9-year-old twinss Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen have a recognition factor that's through the roof. But a lifetime in front of a camera -they began their ABC series when they were 9 months old- has not exactly turned the girls into big talkers. The Olsens have made their first feature film, It Takes Two, a rich girl/poor girl tale opening today. You'd think they'd be more verbal, but short responses laced with a lot of "uh-huhs" pepper their conversation. Do you want to be movie stars? "Yes," Mary Kate says. Will it change you? "No," Ashley says. Co-star Kirstie Alley says the girls, though they have charisma, are not precocious. "They're very normal in the way you want kids to be normal." The film's director, Andy Tenant (TV's The Amy Fisher Story), says don't be fooled by the twins' reticence. "They're much more fun than that," he says. "They're not all Hollywoodized. They're shy and kind of going along. Then something happens when you give them work." They are movie stars, Tennant says. Though many think they are identical twins because they played the same part on Full House, the sisters are actually fraternal twins. "I'm left-handed," Mary Kate says. "I'm right-handed," Ashley says. "We feel like we're totally different," Mary Kate adds. Says Ashley: "She's a fashion person..." Mary Kate says she's better at dance, while her sister is good at horseback riding. The two lead separate lives in school and never dress alike. "That's weird," Mary Kate says. It Takes Two, in which they play an orphan and the daughter of a rich businessman who wind up playing cupid to Alley and co-star Steve Guttenberg, is not the first time the twins have each had their own roles. They have already notched two succesfull TV movies and four hugely succesfull juveniledetective home videos. Though they know little about the business side of their careers, they have deals with Warner Bros. for feature films, a new ABC series and more detective videos. "It's like a game to them," Alley says. "They love the acting, but for entertainment they make videos of each other dancing." Tennant admits he was "underwhelmed" seeing an Olsen video. But the production deal specified the twins; the movie wouldn't have been made without them. "They came with the dinner." But their performances are surprising, he says. "Now I have pictures of my mother, my wife, my children and the Olsen twins on my desk. I've been converted.

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