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'Smallville' role keeps giving back to actorIt takes a special guy to wear primary colors. Dick Tracy had the yellow hat and coat. The Tick was deep into the blue. And everyone knows that the red suit belongs now and forever to Santa Claus. A
GOOD RUN: Tom Welling (top) stars with Kristin Kreuk and Michael Rosenbaum in
"Smallville," which has seen increased viewership this season. - Photo
provided by the WB Or in the case of The WB Network's Thursday-night teen-Superman drama "Smallville," in its fifth season, it's college-age Kansas farmboy Clark Kent, who once was called "the hottie in primary colors." In "Lexmas," the episode airing at 8 p.m. Thursday on WTTV , Clark (played by Tom Welling) has a Claus encounter and delivers a few presents to good little children. For Welling, getting the role on "Smallville" has been the gift that keeps on giving -- but he couldn't have known that at the time. "It worked out all right," Welling says. "It wasn't a horrible choice. There are a million reasons why people get to where they are and why they don't, and some of those are good, and some of those are bad. "All of these people that I've worked with who have had experience in the business and success and even found failure along the way, I ask them things. There's one common thread. They all just put up their hands and say, 'There's no secret knowledge.' You don't get to a certain point, then somebody opens the door and says, 'All right, this is how it really works.' "You
try to go in your direction. Sometimes you have to make moves left and right,
but you try to keep your head down and keep going. It's completely a gamble. It's
like Vegas. I don't know if the odds are better or worse in Vegas, but you're
gambling." "It's economics," Welling says. "By the time you get to your fifth season you've done all the episodes they need for syndication. At that point, they're just spending more money that they don't need to. But it's to be expected. People are saying we're going to go to season six. It doesn't feel like the last season, at least on set. But again, you just have to go with it." This
season, Clark and friends Lana (Kristin Kreuk) and Chloe (Allison Mack) have moved
out of high school and into college and the working world in Metropolis. Also,
other characters from the DC Comics world of Superman have joined the cast along
the way, from Lois Lane (Erica Durance) to Professor Fine/Brainiac (James Marsters). Can
tights and flights be far behind? "No," Welling says. "I don't
mean to rain on anybody's parade, but I know for a fact that it won't happen.
So I'm not worried." "I'd always enjoyed watching Eugene Levy, then being able to talk to him and work with him, I was able to really see the genius behind what he does." On the "Smallville" set, Welling has long observed veteran actors such as John Schneider and Annette O'Toole, who play Clark's parents, Jonathan and Martha Kent; and John Glover, who plays ruthless tycoon Lionel Luthor, father of future foe Lex Luthor (Michael Rosenbaum). Schneider directed a third-season "Smallville" episode, and now it's Welling's turn, as he directs an episode later in the season. "I've at least fooled people into thinking I've learned enough to do that," Welling says. "I had expressed interest, but it wasn't anything I demanded -- they invited me. To be invited was probably the best sign of support that they could give me." While Welling doesn't feel like "Smallville" will end next May, if it does, he wants the show to go out with a bang. "We owe it to the people who've allowed us to be here for this long. We have to go out big." |
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