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Tuc Quotes On...
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Tuc
David
Not kissing Robin Strasser at his OLTL audition got Tuc Watkins the job.
Since then, he's been...
Spec-Tuc-ular! (SOD 11/7/95)
Just the Facts:
Birthday: Sept. 2
Hails From: Kansas City, KA
Status: "Happily unattatched, but dating."
Pet Peeve: "Iced tea with no ice in it."
Who Takes Care of His Dog Blue? Michelle DePaiva, sister of James
(Max)
Let's get the name thing out of the way first. "My real name is Charles Curtis
Watkins III," begins One Life to Live's Tuc Watkins, proud bearer of the
most unusual name on daytime. "My dad and my grandpa are Curt Senior and
Curt Junior. When I was little, I used to say things backward. My best friend
was Tommy and I called him Mot. I wasn't dyslexic, I just spoke like
an idiot. So my parents said, 'Say Curt.' And I said, 'Tuc.' And they said,
'Oh, that's cute. We'll call him that for the rest of his life.'"
Years later, his first Hollywood battle was over his name. "I had a manager
who said, 'We need to add a K to Tuc because it balances out your name.'"
Unfortunately, the T looked like an F when it was spelled out, and...well...you
can see the problem. It stayed T-U-C. "If I don't make it in this business,
it won't be because of my name," he states wryly.
Indeed, Watkins's name has turned out to be an advantage. So has his
squeaky-clean upbringing in the Midwest. "I grew up in Cornfield, America,"
Watkins chuckles. "I remember being very happy-go-lucky." Watkins's family
was supportive when he went to Indiana University to study television production,
and they remain close. "We're all very artistic," he explains. "I act, my
sister paints, my mom is a photographer and my dad is one of the funniest
men I know."
Watkins spent the summer after graduation painting his grandparents' house
and was all set to move to L.A. in September -- until Paul Newman came to
town. "They were casting Mr. and Mrs. Bridge in Kansas City," Watkins recalls.
"I auditioned and they said, 'We want you to come back,' for basically one-line
roles: 'Hi, Mrs. Bridge,' or 'Here's your car, Mr. Bridge.' It would have
been great. October 1 came around and they hadn't called, so I got in my
car and left. As soon as I hit Las Vegas they said, 'We are ready for you.'"
He kept going, and landed the first commercial he auditioned for in L.A.
"It was for Miller Lite Genuine Draft," he remembers. "I sat on the beach
in Malibu between Bob Newhart's house and Lee Majors's house for four days,
thinking, 'This is easy. Why is everyone complaining that this is so hard?'"
The ad never aired, which answered that question. A Snickers commercial
followed, "which they ran the heck out of and paid me $36,000 for. So, I
didn't have to get a waiter job."
Soon, Watkins got his first TV break on Growing Pains. "I had three lines,
to Kirk Cameron and Alan Thicke. 'Towels. Here. Yeah.' I called everybody:
'I am the tall guy in the gym, look for me!' The show airs two hours earlier
in Kansas City, so my mom called and said, 'We think we saw you...'
I watched it two hours later and they cut my part out."
A recurring role on Sisters followed, and then he landed a new show called
Melrose Place. "I basically played a cardigan sweater," cracks Watkins. "I
was Billy's friend from college. As soon as Alison and I started getting
along, he said, 'Alison, I left the stove on. We have to leave now.' That's
a prime example of the writing that was going on at the time -- and the kind
of roles I was getting. I was the nice guy. I was the boyfriend. I was the
frat guy. Boring! This is not why I became an actor."
An OLTL audition opposite Robin Strasser (Dorian) changed all that. "At the
end of the scene with Robin, I was supposed to lay this big kiss on her,"
he recalls. "She resisted, like, 'Don't you touch me.' I laughed at her instead
and left the room." Watkins was told later that suppressing the smooch got
him the job. "Whatever you can do different [as an actor] makes them remember
you," he advises. "And if they remember you, they will consider you."
A year-and-a-half later, Watkins is happily enconced in Llanview, and David's
still playing cat-and-mouse with Dorian. "The people I have learned most
from are Erika Slezak [Viki], Robin Strasser and Bob Woods [Bo]," he states.
"They are so at ease with what they do." He is less at ease because of the
amount of recapping he has to do. "My favorite line was, 'Viki, once you
realize that I am truly your half brother, you'll know that Dorian didn't
kill your real father,'" he chuckles. "That is so unbelievable! But those
three actors can say anything and make it believable."
So can Watkins, who confesses he is still searching for the perfect mate.
Has he thought of attracting suitors by posing in Playgirl like other soap
stars? "I don't think so," he chortles. "My mother is out there watching
what I do! But don't get me wrong. I am for sale for the right price." Speaking
of which, OLTL may have to ante up soon. "My contract is up next March and
I don't have any definite plans," he confides. "But at this point, I see
myself going onto something else." A big smile spreads across his face. "But
remember -- I am willing to be bought."