GRACE ON FIRE
After five years of cult stardom, Battlestar Galactica’s sexiest spacewoman
is heading into the great unknown: fame.
By Tim Leong
Grace Park has a body. she even shows it off sometimes. We were surprised too—enjoy it while you can, because there’s a good chance it might not happen again. And that’s exactly what’s so sexy about the stunning actress (you know, besides the obvious): Her rise in Hollywood hasn’t left her Korean integrity lying by the wayside. The girl sticks to her guns. And even though that usually means disappointment for our collective libido, we still respect her.
Already well-known in her native Canada, she shot to cult stardom in 2003 with Battlestar Galactica, in which she plays the robots-in-disguise Boomer/Athena. (We hear you laughing—go frak yourself, it’s a good show.) Right now BSG is in its final season, which makes this an interesting time for the 34-year-old beauty: What happens when the show that made you a star ends? (Richard Grieco, anyone?) The thing is, even though she’s got another show starting in July—A&E’s extreme intervention drama The Cleaner—fame isn’t the name of the game. For her, there’s such a thing as “too famous too fast,” and she’s willing to put the brakes on acting if that happens. Keep your 100 mph Hollywood hoes; we’re going to slow our roll and put it in Park. Well, not literally. You know what we mean. Reeeeal respectful-like.
The success of
Battlestar kinda came out of nowhere, and now everyone on the show is a star
in their own right; how have you dealt with the fame and fans?
Grace Park: One of the things I like about Battlestar is that we’re
a cult hit. We’re not on Lost, and not every single person is pointing
fingers at us. I went out with Daniel Dae Kim [Jin on Lost]—we hosted
a show together, and we were sitting at some restaurant. And everyone that
walked by would wave at me like, “Congratulations, you know Daniel Dae
Kim,” or “I know him too!” He’s in a much more high-profile
position, so he’s dealing with the public a lot more. I love not doing
that as much, just to have your anonymity.
Are you good with
the public?
Grace Park: I think so. I hope so.
No fistfights?
Grace Park: Not yet. Don’t mess with me.
Have you ever
hit somebody?
Grace Park: No, I’ve never. [Pause.] OK, guys, but mostly in the chest.
Like, playful,
or actually hitting them?
Grace Park: Well, the cover is playful, but really I try to hit them as hard
as I can.
And they’re
like, “Oh, I’m sorry, did you touch me? I didn’t feel that.”
Grace Park: Then I have to pick them up off the floor.
“And then
I gotta go pick ’em up at the morgue.”
Grace Park: [Laughs.]
Battlestar
was your big hit. And it’s ending. Have you thought about that? What
happens when it ends?
Grace Park: I guess we see other actors and we associate them with one TV
show, and then maybe you don’t see them again for a long time. I’ve
never really thought about that.
You haven’t
thought about that?
Grace Park: Thanks! Because I think what usually happens is that once you
enter the machine and you get on a hit show, and it starts to end, managers,
publicists start to say, “OK, let’s get you on another show, it’s
time to capitalize on what you’ve got.” But I don’t understand
why people want to be famous.
But you were a
model.
Grace Park: Yeah, but models don’t do it to be famous. They do it to
make money.
Some people caddie,
some people work at McDonald’s; you say, “Oh, I’ll just
model.”
Grace Park: [Laughs.] I think if most golf caddies could model, they’d
model.
Point.
Grace Park: You want to make minimum wage or you want to make $150 an hour?
And higher, depending on how big you are. Some of them make $10,000 a day.
Like me!
Grace Park: You? $500. Half hour. Easy. [Laughs.]
So you didn’t
want to be famous, but you are now.
Grace Park: To some degree. I know some people might think that, but most
people have no clue who I am and I kinda like it like that.
Well, what happens
if you get bigger?
Grace Park: I know, it’s a conflict of interest. I don’t know.
I might have to stop acting.
You would stop
acting?
Grace Park: Or I’d have to punch out one of the camera guys. Those are
my two options in life, what can I say?
What magical pill
are you dying for someone to invent?
Grace Park: Oh, I always wanted the magical pill that you could just swallow
it and know stuff. So you could learn anything. Like, a new language.
Are you smart?
Grace Park: I’m pretty smart. It’s like how you shrink in life,
height-wise—that started to happen to my intelligence, sadly enough.
Can’t you tell? I can’t finish some of these sentences. And then,
of course, there’s that phase where you could swallow a pill and have
an instant tan.
I have no idea
where that came from. Do you tan?
Grace Park: No. Well, in the sun.
As opposed to
in the dark.
Grace Park: I used to try and tan in front of a fireplace. Me and my sister.
We’d put suntan lotion on, and then we’d sit in front of the fireplace.
Our parents were there too, and they didn’t even stop us. We just got
really close to the fire, as close as you could without burning yourself.
And then you get all flush and you’re like, “Oh my god! It’s
working! Yes, you look more tan!”
What’s the
most illegal thing you’ve ever done?
Grace Park: I’ve done minor illegal things. Like lying at the border.
Some of the other stuff I don’t even want to tell you.
What happened
at the border?
Grace Park: You lie about how much stuff you’re taking back with you.
Right? Everyone’s done that. These are the questions that I can’t
remember, then later you’re like, Ahhh, of course.
Yeah, later you
remember. Like when I killed that guy in Pasadena.
Grace Park: [Awkward pause.]
I, um…Now,
before you got married, in relationships were you the dumper or the dumpee?
Grace Park: Oh, I was the total dumper.
What was your
line?
Grace Park: “I just don’t like you anymore.” I don’t
know if that’s worse, but it’s really simple.
I actually feel
a little broken up now.
Grace Park: [Laughs.] I know, it’s OK. Now I’ll pick
you up off the floor. It’s so matter-of-fact. It’d be weird, I’d
be having conversations with people and they’d be into it, and then
I want to go home and we keep talking and the next thing I know I’m
breaking up with them out of nowhere. “Oh, shoot. Sorry. I wasn’t
planning on that.”
Just very straightforward.
Grace Park: Yeah, it’s not a big fiasco and it’s not like “Let’s
still be friends.” All these people are so finicky about it. It’s
not like you’re doing surgery.
Unless you’re
dating a doctor.
Grace Park: Stop it! I think I was pretty cocky before. I didn’t realize
how cocky I was. Aren’t we all cocky growing up? Until you get wiser.
Or you get stupider.
Your brain shrinks.
Grace Park: Yes, it does. I can feel it. Rapidly. Ow!
After playing
an officer and a pilot, do you find that men like a woman in uniform?
Grace Park: I don’t think so.
You don’t
think men like women in uniform?
Grace Park: I think it depends which uniform. Nurse’s uniform? I think
a lot of guys like that. Twenty-pound flight suit? I don’t think guys
go for it.
You never know!
Grace Park: But some guys seem to like it. I have heard some guys say a woman
in uniform is sexy. But I haven’t heard it a lot.
Have you heard
it about Battlestar?
Grace Park: Yeah, some people think it’s pretty cool.
Is it weird when
people say that?
Grace Park: No, because I’ve only heard it like twice. And it’s
usually Tricia [Helfer], who’s usually in a red dress on the show or
she’s always in heels and the dress. She always wants to wear one of
our flight suits or dog tags.But she’s the one I always hear it from.
Do you think you’re
nerdy?
Grace Park: Dirty?
Nerdy. [Laughs.]
Wow.
Grace Park: Exactly!
Do you think you’re
dirty?
Grace Park: You said “dirty”! And now you pretend. Do I think
I’m nerdy? I can be nerdy.
That’s a no. [Laughs.]
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