| Taye Diggs: 'Ugly duckling'
to hunk
'Kevin Hill' star got his confidence through acting
Posted 29.09.2004

In "Kevin Hill," Diggs
plays a footloose lawyer
who becomes a father to a 10-month-old child.
LOS ANGELES, California - Taye Diggs
says he used to be an "ugly duckling."
"No one believes it, but I was
kind of very thin, very insecure, big glasses,"
says the now buff star of UPN's new drama "Kevin
Hill."
Diggs says his transformation into
the proverbial swan was a slow process that started
when he went to a performing arts high school.
"There, it was great because
it didn't matter what you looked like, how much money
you had, how good you were at sports. If you had (acting)
talent you were considered," he said, "so
that's where I got a little confidence going."
Later, after earning a bachelor's
degree in fine arts from Syracuse University, Diggs
got eye surgery that allowed him to dump the specs
and hit the gym to sculpt his body.
The results have made him a heartthrob
in movies such as "How Stella Got Her Groove
Back," "The Best Man" and "Brown
Sugar." Women swoon over him, but he insists
on pointing out his appearance still has flaws.
"I didn't think I was a short
person, until after 'Stella.' But then lots of women
who approached me would say 'Oh, my God, you're so
short, you looked so much bigger in the movies,' "
Diggs sighs.
Nobody's likely to complain about
that when the 5-foot-9-inch actor hits the small screen
in "Kevin Hill," which premieres 9 p.m.
EDT Wednesday.
"A lot of people had been looking
to lure Taye to television. He's such a great-looking
guy and very charismatic actor," says executive
producer Nancy Cotton.
Making a 'multicultural' show
Diggs, 32, plays flashy bachelor lawyer Kevin Hill,
whose lifestyle takes a sharp turn for the more complicated
when he inherits Sarah, an orphaned 10-month-old.
In "Kevin Hill," Diggs plays a footloose
lawyer who becomes a father to a 10-month-old child.
Being a parent changes not just his private life and
personal values, but also his work schedule, as he
downscales from a big corporation to a small legal
firm staffed by women.
Although the show's baby bit seems
familiar, series creator Jorge Reyes insists he was
inspired by the experience of a male cousin who was
left to rear a child alone, as well as his own stint
working at a women's magazine.
The lead character was not specifically
conceived as being black; Reyes says he wanted to
write a script that was "diverse, but colorblind."
Only minuscule changes were made after Diggs was cast.
"What we all wanted to do, and
what Taye then wanted to do, was to make a show that
was multicultural, but not about racial differences,"
says Cotton.
'He's obviously compensating'
An hour drama with a black lead is a rare thing on
network television, but Diggs says he tries not to
think of that as added pressure. His main reason for
signing on was simply that "Kevin Hill"
appealed to him.
"It's a character with many layers
and layers. There's a reason why Kevin always has
to appear to be ultrasharp," he says. "He's
obviously compensating for something ... The baby
is going to slowly tear him apart. He won't be able
to hold it together and that will force him to shed
that skin and look inside himself."
Jon Seda plays lawyer Dame Ruiz, Hill's
best friend, and Patrick Breen is George Weiss, a
gay nanny. Michael Michele is Jessie Grey, the single-mom
boss of the feminist law firm, which is staffed by
Nicolette Raye (Christina Hendricks) and Veronica
Carter (Kate Levering). Five babies alternate playing
Sarah.
Diggs says he's isn't worried about
playing a womanizer. "I'm a red-blooded male
... I'm looking forward to experimenting with Kevin's
lifestyle," jokes the actor, who's married to
Idina Menzel (Tony winner as the young witch Elphaba
in "Wicked").
The couple met about eight years ago
when they starred together in "Rent." Their
relationship developed gradually while he played Benny,
the villainous landlord, and "she was the lesbian,
and her character hated my character!"
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