| The New Queen of the Small Screen | ||
| Why we’re so BFF with Hilarie Burton. | ||
| By Marisa Walker | ||
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Let’s be honest: We’re crazy jealous of Hilarie Burton. First of all, not only did she have mad skills in her own cheer years—all nine of ’em—but she gets to put on a uniform again as unlikely cheerleader Peyton Sawyer on The WB’s “One Tree Hill.” We won’t even mention the fact that she gets to smooch hotties like James Lafferty and Chad Michael Murray (OK, so we just did), let alone that she rocks the red carpet and the “TRL” studio as an MTV VJ. We already know what you’re thinking: It’s so not fair! But when you meet the girl, you instantly want to be her new best friend. We figured this out about two seconds after she bustled into our early-early morning photo shoot, all bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, and totally psyched to chat about cheer. Art Imitates Life Her on-screen persona is just as complicated. “Peyton cheers, she’s got her art and she’s really into punk music,” explains Hilarie. “She’s into lots of different things, and she doesn’t fit into just one place. I was torn, just like Peyton is. That’s part of the reason I took the show, because I was like, holy cow, this was me in high school.” “There’s always stereotypes in high school. People get put into groups,” she says. “You’re a jock, you’re a cheerleader, you’re a freak, you’re in the drama department. I had a lot of trouble fitting into those groups when I was in high school because I wanted to be a part of all of them. I think that’s how a lot of people are. Some people have the nerve to go ahead and branch out and be a part of everything and some people don’t. I think on our show we have people who are multidimensional and who like more than one thing. People do like more than one thing. It’s nice that [‘One Tree Hill’] shows that.”
In fact, the three girls took charge of Virginia’s Park View HS Patriots their senior year after two years as the youngest on the varsity team. “We wanted to be a really positive squad,” she remembers. “We took care of our girls, and we set expectations for them. Everybody worked together, and it was amazing. We worked our crowd and they would go crazy. I really got into the theatrics of it.” The team started to attract some major attention, and was even written up by the Washington Post. Hilarie’s team was all about cheering outside the box. “[At games,] we were more about interacting with the crowd than just doing the cheers that we’d rehearsed. That’s not what it’s about. You’re supposed to get the crowd to yell for the boys so they can feel it,” she says. “On my senior year competition squad, we concentrated more on being innovative and working the crowd, as opposed to who we could put up the highest.” Hilarie was also responsible for the rockin’ pep rallies at PVHS. Hilarie combined her two favorite activities—drama and cheer—to pull off rallies complete with fog machines, music, props and skits. “It was cool because the drama kids who didn’t necessarily care about pep rallies were into it, and the football players and cheerleaders were really appreciative,” Hilarie remembers. “It was nice to bring my two worlds together. I was really proud of that.”
Hands-On Help The Do-It-All Gal
Although she’s used to balancing a crazy schedule—Hilarie was going to school full-time in the honors program her first two years with MTV—now she’s become even more the jet-setter. Shuttling back and forth from Wilmington, NC, where “One Tree Hill” is shot, to New York City for Fridays’ “TRL” and back again every week, Hilarie lives in two very different worlds. But those worlds collided in November when the “Hill” cast made an appearance on “TRL.” “The crowd was totally insane that day. It was almost overwhelming,” says Hilarie, who was hosting as nearly 2,000 fans crowded almost every inch of Times Square. “People were mobbing [the cast] and throwing themselves in front of their limo. It was crazy, but really flattering to have so many people like the show.” Extra! Extra! |
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| Hil’s Hit List | ||
| Cheer Years: Five years for youth leagues (on five different teams!) and freshman through senior year at Park View HS in Sterling, VA. • Mascot: Patriots • Colors: red, white & royal blue • Comp Hero: As a varsity alternate her sophomore year, Hil was called up the night before a big competition to fill in for a girl who got in trouble. “I got her uniform and she’s like eight sizes bigger than me, so I had to fold the skirt over in half,” Hilarie remembers. “So I show up and I have this big bulge on my side and the top was real big. But I was going to do it, no matter what.” The team ended up scoring big, and Hilarie was pulled up to varsity. • School Star: Is there anything this girl can’t do? She was also a major player in the drama department, National Honor Society, Key Club, German club, science club and forensics—“I was in every club there was.” • Natural Leader: Hilarie got used to the spotlight early, as student council president and thespian society president. Although her busy-bee schedule kept her from actually being named cheer captain, it didn’t stop her from acting the part. “At the end of the year, the coach gives the captains a gift and Jan [Develli] game me an honorary gift. She gave me Shel Silverstein’s The Giving Tree.” • Lip Service: While basketball is life at Tree Hill HS, where her character Peyton Sawyer cheers, football was a religion at PVHS. In Hilarie’s four years of cheering there, they only lost two games: one her junior year and then the fabled State championship, where she planted a kiss on the star kicker, whose just-missed field goal was the make-or break-moment of the game. The kicker of this story? He was cheer coach Jan Develli’s son. | ||
| Peyton's Place | ||
| Cheer Stats: Varsity basketball cheerleader for Tree Hill HS • Mascot: Ravens • Colors: Royal blue, black & white • Drama Mama: Once at the point of a love triangle with half-brothers and arch-rivals Nathan (James Lafferty) and Lucas Scott (Chad Michael Murray), Peyton finds herself digging a new boy. We’re still pulling for her and Lucas in a Dawson/Joey kind of way. • Why We Love Her: She blows away every stereotype the media has placed on cheerleaders. She’s—gasp—smart! And interesting! And so not the pop-tart cheerleader TV often delivers. |