Being a teenager was a time. There existed such emotional turmoil and social upheaval,
I've never quite figured out if I was more a product of the Sixties or the Seventies.
I turned 15 in 1969, too young to be a hippie, too old for the Dazed &
Confused look. The political background for my teen years was just my window
dressing, though; few of us emerge from adolescence unscathed.
Blocking out all the hideous aspects of that time - bad skin, divorcing parents,
school, younger brothers - I can only remember the exquisite pain of teenage love.
How I felt I had to put on the delicate membrane of awkward bravado to hide all the
fears and questions that bombarded me, a veneer so thin that it must have been transparent.
Could my young heart, smarting in unrequited ardor, be seen throbbing away in my
chest? I was so in love with love in those days that when my college professor father
assigned his Trinity University students to see the Franco Zeferelli version of Romeo
& Juliet, he made the mistake of taking me. Daddy had to hold me up when
it was over as I sobbed my way toward the exit, past groups of his amused students.
I was inconsolable; he was embarrassed. "Could we talk about this in class?"
he pleaded, as a student asked him why Tybalt was called the Prince of Cats.
The giddy irony of adolescent angst and love seems to be an enduring theme, particularly
for television. Maybe that's because the medium seems to suit it better in our homes,
where most of us watch TV. Unlike film, which is sort of a one-shot gamble, the angst
better pay off in ratings or it's curtains. That's what happened to one of the best
shows ever, My So-Called Life (MTV; 6pm M-F).

Angela Chase (Claire Danes) and Jordan Catalano (Jared Leto). Teen angst, Ninetiesstyle.
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The short-lived ABC series, from Thirty-something producers
Marshall Herskovitz and Ed Zwick, was born Thursday, August 25, 1994;
its last episode aired January 26, 1995, under much protest from TV watchdog groups.
In between, 19 gorgeous photographs of adolescence came alive for an hour. Here was
Angela Chase (Claire Danes), growing up so fast that her protective membrane
was stretching and tearing for all the world to see. Her parents were the impossibly
appealing Graham (Tom Irwin) and Patty (Bess Armstrong) Chase, and
provided a mildly annoying but indulgently lovable younger sister Danielle (Lisa
Wilhoit). There were Angela's old friends Sharon Cherski (Devon Odessa)
and Brian Krakow (Devon Gummersall), and Angela's new friends, Rayanne Graff
(A.J.Langer) and Rickie Vasquez (Wilson Cruz). And then there was Jordan
Catalano (Jared Leto), whose liquid blue eyes sent Angela's heart dancing.
MSCL was not renewed for ABC's 95-96 season but MTV picked
it up not long after, began running it steadily, and hasn't stopped. It's one of
the genuinely noteworthy programming decisions on MTV's part, and the network has
just renewed its promotion of the series in its new time slot. In typical MTV fashion,
they didn't just announce it, they ran back-to-back episodes in an MSCL
marathon over the weekend, and it suited me fine; for all the years between us in
age, Angela Chase's poignant confusion lurks in my not-so-distant memory.
This is a show that just gets better with time; at some point it will begin to
look dated, its contemporary soundtrack will start to sound like an oldies station,
but in only 19 hours, MSCL did a better job of portraying adolescence
than the entire ouerve of Beverly Hills 90210 with all of Party
of Five thrown in.
You could't really call Angela Chase EveryTeen. She was much too privileged for
that and she knew it, but the disenchantment and dissatisfaction that comes with
being a teenager is universal, as is the quest for meaning and experience. Being
poised on the precipice of adulthood is terrifying; the fall is often graceless,
and the landing even more painful. Some of us are still limping from it.
Layered in between MSCL's lovingly crafted dialogue that fairly
radiates the warmth of a fireplace are the raspy realities of growing up. "Lately
I can't even look at my mother without wanting to stab her repeatedly," Angela
thinks to herself after Patty comments tartly on her daughter's newly dyed hair.
"My breasts have come between me and my father," Angela realizes, after
an uncomfortable meeting in the hallway following an evening shower. "Kissing...
and not kissing...," she sighs, basking in the golden glow of love with Jordan
Catalano.
This week I've gone home at night and tuned into Angela's life. There's nothing
so-called about it, but she doesn't know that yet. And because there are only 19
facets to the jewel that was My So-Called Life, they will remain set
for all time, sparkling in their brittle portrayal.
When the time comes and I have to chose those desert island TV shows, there will
be an episode of My So-Called Life on my list. It will be the Christmas
one, titled "So-Called Angels," and so conducive to making me cry that
I write this watery-eyed. Angela has met a mysterious waif (Julianna Hatfield), who
seems to be shadowing Rickie, now homeless after his aunt and uncle move - without
telling him. Angela's attempts to include Rickie with the Chases meet with cold disapproval
from her mother. "I just had the most upsetting fight with Angela... it was
one of those fights where it doesn't even seem real, it seems like the fight is having
you," Patty tells Graham, as they decide to take action when Angela disappears
after the runaway Rickie. In the police station, Patty looks at a bulletin board
of missing children posters, her eyes falling on one featuring the face of the mysterious
waif.
Now fearful and searching for her own missing daughter, Patty meets the waif in
a churchyard and in an achingly tender scene, asks the question, "How did you
die?"
Hatfield looks guilelessly to Patty. "I froze."
I wept buckets. Still do every time I see it. And while the tears are hot and
bitter as they flow, they leave behind the memories of my own growing up, only now
it feels a little more wistful.
"It was totally wicked, am I right?" Rayanne demands at the end of the
first episode, at school the morning after the two have escaped near-trouble at a
nightclub they were too young to enter. "And the cops came," Rickie adds,
noting the imprimatur of cool.
"I am telling you, we had a time. Didn't we? Didn't we have a time?"
Rayanne demands.
"We did," Angela smiles radiantly in sudden recognition of her newfound
wings to fly. "We had a time."