Sunday, November 23, 2008 | 8:37 a.m.

Hollywood Exclusive by Marilyn Beck & Stacy Jenel Smith

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Marilyn Beck & Stacy Jenel Smith

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Peter Krause: "Dirty Sexy" Changes And Reshoots/Erica Durance Finds Playing Lois Lane Empowering

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Look for changes — big changes — in "Dirty Sexy Money" when the ABC series returns to the tube for its second season on October 1.

"We're retooling the show," reveals Peter Krause, who stars as the morally corrupt lawyer of a scandal-plagued family led by Donald Sutherland in "Money."

"Basically," he says, "we want to make it juicier than it was, and we're reshooting the segments we shot last May and June with the hope of making it easier for new viewers to join the show.

"Last week," he says, "We were shooting three episodes at the same time. It hasn't been easy. The original plan was to have 13 episodes in the can by the time we go on the air for the second season. Now we'll be lucky to have seven, maybe eight."

Kraus, who starred in the critically acclaimed HBO "Six Feet Under" from 2001 to 2006, blames the crunch on the recent writers strike and says, "We're now trying to make up for six months of lost time." He's hopeful, he says, that when "we get up and running, he'll have time to squeeze in some movie work between "Sexy Money" demands.

He was supposed to start the big-screen "Jack and Addie" with Kristin Davis last July, and is now hoping the comedy romance will finally go before the cameras next spring. There's also a script based on a book he hopes will soon head to screen and another film project in the works.

Krause would also like to earmark some time for vacation. He and Roman, his seven-year-old son by ex-girlfriend Christine King, traveled to Vermont and Squaw Valley this year. Peter says he likes space and is also partial to Montana backpacking.

He has Roman with him on weekends and says that he and King "co-parent beautifully."

FROM THE INSIDE LOOKING OUT: "Smallville's" Erica Durance tells us her plucky Lois Lane character has had an impact on her even off the set. "When you're doing series work, playing a character for a few years, usually you have to bring something of yourself to it — and yeah, the character can invade you a little bit," she says. "I come home and she'll still be a part of me, this sassy high energy.
My husband is like, 'Chill.'" On the plus side, "It's helped me become more confident in myself. It's made me a champion of the cause of, basically, women being in charge of their lives and being independent — doing that and making no apologies for it."

The beautiful Canadian actress also notes that one of the things she's also liked about playing Lois in "Smallville," "is that she shows it's OK to mess up and to be human. You don't have to be perfect. Just keep going. Sometimes being a perfectionist can become counter productive — if it keeps you from moving forward. There's a beauty in imperfection."

"Smallville" returns for its eighth season Sept. 18, and Erica is more prominently featured this year, as Lois and Clark Kent (Tom Welling) keep moving toward their mature characters on the CW series.

ON HER OWN TIME: Jordana Spiro may be in the spotlight thanks to her TBS comedy "My Boys," but the actress admits she was humbled not too long ago after an encounter with a "fan." "I was sitting outside on the patio of this restaurant and this girl was kind of looking at me and then she walked up to me. I was with my sister and I was like, 'Here we go. Somebody's going to recognize me.' The girl said, 'I'm going to have a party in there and the people of the restaurant told me that if it's going to get noisy then I have to tell the people on the patio. Will that bother you?' I was like, 'No.' Yeah, that's about the extent of my getting recognized."

THE INDUSTRY EYE: Casting of subsidiary roles is underway for Sarah Jessica Parker's HBO pilot, "The Washingtoninenne," based on Jessica Cutler's novel of the same title. Her character's described as a New York publicist who comes to D.C. to be a speechwriter — who is feisty, sexy, opinionated and abrasive, and determined to take on Washington on her own terms, which apparently include a lot of sex.

Forces on the forthcoming big-screen "In the Midnight Hours" — the Wilson Pickett-Evelyn Rogers story — have been casting about for an actor to play Bruce Springsteen. You might recall that The Boss covered the late soul legend's "In the Midnight Hour," and the two performed it together.

With reports by Stephanie DuBois and Emily Feimster.

To find out more about Marilyn Beck and Stacy Jenel Smith and read their past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 MARILYN BECK AND STACY JENEL SMITH

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.




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Originally Published on Tuesday September 09, 2008

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