TMC
03-11-2021, 07:14 PM
https://www.looper.com/353948/head-of-the-class-dan-frischman-reminisces-about-the-show-and-the-lie-he-told-to-get-the-part-exclusive/
Dan Frischman was how old when he got the part?
What's kind of amazing is that Frischman was 27 years old when he landed the role of high school student Arvid Engen. As he reveals to Looper, "Thank goodness for my baby face I had that I was able to pull that off. I was prepared to lie at the audition and, indeed, the first thing they asked me was, 'How old are you?' And I said, '22,' which I thought was still a little old to be a high school student, but I figured I could pull that off, get away with it."
Sure enough, Frischman got the job, and it wasn't until several seasons later that the question of his age came up again. "At our 100th episode party, by this time everyone knew how old I was — I was like 30 and playing a junior at high school — and I asked one of the producers, 'If you had known how old I was, would you have cast me?'" Frischman recalls. "And he said, 'Well, let me put it this way, I never asked you again.' In other words, he said, 'No.'"
Frischman was 32 when the sitcom finished its run, and says he was the oldest of the original ensemble of students. "The youngest was actually Tannis Vallely, who played a 13-year-old. [...] She was actually 13. But everybody else was in their 20s to begin with," says Frischman. "I think they had tried to do it with actual teenagers originally, but they couldn't find what they wanted."
Why Head of the Class has endured, and whether Dan Frischman would return
Frischman has actually worked as an acting coach for some of the young actors who have auditioned for roles on the upcoming HBO Max reboot series, and he says it will be tremendously satisfying to him if one of the kids he coached ends up joining the cast. "It's kind of like, 'Okay, this has come full circle, and I can hopefully personally help one of these kids get there.' And they're doing it this time with actual 13- and 14-year-olds — the actual ages of freshmen in high school."
Frischman notes that he'd be open to directing episodes of the new show (he's a director as well) and showing up as Arvid once again if he got the call to do so. "One of the associate producers was also a producer on the original, and I've reached out to her about directing it, so we'll see if that happens," he says. "But I can imagine in the third season that they would just do a promotion where they cart us out for some reason. Maybe there's a reunion that we show up at or something to that effect. I could see that happening, but I don't think that's on their minds at the moment."
As for why interest in Head of the Class has held up over the decades since the series' conclusion, Frischman is clear on what he thinks made the sitcom stand out. "It was an intelligent show," he says. "It's about kids who are applying themselves, so I think parents back then, and kids from back then who are now parents today, want to show their kids students who enjoy learning and excel at what they're doing by working hard. I think there's a climate of entitlement today that precludes hard work to get to what you want. So a show like Head of the Class says, 'No, it requires a lot of hard work and passion.' I think that's one reason. Also, it was often a funny show."
Read More: https://www.looper.com/353948/head-of-the-class-dan-frischman-reminisces-about-the-show-and-the-lie-he-told-to-get-the-part-exclusive/?utm_campaign=clip
Dan Frischman was how old when he got the part?
What's kind of amazing is that Frischman was 27 years old when he landed the role of high school student Arvid Engen. As he reveals to Looper, "Thank goodness for my baby face I had that I was able to pull that off. I was prepared to lie at the audition and, indeed, the first thing they asked me was, 'How old are you?' And I said, '22,' which I thought was still a little old to be a high school student, but I figured I could pull that off, get away with it."
Sure enough, Frischman got the job, and it wasn't until several seasons later that the question of his age came up again. "At our 100th episode party, by this time everyone knew how old I was — I was like 30 and playing a junior at high school — and I asked one of the producers, 'If you had known how old I was, would you have cast me?'" Frischman recalls. "And he said, 'Well, let me put it this way, I never asked you again.' In other words, he said, 'No.'"
Frischman was 32 when the sitcom finished its run, and says he was the oldest of the original ensemble of students. "The youngest was actually Tannis Vallely, who played a 13-year-old. [...] She was actually 13. But everybody else was in their 20s to begin with," says Frischman. "I think they had tried to do it with actual teenagers originally, but they couldn't find what they wanted."
Why Head of the Class has endured, and whether Dan Frischman would return
Frischman has actually worked as an acting coach for some of the young actors who have auditioned for roles on the upcoming HBO Max reboot series, and he says it will be tremendously satisfying to him if one of the kids he coached ends up joining the cast. "It's kind of like, 'Okay, this has come full circle, and I can hopefully personally help one of these kids get there.' And they're doing it this time with actual 13- and 14-year-olds — the actual ages of freshmen in high school."
Frischman notes that he'd be open to directing episodes of the new show (he's a director as well) and showing up as Arvid once again if he got the call to do so. "One of the associate producers was also a producer on the original, and I've reached out to her about directing it, so we'll see if that happens," he says. "But I can imagine in the third season that they would just do a promotion where they cart us out for some reason. Maybe there's a reunion that we show up at or something to that effect. I could see that happening, but I don't think that's on their minds at the moment."
As for why interest in Head of the Class has held up over the decades since the series' conclusion, Frischman is clear on what he thinks made the sitcom stand out. "It was an intelligent show," he says. "It's about kids who are applying themselves, so I think parents back then, and kids from back then who are now parents today, want to show their kids students who enjoy learning and excel at what they're doing by working hard. I think there's a climate of entitlement today that precludes hard work to get to what you want. So a show like Head of the Class says, 'No, it requires a lot of hard work and passion.' I think that's one reason. Also, it was often a funny show."
Read More: https://www.looper.com/353948/head-of-the-class-dan-frischman-reminisces-about-the-show-and-the-lie-he-told-to-get-the-part-exclusive/?utm_campaign=clip