Rising
star Zac Efron, 19, is pretty down-to-Earth for a teen heartthrob. The
High School Musical and Hairspray star says the moment he thinks he’s
special, “that’s when I know I’m in trouble.”
The essential Zac Efron

MIRACLE RUN (2003):
Efron makes a major impression as Steven Morgan, one of two autistic
twins, on this Lifetime movie. He was nominated for a Young Artist
Award for his performance.
SUMMERLAND (2004): Efron became a continuing
character named Cameron Bale on this WB series about a young woman
raising her nieces and nephews after their parents’ tragic death.
THE DERBY STALLION (2005): In this movie, Efron
played Patrick McCardle, a troubled 15-year-old who finds himself
through horse-racing in his quest for the coveted Derby Cup.
HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL (2006): Efron’s breakout hit.
He plays Troy Bolton, captain of the basketball team, who finds romance
by starring in – what else? – a high school musical at East High.
HAIRSPRAY (2007): Efron scores again as Link Larkin, the coolest of the cool kids on The Corny Collins Show. He learns about life and love from plus-sized Tracy Turnblad.
I
wasn’t a hot commodity. I was a regular dude. I had to chase chicks –
they didn’t chase me. Zac Efron on his pre-High School Musical day
If you’re a fan of Zac Efron from his work on High School Musical or Hairspray, then I’ve got some very good news for you.
He’s a really nice guy.
Unlike most cute teen idols who take the news that young girls find
them attractive as a license to behave like ill-bred jerks, Efron has a
refreshing honesty and a disarming modesty that put him light years
ahead of his competitors.
“I could show you 500 kids in L.A.,” he says, stretching out on a
sofa in a suite at the Hyatt during his recent stay in Toronto, “who
are my height, weight, hair colour and age. We’re a dime a dozen. Why
did I get the parts I did? Who knows? But the minute I start thinking
it’s because I was special, that’s when I know I’m in trouble.”
Efron didn’t begin in a show business family – far from it.
He was born Oct. 18, 1987, in San Luis Obispo, Calif., to a father
who worked as a power plant engineer and a mother who was a secretary
at the same plant.
“I lived a normal childhood in a middle-class family,” Efron insists.
“When I was younger, I didn’t even know this business existed.”
It was Efron’s dad who first sensed his son’s talent in the acting
world and encouraged him to do high school musicals like many other
kids. For a while, it was like any normal scenario where the talented
son impresses family and friends with his accomplishments.
But later on, professional agents started noticing the nice young
man, with the bangs falling over his forehead, who was able to bewitch
the women in any audience. Still, Efron admits, “I was 18 before it
became a business with me,” and high-powered agents swept in to make
the California kid a worldwide star.
It’s fascinating now, as thousands of screaming girls go crazy over
Efron, that he looks back on the time only a few years ago when, “I
wasn’t a hot commodity. I was a regular dude. I had to chase chicks –
they didn’t chase me.”
Now that the paparazzi surround Efron on a daily basis, he’s anxious
to affirm that “photos are just a frame of your life; they don’t
represent what kind of a person you are.”
The successful movie version of Hairspray currently has
Efron in the public eye as its appealing romantic lead, Link Larkin,
which he describes as “a once-in-a-lifetime role.
“I love watching the guys who bring the cool into the story.”
He also appreciates the way that “Link is all about the way that other people think and Tracy is about being true to yourself.”
But while Hairspray is of major importance to Efron’s
career, there’s no doubt in anyone’s mind that his performance as
jock-turned-song-and-dance-dude Troy Bolton in the phenomenon known as High School Musical made him a giant star.
And the enormous hype surrounding what was meant to be a throwaway
entry on the Family Channel has probably proved to be the strangest
thing of all to Efron.
“We made the movie with low expectations,” he now admits. “And, initially, there was no phenomenon.
“But after we signed the contracts for the second movie, suddenly, pandemonium broke loose and there we were on Good Morning, America.”
One of the amazing things about Efron is that, even when being
caught in the middle of a media firestorm like the one that surrounded High School Musical, he’s able to maintain a mature and valuable perspective.
“It wasn’t the hype that made the movie,” he insists, “it was the fans who took control. That’s what I love.”
But, by now, all of this is in the past and everyone is looking forward to High School Musical 2, which makes its debut at 8 p.m. on Aug. 17 on Disney’s Family Channel.
“It’s a blast,” says Efron, “and it all takes place over summer vacation. It’s a lot sexier than the first. If that one was Grease, then this one is Dirty Dancing. More romance, more summer lovin’, more of the juicy stuff.”
Toronto means all of that for Efron as well, because it was here that “I felt like I really became an adult, a man.”
He smiles shyly as he admits “this was the place where I first struck out on my own.
“When we’d have a day off from Hairspray, I’d put on my backpack and set out to discover this city. I’d just walk all day. That’s what Toronto is to me: Freedom.”
Right now, Efron admits, “I’m one lucky guy to have landed in such awesome projects.”
But he’s also happy abut the success of High School Musical and Hairspray for another reason: “They tell kids that what’s really important in life is following your dreams and truly being yourself.”
Efron flashes his million-dollar smile as he brushes his trademark bangs to the side.
“Hey, if it happened to me, then, man, it can happen to anybody.”
Getting personal
1. What was your first job?
“I worked in a theatre called The Melodrama in Oceana, Calif. The kind of place where the audience threw peanuts on the floor.”
2. What’s on your iPod?
“`Hey There, Delilah’ from the Plain White T’s. It wrecks me every time I hear it.”
3. If you weren’t an actor, what would you be doing?
“I’d be a college student. That’s what I was raised to be.”
4. What’s the last good movie you saw?
“300 … It was a new idea, a new genre, a whole new type of film. It was a man’s movie and I thought it was amazing.”
5. What TV show must you watch/record every week?
“Lost … the whole concept of being lost on a desert island has always intrigued me.”