Star on the diamond takes act to television
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Steve Virgen
If Mike McLean never became famous, he would be OK with that. Just
because he has been studying to be an actor doesn’t necessarily mean
he wants fame or celebrity status.
And even though a day in his life will be highlighted on
television tonight in a program called “American Talent” on KCET, the
teenager -- one of only 20 Presidential Scholars in the Arts in the
nation -- is keeping his cool.
“If I start thinking about how huge an event is, I start freaking
out,” said McLean, 18. “I try to stay calm.”
His mother, Tina McLean, is not playing it quite so cool. She has
a 7:45 p.m. date with friends and family in front of the television
set at her Costa Mesa home to watch her son, now a student of acting
at USC, on the 8 p.m. program.
“We are giddy with excitement,” she said of the broadcast.
The show chronicles the lives of 125 national finalists of the
2004 Arts Awards. Many of the finalists were chosen as Presidential
Scholars in the Arts, an honor awarded by the U.S. Department of
Education.
Like his approach to baseball, McLean’s commitment to acting is
all for the love of it.
McLean recently graduated from Newport Harbor High as a captain of
the Sailors’ baseball team.
He was honored at the White House June 21. After graduating on
June 17, he spent a weekend in Washington D.C., took a tour of the
White House and saw some sites. He did not meet President Bush, but
he saw First Lady Laura Bush and pet their dog, Barney.
McLean’s work in acting at his school and in various competitions
helped him earn the award. Similar to his dedication to his craft,
McLean was also diligent in baseball. He earned second-team All-Sea
View League honors as he helped lead the Sailors to a fourth-place
finish in league. McLean, the Sailors’ leadoff hitter, played third
base and pitched.
Newport Harbor enjoyed one of its best seasons in recent memory by
nearly making the playoffs. The Sailors ended their season with a
loss in a third-place tiebreaker that would have gotten them into the
playoffs.
“It was really heartbreaking at the end,” McLean said. “But the
more I thought about it, I was happy to be that close. My first year
on varsity, when I was a sophomore, we didn’t win a league game. To
go from that to this past season was great.”
McLean continues to study acting through an intense program at
USC.
After catching the eye of PBS during a competition in Miami, the
public television crew followed McLean and completed a
day-in-the-life piece on him at Newport Harbor and around Newport
Beach.
McLean was one of 20 who performed at the competition in Miami
conducted by the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts in
January. He was among 125 finalists selected from a pool of 6,000
applicants nationwide. McLean applied for the competition in
November, when he sent a videotape of himself singing.
After being among the 125, the foundation nominated 50 to be up
for a Presidential Scholars award or other honors, but 20 were
selected. Those 20 were in the final competition in Miami in January.
At the competition, McLean performed a monologue from Six Degrees
of Separation and he sang, “What You’d Call a Dream,” from the play,
“Diamond,” a drama about baseball.
If McLean were ever to become famous, he said he would love to be
in a movie as a baseball player.
“It would be fun to be in some sort of baseball movie where I’m in
Yankee Stadium,” he said. “If I’m going to be famous, which is highly
unlikely, I just want to do things that are cool -- visit other parts
of the world or be a pro baseball player.”
Acting, however, remains merely something McLean enjoys doing.
“My main goal is to have a family and to be able to settle down
with them,” McLean said. “This [acting] just seems to be the thing
that I’m best at. But baseball is my first love.”
McLean’s passion for baseball will last after high school, he
said. Recently, he assisted his former coach, Joel Desguin, with a
local baseball camp. McLean also plans to compete in adult leagues,
just so he can keep his competitive fire burning.
“I always used to tell my dad not to play in those softball
leagues,” McLean said. “But now I’m saying I’m going to be out there
pretty soon. I just love it so much. To imagine not playing anymore,
I can’t see that. I’m still going to love it.”
* The Pilot’s Ryan Carter contributed to this story.
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