Fox plays FBI agent on series 'Missing'



The show is number one with women 18 to 49 in its time slot.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- It's not every day you'll hear a Hollywood actress bragging about turning 40 the way Vivica A. Fox is doing.
Of course she can boast about aging because she doesn't show it, not even on this day, when she had taken a red-eye flight from Toronto and spent much of the morning promoting her new Lifetime series "Missing."
She's bright-eyed, smiling and talking a mile-a-minute about everything from the single life and the "little young fellas" who keep "checkin"' her out to going shopping for frilly, pretty things -- like the strapless, pink A-line and matching feathery flip flops she's wearing.
"Guurl, I'm excited about 40. I ain't wet behind the ears no more!" she says, laughing. "I'm a woman and I'm cool with me, and if everybody don't like me, that's OK because I ain't goin' to like everybody anyway, and I'm cool with that, too."
Yet it appears television audiences like Fox just fine in the newly retooled "Missing," which premiered last season as "1-800-MISSING" with Caterina Scorsone and Gloria Reuben, who has left the show.
Success
Since last month's season debut, "Missing" has climbed to No. 1 in its time period with women age 18 to 49, according to Lifetime, which just ordered five additional episodes of the series.
After a string of ill-fated shows, Fox now has a chance for a more lucrative series run playing FBI special agent Nicole Scott, a frank, off-the-cuff investigator partnered with straight-arrow agent and psychic Jess Mastriani (Scorsone).
Making "Missing" is like "doing a minimovie every week," Fox says. "I'm doing drama, with a little bit of humor added, and I'm very happy. I like being here."
Series creator Debra Martin Chase seems just as pleased with the casting.
"Vivica's that great combination: She looks amazing, she's smart; women love her, men love her," Chase said. "We were able to take advantage of that and create a character that is vulnerable, who is gentle but tough and is not afraid to kick some butt; who breaks the rules but who has her own code of honor."
Having finished "Kill Bill: Vol. 1 & amp; 2," "Ella Enchanted," and a series of urban romantic comedies, the woman who catapulted her movie career with an out-of-this world kiss with Will Smith in "Independence Day" wasn't interested in returning to television.
But Lifetime had other ideas.
"Vivica's was the first name we went to when Gloria talked about wanting to leave," says Lifetime programming vice president Kelly Goode, "and Debra was just dogged about going after her."
Deal she likes
After three months of relentless pursuit, Fox finally got an offer she couldn't refuse: co-executive producing credits on "Missing" and a film production deal with Lions Gate Entertainment, which produces the series in Toronto.
"I feel like I've achieved another level in a business that's not kind to African-American actresses," says Fox.
But juggling her roles as producer and star hasn't been easy.
"There's days when I gotta get down on my knees and do positive prayers, especially when I first started the show," she says. "There were always so many questions and ways I'm being split that I have to stay positive to keep my strength, to keep my serenity."
She's needed that a lot lately, after her divorce to singer Sixx-Nine (Christopher Harvest) in 2002 and the abrupt end of her romance with rapper 50 Cent, who began insinuating after the breakup that Fox was "crazy" and using him to get her face on magazine covers.
"I didn't speak about the break-up when it happened, and he was going so public, which was completely disappointing. ... I really don't know what I did that made us break up. It was sad, because I really cared for him, but I still wish him well. But I will never publicly put down a black man. I just can't."
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