From the October 17th Soap Opera Digest:

Hers is a true Hollywood story: Born in L.A.'s Cedars-Lebanon Hospital to a family of actors sometime between the original theatrical releases of The Godfather and Star Wars (for fear of professional blacklisting by ageist casting directors, she's mum on the exact year), Josie Davis was barely a toddler when, enchanted by big brother Josh's appearance on an episode of QUINCY, she developed her own thespian aspirations. Almost immediately, she got a job—and a lesson in how show biz doesn't always deliver on its promises. "My first commercial was for this cereal called Super Sugar Crisps," she sighs. "It never aired because Super Sugar Crisps had too much sugar in it, and they had to take it off the shelves."
     Undaunted, Davis tore up the advertising circuit, appearing in "tons and tons" of TV spots before she was cast as one of Charles's charges (at age 13) on the Scott Baio sitcom CHARLES IN CHARGE. Talk about reality TV: For half an hour every week, all of America got to see her progression through puberty. "It was very difficult. Nicole Eggert was playing my sister, and people were constantly comparing us," the actress says. "And some people would stand up for me, but so many times, people were like, 'There's the ugly girl from CHARLES IN CHARGE.' It was so sad. I never wanted to wear a ponytail in public because any time I did, people would recognize me, and I knew they would think I was the ugly girl. So I started dressing like a sexpot and wearing my hair down, and it fooled a lot of people, but then they started calling me a tramp, when I had never even kissed a guy."
      These days, of course, she's a fixture in fashion and beauty mags—so is she still haunted by the catcalls of yesteryear? "I'm so much further away from that now ... I'm beyond it ... there's always going to be that little part of me ... yeah, of course I am," she sighs. "I mean, it's gotten a lot better. But I always ... I never feel as attractive as I supposedly am. Last night, I went to dinner with some friends, and they're like, 'Oh, my God, those guys almost fell into the bushes looking at you.' And I'm like, 'I know. Isn't that weird?' And my friends said, 'No, it's not weird—you're gorgeous!' And I'm like, 'Oh, please.' I don't think I'll ever feel like that. I don' t get it. I don't feel like that."
      After CHARLES IN CHARGE was canceled, Davis found herself at a crossroads: Did she want to act for a living, or direct, or write? Thinking that college would help her decide, she planned on going to film school, then changed directions upon realizing that acting was, indeed, her true calling. "So I went full force with it," she says. "I did a lot of guest-starring things, and then [in 1996] I got on YOUNG AND RESTLESS." After so much prime-time work, the quick pace of daytime came as a shock. "I was like, 'Oh my God, I'm in a tornado,'" Davis laughs.
      She was also in a quandary. "The thing is, they didn't really tell me how they wanted my character, Grace, to be. I didn't know what to do, so I played her as being very kind, and then they started saying, 'We want it really evil,' and then they had me stealing people's mail." After a year, the show him Jennifer Gareis to replace Davis. "There was an actual, concrete reason why things didn't work out," the actress allows. "I wonder if it's been enough years that I can say it? Nah, I'm not going to say it. Let's just say it was the right decision for everybody." Was it a personality conflict? "No, it was more a disagreement on what kinds of things they wanted me to do. So they hired someone who could fulfill that need."
      And Davis went on to fulfill needs of her own. In 1998, she auditioned in front of Oscar-winners Martin Landau and Shelley Winters to become one of only two people accepted into the prestigious Actor's Studio in New York City that year. "That was a very big goal of mine," she recalls. "I definitely wanted to prove that I was a good actress." Afterward, she returned to California—and to BEVERLY HILLS, 90210, where she played Camille, a temporary obstacle in Donna and David's slow-moving pilgrimage to holy matrimony. As the plot progressed, Davis was called upon to do some far-fetched things in the name of love, which was fine with her—she understood Camille's pain. "Did you see Camille and David's breakup scene?" she asks. "I don't know if you could tell, but that was quite real. I was crying during all the rehearsals."
      That said, she had a mostly fabulous time on-set ("Tori Spelling [ex-Donna, 90210] is the coolest chick") and so impressed the bosses, they brought her back for TITANS. "It's funny because I had some commercials running at the time and Aaron's wife, Candy, saw one, and she's like, 'You need a girl like that. Why don't you get that girl?' And Aaron goes, 'I already have her.'" For her part, Davis was only too pleased to stay aboard the Spelling gravy train. "This show is so good, and I'm not even being biased. I swear to God, I'm not just saying that because I'm on it. Because I have done shows that, you know, weren't that great. I'm really excited about this one."
      The days are long at TITANS—10 hours at least—but she's not complaining. "We amuse ourselves," she says, refering to Jack Wagner's (Jack; ex-Peter, MELROSE PLACE; ex-Frisco, GENERAL HOSPITAL; ex-Warren. SANTA BARBARA) pranks, Yasmine Bleeth's (Heather; ex-Lee Ann, ONE LIFE TO LIVE; ex-Ryan, RYAN'S HOPE) "funny little voices," infomercial queen Victoria Principal's (Gwen; ex-Pam, DALLAS) movable apothecary ("Her under-eye gel is so pure"), and the ministrations of "the nicest man in the world," Perry King (Richard; ex-Hayley, MP). "Everyone is just so talented and kind and giving, and believe me, that is not the case on all sets," Davis marvels. "I'm just amazed that I can say so many good things about all these people." And don't get her started on her love interest, Ingo Rademacher (David; ex-Jax. GH). "Please!" she gushes. "Have you seen his eyes?!"

It's A Really Small World
     While she was at Y&R, Davis entered into a two-year romance with SUNSET BEACH alum Dax Griffin (ex-Tim). When that ended, Griffin moved on to a new relationship ... with Jennifer Gareis, Davis's Y&R replacement. "People kept saying to me, 'Josie, don't you think that's a little weird?'" she laughs, "and at the time, I didn't think so at all. But now, years later, I'm like, 'Maybe that is kind of weird!'" Even weirder, the three actors are all the closest of buds. "Jennifer's a great girl, and I'm friends with all of my exes. It's so funny. And Jacob [Young, GH's Lucky] is another of my exes, so sometimes at parties, it's like I'm hanging out with Jacob and Dax and Jennifer and whoever else, like one big, happy family."
      These days, the family has a new member: a salesman of radio airtime named Sean. "I don't know if I should talk about him ... I guess it doesn't matter," Davis muses. "We [became a couple] over the July 4th weekend, but we had been friends for a long time before we started dating. I was single, and people were like, 'It's always someone who's right under your nose,' and I thought, 'I wonder if there's anyone under my nose?' And I couldn't think of anybody, but there he was. And I didn't want to jump into a commitment really quickly because that's what I usually do, but meanwhile, we haven't been seeing other people, so ... I don't know." And how's this for coincidence: He used to work with Griffin's roommate. Laughs Davis, "It's such a small world."


Considering she's worried about ageist casting directors they made it easy to figure out her age. She was 13 when she was cast in Charles in Charge. She made her Charles debut in 1987. Do the arithmetic. And for the mathematically challenged, her birthday is listed on the Internet Movie Database.

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