LOS ANGELES (AP) - Fifteen-year-old Chloe Bates is in love.
A 10th-grader at an all-girls Catholic school, she lights up
when she talks about her handsome 17-year-old honey. Chloe doesn't
know too many boys, so she still gets a nervous, buzzy feeling
whenever she thinks about HIM. Her friends know all about this guy
— he's a regular text and telephone topic between school,
homework and dance practice.
Chloe keeps a few pictures of him on her bedroom wall, scattered
among snapshots of her and her friends. She also writes about him
in her journal. But she can't really get close to him. It's like he
doesn't know she exists.
Chloe is in love with Taylor Lautner, one of the hunky stars of
the "Twilight" films. And she's not alone.
Girls have been falling in love with movie stars since the dawn
of cinema. When teenagers became Tinseltown's prime marketing
target, Hollywood delivered handsome heartthrobs any girl could
love.
James Dean. Frankie Avalon. David Cassidy. Rick Springfield.
Johnny Depp. There are teen icons for every generation. For Chloe
and millions of girls around the world, it's Lautner and Robert
Pattinson of "New Moon," the latest installment in the "Twilight"
series.
These girls aren't just experiencing a movie-star crush, they're
participating in a uniquely female rite of passage: The birth of
romantic fantasy. And today's technology — online fan forums,
Twitter, an endless Web stream of photos and videos — lets
them get closer than ever.
Before real boyfriends and first kisses, girls' imaginary
relationships with their heartthrobs provide a precursor to adult
romance — a love before they know what love might be.
"They're practicing feelings of love and attachment and
attraction and romance," says Los Angeles psychologist Wendy Walsh,
whose own 11-year-old daughter also loves Lautner. "These are all
new feelings, and what a safe way to play them out — in the
privacy of their own room with a poster of Taylor Lautner."
The "Twilight" series itself is about first love. "New Moon"
centers on Bella Swan, an ordinary teenager in love with the
mysterious Edward Cullen (Pattinson), who comes from a family of
vampires. Edward is romantic and otherworldly, and though he
literally hungers for her, he's gentle and protective. But he
leaves and Bella finds comfort with her loyal, longtime friend
Jacob Black (Lautner), whom she later discovers belongs to a
lineage of werewolves.
"It would be so fun to be Bella," Chloe says wistfully. "I love
the idea of having two super-hot mythical creatures fighting over
me. I just think that would be incredible."
Chloe hasn't had a real boyfriend yet, but she thinks Lautner
would be perfect because he's "that fun, hang out,
let's-play-video-games kind of guy that I think would be really fun
right now."
Like practically everyone at school, Chloe has read all four
novels in the "Twilight" series. She spotted Lautner when she saw
the film last year and recognized him from a kids' movie she'd seen
a few years earlier.
"Now he's hot," she says. "He's really hot."
Besides his looks, Chloe loves the character he plays: A
kid-next-door type who's sweet, funny and just a tad awkward.
"I like him because I can feel like that might actually happen,
like this guy could be real," she says.
Pattinson is really hot, too, but Chloe finds his character's
infinite devotion to Bella "kind of unrealistic."
Fans of the series fall on two sides: Team Edward and Team
Jacob. Chloe aligns firmly with the latter, but "it's pretty much
half and half at my school," she says.
Each has his charms. On screen, Pattinson plays a dashing
vampire. Off-screen, the British actor is shy and soft-spoken,
humbled by all the "Twilight" attention. He's 23, lanky and pale,
with thick, tousled hair he constantly runs his fingers
through.
Lautner is buff and bronzed, with a gregarious personality, dark
eyes and an easy smile. To reprise his character in "New Moon," he
packed on more than 20 pounds of chiseled physique.
Pattinson and Lautner may be slightly sexier than teen idols
past, but they're cut from the same teen-heartthrob cloth as their
predecessors: Smooth-faced stars who seem wholesome — and
just a touch away from attainable.
Heidi Hurst, executive editor of teen pinup magazine Tiger Beat,
notes that since the magazine was established in 1965, the guys on
its pages have been "non-threatening, more on the boyish side of
good looks." The November issue features Lautner and Pattinson on
the cover.
Most Tiger Beat readers, who range in age from 8 to 16, "still
aren't dating boys in real life and this is their first exposure to
boys as in 'They're cute. I like them,'" Hurst says.
Chloe buys Tiger Beat when it has a good Lautner spread. She'll
also Google him from time to time and, until recently, kept a "very
hot, shirtless picture" of him as her computer screen-saver. But
she's not as obsessive as some of her friends, who check YouTube
for him daily and follow various "Twilight" fan sites.
She and a dozen of her friends are planning to make their own
Team Jacob T-shirts and see "New Moon" when it opens Friday.
Chloe's mom, Jill Mullikin-Bates, approves of her daughter's
love for Lautner, calling the young actor "a wholesome, realistic
role model."
"He's the right age and super cute," says the 47-year-old mother
of two. "It totally brings me back to when I was that age and
having those fantasies."
Mom's teen heartthrob? Leif Garrett, a late-1970s icon adored
for his feathered, Farrah Fawcett-style hair.
Fawcett, of course, was the most popular pinup of her day. But
the boys who bought her iconic poster related to her in a
completely different way than Chloe does, because they typically
don't have relationships with their on-screen idols the way girls
do. Most guys want to get physical with their love objects, where
girls fantasize about their heartthrob becoming their
boyfriend.
"Pinups are more explicitly eroticized where a heartthrob ... is
about feelings, being able to imagine romance rather than just sex
and sexuality," says Karen Tongson, a professor of English and
Gender Studies at the University of Southern California.
Former heartthrob Rick Springfield says he never believed his
adolescent female followers were attracted to him sexually: "If
they were confronted with this older man and they saw all this body
hair and whiskers, they'd probably completely gross out."
He theorizes that young, screaming fans are merely responding to
fledgling feelings of attraction they can't yet define. "They're
just letting out all this new energy that they're discovering," he
says.
Chloe says if she ever met Lautner in person, she'd be "freaking
out on the inside but trying to act cool on the outside." Sometimes
when she's with her friends, "we pretend what we'd say to him if we
were more confident."
As if adolescent emotions weren't enough, today's heartthrob
crushes are supported by all manner of merchandising and
gadgetry.
"It's so much more elaborate than it used to be," says USC
cultural historian Leo Braudy. "Every movie comes fit with its
posters and its icons and its bobbleheaded dolls."
Where Chloe's mom had to wait for the latest Tiger Beat to get
new photos of Leif Garrett, the media empires that create the
latest teen idols are ready with an array of products for every Zac
Efron around — albums, posters, ring tones, T-shirts, tote
bags and more. Then there's the life-sized cardboard cutout of
Lautner that Chloe's mom and dad recently bought for her.
One day the doorbell rang at Chloe's San Fernando Valley home
and cardboard Lautner was standing there, wearing a T-shirt and
jeans and his trademark sweet smile.
He now stands in her bedroom, near the window and the little
table where she writes in her journal — her first vision
every morning and the last thing she sees each night.