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Josh Peck gets serious in 'Wackness'

Josh Peck is glad to be back amid the noise, crowds and cabs. He's a New Yorker, born and bred, raised by his mom in Hell's Kitchen. But at 14, he moved to Los Angeles when he was cast in Nickelodeon's "The Amanda Show." He soon got his own series - the zany, volume-pumped "Drake & Josh," with Drake Bell.

After several seasons, D&J parted. Peck, 21, now has several films due out in coming months. But it's "The Wackness," a dark, coming-of-age tale that premiered Thursday, that's destined to give Peck some "serious actor" street cred. Young writer-director Jonathan Levine cast Peck as Luke Shapiro, a lost, friendless pot dealer who sees a therapist (Academy Award-winner Ben Kingsley) in exchange for marijuana. Things get dicey when Luke falls for the shrink's stepdaughter (Olivia Thirlby).

The quirky doctor-patient friendship, budding like Luke's ganja, is set against the backdrop of New York circa 1994, the start of the Giuliani era. Not that long ago, yet it feels like some freaky time capsule, packed with artifacts like mixtapes, O.J. headlines, Zima - plus a "dope" soundtrack of classic rap. Peck recently sat down with Newsday contributor Joseph V. Amodio at Manhattan's Regency Hotel.



"The Wackness" is a far cry from "Drake & Josh." You must've been psyched to be cast.

I was going to the bank that morning and it was an odd day because ... I just don't go to the bank. [He chuckles.] My mom gives me cash, and I spend it. So my manager calls, saying, "You booked 'Wackness,' man." I freaked out for 10 seconds. Then I realized I would have to be buck naked in the movie and all my neuroses flooded back to full effect.



Guess a love scene can be pretty nerve-racking.

I was afraid that when the robe fell so would the heavens.



You've actually lost a lot of weight in recent years, haven't you?

About 100 pounds, over two years. I stay healthy. I play on a basketball team - I'm awful, but damn it, I play with a lot of heart.



Are you a Knicks fan?

They're a tough team to love, but I [do]. I hope they acquire LeBron [James] in a couple a years. I think they're really gonna turn it around this year.



Your mother was a single mom. Did your parents divorce when you were young?

I never met my dad. Yeah ... that's how that goes.



And you grew up an only child?

Yeah.



So did I.

Oh, represent! But I have a big brother from the Jewish Big Brothers Foundation. He's a big part of my life, and I call him my brother. I love him to death.



Luke starts with a bleak outlook. Why do you suppose so many teens feel that way, and so many parents seem clueless, saying, "But these are the best years of your life?"

Everything is overblown at that age, but in a roundabout way ... it is the best time of your life. Pain reminds you you're alive. With Luke, it's like Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World." He doesn't want to be one of the masses. But what's better - to be a sheep or be aware that there's a greater existence? A lotta people get older and cease exploring that.



Any college plans?

Related topic galleries: Ben Kingsley, Celebrity Mothers, Film Festivals, Family, Movies, Fire Island, Magic Johnson

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