Amanda Stepto - her storyby Catherine Dunphy
For Amanda Stepto, the Degrassi
Talks series meant working behind the camera for a change.
"The best part of doing Degrassi Talks was meeting teenagers
from other cities and towns - and realizing how we're all the
same in a lot of ways. Even though we have all different
backgrounds, we all go through the same teenage ups and
downs."
Amanda played the character of Spike for five seasons on the popular CBC-TV series Degrassi Junior High and Degrassi High. She was also the host of the Degrassi Talks program on sex - and Catherine Dunphy interviewed her specially for this book.[i.e. - Degrassi Talks on Sex]
Working behind the camera took
some of the pressures off her as performer.
"I got to paint the picture this time and move people around
and direct and think of camera shots. It's really neat. It's more
a power feeling." The most personal interview she conducted
was with Shantih, a young girl who gave up her child for
adoption. Amanda herself is adopted.
"I think Shantih and my natural mom chose adoption for the same reasons. Shantih was being a responsible individual, thinking of her child. She was practical instead of idealistic. My natural mother had the same thought process."
She was banned in Britain; she was a hot topic in dressing
rooms and among the clumps of girls clustered in washrooms and at
their lockers.Newspapers wrote about her; she was mobbed in malls
during publicity appearances. She was not even in high school and
she was going to have a baby. She was Spike, the girl on Degrassi
Junior High with the dyed blonde Mohawk - the one in big
trouble by the 11th (and Emmy-winning) episode of the season.
By the end of the 1986/87 season she was in labour, and when
Degrassi returned in the fall, she was barely 14 and the mother
of Emma. It was made up, all of it, but Spike got lots of
letters.
Letters telling her she was a sinner, others begging her to keep
the baby, or put it up for adoption. Some offered her baby
clothes, and others just wanted to discuss the messy ordeal of
teenage motherhood. Girls wrote who had made the same mistake as
Spike. Girls wrote who also had kept their babies. Girls who
decided to have an abortion and girls who hadn't had sex yet but
who were feeling pressured by their boyfriends to do so wrote to
her.
They asked her what she thought, what they should do. As if
she were a psychologist or a doctor, or a sex therapist, or a
counsellor. Instead of a 17-year-old Mississauga girl named
Amanda Stepto who was still a virgin. Now 21, Amanda laughs.
"It was pretty funny. I wasn't having sex in real life and I
was pregnant on TV." Guys came onto her as if she was an
experienced woman of the world. Even the rest of the Degrassi
cast assumed she was sexually active, if only because she was the
oldest of them. "I didn't talk about it", she explains.
"I'm usually a very private person anyway. I didn't say,
'No, I didn't', and I didn't say 'Yes' even when I did. I didn't
talk about my sex life with anybody. It's not that it was right
or wrong to have sex, but with a lot of people, it was sex this
and sex that. That's all they talked about and it turned me off.
I mean, what's the big deal?" It was at a time when a lot of
the Degrassi cast were about 15, she continues, and, to put it
bluntly, obsessed with sex. She was older and not.
"Everything had sexual innuendoes. I was like, 'Grow up. I
don't want to hear about it. Please, I'm eating ' " , Amanda
laughs again. " I just tended to stay by myself."
And answer her letters. Kids continued to write her,
sympathizing and outraged when Spike was going to be thrown out
of school because of the baby, worrying when she became so tired
- from doing homework and looking after the baby and never going
on a date or out to a dance.
She was always careful not to dictate a solution to their
problems. First of all, she really believes that people are
different and have their own way of thinking things through for
themselves. And second, of course, was the fact that she was not,
and had never been, pregnant.
Although she sometimes felt as if she had gone the whole course.
Degrassi made sure it was realistic. Amanda groans: "On set
I felt so fat and ugly." Pretend pregnancy or not, it made
her even more careful. "I waited to have sex because I
wanted to wait and I never let myself be put under
pressure." She's very firm about that. She has made it a
point, a credo she lives by, to never give in to group pressure.
It's why she says she never smoked or did drugs, no matter how
often she was asked or told to. "I would just say no and if
they kept on I'd say to them,
'Hey, I don't need this. I can always go home.' And she rarely
drinks . It started when she would be the designated driver
"because I was the responsible one". She loves the club
scene and alternative music. Because of a long-term relationship
with a man who was a musician, she knows a lot people in
"thrash" bands and hangs out in clubs. Even now when
she lives in downtown Toronto and can walk to some clubs, she
still rarely drinks - out of habit.
And she resists any pressure to get her to change her ways. She
says she's seen too much of that, girls going along with the
gang, "preppy girls willing to do anything" for what
Amanda calls the "heavy metal" guys. "No
way", she says, shaking her no-longer spiked hair. "I
said, ' Are you stupid? Don't you have any minds of your own? '
"
Her way was to abstain from everything, including sex. She
waited until she was 18 and in a steady relationship. He was five
years older and her first "real" boyfriend, she says,
"not a three-month thing, or a friend, or even a week
thing." And she was sacred and nervous and did feel
pressure, she admits. He was experienced but still " I
didn't think it was too grand."
Only now, after talking with girlfriends, has she discovered that
sex the first time is not always fireworks and grand passion the
way it is in the movies. "It was terrible experience for
most of my friends", she laughs. I
n real life, she has never experienced a pregnancy fear. Since
she began having sex she has been taking the birth control pill
and, she says, she is always very careful. "Wouldn't that be
stupid after I played someone who got pregnant and went through
all of that - because basically I did go through all of that -
wouldn't that be stupid? Me, Miss Preacher, the one everybody
looked up to?" So she knows how big the decision is to have
sex. Even now in these times, when there is so much information,
when there are condom dispensers in school washrooms.
It used to be the taboo was having sex. Now it almost seems like
it is not having sex.
She remembers two girls from Halifax who told her they would
not have sex until after marriage - "and that was cool"
- but most kids have sex. Or so it seems. Statistics say it's now
one in every two kids in high school, but Amanda thinks it might
be more. "Everybody seems to be doing it, not just the
gorgeous people or the low-lifes. Kids want to be able to say
they've done it. Having sex is a status symbol, definitely."
She says she worries about the promiscuity she sees around her,
because she knows not everybody uses condoms when they should and
because she says she still doesn't believe in one-night stands.
"Now in a club if you meet someone and are attracted to them
and go up to them, automatically there's the sex thing. It's not
like 'Let's go on a date and get to know each other.' When you're
in a club it's 'Hi. Sex.' Then after the sex, you might get to
know each other", she says. And she thinks this is working
in the guys' favour. "I think you can say sex is a power
thing." That is being played by the very young.
"When I was in Grade 8, I still thought boys were
disgusting", says Amanda. She was a good student, busy after
school with dance, music, skating classes. she lived with her
parents and older brother and sister in Meadowvale, a subdivision
within Mississauga. She enroled in the Etobicoke School for the
Arts for three years with dance as a major and drama as a minor,
transferring to a school in Mississauga to finish her courses.
She says she was just an average dancer, never great. And
although she loved modern, she never thrived in ballet class.
"I had a strike against me because of my spiked hair. It
didn't go with the pink getup."
She spiked her hair because it was different, and that's what she
wanted to be more than anything.
When a drama teacher told the class about the open audition
for Degrassi, Amanda was the only one who acted on it. She didn't
have a resume and had to get her doting father to take a
couple of pictures, spiked hair and all. When her character
became pregnant, her mother sniffed, "As long as it doesn't
happen in real life". During the first reading of the script
when that happens, some of the Degrassi cast snickered.
But that's not the episode which sticks in her mind. The one
which meant more to her was the episode in which a pregnant Spike
considers her options, including putting the baby up to adoption.
The script called for her to speak to Wheels, a character in the
series who is adopted.
"It was like me, Amanda, talking to myself: ' How do you
feel, what were you thinking?' It was really trippy. I was like
in the body of my biological mother talking to me. Really
weird."
Amanda was adopted in Montreal when she was three months old. Her
birth mother was 25, her father 55. He was an American jazz
musician just passing through and she was a woman who had been
raised in an orphanage and wanted her own family - although not
necessarily a husband. But when she realized she couldn't bring
up a baby, she put Amanda up for adoption.
And that is all she knows about her birth parents. Right now that
is all she wants to know.
"I really don't think about it at all. I'm happy with my
life. I'm happy with my parents. I don't wonder what it would be
like. I have a better life now."
She is very close to her mother who tells her to wait before
she thinks about ,marriage - to go out and get a career for
herself. And, after being Canada's best known unwed teen mother
for so long, that's exactly what Amanda intends to do.