As the show went on, Luke Perry smiled less and less in the opening credits. In the first season, the credits only used stock footage from the filmed episodes, and in the second and third seasons, Luke Perry is sporting an ear-to-ear smile.
In the fourth season, Perry has a small grin with a closed mouth, and in season five his character is giving the camera an approving yet unsmiling look. He’s changed to a poker face by season six. Some have suspected that this gradual change may be a foreshadowing of Perry’s leaving the show for more serious roles.
Young Character, Old Actors
While some cast members played a character much younger than themselves, others really were near high school age. The youngest of them was Doug Emerson, who was sixteen. Then there were Tori Spelling and Brian Austin Green, who were both seventeen when the show started, which is bizarre when you think about it.
Jennie Garth was eighteen, Shannen Doherty was nineteen, and then things start to go off the rails. Jason Priestly was twenty-one, and Luke Perry was twenty-three. For reference, the actor and actress playing the Walsh parents were thirty-five (James Eckhouse) and forty-two (Carol Potter). So they did take some aging liberties.
The Prez
In 2016, Gabrielle Carteris became the president of the SAG-AFTRA, the Screen Actor's Guild, and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists. One of her very first causes was to sponsor California Bill AB 1687, which would require entertainment websites and databases to remove actors' ages if they request it.
The bill would help to prevent age discrimination in Hollywood and other areas. We can't help but think this has something to do with all the ribbing she took acting someone half her age. Not to mention the other age discrepancies that actors faced while on the show "Beverly Hills 90210."
The Inspiration
Darren Star, the creator of "Beverly Hills, 90210", was only twenty-seven years old when Fox told him they wanted to create a series about teenagers in Beverly Hills. Surely enough, like any talented filmmaker, he took inspiration from other shows and films that came before.
Star wanted the show to focus on real issues teenagers faced and used a few famous pieces of media to build his framework. The first was "Thirtysomething," which featured issues involving teens and their lives. The other was John Hughes movies such as "The Breakfast Club," which had teens' points of view as they worked out their own problems.
That's How You Know You Hit it Big
As the show rose in popularity, it attracted more attention, even from the kinds of people you do not want to look your way. Actress Jennie Garth recalled that, at one point, they even had a bomb threat. The show got so big that the cast and crew sometimes had security problems on set.
During a season finale, in which the characters graduated from high school, someone hid an explosive device under the bleachers. While this shook the actors and crew, Jennie Garth said she knew they had made it if someone had the nerve to do that. For weeks afterward, security was heightened with young police officers hired as extras.