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为大家翻译一篇文章,为你讲述小C的成名之路 Advice on how not to be one broke girl CBS recruiter Bryn Berglund had some internship advice for the 100-or-so eager Penn undergrads in the Wharton School auditorium: "You need to work hard, and you need to be nice." Jobs may be Job 1 at Wharton, where the event took place Wednesday evening, but students had also come to see a new TV show and its star. She was living proof that the recruiter's advice was solid. "Be a fighter. Don't take no for an answer," Beth Behrs told the students. "You have to work it." She didn't have to confirm the nice advice. She sat before them, Miss Marin County (Calif.) 2006, all sunny and blond, and just smiled and smiled and smiled. Behrs, 25, plays the recently impoverished daughter of a Bernie Madoff type in the delightful new sitcom 2 Broke Girls, which airs Mondays at 8:30 p.m. on CBS. Her character, Caroline, herself a Wharton grad, teams up with a waitress who has been struggling all her life. Behrs auditioned seven times for the job. After graduating from UCLA's School of Theater, Film and Television in 2008, she told the students, "I sent out e-mails every day" to people she thought could help her. Eventually, she landed a role in the straight-to-video American Pie Presents: The Book of Love, released in December 2009, and then some TV guest shots and indie film roles, and now she's a star. The program, part of something called Wonderful Wednesdays at Wharton, was aimed primarily at business school students interested in marketing. CBS seemed pretty interested in them. It has established a separate e-mail account, where students can submit resumés, just for Wharton, and it sent Berglund and a whole convoy of CBS people,from local newscaster Erika von Tiehl through junior marketing and publicity people, all the way up to a couple of vice presidents. But it wasn't all business. Students got to view the show's pilot, in which Caroline journeys to Brooklyn from the Upper East Side to take a waitress job and meets the cynical Max, played by Bryn Mawr's Kat Dennings. Behrs was born in Lancaster, but soon moved to Virginia and then to California, as her father and mother, both educators, changed jobs. A theater major asked Behrs for advice. "Make your own content," she said. "Write something for yourself, and if you can't write, get somebody else to do it. . . . Know who you are, because that's how you will be cast at first. Then you can be Meryl Streep further down the road."
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