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Connick Jr. braves a big chill for ‘New in Town’

The actor’s face, beard and eyelashes froze in the subzero temperature

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updated 11:11 p.m. ET Feb. 1, 2009

NEW YORK - According to Harry Connick Jr., winter in Canada counts as a fifth season. While filming the romantic comedy “New in Town” in Winnipeg last January, the actor’s face, beard and eyelashes froze in the subzero temperature.

“This was just a different level. I mean, for real,” Connick Jr. said Tuesday. “You can’t function. ... I mean, this is the kind of weather where if you stay out there, you’re not gonna make it, you know?”

Luckily, the 41-year-old actor had co-star Renee Zellweger’s company to distract him from the cold. The Southern-born stars — he grew up in New Orleans, she hails from Texas — clicked instantly and their scenes together felt natural, he said.

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“She’s really smart, she’s really, really funny and she just loves to have a good time,” he said of the Oscar-winning actress. “And I think we have a lot in common, so we hit it off sort of off-camera before we even started working together. So that made a big difference. I mean, when you really like being around somebody, it’s easy.”

“New in Town” features Connick Jr. as a blue-collar union rep and Zellweger as a corporate executive from Miami sent to New Ulm, Minn., to revamp a food-processing plant.

Connick Jr. and his character, a low-key single dad, have something in common: tween daughters dating for the first time. In the movie, he tries to scare off a boy who arrives at the door with the ill-conceived threat: “Whatever you do to her, I do to you.”

But in real life, Connick Jr. — who has three girls with wife Jill Goodacre — sees no need to intimidate the boyfriend of his eldest daughter, Georgia, 12.

“I know he’s a good kid and I know that his family’s a good family, so that definitely helps,” he said. “And he’s got manners. He’s very polite, very respectful. ... The last thing I want to do is embarrass my kid or embarrass the boy.”

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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