After Midnight by
Matt Springer Whether terrorizing Buffy or watching the
History Channel, James Marsters is up all night
James
Marsters is a little groggy, because he had a late night.Clubbing? Hitting a
punk rock show? Scaring up a late dinner? Naw, just surfing some cable. It just
goes to show you that Marsters isn't really bad; he just plays it on TV. Though
he loves a very rare steak and is definitely a night person, you'll never find
him prowling the streets of Los Angeles in a feeding frenzy. Bollocks, he doesn't
even have a British accent. If he weren't such a nice guy, his lack of evil
might be disappointing. Unfortunately, the only supernatural phenomenon
surrounding Marsters so far has been his uncanny ability to create such a
diabolical and even compassionate villian in William the
Bloody.
Spike
3:16
A lot of people find Spike to be the most
wicked bloodsucker since the heyday of Angelus, but whether you love him or hate
him, you have to admit that he can be pretty, er, bloody funny at times. Here are
a few of William the Bloody's memorable quotes and pearls of wisdom:Spike the Vampire Ambassador: We like to talk
big, vampires do...The truth is, I like this world. We've got dog racing,
Manchester United...and we've got millions of people walking around like Happy
Meals with legs. ("Becoming," part 2) Spike the Domestic: I don't fancy spending the next month
trying to get Librarian out of the carpet. ("Becoming," part 2) Spike the Alpha Male: Anyone of you want to
test who's got the biggest wrinklies around here, step on up. ("School
Hard") Spike the Relationship Expert:
Love isn't brains, children, it's blood--blood screaming inside you to work its
will. I may be love's bitch, but at least I'm man enough to admit
it. ("Lover's Walk") Spike the
Dumped: She wouldn't even kill me. She just left. She didn't even care
enough to cut off my head. ("Lover's Walk") Spike the Impatient: I've known you for two minutes and I
can't stand you. I don't really feature you living forever. ("Lie To
Me") Spike the Modest: I don't like to
brag. Oh, who am I kidding; I love to brag. ("School Hard") Spike the Motivator: If at first you don't
succeed, I'll kill him and you'll try again. ("Lover's Walk") Spike the Picky Eater: I'm a veal kind of guy.
You're too old to eat. ("School Hard") Spike the Slayer Slayer: You know what I find works real
good with Slayers? Killing them. ("School
Hard") |
The actor began his career studying at New
York's famed Juilliard Academy, then spent ten successful years touring on the
regional theater circuit. He moved to Hollywood in 1997 to try his hand at film
acting, ostensibly to earn enough money to live comfortably as a stage actor. An
electric audition with Juliet Landau led to his ongoin role on Buffy.
Since then, we've thrilled to their exploits as they drove Sunnydale to the brink
of destruction time and again. So what if they never succeeded? At least they
have fun, and that's what's important. In his two seasons on Buffy, he's
rapidly become one of the show's most popular villains, along with his
whacked-out clairvoyant lover Drusilla. They're more than just the Sid and Nancy
of Sunnydale; they're the kind of villains you can't even love to hate, because
you just love them period. Buffy the
Magazine: Y'know, I can't help but notice that you don't have a British accent
when you speak. How did you get so good at it? James Marsters: I was
doing a production of The Tempest at the Shakespeare Festival in L.A., and
there was a guy from North London playing Caliban. So I kinda pulled him aside,
and asked for some help. I had a general sense of British accents--I've seen
every Monty Python. BTM: That's
really all the help you need. JM: It really is. They did all the
different British accents on that series. They're all fake, because all the guys
were from Oxford and Yale. BTM: Do you often
get mistaken for a Brit? JM: Not until Buffy. (laughs) It's not
as much of a problem now, because word's gotten out. But right initially, people
were thinking of me as British, so my manager had to tell all these people that I
was actually American. BTM: You mentioned
acting in The Temptest, and I know you have an extensive theater
background. Which do you prefer--theater or film? JM: Before I came
down here, I would of course have said theater. But the more I do film, the more
I realize that it's chock full of its own challenges. In theater, the actors have
all the reins of the story. The actors have to be very aware of what the story is
and how to tell it together. In film, the story is created in the editing, so
you're providing a lot of building blocks for someone else to tell a story. I
really had to get used to that, and when I go back and look at some of the
earlier stuff I've done, I see myself trying to do something, and it looks like
acting. BTM: Do you enjoy playing such a
rough and tumble baddie like Spike? JM: Oh man, it's the best. I think
everybody likes the villain. BTM: If you
lost your own soul, what's the first thing you'd do? JM: I'd go and
kill Trent Lott. (laughs) I would just rip through the entire House Judiciary
Committee. See, the problem is that I'm pretty happy with my life, so I'm not
really tempted. I guess the ability to be able to go out and take whatever you
want, to be above the concerns of money. That's the thing I've always loved about
vampires. Vampires don't carry around a wad of cash. If they want something, they
just go take it. BTM: The two-fang
discount. JM: Exactly. (laughs) BTM: What was the audition process like for
Buffy? JM: It was really cool. It went very well, and the
casting director asked me to do it in both a southern accent and an English one.
It's kinda weird; it's almost inexplicable when something clicks in you, and you
just have an instinct towards a role. I was able to just kinda let go and have
fun with it, and the usual thoughts of how well I did were just kinda erased. I
just had a fun time. Vampires don't carry
around a wad of cash. If they want something, they just go take
it. | Then I came back for a callback with Juliet [Landau],
who at the time was precast, though I didn't know it. We went in and read for all
the producers and Joss [Whedon], and we just kinda leapt straight into it. There
was a trust right away, I think. In fact, there's that one picture of Juliet and
I from our first episode, where we enter our first scene and we kiss and touch
foreheads and rotate out to the camera. That just happened organically in the
audition; we didn't kiss in the audition, but that move happened. What was really
cool about it is that they were looking for a punk, rough-around-the-edges
character. I've had a lot of rough chapters in my past, but I've kinda cleaned
up, and so I didn't come in with anything pierced or anything. They trusted that
they had the facilities to create the visual impression, and that the internal
reality of the character was most important. That's pretty rare in
Hollywood.BTM: Do you feel like you have a
lot of say in developing the character and the way you perform the lines from the
script? JM: Yeah, but the way I look at it mostly is that I am trying
to fulfill the needs of the script. All I'm really trying to do is make sure that
what's on the page when I read it gets onto film. But I've never had an idea
squashed, except for the time I wanted to take my shirt off and Joss said
no. BTM: Which episodes would that have been
in? JM: I don't remember the name of it; it was when I was in the
wheelchair, and the Scooby gang came intot he warehouse and I was spying on them.
I was hiding, and there was just one shot of me lurking in the corner, and I was
thinking, what does Spike do these days? He's in a wheelchair all day. So I
thought that the black jacket could double as a bathrobe, and I could be sitting
around half-undressed, like he's just got nothing to do all day. Obviously the
best ideas come from the professional writers. (laughs) Spike was originally
designed to be based on Sid Vicious, and to some degree there are colors of that
in him, but to some degree he's very much not that. BTM: What do you think sets Joss Whedon apart from other
producers you've worked with? JM: Joss is the best living writer I've
ever worked with. That's number one. His imagination is just so fertile. It just
leaves me in awe. He's also the kind of boss that makes you feel like a monarchy
could work. (laughs) His word is to be respected, and he gets what he wants, but
he doesn't have to make people feel bad about themselves to get it. He's very
friendly on the set. It's a balance that I respect very much, because you're not
gonna walk all over the guy, yet he's gracious enough to run a very open and
happy set. I think he's just the best, basically. He's just awesome. BTM: Do you spend a lot of time imagining a past for
Spike in your head? JM: The short answer is no, I don't go by a lot of
backstory. Sometimes that can cloud what the script or scene needs, because
you'll have all these ideas about what the character is based on your
imagination, and it may not jibe with where the scene wants to go. I really just
take it from the page. I just want it to come off the page. Just for my own
edification, I do sometimes wonder what's up with this guy. My feeling was that
he probably wasn't such a great guy before he became a vampire. he was probably a
jerk. My feeling was that Spike
probably wasn't a great guy before he became a vampire. He was probably a
jerk. |
BTM: He would
have been a bad guy no matter what. JM: Yeah, exactly. but see, this is
the thing. Later on, we'll find out that he was a choir boy. It gets hard to make
these decisions. BTM: What's your favorite
of all the despicable acts you've done? JM: Oh man, definitely the most
violent, when I pushed that guy's head through the glass in my first episode.
That was the funnest. It felt great, because in the moment you believe you're
doing it, even though later you know it's a scripted gag. Also, anything to do
with fights. James
Marsters Vital Signs
Birthday August 21 in Modesto, CAFood "I don't eat food...just kidding." A good, very rare
steak, and Cappucino Crunch low-fat ice cream. TV
Show The X-Files Movie Apocalypse
Now Music All kinds--Charlie Parker, Morcheeba,
Lou Reed, the Sex Pistols, Artie Shaw, Hank Williams Color "Green, the color of the earth." Sport Football | BTM: So you enjoy beatin' people up? JM: I love it. I
love stunt work. That really is kind of a microcosm of what I like about acting.
There's just so many little tiny tricks within a fight. If I'm about to swing an
axe at your head, then I don't swing until you duck. But if you're really in
tight with the other actor, it looks like they're ducking because you're swinging
the axe. Yet it's in fact completely safe. It's those little kind of things;
they're like learning how the guy pulls the duck out of his sleeve.BTM: Just like those Magician's Biggest Secrets
Revealed Specials. JM: Exactly. And then you get to go act it, and
you get to let all that angst out, and no one has to go to the police station.
(laughs) BTM: What can you tell us about
Spike's future? Will he return in season four? JM: The details of that
are still being worked out, basically. What I was told is that Spike will
actually be forced to help Buffy, that he will be a reticent part of the Scooby
gang. He's sorta blackmailed into it, which I think has an enormous amount of
comedy potential attached to it. plus, I probably won't get killed, which is
always a good thing. I wanted to wear a T-shirt around the set last season that
said "Don't kill me." BTM: It was also
rumored that you might be a part of Angel. Is that still possible? What
type of role would you play? JM: There have been discussions about that
too, and there has been some thought that there will be some crossover, but not
as a regular. I'll probably just come over and make his life hell for a while,
and then leave. BTM: What's going to happen
with Spike and Drusilla? JM: I don't know. That's really what set Spike
and Drusilla apart from other villains: although they don't have souls, they seem
to have discovered a real love. It's true love. I'm very interested in how that's
going to be handled--what does that do to Spike if you take that away? And I'm
not sure that they will. But Joss is very good at presenting something that the
audience wants to watch, and then denying them that. It keeps people tuned
in. BTM: We kinda got a flavor of how Spike
might react if he lost Dru this season in the episode "Lover's Walk." He
basically got smashed. JM: (laughs) Yeah, I'm gonna be drunk all
sesaon. I'm just gonna be sipping booze in the back. BTM: Have you ever known a heartbreak like that, and what was
your response? Did you get drunk? JM: I don't drink, actually, so that
probably wouldn't be my response. I did something that's called substitution, and
I imagined someone I loved having died. It's something I've done a lot, and I'm
thinking that maybe it's not such a good idea, but whenever I want to be sad, I
just envision something that I love very much being taken away. Plus, I probably won't get killed. I wanted to wear a
T-shirt around the set last season that said "Don't kill
me." |
BTM: Who do
you hang out with on the set usually? JM: Man, we all hang out. The set
is a really fun place to be. I really like to hang out with Tony, I like to hang
out with Nick a lot, I like to hang out with Alyson. Alyson's a hoot. She's a
real fiery chick. Last year we got made up as vampires for Halloween. She looks
good as a vampire; I think she looks better than anyone else in the vampire
makeup. BTM: So would you consider yourself
a night person, then? JM: I am completely a night person. I just woke
up. BTM: That's the Hollywood
lifestyle. JM: Well, yeah. (laughs) I don't really go out clubbing too
much, but I usually stay up very late. With cable, there's some damn good shows
on late at night. It's amazing to me. You can learn about French history at two
a.m. I'm learning more now off the History Channel than I ever did in history
class.
Spike & Dru vs. Sid
& Nancy At this point, it's pretty much common knowledge that Spike and Drusilla
were envisioned as "the Sid & Nancy of vampires." But what does that really
mean? What attributes do they all share? And more important of all, who would win
in a fight? It's that last question which has inspired yet
another Buffy magazine duel, this time pitting everybody's favorite undead
lovers against two early casualties of that undead music movement known as punk
rock. Spike may not play bass guitar--and for that matter, neither could Sid
Vicious--but all four surely do know how to party until dawn, even if only Sid
and Nancy could party into the day as
well. | | SPIKE &
DRU | SID & NANCY | EDGE | Real
name | William
the Bloody | John Ritchie, Nancy Spungen | Spike | Group | A motorcycle gang on PCP (allegedly) | The Sex
Pistols | Sid
& Nancy | Enemies | Buffy, the Scooby gang | The music industry, top forty
radio | Spike
& Dru | Sire | Drusilla | Malcolm McLaren, the band's manager | Spike &
Dru | Addictions | Blood, each other | Heroin, each
other | Sid
& Nancy | Most notorious
event | Killing the Anointed One | Sid stabbing Nancy to death after a
fight | Spike
& Dru | Number of Slayers
killed | Three | Zero | Spike & Dru | Number of Rock Bands
Killed | Zero | Two | Sid & Nancy | Biggest
fans | Billy
"Ford" Fordham | Green Day, Nirvana | Sid &
Nancy | Favorite
toys | Drusilla's doll, Miss Edith | Sid's bass
guitar | Sid | Mental
illnesses | Drusilla's visions | Nancy's rage | Drusilla | Destructive
behavior | Knocking over the "Welcome to Sunnydale" sign | Trashing hotel
rooms | Spike
& Dru | Handicaps | Spike's crippling injury | Sid's lack of musical
talent | Spike | Legacy | Many dead people | The live fast, die young lifestyle | Spike &
Dru | | | | Spike &
Dru | And the winner is: Spike and
Drusilla. It's not even a contest, really. Sid and Nancy died before the age of
twenty-five; Spike and Drusilla have a solid couple hundred years on them. Plus,
when your only life goals are death and destruction, it's a lot easier to keep
the chaos going then if you're also trying to become a rock star. Now, if a
couple of vamps had caught up with Sid and Nancy before their tragic deaths, one
can only imagine the mayhem that might have
ensued. |
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