"A VAMPIRE WITH SOUL AND
CHEEKBONES"
by Joyce Millman
from "The New York Times" "Arts & Leisure" 12 January 2003
(Joyce Millman is a television critic for "The Boston Phoenix."
(Thanks To Les)
"Love hurts. Just ask Spike, the formerly evil peroxide-blond punk vampire of
UPN's 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Last season, Spike's desperate passion for
Buffy culminated in an extraordinary mature story line, in which the emotionally
frozen slayer used the masochistic vampire for violent, all-consuming sex. Their
affair walked the line between love and hate; it ended in rejection and
attempted rape. Sick with remorse, Spike tried to win Buffy back with a
typically brash gesture, travelling into the underworld to regain his soul. But
now that soul burns with guilt and self-loathing.
You know what else hurts? Pain. And Spike has had plenty of that this season,
enduring weeks of torture by minions of the apocalypse-bent First Evil (the
incorporeal source of all badness). But he refuses to rejoin the dark side
because, in a fleeting moment of tenderness, Buffy told him she believed in his
capacity to be good. Spike yearns to be a man, not a monster, and he's paying
the price.
So is James Marsters, the charismatic American actor who plays the British
Spike. He's growing impatient with weeping and being whaled on. Speaking by
phone from his home in Santa Monica, California, on the first day of his
Christmas break, Mr. Marsters explained that 'Buffy' was a 'very moral
universe.'
'And if you're going to seriously redeem a character like Spike, who is a mass
murderer, then he's going to have to go through a real journey,' he said. But
he hoped the writers got it over with soon, he added, laughing, 'because I'm
tired of getting dragged across gravel.'
Spike was originally intended as disposable slayer bait, but his deliciously
narky seductive villainy clicked with the show's createor, Joss Whedon, as well
as with viewers. Mr. Marsters is now in his fourth season as a regular. And no
character better embodies the ambitious, unpredictable nature of 'Buffy' ---
which veers from drama to comedy to horror, usually in the same episode --- than
Spike. He has been a bad boy, a lover, a hero in black leather and goofy comic
relief. He has a romantic's vulnerability (before becoming a vamp, he was an
earnest, awful Victorian-era poet) and a rock star's swagger (authoritatively
displayed in the show's celebrated 2001 musical episode). Spike is dead, but he
hasn't disengaged from life. And in Mr. Marster's agile, richly textured
performance, you sense Spike's soulfulness long before he had a soul.
Spike's female fans sensed something else, too. Throughout Spike and Buffy's
sex scenes last season, Mr. Marsters was as naked as broadcast television
allows. (Sarah Michelle Gellar's Buffy remained discreetly covered). And he
has, well, these abs. And these arms. And cheekbones like straight razors. So,
not surprisingly, Mr. Marsters has noticed that his popularity 'has climbed to a
new level in the last six or nine months, where sometimes I get chased and
stuff.'
Why do women love Spike? Well, it's obvious --- tough but sensitive, Spike is
the perfect fantasy object. When asked for his thoughts on Spike's appeal, Mr.
Marsters laughed and said, 'In the words of Sid Vicious' --- he adopted a
slurred British accent --- 'Girls love me 'cause I've got a nice face and a good
figure.' Turning serious, he added: 'Women enjoy the potency of Spike. But if a
man is bad, he will be bad to you.'
Raised in Modesto, California, the son of a Methodist minister and a social
worker, Mr. Marsters, 40, sounds much sunnier than the vampire who lives inside
him. His voice is lighter than the deep caramel tone he uses for Spike, and his
laugh is warm and contagious. Mr. Marsters describes his teenage self as 'a
pretty good kid until I hit about 15 and discovered punk rock.' After high
school, he attended a theater apprenticeship program at the Pacific College of
the Performing Arts in Santa Monica, California. And then, he said, "I went to
Julliard, (in New York City), and they kicked me out and all hell broke loose.'
The Julliard defeat -- his rebelliousness 'inspired great hatred among some of
the more prominent members of the faculty' --- left marks both psychological (he
gave up on acting) and physical (he acquired the scar that cuts through his, and
Spike's left eyebrow from a mugging while bartending in Queens.) Mr. Marsters
regained his confidence when he moved to Chicago in the late 1980's and was
quickly cast as Ferdinand in a Goodman Theatre production of Shakespeare's "The
Tempest", in which he made his entrance strapped nude to a metal hoop. "De'ja
vu: Spike has been strapped to a torture wheel this season, but, Mr. Marsters
noted, 'In Buffy, I got to keep my pants on.'
After a well-received theatre career in Chicago and Seattle, Mr. Marsters
arrived in Los Angeles in 1997 'willing to sell out, happily.' Being cast in
'Buffy' was 'wonderful irony', he said. 'I get more acting jollies from the show
than I did from any full season of theatre. The writing is not safe. That's
the best thing about it. It can be horrifying, but in the most exhilarating
way.'
Viewers saw proof of that in the haunting final scene of this season's best
episode to date, 'Beneath You', in which Spike revealed his soul to Buffy in an
empty, moonlit church. Mr. Marsters gave Spike's madness and despair a moving,
shattered dignity. There was something Shakespearean in his readings of lines
like 'Why does a man do what he musn't but for her, to be hers', delivered in
half-darkness, and in the devastating last shot, Spike striking a martyr's pose
--- draped around a large cross, bare back to the camera, flesh smouldering ---
for a love that Mr. Marster's calls 'unquenchable.'
While Mr. Marsters said he had 'real interest' in returning for another season,
the fate of 'Buffy' is uncertain --- Ms. Gellar's contract is up and, as yet,
she hasn't signed another. What does Mr. Marsters want Spike to do before the
show ends? 'I'd like to see him regain his sense of joy in something more
fruitful than killing people', he said. 'I've always envisioned him giving Buffy
a garden that he could never go to in the daytime, to give her something for a
change.'
As for life beyond Spike, Mr. Marsters has ambitions large (find another series,
adapt 'Macbeth' for the screen) and modest ('I think I'm a character actor who
can be pretty if you apply enough powder'). But when he talks enthusiastically
about returning to theatre, it's clear where his heart lies, and where some of
Spike's playful fearlessness comes from.
'I miss the interaction between the actors and the audience', he said. 'I miss
soliloquies, where you can turn boldly to the audience and speak to them. I love
talking to one person at a time, if only for maybe three seconds, but
specifically looking in people's eyes and watching them jump. Oh, it's
wonderful! And dangerous! ' "
END