» Estas en James > Prensa > Buffys´Bad Boy. (nº 144 TVZone - Octubre 2001).

He might be defanged, but he still has some bite. James Marsters tells us why Spike wants to jump The Slayer's bones...

ACTING OUT the final grief-driven moments of The Gift - Buffy The Vampire Slayer's Season Five cliffhanger, in which Buffy (Sarah Michelle Gellar) sacrificed herself to spare her sister Dawn (Michelle Trachtenberg) and quite possibly the whole planet from a date with death - proved far less challenging than James Marsters ever expected. "It was easy," notes the actor, who's spent the last four seasons sinking his teeth into the role of the vampire Spike. "I've never played a character for this long. l'm used to doing stage, where you live with a character for a maximum of about four months. After five years, there really is a space somewhere in my soul where Spike and Buffy really do live. There really is a Sunnydale inside me somewhere. So when Buffy really was dead and I really was Spike it wasn't hard at all to break down. It was crushing. That's the weird thing about acting, man. We're not insane, but we're paid to use our imaginations as fully as we can. So somewhere down inside my heart there really is a Spike and a Buffy and he's very much hoping that he'll get a little more time with Buffy."

Gellar, to be sure, is the star of the series and to put a fine point on matters, she's not going anywhere. How the character of Buffy will be resurrected remains a mystery, as does how she'll be brought back to the real world. The betting money in rumour-ville is that Willow (Alyson Hannigan), using her increasingly strong skills and powers as a witch, will do the deed, but at a price: the buzz is that she'll be the season's main villain. There's also talk that it won't happen right away, but rather that the Buffy-bot will return to fight evil for a while before the real Buffy Summers picks up stakes once again. As for good old Spike, he'll try to help the Scooby Gang, but it remains to be seen if they'll accept his assistance. After all, Spike is a killer and series creator and producer Joss Whedon never seems to lose sight of that fact.

But ask Marsters about upcoming sixth season arcs - the current Season Six kicked off October 2 on UPN - and he's hellishly vague. "I don't know," he says. "I don't know. When I came on the show as a regular (beginning in Season Four after first appearing on the show as a guest star in Season Two's School Hard) I really assumed that the major arcs would be laid out to you at the start of the season and that things would be talked about. What I learned is that these guys are tap-dancing as fast as they can. It's impossible to tell an actor what the upcoming arcs are because they really might change. And I have stopped asking. I really don't know what's going to happen for Spike. It might be possible for me to find out, but, for me, Spike doesn't know what's going to happen, so why should I? I found out that Meryl Streep reads a script one time and that's it. When she goes into a film, she doesn't even remember where this scene fits into the movie. That's not her job. Storytelling is not her job in the film. Her job is just to be real in the moment. And so, as I told Joss two years ago, I have embraced sloth and ignorance. I think l'm getting it. He almost went into a blind panic, of course, because he didn't understand me. But, like the rest of us, I wait to find out what the new adventure is every week, except that I'm about four weeks ahead of the audience."

Fair enough, but what about Drusilla (Juliet Landau)? Will dear, beloved, thoroughly insane Dru soon grace Sunnydale with her bloody presence? "I can't give you a guarantee, but I can almost give you one," Marsters replies. "It was so successful last year to have her over on Buffy and Angel. I think the only real question this year is whether they want to drop her into Buffy or Angel because they can't do both at this point. That's a shame. They can't drop me in, either, but, you know, it means that they can't drop Angel (David Boreanaz) into Sunnydale. So that's OK. Keep that big lovely hunk away from Buffy. Keep him away from my Buffy. He's just too damn good-looking."

WHEN MARSTERS POINTS OUT that Spike, Dru and Angel must stick with one show or the other, he's referring to the fact that, after an acrimonious period of negotiations, Buffy will air this fall on UPN, while Angel will remain on The WB. Other than putting an end to crossover episodes for now, the impact of the jump from The WB to UPN has been negligible, at least on set, Marsters insists. "As far as being an actor on Buffy The Vampire Slayer, it really has had very little effect on us," he says. "It was really between my boss and his bosses, and he's good at not letting us know about what the tensions are surrounding that. I understand that the people at The WB are probably better businessmen than I am, but I think sometimes you have to hold onto a show that's losing money in order to prop up a network. But, of course, they have their own business strategy. It just happens that that strategy included giving away Buffy, so that the UPN could throw a whole lot of money at us, so that I could get a huge trailer. Beside the trailer and the very nice watch and caviar, it's business as usual. Joss is an outsider and a trickster and he's hired a company of outsiders and tricksters to play the roles on the show, so most of us, if not all of us, were kind of on the outside of things, growing up. We were not popular growing up. So this whole thing just got us feelling a little more like outsiders and has got us feeling like we want to prove something. And I think that feeling that in the fifth year of a series is a very good thing."

Spike began life as what Marsters describes as a "disposable" villain. That is, the character was brought in to wreak total havoc and, because he was so inaccessible and so abhorrent, he could have been dispatched with after just a few shows. But a funny thing happened on the way to the chopping block: audiences fell for the handsome, sly and witty character, who quite often rattled off the best oneliners, and they also came to appreciate Marsters's sublime performances as the character. Spike emerged as the character everyone loved to hate and he stayed that way for a long time. Now it's been a long while since he turned, for lack of a better word, good. He's been de-fanged, even cuckolded, some might argue. And while it's made for great character development, many Buffy die-hards find Spike just a bit less exciting and just a touch less threatening.

"Inside my own mind, Spike is exactly the same guy," notes Marsters. "It doesn't feel any different. He's not good. He's just hot for Buffy. He's not going to do anything to piss her off. In a way, he's closer to the Spike we met in Season Two. Originally, I thought the interesting thing about Spike was the contrast between the fact that he was a psychopathic murderer and the most sensitive boyfriend you could ever imagine. Those two things didn't seem to fit, and yet they were in the same character, which was kind of mysterious and cool. Later on, they took both of those elements away from the character. Dru left him and he became chipped, so he could no longer have fun killing people and he no longer had a girlfriend to be so gentlemanly for. So now, while I'm still chipped, I'm getting to fight demons and have fun with the violence, and I'm also back in love with a girl, which lets me explore that gentlemanly side that really hasn't been explored for about a year and a half. So, in a weird kind of way, I feel like l'm getting back to the original Spike. He still gets to throw out those nasty asides. So it's still the same guy; I just don't have the body count."

MARSTERS SPENT HIS SUMMER hiatus attending a couple of genre conventions, appearing opposite Roger Daltrey in an episode of VH-l's anthology series Strange Frequency, guest starring as a Nietzschean archduke in the Into the Labyrinth episode of Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda and working for a few days on an indie film entitled Chance, which stars Buffy compatriot Amber Benson and was written, produced and directed by Benson. For all the side projects, however, Marsters wants nothing more than to spend more time in the Buffy-verse. "Are you kidding me?" he asks, bringing the conversation to an end. "I have been in enough plays to realize that every 10th or 15th play is a really good one, and the other ones, you try, you're aiming high and failing to hit the mark. So when you get that really great play that everyone's talking about and that really works, you feel good about it and enjoy the experience. I'm in that play now and I'm just lucky that Buffy's lasting five years and more. My plate is full. The writing on Buffy is of really high quality. The production values are great. My character is great. I'm quite happy to be with Buffy."

VAMPIRE IN LOVE
A vicious killer with a reign of terror stretching back centuries, or a fluffy bunny rabbit with fangs? William the Bloody Awful, as he was once known in English poetry circles, was a sweet, sensitive soul who really just wanted someone to appreciate him. One day a vampire named Drusilla did just chat, turning him into her undead lover. The demon that inhabited Spike took away his better qualities and made him a psychopath with no regard for Human life, desperate for his next challenge. He got it when he managed to take out two Slayers single-handed, earning hirn a powerful reputation. What he never lost, however, was his ability to love, and despite the warped way he goes about pursuing Dru, there's no doubting his feelings.

It comes as no surprise, then, that he suffers extreme jealousy of Angelus when Dru seems smitten with the restored vampire who created her and will go to any lengths to get her back when she is unfaithful to him. It's also telling chat he can spot the true feelings in anyone, however hard they may try to hide them. He sees through Buffy and Angel's 'just friends' charade, claiming they'll be in love 'til it kills them, but he isn't prepared for feelings of his own resurfacing.

Implanted with a chip in his brain chat causes him to feel agonizing pain every time he harms a Human in even a minor way, Spike is effectively neutered as a vampire. It's at this point that his pre-vampire existence returns, as Spike really does start to care about Buffy and her friends even when excluded from their group. He tries to comfort Buffy after her mother's death, he looks after Dawn, for whom he seems to have some affection, and he comes to the conclusion that he is in love with Buffy. At first unable to cope with the fact that he's fallen for the Slayer, the person he's been trying to kill for more chan two years, the return of Dru to Sunnydale makes Spike believe he can be the 'Big Bad' vampire he always was again. Finding the chip prohibits this, he tries his hardest to get on-side with Buffy, who will have nothing to do with him despite her crack record with dating vampires. He gets a robot double commissioned of her, but it's not the same as the real thing, and though he proves his loyalty in protecting Dawn from Glory, in the end it seems Spike is destined to live with unrequited love. Or is he?

Paul Spragg

Fuente: TVZone

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