Interviews & Artikel |
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Halloween Q & A - 2004
Q. Welcome back to the UK, James.
A. Thank you. I’ve been here about three days stuck up in a hotel room
having a lot of room service and having a lot of fun. I went to the Virgin
Megastore and I bought like £600 worth of CD's coz I knew that the Virgin
store here is like the best record store in the world. So I put a whole list
of stuff together that I always wanted that you can't necessarily find. I
went in and this guy started helping me coz I had like 30 CD's so far and he
saw my list and he was like, "Dude! Right on!" and he's like
"who's Romeo Blue?" And I’m like, "oh, that's Lenny Kravitz
in his early career - he called himself Romeo Blue." And he's like,
"I did not know that!"
Q. Educating the British, that’s good.
A. But he wasn't a Brit. No, he was an American. That explains it! (Laughs.)
Q. Ok, on to the question. I have a question about the two audition pieces
that you use from Shakespeare, Macbeth and Caliban. I think we can all
understand why you do Macbeth because you’re a big Macbeth nut. But why do
you do Caliban?
A. I do Caliban because I just think it has language - the Caliban piece
rivals any piece of language he ever wrote. I think that's possibly the
prettiest, most pleasing vowel combinations he ever did, for one, rhythms he
ever did and just everything about it is just like a little piece of magic.
There's stuff in Winter's Tale that rivals it when the queen wakes up from
being the statue. There's stuff in Midsummer Night's Dream that sometimes
gets there, but that one I just think is..he's also a monster (bends over
and makes growly noise) and he delivers it...you know...yeah.
Q. What is one thing you’ve never done but always wanted to do?
A. Sky-diving. And/or hang gliding. Yeah, yeah.. Coz that’s so…ohhhh,
too many other things.
Q. Hi. You seem a very intelligent person. (James says “a very what? Stick
it (the mic) right up to your mouth, baby, don’t be afraid. That way we
can hear you, seriously.”) Some unintelligible physics question
(she speaks too fast) .. plus a fraction of that wavelength, does the
something collapse the infrastructure?
A. Darlin’, I’m really a stupid American and I can’t understand you.
If you could just slow down and really put the mic up to your lips, I’m
really serious.
Q. If the width of a wormhole cavity is a whole number of wave lengths does
a fraction of that wavelength with the coinciding particle activity collapse
the infrastructure?
A. It does NOT collapse the infrastructure!
Q. Audience laughs. Giggles. Are you very, very sure about that?
Q. Hi James. Welcome to the UK.
A. Thank you.
Q. Spike was used a lot as comic relief in Buffy and in Angel. Did you enjoy
doing the comedy and have you done comedy before in your career and have you
got any plans to do that, because your timing was great.
A. Thank you. Yeah, I've done a lot of comedy just in stage because in stage
you do kind of everything, if they'll hire you. I had just come off
performing, oh, now what the devil is that dude's name…I gotta get this
right…who's Toby Belch's sidekick, man? Andrew Agueface, right? And the
play is...well, I was doing...Twelfth Night. So, I was doing a double bill,
I was doing Macbeth and Andrew Aguecheek. And I did Andrew Aguecheek like
Andy Warhol with the big bright wig and face paled. And I just didn't want
anyone to know that it was me, that it was Macbeth that was doing it so we
just did it stagename and I just prayed to God no one was gonna, you know,
"that's Macbeth??" But, yeah, but did I enjoy doing the comedy on
Buffy? Not originally. Originally I was so happy with doing kind of scary
stuff and manly stuff and sexy stuff and then when the wheelchair stuff came
along and the drunken stuff, that was hard because I was just enjoying the
other stuff more I guess. But then pretty quickly, in fact, kind of halfway
through that one episode when I came in in Season Three and I was all drunk
looking for Dru, you know? I kind of started to understand where Joss was
going with it. And that he was, in fact, making me more human, you know.
Because monsters really are only so interesting then they have to die. So
yeah, ultimately, I think that's what saved it. Really.
Q. It’s reported that you want to play Bluntschli in Arms and the Man;
Shaw's Arms and the Man; Shaw is a wonderfully witty, iconoclast, (and?) a
revival is long overdue. Are there any other Shaw parts you fancy? I would
have thought that Dick Dudgeon in The Devil’s Disciple, which has nothing
to do with the supernatural, was tailor made for you.
A. I would have loved to have done The Devil's Disciple only I don't know it
as well as Arms and the Man and that's the only reason. I LOVE doing Shaw.
In fact, I did Bently Summerhays and that was in a magical production of, oh
my God what's the name of the play!! It's a single word, a Shaw play...I'm
gonna get it in the middle of another question and I'm gonna shout it out.
Yeah, I love Shaw. The thing I love about Shaw is they were actually rioting
in the streets because of his plays. His plays made people so...
MISALLIANCE! Thank you!... the one that has the woman parachuting in through
the glass at the end of Act I. It's like "hi, how ya doin? You mind
that I'm in pants? Anybody?" Yeah. That scene had them actually burning
things outside the theater when they were performing that one, yeah. I love
Shaw.
Q. Hi James. How much do you love or loathe the internet, because although
it’s been great for spreading the word about you, how far are you aware
that everything, EVERYTHING you’ve ever said in public is analyzed and
cross analyzed in a way that can horrifying and intrusive?
A. It's not intrusive I guess because I'm choosing to be public right now.
And I guess if I really do my job all right, I'll be ok if it's analyzed.
No, the internet is a double-edged sword. It has absolutely benefited me
hugely - and also as I'm starting to try to do more music it's benefiting me
because on the internet I can both advertise and distribute without a label,
which means I get 95% of profits. But I made a friend recently (questioner
turns to leave) Don't go away yet! This is the INTERNET we're talking about!
(Laughs.) I met this dude traveling back from London last time I was here
and he helped to invent the MP3, which is the digital music thing. He's like
all up with computers, he's on all the big...the government calls him in to
do stuff. And he told me the internet is, "dude, I helped invent it and
it's very, very, very, VERY dangerous. He said you have to have two
computers. If you're on the internet, everyone, you have to have two
computers - one to be on and surf the internet and one to store your
information because no matter what they tell you. the information on your
computer if it is connected to the internet, is not in any means safe at
all. And it also helps the government keep a lot better tabs on us, which I
don't think is always good.
Q. I’d just be happy if you could lay off politics and your private life
because that’s NONE of our business.
Q. Hi James. The organizers were inviting outrageous questions so here goes.
Have you ever kissed a man and if so, under what circumstances and did you
enjoy it?
A. (thinks and paces a second) I had a dream when I was thirteen. THAT
worried me for a long time! (Laughs.) Then I did a play - I'm trying to
remember the name of it, it was at the Bailywick Theater. It was a beautiful
play about... it's called Just Friends and it took place in Brighton,
England during World War II when people used to go sun themselves and watch
the bombers go and have picnics. There's an artist who's laid down in the
sun that I played, and he's gay and totally cool with it and there's another
guy who's gay and not yet cool with himself about it and they sit and talk
and the guy kind of comes out to himself, the guy that doesn't really
understand that he's gay. And then the artist takes off his clothes. And
then, I think I had to kiss the guy for it, but I can't remember when the
kiss came, man, and then the clothes come off. And I think they just lay
down and sun themselves, because it's not about sex - they're just friends.
But I think I had to kiss a guy named Andy for that, yeah, no I didn't enjoy
it.
Q. I’m told that I should say that everyone’s seen a picture of you
kissing Nick Brendon, although I haven’t seen it myself.
A. Oh, wait a minute! I've kissed tons of guys! I totally forgot! Not Nick
Brandon, no wait a minute, (chuckles) no, this is a good one! By the time I
was a senior in high school, I'd already been working out a while and I used
to like to tangle, starting to enjoy that. Another friend of mine,
especially another friend of mine who knew kung fu, we used to pretend to
kiss in high school because we came from a REALLY homophobic place, man,
like, we're gonna kick the shit outta that.. and we would bait 'em, you
know, to do that and oh, you know, sorry. (mimics a fight) So, yeah I did
that a little bit. But I don’t know, did I kiss Nick? (audience mumurs
yes) Maybe I did! He does have a sweet mouth. (laughs)
Q. Hi. The next question actually isn’t mine, but is from the little girl
behind me, hiding. She just wants to know if you can remember the first role
you ever played on stage as Eeyore and Winnie the Pooh and which lines you
had to say and which costume you had to wear and if you could do us and her
a favor and perform the donkey again like when you were back in school.
A. Yes, it was fourth grade, (to little girl) hi darlin’. It was in fourth
grade – I played Eeyore – it was in the chorus room of the school so it
was kind of on these little steps which were problems for all of us actors
because we kept tripping on the stage coz the stage had layers like that. I
had a blue costume and there was a little cutout of my face, with the ears
coming out and I remember feeling like I did really well. I didn't act again
for two years, but I really had liked that experience, then that led me to
audition for the stuff that got me started - but I don't really
remember...uhm, let me try. (thinks - then in a wonderful Eeyore voice)
"Oh, Pooh..I supppose...I'll just sit under here - that's fine with me.
"
Q. Hello. You’ ve talked about method acting before and how the camera
wants to capture something happening for the first time. My follow up
question to that is how do you make it happen for the first time even in the
fifth take?
A. You can't. Ultimately, you can do different things and if your partner is
really with you and present, and not just giving you another pre-programmed
line reading, then you can surprise each other. You can intentionally do
little things differently. Or better yet, just hang in with them and just
see what happens. But you can't recreate the first time. I remember Penny
Marshall talking about working with Robert DeNiro. I was always reading
Hollywood Magazine, just trying to glean any piece of information and this
one stuck with me. She said that he'll give you great takes every time but
no two are the same. And it struck me that it’s like he's like a jazz
musician - he knows what the chord structure is, he knows what the melody
is, he knows where all the things are, but he's just rippin'. So he's not
trying to recreate anything, he's just trying to create again, I guess. But
the first three times are pretty fresh. The first one is always the best but
it almost never gets printed because there's some problem either with the
technical end of it, and frankly that's 90% of it. That's the weird thing,
man. The camera men? They can mess up seven takes in a row and no one says
anything. Actors mess up two and everyone's like, (mimics big sigh and
frustrated shrug). Right on. (Laughs.)
Q. Hi. How much of what we see of you onstage is the real you, how much is
the one you think we want to see, and how much the one you want us to
believe you are?
A. Good question, baby. Damn. Uh, ok. I don't know what you want to see in
me. Well, I can make assumptions but those are assumptions.
Q. I think you assume what the crowd wants from you.
A. That's not it. (vigorously shakes his head) I can't do that. That's
second guessing the audience. That's trying to give them what you think they
want and that'll never get you anything. What you have to decide is how much
you are willing to share, how far you're willing to go and how open you're
willing to be in front of an audience to be honest. It's a courageous thing
to do, frankly, coz, you know, I'm nervous right now. I'm up in front of a
bunch of people and you know, you're starin' at me. The thing is, what you
think I am has a lot to do with Spike. (crowd murmurs no) Well, it flavors
it. Come on, man. The whole Spike thing I'll say is the intersection between
the words that were written and that really, believe me guys, that the
character of Spike was very clear on the page. You guys - I'm sure some of
you have been reading scripts. How many have actually read a Buffy script?
Am I wrong? How many people think I'm wrong, that Spike doesn't really come
across with just the words? Yeah, exactly. So....then you have me who is
actually giving those words an immediacy and a life and I'm being honest
when I'm saying them. And that's really a good thing to be able to do. But
I'm not defining the character, I'm not really building the character. That
work is done in the language. I am being present and sometimes that's hard -
you know, hour twenty (makes a "wake up now" sort of motion)
Action! Yeah, that's why I slap myself - you probably saw me do that earlier
this morning. Um, such a good question. But what I want you to believe I
am...uh, Honest I guess is all I can uh, but yeah. Good acting is not
putting on a mask. That's not good acting. It's hiding yourself behind a
technical kind of thing. Good acting is revealing yourself. So, hopefully
what you've seen is me, but that's not building the character.
Q. Hi. When you came to Chicago, what did you do to survive until you got
cast at the Goodman?
A. Uh, waited tables at Monday's restaurant in the lobby of a hotel
something, man I forget. 4:30 in the morning, which meant you had to be out
in the cold at 3:30 in the morning waiting for the el on the el
track..everybody's fighting over these little heat lamps and most of them
don't work, so you're just going "hope I don't die, hope I don't
die." I'd come from New York so I had a taste of cold, but I didn't
KNOW what cold was til I came to Chicago. But to tell you the truth, the
Goodman happened fairly quickly. I took an acting class in a local... I was
making tentative steps back into theater because I really got burned in
school so I just said I'm just gonna go to a little cornerstone place and
they cast me in this pretty good role, this really cool Lysistrata, 2411 AD.
So they cast it in the future but they did it with the cothurni and with the
phalluses. And if you do Greek comedy with the cothurni and the phalluses,
it is HILARIOUS because everyone's trying to be so serious. "These
women! What is wrong with them? (sniff!) I don't know, I can't think!"
You know what I mean? It's just too good. So, a director directed that play
and he happened to know more directors in town and he heard at a party that
they were looking for an actor to play Ferdinand in The Tempest and he said
my name. And then I went in and didn't get the role. But I almost got the
role. A different dude, Don something, who ended up on Seaquest 2484 or
whatever, uh Don Franklin, cool guy, got the role but they moved him to
Puck. The director made a different decision and they moved him to Puck and
they put me into Ferdinand. That was my first professional true role and it
was a nude role. And I didn't even know it! I didn't even know it was nude
until I had the first day of rehearsal and Bob Falls, who is about
"this" tall, (raises arm way over his head) and I'm this
unemployed, you know, little 22 year old actor and Bob Falls is already a
legend. "Kid, we're gonna have you nude in this one. We're gonna strap
you to this big, iron hoop and you're gonna be chained in there and we're
gonna roll ya out, or the sprites are gonna roll you out and we're gonna
untie you and you can continue with your speech. And I was still so excited
that I DID get the role, having had the exilaration that "I'm gonna go
to the Goodman!...no I'm not I'm falling...I'm GOING to the Goodman! with my
DICK hanging in the AIR! (covers his face with his hands) And, when we went
into text, which is about a week and a half before the opening for the
critics, the lighting designer broke his leg in Denver and was stuck in
Denver, so his assistant lit the show - like a VEGAS show. It was supposed
to be all about tasteful shadows, and sidelight, and it was just like (makes
hand gesture of wow! direct lights) And the production stills of that show
to this day are like, "what were they doing at the Goodman?" Bob
did a lot of nudity that year and I asked him about it. He said he was
trying to change his audience, actually trying to get the old people to stop
coming. And I was like, "you are insane! That's the backbone of
theater!" and he said, "nope. Young people are the backbone of
theater. Let's shake it up." He's still there kicking ass too, man, I
wanna go back.
Q. Are you ok with the flash cameras or not?
A. Oh yeah.. Makes me feel pretty!
Q. With Buffy and Angel having come to an end, and with your acting past,
believe it or not another Eeyore question, if you were approached to reenact
your first role of Eeyore in a feature film, would you sign up immediately
or would you hold out for the role of Tigger?
A. (laughs) Well, with this performance capture stuff, you know? I'll do
both! Have you heard about this? Performance capture? This new film coming
out with Tom Hanks and he's played like six roles? They put fifty different
sensors on his face and measured everything? I find that, actually, kind of
helpful. That's actor-driven special effects and I'll be hired doing that!
But no, depending on who was directing, I'd sign up in a second. Yeah.
Q. Hi James. I’m sitting down for this one.
A. You have the power, use it.
Q. I know, I know. So have you honey. What would you write or say in your
own obiturary? And what would you most want to be remembered for?
A. Produced theatre, did a TV show, tried hard. Yeah, yeah…did some music,
did some music.
Q. Hi James. Can you tell us a bit about your appearance in The Mountain?
A. It was actually very good! The producers and the WB was really pressuring
me to do a lot of press about it, which they never talked about going in and
my publicist said that it was very bad for me to do press for any guest star
role for a one week appearance. It looks HORRIBLE if you run out and start
talking about a Big New Role for me that lasts 30 minutes, ya
know...(laughs) But I took it because the role was of a flawed man and I
like flawed characters because I think that gives you meat that you can
really dig into. I play an alcoholic father of a kid who ruins his chances
to go to college, but loves his son a LOT, infinitely anyway. The guy
playing my son is a guy named Penn who is a really good actor. He's one of
those actors where you can just look at him and he hangs with you and we can
just improvise and jazz it together. And he loves jazz, like I do. So on
that level it was really great. They filmed me for four days instead of the
agreed upon two, but that's television. Television happens. Plus, Vancouver
rocks! I had half the day in Vancouver to walk around, which was really
good.
Q. Hi gorgeous.
A. Hi sexy.
Q. If you could produce and perform in a theater or filmed version of
Macbeth, who would be on your wish list to work alongside you?.
A. If I could choose any one from past and present? For Macbeth? (takes a
second) Young Richard Harris
Q. Is he still alive?
A. YOUNG Richard Harris… he's a warrior, you have to believe when he pulls
out a sword "Is there ANYONE who can take me?" He can't be
defeated.. So you gotta be young enough. Uh, Malcolm McDowell? No, too
(can't make out what he says) uh....Richard Burton...Olivier, of course,
because his is the only one that everyone agrees on was good, so obviously
Olivier.
Q. Anybody sort of, newer? More modern?
A. Sorry, baby, I’m old. These are my contemporaries…(laughs) A current
actor to play the role I'm not aware of. I'm sure they exist, but they are
in theater that I haven't seen. You'd have to have a theater background. To
do Shakespeare, you have to have the flight hours of trying and failing
enough until you finally get it.
Q. Hi James. Do you know what effulgent means and can you use it in a
sentence?
A. The light upon her hair was gleaming, twas effulgent.
Q. But what’s the definition of it in the dictionary?
A. Radiating.
Q. That’s the one, well done.
A. By the way I have to admit to being nervous to do Shakespeare in front of
English people because you invented it and I'm and American; so I am always
straining to do it fast enough and get the rhythms correctly and I suspect
that if I did it, some of your ears would go," innng" (makes an
ouch face). But there would be a passion to it and an immediacy and you
would be able to understand it. It would be clear, if not completely
musical. That would be the fault of it. But I fear that. I fear coming over
here and "he's doing Macbeth! On the London stage! And he's SMASHING
the meter!
Q. Hi. We’re getting a little less serious.
A. Good!
Q. This will probably tell me more about your character than any other
question I’ve asked you. I would like to know who your favorite Star Trek
character is and why?
A. Spock Spock Spock Spike Spock Spike Spock Spock! (applause) Spock was a
character that they didn’t expect to break out, but they found out that
through that character they could re-examine their theme or they could do a
variation on it. The theme of the show seemed to be this very hopeful theme
actually – that humankind would get over where we are now and come to a
time where we could be spreading the best of ourselves. And how can we get
to that place? And that was a character who could interestingly, we could
ask what is it to be human in the first place? And that really gave it
ground underneath, and it kept it from being too Pollyanna. It was just one
of those things where you cook up a bunch of characters and one of them
really, you say "hey!" you know I could really get my writing, I
could really get my teeth into that guy over there and it worked. In the
hands of a very good actor, Leonard Nimoy, who turned into a very good
director, very good. And yeah, I think Spike was a little bit the same way.
He was able to take the theme and kind of expand it in a certain vein.
Q. I suddenly feel like breaking into “Danke Schoen” but I won’t.
A. Oh please do.
Q. If you could play any character of the opposite sex from books, movies,
plays, tv, or cartoons, who would it be and why?
A. I SO like being a guy, that's just something I haven't given any thought
to.…nothing against being a girl! I appreciate that YOU are doin' it!
Q. Thanks, and I appreciate your doing the guy thing…
A. Thank YOU. As it should be, honey. Right? But I’m…uhm… wow…(in
elderly English Lady voice) "Lady Bracknell? That would be fabulous
wouldn't it! I think I would choose Lady Bracknell and I don't think I'll
wait til I'm a woman!"
Q. Hi James. In theater, what do you as an actor look for in a director?
A. In theater? It's a long list, man. That is a very long list. First and
foremost, just basic leadership capability, leadership being the ability to
create a safe environment for the work to be done and to order the work
to….to inspire people to work harder than they were planning to, as
opposed to trying to force them or shame them into working harder - coz
creatively that doesn't work. So you need someone who understands that level
of leadership. Someone who has a personality that is interesting enough to
inspire you as he's talking to you and to get you excited by his ideas,
that's a bit of a performer, that's very important. The ability to
encapsulate what he's talking about in a very few amount of words so that he
can get out of your way, so that he can tell you what he wants and then can
get the hell out so that you can get back to the actual doing of the thing.
You don't want one of those wonderful directors who is so charming but can't
get off the stage. That's a problem. You want a director who can cast well
because if you cast the play well, 85% of your job's done. Any good director
understands that and I remember once I came close to working with the
artistic director of the Market Theater and I forget the man's name, but
he's one of the people who helped Athol Fugard become Athol Fugard and
that's where Athol did all of his work and he brought a play to the
Northlight Theater in Evanston, just north of Chicago, and he almost cast me
in the lead. He auditioned me for three months until finally the artistic
director Russell Vandenbrook came in and said, (shouting) "JUST CAST
IT!" and so the director cast the guy who originated the role in
Johannesburg, not me. But he took three months, ya know? So, that's another
thing. I guess those are the main things. Yeah.
Q. Hi. In an older biography painting was listed as one of your hobbies. Do
you still paint and what kinds of things did you paint?
A. Yes, I do still life, which is the easy one! But exterior still life, and
not anything I'd arrange. I painted plants but more specifically I liked to
paint the shadows cast by plants. That's what I was into, which sounds
weird.
Q. Did painting accomplish the same thing as playing the guitar does for you
or did it serve a different function as a creative outlet?
A. Totally different. The main thing that painting gave me was an
appreciation of how beautiful the world is. Because I had gotten to a point
where I started asking myself at all times, "well, how would I paint
this? How many colors would I need?” And it started dawning on me how many
different colors were all around me at all times and things got more
intense. I just started noticing how beautiful the world was. And that just
took staring at one thing - the first one was a sunflower against the brick
chimney thing and I did that all summer, you know, for two hours because the
shadow was only there for two hours coz it was a late afternoon kind of
deal. Guitar and music are really a distinct, a "tune me up" and
makes me feel more mature, basically. (laughs)
Q. Hi James. You know that Alyson Hannigan has been on the London stage this
year. If you found something that you liked, would you consider coming to
London to do a stage play?
A. I would LOVE to come to London and do a stage play. But right now I have
family commitments that would preclude that for 10 years at least. But after
that period I will try if you'll have me.
Q. Which one would you like to do, apart from Macbeth?
A. Oh, God.. Oh! I'd like to do a Steven Berkoff. I'd like to do Kvetch if
no one has struck gold with it recently because it strikes gold everytime
it's produced. It was gold for me. It's this GREAT play - Steven Berkoff, by
the way, is all about sweating and misery and nervousness and "oh my
God, I'm dying inside!" Oh, it's so funny. But he has this power and
this passion and I would love to do one of those. I might like to do a
George Walker play. He's a Canadian playwright that not a lot of people know
about. He's absolutely fabulous. He writes about the underclass in
Toronto.(thinks) Oh, you know Life is a Dream - I've done the role and then
I've directed the play and it's the spanish Hamlet, so I feel like maybe my
third whack at it would be the successful one. That would be good. It kind
of goes on and on. I had to close my theater, not because I....we were
selling so well, right, that I got lazy and I didn't save money because all
the shows were selling out so I didn't save any money. But I had two plays
that didn't sell so well, I mean they weren't flops, but they didn't sell so
well and we went under. And so we had all these plays that we wanted to do.
Q. Hi James. Now that the band has disbanded are there any plans to tour as
a solo performer?
A. Not immediate plans, but definitely yes. Guys, mentally, I'm on tour
right now. I'm singing for you tonight. That’s the first time I've sung
solo since, what, 14Below? Anyone here from 14Below? (to someone who yelled)
Ahhh! Baby! Right On. We'll see how it goes. Right now I'm putting my energy
into making the album. I've got the songs, I know what I want to do with
them, and right now we gotta get them done, and pressed, and then you start
touring with that. So yeah. You gotta have CD's to sell on the tour! (makes
"cash" motion with fingers) I get this now, Steve! Steve! I'm on
board now!
Q. Hi James. Was it fun to go back in time and portray Spike as William with
different costumes and hairstyles?
A. When I got different costumes - the one time that I liked my different
costume was in Tabula Rasa. That was the one I enjoyed because I got the
point. The hawaiian shirt - I didn't get that at all because I had just come
on the show and I was feeling like my....I was told that I was supposed to
be the new Charisma, uh, not Charisma obviously but Cordelia. The person who
would stand in the corner and go, "Buffy, you're stupid. You're gonna
die" That's one of the things that the scenes need and I was told that
that was my function and I tried to do that, except they kept bringing me in
in this smoking blanket, you know? And you can only do a smoking blanket so
many times. So that was failing and I was starting to think that my position
on the show, my future on the show was probably not that good. And then they
started putting me in like this clown suit and I was like, "that's it!
Why don't we just chop the character up and flush him down the toilet!"
Okay. I made three jokes in the make-up trailer - THREE jokes. They had a
little bite to them - one of my jokes was, that I remember was, "you
know usually when they ask you to play Urkel, you would go to an audition
and there would be sides, and you would do an Urkel kind of thing. And you
would know that the role was Urkel - on the contract it'll say Urkel and you
would know that you are playing sort of a nerdish kind of character. It's
been surprising to me that I thought I had signed up for Spike and I seem to
be Urkel today! I later found out Joss almost fired me over that. Like,
whoa...three jokes in the makeup trailer. I'm going to be SO good.
Q. Hi James, how you doing? What was it like doing the scene with Buffy when
she was invisible and did you have to improvise? (big audience reaction)
A. There was a lot of talk about how I should be doing the (air quotes)
"push-ups." Because the way I did them they were not looking like
push-ups at ALL. They were looking like what they were, QUITE obviously and
they thought that was way too much. Like in the first rehearsal they were
like, "whoa! WHOA!" and I'm like, "what? that's what he's
doing, and I'm just doing...what...!" So we changed that. I
dunno…See, that one was with Nick, so that one was not so bad. That was
just another guy so it wasn't a big deal to be naked.
Q. Hi James. This question was kind of asked by a few people in front of me
so I’m gonna change it a little bit. It’s about your music, about your
solo album? Can you tell us a little bit more detail, perhaps, if there’s
gonna be any of your older songs that you’ve written on the new album or
if it’s all brand new?
A. There's one old song that I'm gonna record called "Smile." It
is mostly material that was to be on the band's second album. So if you guys
have been going to the shows, you've heard these songs before. They're
reinterpreted and I like what I'm hearing actually, I really do. I heard a
softer sound....yep,
Q. A lot were wondering if you were going to have Over Now, Katie,
A. Yep, yep all those are all going on the album. You guys liked those, they
were all going on the album. Yeah, definitely. Katie was the first song we
had decided would go on the next album.
Q. This Town too?
A. Yep, yep, yep. And a new one by the producer of the album, Andy
Rosenthal, called "Every Man." It's a really good song, because
every man thinks that God is on his side. Ain't that true?
Q. Hello love. What do you like to use in your bath water?
A. In British accent) What do I like to do in my bathroom?
Q. Do you like bubble bath, cologne, bath oil, or nothing at all?
A. Oil. I don't always do that because the clean up is a pain in the
butt…but oil's good. I don't like all the bubbles because it's like this
detergent in your nose. But yeah, oil's ALWAYS good, I mean come ON!
Q. I wondered how much input you had about the look and content of your
official website and if you actually write some of the shout-outs?
A. No, I don't, I don't. I really don't. I trust that that's done.. Because
the thing, the real communication that needs to happen, you guys are doing
and all the website is, is a conduit, at best, for that. It may develop into
more. I had a friend who really wanted me to up the content and find ways to
market and, not necessarily charge for visiting the site, but put certain
ads in certain ways ..he was very smart by the way, I might do it. Uh,
targeted marketing. Actually, actually giving commericals to the people that
they DO want to see. But, I don't really go on the net. No disrespect to the
people who do - it's just that I want to keep my ego as SMALL as possible
through all this.
Q. Hi James. If you could choose in the beginning of your life to live as a
human just once, or to be a vampire forever to survive many generations to
see a lot of things, what would you choose and why?
A. Human, definitely.
Q. Why?
A. I remember, God this is so powerful, I'm gonna cry. It’s like one of
those…here's the actor's secret. What Spike wanted to do with Buffy when
he was in love with her? He wanted to give her a garden, a rose garden.
(pauses and paces a min. to collect himself, takes a drink of water) (voice
shaking) because that was alive.. ( applause)
Q. Hi James. My friends and I were discussing who we wanted to look like.
For me it was always Jane Seymour. You’ve become really famous for your
looks, or become really famous for Spike’s looks. Did you ever want to
look like someone else and who?
A. I’ve always like my looks but I always wanted straight hair, that’s
about it. Yeah. I wanted to look older all my life. I always look at actors
NOW and I'm trying to make sure this little line (points to face) keeps
under control. I'm like "oh my God." But when I was younger I
remember looking at actors goin', "man, I wish I had that LINE, man,
that’s so cool." Yeah, the grass is greener, isn't it..
Q. Hi James. What was the inspiration behind the song “This Town?”
A. “This Town” is me trying not to write a personal song anymore but
write a song that is a story. It's about longing, I guess. It's trying to
instill that, it's about longing. It's about situations where people choose
people that they can't have. And both of them are doing it. The woman does
it and the man's doing it too and for both reasons they are in constant
longing and I was trying to get at that.
Q. Hi. If you had to go backpacking for a year, and you were gonna take one
person with you, it could be anyone from history, from the present..or
A. Gordon Hart. You don't know him, he's a friend. He works for the Sierra
Club in Sacramento and the California legislature. He's a lobbyist for the
Sierra Club, which is a little more center of The Green Party, it's been
around a lot longer and it doesn't have the same kind of political skew on
it. It started so long ago that people think of it as a neutral thing, so he
decided to go with that. I've been backpacking with him - in fact, one time
Gordon and I, we were just like walking around, we didn't intend to really
go hiking, but as the case with Gordon and I we always end up walking and
talking and we just started climbing. I had on Chinese exercise slippers,
which is a BAD idea for hiking, when we decided to go chimneying. This is
what an idiot I used to be. Chimneying is when you put your back up against
one side of the fissure and your feet up the other and you just wiggle up
and down, and if your feet go up above your head, you're dead. So, I got
down there and Gordon says, "I'm pulling up, I think that's enough, I
think I'm not going any further" and I'm like, "man, I'm gonna
check that thing down there!" and I go down, my feet slip, and I really
get in a jam. Gordon decides to just come on down and help me and then HE
slips. And we're just sitting there, I've told this story before, but we're
just sitting there and we're looking down and we both just started to
chuckle. And we just look at each other and we don't say anything, but then
I'm just basically like, "brother, I hope we really live." And he
went, "yeah." and then we're just like, ok we're gonna do it real
slow, we're gonna just breathe here and we're not gonna panic.” And we
very slowly and very carefully, and we kept each other calm, got our feet
back and we inched our way back up and we climbed back down the hill and we
looked up back where we were..(tape distorts here)
Q. When you ran your own theater company, what made you choose the plays
that you did?
A. I was at such a low operating cost that I could choose plays solely on
how entertaining and thought-provoking they were. So what we did was just
read about what everyone’s doing and read the scripts that were all around
the country and chose the ones that were the fire-iest and excited us the
most, without any regard whatsoever to sales. Zero. We were a 60 seat house
and if we sold 35 a night, we could cover our operating costs. We ended
covering about 75% of our operating costs over the 2 1/2 years we were in
Seattle, which is really good. Most theaters do 50% and that feels really
good. Unfortunately, the 25% that was made up came from me. (laughs) A lot
of artistic directors could come up to me, we'd go to parties and stuff, and
they would say, "you just did that Christopher Fry one act, man? You
did “Phoenix Too Frequent?” Man, I've been wanting to do that - for 20
years I've been trying to talk my board into that one act. Damn! You're
doing George Walker? Oh MAN! I wanna do George Walker." And I'm like,
(does neener neener singsong) na na na NA na. But I mean, they were doing
Shakespeare and Shaw - the old standards sometimes are really wonderful too,
but yeah…at least you guys have a chance of commercial success. In
America, it's even dicier, a lot dicier. A lot of people are closing
theaters and stuff...boy, I'm a real upper to talk to!
Thanks a lot, I love you guys!
Quelle: MoreThanSpike.com Board
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