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TVGuide.com - Cool Money - März 2005
Since Angel was dispatched to TV-show heaven, James Marsters’ admirers
have had a helluva time getting a fix of the actor formerly known as Spike.
(Sadly, The Mountain peaked before his character even had a chance to recur.
And the Spike TV-movie is only a fantasy for now.) So Saturday’s USA
movie, Cool Money (airing at 9 pm/ET), is guaranteed to get fans’ blood
pumping. In the fact-based drama, the Buffy the Vampire Slayer alum is
career criminal Bobby Comfort - "exactly the kind of guy I want to
play," he tells TVGuide.com. "He did some petty crimes that he got
caught for almost every time. Never hurt anybody, but he was a smartass to
the judge the last time around and got a really heavy sentence - like nine
or 10 years for rolling a gas station, I think.
"It’s a horrible thing to do," he adds quickly,
"but [the sentence was a bit much]. So he escaped from prison, got
caught and argued in front of a judge that he was over-sentenced the first
time around, and even if he was sentenced again for escaping from prison, it
still wouldn’t make up for unjust time served. And he won!"
Clearly, while Marsters doesn’t advocate living outside
the law, he remains fascinated by his Cool counterpart. So of course, he’s
bummed that the thief died - of old age, not a prison riot, by the way -
before Marsters had a chance to join him for a meal of bread and water.
"They say he was a very kind man you wouldn’t want to
[expletive] with," he says, then quickly corrects himself. "Screw
with, excuse me. And those are always my favorite kinds of people."
As fond as the thesp grew of his Money-grubbing alter ego,
he doesn’t see Comfort and himself as kindred spirits who make their
living, in essence, by lying. Comfort, after all, conned folks, and Marsters
gets paid to play make-believe. Strange as it may sound, he sees his
performances as works of truth rather than fiction.
"I feel very differently about acting than most people
do," he explains. "Good acting is not so much lying or putting on
a mask as it is revealing yourself in a truthful way. The art of it is to
select those facets of your personality that fit the character and not play
upon the ones that don’t.
"I think it was [Ralph Waldo] Emerson who said,
’Within all men are all men,’" he goes on, "and that’s a
very potent thing for an actor to contemplate. It gives you the power to
play just about anything."
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