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James Marsters

James Marsters is best known for his role of Spike the Englsh vampire in TV’s “Buffy the Vampire Slayer”.   He was born in 1962 in Greenville, California.   He played the same character in the spin-off “Angel” until 2004.   In 1992 he got his first major role on television in the series “Northern Exposure”.   His films include “House on Haunted Hill” and “PS I Love You”.   He is also an accomplished singer and mushas performed in a band.   James Marster’s website can be accessed here.

TCM Overview:

An attractive bleached blond California native, actor James Marsters honed his craft onstage, training and acting in productions in New York, Chicago and Seattle before hitting Hollywood in the mid-1990s and subsequently landing the breakthrough role of Spike in the popular supernatural series “Buffy the Vampire Slayer.” The son of a social worker and former minister, Marsters pursued an acting career after high school, and attended nearby Pacific Conservatory of the Performing Arts as well as NYC’s prestigious Juilliard. Rather than stay in NYC, Marsters made the move to Chicago, where he joined in the city’s noted theater community, working in productions at the Goodman Theater and the Balliwick Repertory, later co-founding the Genesis Theater Company. A versatile and courageous actor, Marsters didn’t shy away from roles that called for a dramatic nude entrance or required him to carry a six-hour epic, taking such assignments in Goodman’s “The Tempest” and Balliwick’s “Incorruptible,” respectively. His drive led him to try other cities, and he ended up in Seattle, working with the American Conservatory Theater and landing guest roles on the series “Northern Exposure” (CBS) in 1992 and 1993.

Dissatisfied with the Seattle scene, Marsters headed to Los Angeles in the mid-90s. He landed the role of 200-year-old vampire William the Bloody (nicknamed ‘Spike’ after his favored weapon) on “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” in 1997. A former pupil of David Boreanaz’s Angel, Spike wasn’t burdened by the conscience that plagued his lovestruck mentor, and was a welcome villainous addition to the “Buffy” stable of supernatural characters, offering comic relief to the sometimes overearnest series. Marsters’ skillful North London accent and wildly acerbic delivery made lines such as “I love syphilis more than I love you” (delivered to Juliet Landau’s Drucilla, Spike’s girlfriend) all the more enjoyable. Spike’s popularity won the actor a regular spot in the cast in 1999, and in order to counteract his unabashed evil, writers hindered Spike’s murderous glee by adding a plot point that saw the bloodsucker altered by a mysterious group called the Initiative. The result was that whenever Spike did harm, he feels unbearable physical pain. As he became an integral part of the otherworldly teen clan, Spike ironically began to fall for the eponymous slayer (Sarah Michelle Gellar).

As “Buffy” raised his profile, Marsters appeared on the big screen in the 1999 horror thriller “The House on Haunted Hill.” He didn’t abandon stage work despite his TV stardom, starring and contributing to the score of the ambitious drama “The Why” (2000), produced by the Blank Theater Company. Marsters also took his singing and guitar playing talents to the stage with a series of acoustic club performances in 2000.

The above TCM Overview can also be accessed online here.

 
 

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