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TRUE
BRIT
Anthony Head explains
how Buffy will see the dark side. Buffy's watcher says the WB
doesn't understand the show's fan base.
Giles, the world's
stuffiest librarian, in drag? Buffy the Vampire Slayer star
Anthony Stewart Head surprised some fans late last year by donning Dr.
Frank-N-Furter fishnets on the VH1 tribute Rocky Horror 25: The
Anniversary Special. Despite that sartorial transgression, he's
still EW's favourite snob: In naming Buffy one of the 10 best
TV shows of the year, EW TV critic Ken Tucker raved that "the
guy gets more laughs out of prissiness these days than Frasier and Niles
combined."
Off screen, Head, 46, is no
fussy stick in the mud. To prove it, the former Taster's Choice
pitchman talked to EW.com about Giles' love life, the new direction Buffy
is taking, and how he mastered tromping around in stiletto heels.
Hey, you don't sound
like Giles! What happened to the posh accent?
I'm kind of a long way from
Giles in a lot of ways, which people realise when I walk in the door with my
earring and my jeans and everything. But over the years, Giles has
gotten a little closer to me, becoming a little hipper and a little funkier.
So, fess up. When
is Giles getting a new girlfriend? He hasn't exactly been lucky in
love.
I'm constantly getting
asked about it, and I'm very flattered. But the problem they found
with my last girlfriend Olivia (Phina Oruche) was that she was normal.
What do you do with that? She couldn't join the gang, and to kill off
another girlfriend (like the ill fated teacher Jenny Calendar, played by
Robia La Morte) would be too cruel to Giles. I think he'd end up in
the loony bin. But I'm going to pass the suggestion on to Joss.
In its fifth season, Buffy
is up 12 percent among adults 18 to 34. Do many grownup Buffy junkies
approach you?
Yes, but they always say
that they like the show in a slightly hesitant way, slightly
embarrassed. "I know I'm not supposed to, but I watch Buffy."
And it's like, it's all right, man! You're not alone!
Is it frustrating when
people refer to Buffy as a teen show?
It's never been marketed as
what it is, because it has a truly universal appeal. Though the teen
thing has done very well for The WB, I think they have to widen their
horizons. At a photo shoot once I asked an executive, "Are you
looking to expand our audience?" And he looked at me pointedly
and said, "Well, we're now looking at ways to attract more women in
their 40s." And I just thought, I'm not saying a word.
That's not about looking at the big picture. Look at what you have,
not what you think you have.
How have you been coping
with the fan reaction to the show's newest cast member, Dawn (Michelle
Trachtenberg)?
People got so pissed about
the sister, Dawn! And even my publicist was calling me saying,
"What's going on? This is horrible!" And I told her,
just wait, it's cool, something will happen. Because I didn't want to
spoil it, since it's such a great concept.
This season Buffy seems
to be exploring her dark side and her connection to the first slayer.
Will this change the tone of the show?
Joss wanted this season to
be about the id, about finding out what makes you tick. It's the next
step after that "Yeah, alcohol!" part of growing up. And
that's something that you go on learning. I'm still hanging in there.
Last season, Giles
serenaded us with a bluesy rendition of Behind Blue Eyes. Is
his musical side going to emerge further?
That represented the climax
of his midlife crisis, so it's kind of done its thing. Joss hasn't
proclaimed either way on it. But I have been approached by a little
independent record label that wants to put me and George Sarah, who's
written a few songs for our show and Angel, together for an
electronic music album. I've written a bit and we've compared notes
and it looks great.
Your family [girlfriend
Sarah Fisher and his two young daughters] still lives in England.
That's one hell of a commute.
Yes, and I don't get back
often enough. But the kids absolutely love the show. The times
when we've talked about maybe me leaving they've said, "Oh my God, no,
you can't, you can't!" It's very hard, because they're growing up
and Sarah has raised them as a single mother for six, seven years now.
At some point, I will have to go and spend some time in England. But
we shall see.
Isn't your brother
Murray Head, the guy who sang 1984's One Night In Bangkok?
Yes, he is. He's
living in Paris now. I saw him a few months back, and I know he wrote
and starred in a film in France. But to be honest I don't know what
he's doing.
For seven years you did
those soap opera Taster's Choice commercials with Sarah [sic] Maughan.
Do you even drink the stuff?
No, I don't. But I
still get recognised from the ads. It's always, "Do I know
you?" Because I wasn't an actor in show and you didn't see my
name, I was just this person in people's living rooms.
Having starred in the
London stage production of The Rocky Horror Picture Show in 1991, was
it a thrill to get back into your Frank-N-Furter costume for VH1?
I got an extremely warm
reception, which surprised me because I wouldn't have thought that many
people would know my work from eight, 10 years ago. In London, my
Frank was much more demonic than any of the Franks that went before. I
liked the challenge of finding something different in the character.
Instead of wearing green scrubs, I came out in a 1950s high waisted nurse's
gown with a pillbox hat. I just had fun with it.
How hard was it getting
around in those stiletto heels?
I'd seen countless Franks
in very clumsy, stacked heels and platforms, and I wanted to be very mobile,
so I had these 3½-inch pointy black patent leather ankle boots.
Because they supported my ankle I cold leap around like an idiot. And
I did.
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