
Dollhouse's Alpha and the faux Steven Kepler were, of course, played by frequent Joss Whedon collaborator Alan Tudyk, best known as Wash on Whedon's short-lived FOX series Firefly (and the subsequent big screen adaptation Serenity).
Tudyk participated in a conference call on Monday with press to discuss his role on Dollhouse, what a potential Season Two could mean for Alpha, and how on earth Wash got to play Dollhouse's "god-like" Big Bad, who Tudyk says is comprised of 43 different personalities. (Just don't expect one of them to be Steve the Pirate.)
So was waltzing off with Echo into the sunset in "Briar Rose" really Alpha's game plan all along?
"I think thatās Alphaās plan, sure," said Tudyk. "Everything that Alpha has done has been to get Echo. Whenever you see Alpha, heās screwing with the dollhouse and itās always around Echo and his obsession with Echo. It was his plan all along to come get Echo and thatās what it was all about. So now he has her and he gets to fulfill his plan now, which is to make her like him. Alpha isnāt really Alpha. He is Alpha, but what Alpha is this composite of people. We understand that heās a bunch of people crammed into one. Heās 43 people at once. Heās ascended in his mind to a god-like place."
As for what a second season of Dollhouse would mean for Alpha, Tudyk was playing his cards close to his chest. "I think, the second season for Alpha--wow, I want to be able to say this without giving away," said a sly Tudyk. "I canāt say because Alpha may not make it through the next episode. He does have Echo and Alpha is a formidable person to deal with, but he has Echo and thatās playing with fire. It could blow up in his face."
As for how Tudyk landed the role, it all came down to a game of Pictionary at Nathan Fillion's house, apparently.
"[Joss] set me up really well because he didnāt tell me he was offering it to me or that he wanted me for the role when he first described it," said Tudyk. "He laid it out like the role does this, and he does this and heās this composite of these people. He gave me a full scope of the guy that he was this person who was obsessed with Echo and was 43 people at once and has all of these skill sets crammed into one, but because heās 43 people at once, heās mad. But he can do many things, because he is also 43 people at once and heās sort of godlike in his own mind. I was like, 'Oh, my God, thatās sounds so amazing. Whoās playing that?' [Joss:] I want you to play it.'"
"It was really cool. It wasnāt like we were in his office discussing work. We were over at Nathan Fillionās house for Pictionary," he continued. "We were on a Pictionary break when he said, 'I want to talk to you about' ā I was asking, I brought it up. 'Whatās going on with the show? I want to hear about your new show,' because it had yet to start and we were just getting into the strike time. I was really blown away that he wanted me for it and I was excited to get to play it. [...] I donāt get to play bad asses very often."
But Whedon did give Tudyk some room to create his own take on Alpha, though Tudyk says that he was definitely relying on Whedon's own take, given how integral Alpha has been to Dollhouse's overarching plot.
"I think I had space to create him, but I was hungry for anything he gave me," said Tudyk. "Any idea he had or any information he could fill in with his vision of Alpha because itās been shaped by all these other episodes, these different things of what other people have said about him. So Iām adding up everything people have said about him and then going to him and saying, 'Are all of these impressions of Alpha true because theyāre saying thatās who he is, but are they right? What is your vision of Alpha?' I was really dependent on his vision because itās definitely, heās had this guy in mind since the beginning. "
"In the playing of it, in the actual shooting of it, we got to have fun and there was a lot of little bits," he went on. "But the main thing for the last episode is he wanted... that stakeout as much as possible, although it wasnāt a very well kept secret, but they created a really great role in Steven Kepler. He wanted that to be a full person that people could believe in before he flipped into one of those other personalities."
Tudyk says that he believes that Alpha has the ability to become the most perfect human specimen. "I think he has the ability to be," mused Tudyk. " I donāt think that heālike any of us, experience because in a lot of ways when youāre downloading a bunch of people, youāre downloading perspective and his experience. Somebody can go through one experience and have a conclusion about that and another person could have the same experience and have a different conclusion. Somebody can end up enlightened and somebody else could end up a villain. I think he takes the wrong lessons from his downloaded experiences. He is certainly evolved, but I donāt know, the swine flu is evolution, isnāt it? In a way, itās an evolution of flu, thatās sort of him... I bet Alpha believes that there wonāt be anybody [in the future]. Heck, no, there will be Alpha. Alpha will be there. Alpha is a god. He is forever now. He can live forever. He has the ability to live forever."
In the meantime, look for Tudyk to get to showcase some of Alpha's numerous personalities. "Thereās sort of a Mickey personality that I like a lot," said Tudyk. "Heās fun, good old boy. Heās fun. Heās one of the more distinct ones that youāll see. He has a little more room to breathe, yes, him. And then just sort of the overall Alpha, the composite guy, because there is a basic, there is a center. There is a center that when heās in control of things, which is egomaniacal and he believes heās God. Maybe thereās a Gar, but itās very subtle. Actually thereās a great dodge ball player in there. He was just never given a shot. It doesnāt get a chance to do that. If he survives this episode and thereās a new season, hopefully we can flesh that out."
As for whether Alpha and Tudyk will turn up in the bonus episode of Dollhouse ("Epitaph One"), Tudyk isn't saying. "Youāll never know until you buy the DVD," he joked. "I donāt want to comment on my state beyond this episode, or Alphaās state, my fate beyond the episode totally alive, living a healthy life in Venice, California. But Alphaās fate, itās uncertain."
Meanwhile, Tudyk is sworn to secrecy on his next project, ABC's pilot for a remake of sci-fi series V, written by The 4400 creator Scott Peters. "I can say this, itās really good," said Tudyk. "I hope that they pick it up. If youāre a fan, which I was at the beginning, of the first one this is kind of everything that you remember without going back and watching because if you go back and watch the original V, youāre like, oh, I thought this was great. It looks really kind of cheesy. It fills in your memory as it should be. Itās like really awesome effects. The effects are done by [Firefly's] Zoic [and they do] all the spacecrafts and anything requiring digital enhancement... and they do a great job. And then, of course, Morena Baccarin is in it and sheās the leader of the aliens, so you canāt get any better than that."
What can viewers expect to see Alpha get up to in Friday evening's season finale of Dollhouse ("Omega")?
"I love how 'Briar Rose' ends. It was that whole Sleeping Beauty thing and you knew somebody was going to get kissed at the end. Iām glad it was Alpha kissing her, but you see that, both of us together. 'Oh, my God, yes, I know who you are. Yes, I know who you are. Come on, letās go,'" said Tudyk. "We take it on the road. Thereās maybe a kidnapping or two in the episode, but [...] for Alpha itās about fulfilling his plan, which is just the last step. Getting Echo was the second to the last step of his ultimate plan. Heās got one more thing in place before they can really go on their worldwide domination killing spree, ruling the world spree. Itās about making her in his own image really, as far as he is this, heās a god. In his mind heās a god. Heās ascended and he wants to bring her up to his level of multiple personality person. So itās cool, youāll see."
"Tim Minear directed the next episode," continued Tudyk. "Tim was part of Firefly. He did 'War Stories.' He did my favorite episode and heās one of my favorite directors on Firefly. The next episode he wrote and directed and I really like this next episode coming up. I think it really shows off Tim and he gets to play with all the elements, itās such a heightened episode, as far as Echo has been kidnapped by Alpha. Thereās so much to play with and he does a great job."
Dollhouse's season finale airs Friday at 9 pm ET/PT on FOX.
Comments
There'd also be free chocolate for the poor.
Said as an eternal fan of BtVS & FIREFLY. Even the episodes that have been hyped as improvements put me to sleep.
The layered metaphors of abuse, dolls, and sleeping beauty was very cool. Multiple lines that can be taken multiple ways. And the continued moral meditation on who is right, when you know it's going to be no one.