James Marsters Movies
An unlikely candidate to end up as immortal vampire Spike on
Joss Whedon's popular television series
Buffy the Vampire Slayer (in addition to reprising his role for the spin-off series
Angel), former stage actor
James Marsters got his start in the spotlight by performing in such
Shakespeare classics as The Tempest before donning fangs to portray the conflicted bloodsucker who eventually falls for the one girl sworn to do battle with the undead.
Marsters was born in the Northern California logging town of Greenville, later moving with his family and spending much of his childhood in nearby Modesto. From his grade-school stage debut as Eeyore in a production of Winnie the Pooh, the aspiring thespian knew that he had the talent and drive to become an actor. After studying his craft at New York's renowned Juilliard School of the Arts, he set his sites on Chicago, making a name for himself with impressive performances at the Goodman Theater before heading west to Los Angeles. The talented stage actor made a transition to the small screen when he made an appearance on the popular series
Northern Exposure in 1992, with a few other minor television roles preceding his rise to fame on the wildly popular
Buffy. Though his character, Spike, was originally supposed to be killed off during his first season on the show, he proved so popular that he was kept on and eventually made a regular. In addition to his appearances on
Buffy and
Angel,
Marsters also found time to act in a pair of independent films entitled Winding Roads and Chance. While fans of his character on
Buffy may have been saddened when that series wound to a close, they could take some solace in the fact that he would return as the mischievous Spike in the 2003-2004 season of successful spin-off
Angel.
Marsters' other small-screen roles included appearances in
Strange Frequency and
Andromeda, as well as voice work on the animated television series
Spider-Man in 2003. In addition to his theater roles,
Marsters maintained an entirely different stage persona as a member of the rock band Ghost of the Robot. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide