Return to the Continuum home page

Clicking on images provides larger ones.
Stylin Online - T-Shirts

THURSDAY, MAY 1, 2008

THE SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN: PETER MACNICOL

The kids gloves are off this Saturday on Kids' WB!'s The Spectacular Spider-Man.

While Dr. Octavius has had a submissive role in the first seven episodes of the series, Doc Ock makes his explosive debut in a new episode entitled "Reaction" that will air at 10 a.m. (ET/PT).

Doc Ock is voiced by Peter MacNicol, who adds the role to a busy schedule. MacNicol is a core cast member in two primetime television series -- 24 and Numb3rs -- but was still able to devote an afternoon every other week to creating the voice of Dr. Otto Octavius and his villainous alter ego.

MacNicol has crafted an extremely diverse and successful career, balancing primetime series starring roles (including Ally McBeal and Chicago Hope) with numerous guest performances (Boston Legal, Cheers, Tales From The Crypt), not to mention feature film appearances (Ghostbusters II, Sophie's Choice) and, of course, his first starring role as Galen in the fan favorite, Dragonslayer.

Despite all the on-camera work, MacNicol maintains a steady flow of voiceover roles in animated television series and movies, as well as being popular in the books-on-CD arena. MacNicol's animated voiceovers cover a wide range -- from lighter series like The Wild Thornberrys, Olive, the Other Reindeer and Buzz Lightyear of Star Command to the super-hero series Justice League, The Batman and now, The Spectacular Spider-Man.

"Cartoon work is pure recreation for me, pure playtime," said MacNicol. "But 'Books-on-CD' ­ now that's work! Keeping even the minor characters straight in my head, giving each bit-part his/her/its own voice, working for days in that airless chamber of the recording booth, with my eyes playing tricks on me as the hours drag by, and the pages I'm narrating, which must be noiselessly turned, and the sheer whiteness of those pages, which begins to create a kind of snow-blindness by mid-afternoon.

"Once for an epic fantasy series, I had to voice literally dozens of elves, fairies, and ogres, all of different ages, sexes, and from many lands -- with the hill dwarves needing to sound different from the valley dwarves. Had there been a window I would have jumped out of it."

MacNicol has found great pleasure in bringing villains to animated life; Doc Ock follows previous portrayals of Chronos and Manbat For Doc Ock, MacNicol opted to channel the persona of a classic actor far outside the reference points for most Spidey fans.

"The voice I chose for Dr. Octopus was something of an homage to Laird Cregar, one of Hollywood's greatest 'heavies,' and I do mean 'heavies,' " MacNicol explained. "Throughout his brief 1940s career, Cregar waged a war to the death against his own obesity, ultimately losing too many pounds too quickly; he was barely 30 when he died. In his two greatest movies, Hangover Square and The Lodger, he seemed so haunted and hulking, and I loved that soft menacing voice of his. Still, I'm no mimic and it was Cregar's quality rather than his voice which gave me my model."

MacNicol said he enjoys devouring the role of a villain, pointing out the extreme texture the dark side adds to any story ­ particularly in super-hero tales.

"It's all relative ­ this business of hero or villain," MacNicol said. "After all, villains are somebody's hero ­ certainly they've won the devotion of their cronies, their parents, and perverse fans like myself who actually prefer them over the title characters. Yep, it would be a pretty dull universe if we didn't have Rhino, Sandman and Doc Ock trying to destroy it."



E-mail the Continuum at RobAlls@aol.com



Return to the Continuum home page


Copyright © 2008 The Comics Continuum