ADRIAN PASDAR is NATHAN PETRELLI in HEROES
Q: How are you?
A: I am good. I have just come in from sailing this morning. Hayden
and I went for a sail and we left at 4.30am when it was cold and dark and a
little bit foggy. Sailing is one of the things I have always had a fondness
for. But you really have to get out early to make sure you are ahead of everybody
else. It was brilliant.
Q: You have said that playing Nathan in Heroes was a bit like doing
Richard III?
A: Minus the physical deformities that would make it perfect…if
I had a limp or a wandering eye or some such thing. There were certain complexities
to these characters when they started to write them out and then when you act
them out. Television is closer to the stage than film because you are repeating
your character over and over again. So it gets layered and layered with every
attempt to clarify who it is. Through the course of that I have found that there
is not so much dissimilarity to something that Shakespeare might have imagined
on one of his not so great days…not saying that in any way that this is
on a par with the works of Bard but we have to try and aim high. I think that
the struggle, the internal battle that this guy faces – which is somewhat
pedantic at times, somewhat selfish and ultimately selfless in the end as he
tries to relieve himself of the guilt that he has carried with him – is
not unlike the behaviour of Shakespearean characters that Macbeth and Lear might
share.
Q: Like some Shakespearean characters, Nathan wants serious political
power?
A: Yeah I think that is one of the things that the character shares
with what Shakespeare might have written about some of the lads that he wrote
about. I always think it is interesting when you find someone who is driven
to politics and has a family structure behind him to pull it off. The familial
bond and the expectation are levied upon someone growing up to become someone
extraordinary, to be a leader. I find that fascinating. The politics from the
inside resemble very little of what they look like from the outside.
Q: With all of the complexities in Nathan’s make - up, is it then
beneficial for you that he also has a super power?
A: Yeah that is his Achilles heel. That would be his visible deformity.
The way he looks at it that would be his weakness. The way it is written out
Nathan would be perceived as a freak if somebody knew that he had this super
power. On the one side it is great; he can zip around, but the other side is
that he can’t really tell anybody. He has to hide it. In that way I think
that I can see all the parallels between Shakespeare and Petrelli. It is interesting
– there is what people think it would be like to have a super power but
we try to explore the other side of that. If someone in the public eye had to
try and hide one of the greatest things that could possibly happen to your DNA
structure would be an interesting conundrum.
Q: Then there are the rest of the things that he is hiding – the
skeletons in his cupboard. It must be fun to eke these out over the series?
A: That’s the thing, they hint at them periodically and I find
them out very often as we read the script. You have to be prepared for anything.
You never know what is going to creep up. I didn’t know that Clare was
my daughter when we started the series – and I don’t think they
did either.
Q: Which is surely one of the great things about Heroes that the script
seems so organic?
A: Yeah that is very true. We had a very interesting first season and
I think this year kind of got off to a rocky start. Last year caught us all
by surprise. Nobody thought the thing was going to take off. And very often
that is the best beginning for any series when you are really scrambling to
come up with a story. Sometimes the worst thing that can happen to you is to
have too much time and loads of expectations. Not that we have ever had too
much time the backs have always been against the wall. But the expectation has
been so high that his has been an interesting time for us and the strike is
also coming at an interesting time.
Q: Why was the first series of Heroes such a global sensation?
A: I think it combined fantasy with reality in such a good way that
we were able to take the events of the world and the temperature of the geo-political
world and use it in tandem with the fantastic elements of what if…We combined
real world feel with the fantasy world added to it and that made Heroes appealing
to everyone who watched it. There was something in it for all walks of life
and it was fun to be part of that season, which was such a humdinger.
Q: It seems that the cast of Heroes have become like a family?
A: Yeah it’s funny after sailing I pulled in for some petrol
as we were coming back in from the Pacific Ocean and the guy at the station
said…’So you hang out together too!’ When you spend 15 hours
a day with people it really helps if you like them.
Q: You also seem to have clicked with Milo?
A: Yeah we very nearly worked together. They were going to do a spin-off
from Gilmore Girls and I was to play his father. But ultimately we didn’t
look appropriate age wise – they said I should really play his brother.
And now that has come to pass. So we didn’t really work together back
then but we did meet in an office.
Q: You are not really a big comic book fan but I believe you did like
the Silver Surfer?
A: I always thought he was interesting because he was always alone,
having to save the world, no matter how reluctant he was. I did not really have
a big comic book interest in my early years the way a lot of kids did. But if
I had to reach back and pull out one comic book it would be the Silver Surfer
for sure.
Q: Who are your heroes?
A: I have always said that they are my mom and dad. It might sound
like a cliché but it is no less true. They way they raised us –
I take my hat off to them. They are definitely the people that I try to emulate.
If I feel that I have their approval for my actions then I think that at least
I am on the right track.
Q: Your father was a heart surgeon. Didn’t he want you to have
a career in medicine?
A: He never really pushed me in that direction and I didn’t show
a proclivity for that sort of environment. School never really came easy to
me. I always struggled. I was good at maths and science but everything else
fell by the wayside. I was a classic case of not applying myself and getting
into trouble. He would have been happy if I had gone into medicine but he was
just as happy that I went into something where I would do my best at it…whether
I succeeded or not.
Q: You work in film and TV. Is there much difference nowadays?
A: The medium has changed. Television is just as likely to turn out
quality as the movies. There is just as good writing on television as there
is anywhere else and the budgets are appropriate. We spend somewhere between
$3m and $4m an episode on Heroes. So if you look at that over a season it would
be like having a $250 m opening night for a movie. It is all relative but the
work is good and the people are very talented.
Q: Do you think that Heroes might one day become a movie?
A: Would it work on the big screen? I think it would. I think it would
be a great opportunity for these characters to be further drawn. But it would
have to be very carefully handed and Tim Kring would be a wonderful person to
helm it.
Q: Do you offer ideas for the development of your character in Heroes?
A: I have and I suggested a huge one which they have bitten on and I can’t
tell you what it is. So I have contributed and there is a big one coming soon.
But the best part of having Heroes is the other opportunities it affords me.
I have written and directed a musical called Atlanta – about romance and
racism against a backdrop of the American Civil War, it’s not unlike Les
Miserables – which is opening in Los Angeles in three weeks. I am head
over heels about that and hope we come to London’s West End.


