In
Dark
Shadows episode 212, Barnabas Collins (Jonathan Frid) -- a vampire --
returns for the first time in centuries to his home, Collinwood Mansion. He meets Mrs. Stoddard, and tells her that
his “roots” are there, and, “perhaps,” his “destiny" as well.
Stoddard
is thrilled to meet a relative, a cousin from England, and welcomes Barnabas
with open arms. He is grateful for her hospitality, meets Victoria Winters (Alexandra Moltke) and then
goes to look at the grounds.
Barnabas travels up
to the old house on the hill, and there meets young David Collins (David
Henesy), who tells Barnabas that the house is occupied by many ghosts. A portrait of Josette has eyes that seem to
follow visitors and “the picture glows” even as the air around it “smells like
jasmine.”
Barnabas
seems to understood, and David recognizes that he is “sad,” and that he seems
to “haunt” the rooms of the house, rather than merely walk through them…''
Jonathan
Frid in the role of Barnabas Collins connected to a youthful generation in
America on Dark Shadows (1966 - 1971), and it is easy to see why.
Barnabas is both monster and man, a creature
that inhabits the night and is haunted by his own behavior and choices. Frid once described the character as being in
“terrible agony” and noted that Barnabas
was not unlike a heroin addict, driven to madness by a thirst beyond his
ability to sate. He is a tragic figure, and in many ways, the first tragic TV vampire.
That club later took on new members including Nick Knight, Angel, and Bill Compton. They all owe something to Barnabas, and to Frid's portrayal of the noble monster.
This
episode of the series introduces Barnabas as a primary driving force of the Dan Curtis afternoon
soap opera. Almost immediately, Frid
takes command of his environs, and the series transitions. The sets at Collinwood -- the mansion and so forth -- now seem truly to
belong to Barnabas, an outsider and a man
with secrets,
Barnabas is also a man of regal bearing, and dignity…when he can
maintain it, but given to flights of rage and anger. Somehow, Frid makes it all play as coherent.
There is very much the
possibility that Frid would succumb to some of the more florid dialogue he is
given here, but instead, in this episode at least, the language assists him craft a character quickly. Barnabas seems all the more formal and
mysterious, seeing visions of a world that no longer exists.
Frid
has good focus too. At one point in the episode, the actor playing David badly
flubs a line about oceans and sunsets, and Frid doesn’t react, nor miss a beat.
His focus is laser-like.
The
tragedy of Barnabas Collins begins to come to the forefront in this
episode too. He states it well, describing
how he turned into a creature that "even his father loathed." But this episode of Dark Shadows is also
important because Barnabas makes a choice that affects everyone at Collinwood.
He chooses to fight for what he wants, and what he feels he deserves. He is going
to return to the life he never had…but should have.
Shot
in just one or two locations, and lasting only a half-hour, this Dark Shadows episode, moves
faster than the other two I watched in recent weeks, and coheres because of
Frid’s considerable gravitational pull. He pulls the other actors -- and the audience too -- right into his performance.
No comments:
Post a Comment