Hes not really bald, so dont even ask. And if you think playing Superman's
nemesis, Lex Luthor, is the extent of his acting range, you're sadly mistaken.
Read our interview with Smallville star, Michael Rosenbaum.
Michael,
how you doing?
Ugh, yeah.
You
sound pretty tired, man.
Oh man, they got me working around the horn.
Anything
exciting you can tell us about the next few episodes?
Well, I guess Lex
steps over the line.
Again?
Yeah,
but he does it with the wrong person this time, and people just find out some
of his motives and what hes up to. He cant really lie his way out
of this one.
Well, hes got to turn into the nefarious villain sooner
or later.
Thats what Im saying. In fact, theres a scene in
the last episode where he loses himself for a minute, which had been building
up. In the wedding episode, five minutes before he gets married, Lex kills this
guy below the church in the basement, and then five minutes later, walks up the
stairs and gets married. But thats just Lex Luthor. Inevitably, hes
going to become evil, but hes still fighting it.
The
last few seasons have revolved less around villains falling into the same body
of water, getting mutated by kryptonite and attacking the town. The episodes seemed
to have shifted into more complex ideas.
I
think that was really the turning point, when we stopped doing the 'freak of the
week'. I mean, when youre doing 22 episodes a year, you sometimes have to
go that route. But, I think people got tired of it. We found what worked and we
worked more on character and focused on Lex Luthors future and why he becomes
who he is. I think fans like it.
He
has to change eventually.
Its great. Kids are a little more frightened,
and they look at me like, Oh my god
he really is a bad guy! Thats
kind of cool. I like to scare a kid every once in a while.
When
you were a kid, you couldnt have possibly seen yourself as a Lex Luthor.
No
way. I remember being a little kid with Superman Underoos, flying up the stairs
and acting like an idiot. I never thought I would be the bad guy. The irony is,
I was always thought of as the funny guy, all through college, doing sitcoms and
doing stand-up. I always thought that is what would get me known and somehow,
I land one of the most serious parts on TV. Once they shaved my head, the eyebrow
kind of lifted up, and it changed everything.
How
many interviews do you do that start of with a question about the hair?
It
used to be the very first question they would ask. For the first year or two,
I think I liked it, but Im ready to grow it back for good. I have to be
one of the youngest characters on TV to be bald. Can you think of any?
Nope.
Also,
its not just shaving my head, but wearing three layers of makeup so you
cant see the hairline. Ive definitely become a little burnt out from
it. One time, I was so bored in the makeup trailer that I actually added up my
time in the chair and it was like 600 or 700 hours over the course of six years.
Thats pretty wild.
There
must be a little worry every season that after shaving it and not seeing it for
so long, that there would be less of it there.
That would be the worst
thing ever.
Wouldnt
it be ironic? You may literally turn into Lex Luthor.
Oh man, I would be
crushed. I would have to go and get the transplant. I cant walk around lie
that.
It
would probably pigeonhole you as Lex for the rest of your life.
That it
would, but thats the good thing about being bald right now, is that everyone
associates me with Lex.
Youd
think that in season two or three, they could have had Lex fall into the pond
with all the meteor rocks and all of a sudden, he comes out with a full head of
hair.
I wanted to do that. I went through every scenario. I was like, Hey,
come on! This is Lex Luthor! Look at Gene Hackman. He wore wigs in all the Superman
movies, and they were like Yeah, but thats later and that was
a little cheesy and we dont want you to be cheesy. We want you to be real.
I went through everything, believe me.