OPINION

Reflections of a Recidivist Fangirl

Written by Barbara Barnett
Published November 05, 2007
page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5

Yes, as time marched, Mr. Right did eventually materialize (sans English accent). Pregnant with our daughter, I convinced my husband that we absolutely “must have” a VCR to playback the ultrasound tapes so kindly provided by our OB. With the acquisition of the ridiculously expensive VHS player, a whole new world now lay open to me. Not only could we experience the joy of observing our 20-week-old fetus of a child swimming round in my amniotic fluid, but now I had the ability to record actual television shows. And hit that little “rewind” button over and over to re-watch the salient moments again and again (and again). Life was bliss. But I was between shows. Oh, we watched Barney Miller and Night Court and whatever else was popular in the mid-'80s. But it was a casual relationship with television at best in those days.

Now, I’ve always had a thing for secret agents of the fictional variety. Like Pym in John Lecarre’s A Perfect Spy, they tend to be a pretty dark and tormented bunch of fellows. So here it was 1985, and into my living room television walks the tall and lanky Bruce Boxleitner, who hands a package to suburban housewife, drawing her into mystery, intrigue and eventual romance. And thus did Lee Stetson, the “Scarecrow” in Scarecrow and Mrs. King become my next TV crush.

His bravado and cocky self-confidence could not completely conceal the torment that lay behind those green eyes. I knew better. As did Amanda (Mrs. King) and millions of other women. The VCR had made it now possible to obsess over the intense sexual tension that crackled between the two main characters. Inspecting and dissecting it, hitting “replay” over and over to catch every nuance and furtive, longing gaze. Their careful and slow dance drew out enticingly over four seasons. During season three and early season four, the reticent Scarecrow drew ever closer to the practical and outgoing Mrs. King. Pieces of Scarecrow’s painful past came to light, stripping away his well-preserved macho façade, and exposing a heart-breaking vulnerability. Unfortunately, the sexual tension vanished into a silly storyline of a secret marriage depriving Scarecrow of his angst; his brooding vulnerability giving way to a slightly henpecked domesticity. Well, Scarecrow, nice knowin’ ya, but… Cruel, I know. But, as mom told me, I’m simply capricious to the core.

Fortunately, 1987 brought the brooding back to Bond as Shakespearian actor Timothy Dalton took on the role of MI-5 agent 007 in The Living Daylights (and again in 1989 in License to Kill). Now that was more like it, after years of Roger Moore’s too-lightweight take on Ian Fleming’s dark, self-destructive hero. And I had my new crush. In the meantime, technology blazed ahead at light-years per minute, creating more venues for in which to tend to my addiction.

We now had our first real computer, a blazing IBM XT (complete with a gigantic 10 megabyte hard drive.) I mean no disrespect to our trusty Commodore 64, which got both my husband and I through graduate school with its 64K of memory and cassette tape drive. After all, that computer linked us to the mammoth IBM 370’s at U of I enabling us to play endless hours of the classic text game “Adventure” in between seasons of Hill Street Blues, St. Elsewhere and Night Court. But I digress.

page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5
Barbara Barnett grew up on politics and pop culture. Her professional life has been ecclectic and eccentric, having acquired university degrees in biology, Political Science and Public Policy. Her real passions are writing, music, reading sad novels and spy novels, and discussing House MD, and its star Hugh Laurie.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
Reflections of a Recidivist Fangirl
Published: November 05, 2007
Type: Opinion
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Television, Video: SF, Video: Drama, Video: Cult, Sci/Tech: Internet, Culture: Personal History, Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: Classics
Writer: Barbara Barnett
Barbara Barnett's BC Writer page
Barbara Barnett's personal site
Spread the Word
Like this article?
Email this
Submit to del.icio.us Save to del.icio.us
RSS Feeds
All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
BC articles by Barbara Barnett
Video: Television
Video: SF
Video: Drama
Video: Cult
Sci/Tech: Internet
Culture: Personal History
Books: Literature and Fiction
Books: Classics
All Video Articles
All Opinion articles
All BC articles
All BC Comments

Comments

#1 — November 5, 2007 @ 10:28AM — grigorisgirl [URL]

Only the other day I was trying to explain my Bezuhov/Hopkin "thing" to somebody on-line and now I find him at the top of the page!

Kuryakin, Rochester, Dalton, Rickman, we must have been seperated at birth!

#2 — November 5, 2007 @ 10:39AM — Barbara Barnett [URL]

I have found (especially in the last couple of years) that a lot of women have followed a similar set of actors. I can post a comment making reference to Illya on a House, MD or a Hugh Laurie fan message board, only to have 15 people acknowledging that they, too, had a "thing" for Illya. My reason for writing this blog was to try to make some sense out of that exact phenomenon!

Barbara

#3 — November 5, 2007 @ 10:48AM — sdemar

Barbara, I, too, loved Illya Kuryakin and Spock. I even attended a Star Trek convention so I could meet LN. Luke, of General Hospital, was another one that tugged at my heart. And now, Hugh Laurie, and those beautiful blue eyes of his. He makes me sigh. You are in good company, my friend.

#4 — November 5, 2007 @ 22:01PM — genagirl

I hear you, Sister! My fictional boyfriends began with Jack Wilde on H.R. Puffenstuff (his cute accent made me fall in love with Brits for the next 40 years). I still get a kick out of David McCallum on NCIS though I was a Napoleon fan and my obsession with Hugh Laurie and House is as great as yours. What can you do, they're always sexy, complicated and usually wounded, they never make messes and they leave you alone when you turn off the TV set - the perfect man.

#5 — November 5, 2007 @ 22:11PM — Barbara Barnett [URL]

Thanks Sdemar!

Genagirl--You are so right. No muss/no fuss. Perfect men. It's funny how our tastes are established so early on. When I look back and think of how young I was when my attraction to a specific male type began, it's pretty bizarre. I don't think the same can be said for my daughter (although I don't know for sure).

But oh, my. Jack Wilde on HR Puffenstuff. Wasn't he also in the original Oliver! cast? I seem to recall something about that. But it's been (sigh) 40 years?

barbara

#6 — November 5, 2007 @ 23:35PM — Louise

Dear Sister Barbara,

You do have exquisite taste. I really thought I was past all this intense absorption until the additively fascinating Hugh Laurie brought his talents to House. But, I tend to be loyal--or obsessed--I just purchased a DVD to keep watching Peter O'Toole in Lawrence of Arabia--the VHS tape wore out. Ah, there along with Rochester is a prototypical wounded hero.

Louise

#7 — November 6, 2007 @ 08:57AM — Judy

ditto, ditto, ditto! I have found my true family!! welcome home girls!

#8 — November 6, 2007 @ 08:57AM — Barbara Barnett [URL]

But, I tend to be loyal--or obsessed--I just purchased a DVD to keep watching Peter O'Toole in Lawrence of Arabia--the VHS tape wore out. Ah, there along with Rochester is a prototypical wounded hero.



I did the same thing with the BBC Jane Eyre. And of course I absolutely HAD to have both the UK and US versions of Maybe Baby (with Hugh Laurie). And then get a region decoder for my computer so that I could watch the Region 2 version (and the director/actor commentary track with Hugh and Ben Elton)...ah, what we do for our men!

#9 — November 6, 2007 @ 11:12AM — iamdaffodils

My name is Cathy and I'm a Hugh-holic. Excellent blog Barbara! And yes, another Ilya Kurakin fan here. I was probably about 6 or 7 when Man From Uncle started. I never understood how anyone could have a crush on Napoleon Solo - there was just no comparison as far as I was concerned. I even had an Ilya Kurakin doll with the gun that really worked! Wish I still had that.

My first three childhood crushes were Richard Chamberlain, David McCallum and Davy Jones, so I had a thing for British accents early on - (Chamberlain moved to England after Kildare ended, so he had one too at one point!)

But back to the topic at hand - Mr. Laurie makes me feel like I'm back in grade school again. He's definitely the best crush I've ever had - even though I'm WAY told old to be a fan girl. What's the cutoff age on that by the way?

Cathy

#10 — November 6, 2007 @ 11:28AM — Barbara Barnett [URL]

Hi Cathy,

I'm "sasmom" on a fan forum which we both well (I think, anyway!)

I had an Illya doll too! And my older (musician) brother made me my own transmitter out of a 1/4 inch amplifier jack!

But, as you say, back to the subject at hand (and although this essay isn't part of "Welcome to the End of the Thought Process" my House feature here on BlogCritics, it's certainly the source it is certainly related to it). Hugh Laurie's splendid, nuanced and emotional portrayal of the (supposedly) unemotional Gregory House certainly spawned this most recent (and long-lasting) crush.

As far as an age cutoff, I'm ancient at 52, so... I say there is no age cutoff to this particular sisterhood!

barbara

#11 — November 6, 2007 @ 11:57AM — iamdaffodils

Hi Barbara! Yes I'm quite familiar with (like practically live there!) that particular fan forum (and the one we used to post at too - not sure if you still do since I quit going there). I always love your insight and analyses. You wrote such an amazing one for S3 - made me realize things that as many time as I've watched those episodes, had never thought about, and I understood the journey from Meaning to Human Error.

That is so cool that your brother made you a trasmitter! My brother is 6 years older so he was a teen and really into Man From Uncle back in the day...of course he watched it for very different reasons than I did!!!!

I like that you describe House as "supposedly" unemotional because we know how untrue it is to call him unemotional, or when someone says he doesn't care about a patient. We've had too many scenes of him in the hallway silently, intently watching his patients. We know better. Another thing I dislike is when he's described as a grouch or cranky. To me that's just too easy a label to put on the character. He's far more complex and layered to be explained away with an adjective. As he told Stella in Need To Know, "I'm complicated. Chicks dig that." Oh yeah!!!

Oh and glad to know there's not an age cutoff on fangirlhood - I'm 50 and so happy to be in the sisterhood of Hughlovers!

#12 — November 6, 2007 @ 12:30PM — Barbara Barnett [URL]

I like that you describe House as "supposedly" unemotional because we know how untrue it is to call him unemotional, or when someone says he doesn't care about a patient. We've had too many scenes of him in the hallway silently, intently watching his patients. We know better. Another thing I dislike is when he's described as a grouch or cranky. To me that's just too easy a label to put on the character. He's far more complex and layered to be explained away with an adjective. As he told Stella in Need To Know, "I'm complicated. Chicks dig that." Oh yeah!!!


The "supposedly" was placed in there for just the reason you describe so well. I've always contended that rather than House not being able to "feel," he actually "feels" too much. His attitude, the walls he puts up and the other defenses he employs are to prevent his feelings from both exposure and from getting in the way of the objective rational problem solving he needs for his job (and his passion.) We've seen House in situations where his emotions are too close to the surface; and like Mr. Spock, his efforts to submerge them behind rationalism and logic sometimes fail. It is then when we get those "moments."

Barbara

#13 — November 6, 2007 @ 15:02PM — iamdaffodils

"His attitude, the walls he puts up and the other defenses he employs are to prevent his feelings from both exposure and from getting in the way of the objective rational problem solving he needs for his job (and his passion.)"

Perfectly said Barbara. He won't ever let anyone catch him caring for exactly the reasons you said. But I would love for them to do an episode where we see him deal with his emotions in the aftermath of a patient's death, a child, who he had bonded with but of course never let on that fact to anyone. There's always fan fiction I guess!

Cathy

Want comments emailed to you? No spam, promise! Address:

Add your comment, speak your mind

(Or ping: http://blogcritics.org/mt/tb/70611)

Personal attacks are not allowed. Please read our comment policy.





Remember Name/URL?

Please preview your comment!

Fresh
Articles
Fresh
Comments