Women in the viewing audience might be somewhat disapppointed, but Forbes March
is not a super hero who wears tights and sports a cape.
Instead, as a genetic-experiment-gone-wonderfully awry in the new sci-fi series
Mutant X. He gets to zip around town in flashy cars wearing what seem to be
regular-guy pants, albeit with spiffy leather jackets.
"You got me to a T. I really wanted to stand in front of the world in tight
biker pants and show my assets to the world," the Halifax-born actor says,
laughing. "We're trying to get some scenes in there where we're all working out
in biker shorts."
A girl can dream, can't she?
The hunky March - who has worked as a model and used his good looks as a regular
on the soap All My Children - is one of four comely "mutants" in the new
series, debuting Saturday at 8 p.m. on Global.
The catch is that the four genetically designed young adults each have a special
power. Jessie Kilmartin, played by March, for example, is able to change the
density of his body, while others have animal strength or electrical power.
John Shea is the fugitive leader of the team - and the one who headed the
experiment that created them. His job is to keep the government from destroying
his creations, while they seek out more of their kind. The group's main enemy
is an Andy Warhol-like dude named Mason Eckhart (Tom McManus), who has a real
hate-on for the mutants and their ilk.
Are you with me so far?
March thinks it's the everyman - or woman - aspect of the high-tech show that
will appeal to viewers.
"I liked the idea that this was going to be a super hero show but where the
characters aren't necessarily super heroes. It's not sort of a Spandex kind of
deal. It's ordinary people who wake up and discover they have super-hero
powers. I thought that was really appealing," he said.
His fellow Canadian actor mutant heros include Lauren Lee Smith as Emma deLauro,
a telepath who's new to the group; Victoria Pratt as Shalimar Fox (yep, that's
right), a "feral beauty" with both animal and human DNA; and Victor Webster as
Brennan Mulwray, a street-wise rebel.
March said the F/X-heavy series, being filmed on a sound stage in north Toronto,
was a tad complicated to work on in the beginning since none of the actors
could visualize how their "powers" would be realized on the screen.
"I had no idea where I was supposed to be acting. I mean what does it look like
when a person becomes very dense?," he said earlier this week in an interview
from Toronto, which is now home for the Halifax-raised actor.
"I don't know. Is it heavy or just hard? And does my character know this? It's
called imagination da-hhling."
March, 28, almost didn't even get that far into the production because he was
initially reluctant to audition for the role.
"The character was originally supposed to split into three different people and
the audition piece was these three different people having a conversation
between themselves," he said.
"But in an audition sitting in a white empty office on a collapsible metal
chair, having a conversation between three people by yourself was a little
daunting."
March obviously got over the fear and landed the role, which was altered to
become someone who can make their body as hard as a wall or pliable as water,
which comes in handy if someone wants to, say, drive a car through you.
The syndicated series has the green light for two seasons, which equals 44
episodes, to be seen here and throughout the U.S. There was an initial legal
challenge to the title of the series with Fox, owners of the X-Men franchise,
suing over use of the similar-sounding name. A court subsequently denied Fox's
petition to ban the use of the Mutant X title, although all press material
makes it clear that the two are in no way related.
March, who left All My Children about a year ago after being on the series for
about a year and a half, said the daytime soap job was demanding but
educational.
"It was fantastic. It was also very difficult, but overall fantastic. It gets
more fantastic the further away I get from it. It's a tough medium," he said.
"You go to school for year and work your tush off and you realize that no
matter how much you studied you can only learn about 10 per cent of what there
is to learn before you step on a set."
As for Mutant X, the actor thinks it's got everything in place to be a
successful series, including stylish sets by the designer of La Femme Nikita
and fight sequences taught by a colleague of Jackie Chan.
"They've really put a really complete package together. I think the fact that
they already had 44 episodes sold gave them a chance to really invest in the
show, without having to say, 'Oh let's see what happens with it first.' "