Blood gushes in HBO’s new vampire series

  • By Kinney Littlefield Associated Press
  • Friday, August 29, 2008 4:11pm
  • Life

CALABASAS, Calif. — As fictional lovers go, bubbly blond Sookie Stackhouse and tall, pale Bill Compton are as massively mismatched as they come.

After all, Sookie (Anna Paquin) is exuberantly human and Bill (Stephen Moyer) is, well, totally undead in HBO’s flamboyant new vampire saga, “True Blood.”

“Bill is really genteel but that doesn’t stop him from being blood-hungry,” Moyer said of his menacing 173-year-old character in “True Blood,” adapted for television by Alan Ball (“Six Feet Under”) from the popular series of Southern vampire novels by Charlaine Harris.

“The tension between Bill and Sookie is quite palpable,” Moyer said in between scenes in which the courtly vampire, who fought for the Confederacy in the Civil War, escorts his lady friend Sookie, a telepathic roadhouse waitress, home on a dark and eerie night.

That sexually suggestive tension is key to “True Blood,” premiering 9 p.m. Sunday.

Set in a small Louisiana town (actually the Santa Monica Mountains northwest of Los Angeles), the edgy series chronicles a time when synthetic blood supplies enable Bill and other vampires to live openly among humans, without necessarily feeding on them.

Like Barnabas Collins (Jonathan Frid) in the classic vampire soap opera “Dark Shadows” (1966-1971), Bill has returned to his ancestral home, where he woos Sookie and tries to fit into human society.

Like Frid’s Barnabas, Moyer’s Bill is an unresolved paradox — part seductive protagonist, part menacing monster.

“He’s not typically vampiric,” said Moyer, who played a vampire in the Brit miniseries “Ultraviolet.”

No long black cape and ghoulish grin for Bill, who dresses yuppie-casual.

“But we do get to see him sort of sex-starved at one point,” Moyer said. “And there are moments when he is quite confrontational with other vampires, when other people are predatory with Sookie.”

“True Blood” also pushes the content boundaries of premium cable, with plenty of extravagantly gushing arteries and over-the-top bedroom antics to rival Showtime’s “Californication” — all mixed with a good dose of Southern gothic goofiness.

Ball was looking to produce “lighter” fare after the life-and-death introspection of critically acclaimed “Six Feet Under.”

“Charlaine has just created this amazing world that’s funny and vibrant and scary and also a sort of social treatise, you know what I mean?” Ball said.

“The books are violent and that’s part of the appeal,” he said. “It’s visceral and predatory and unapologetically sexual. And it’s unapologetically romantic in the sense of an old-fashioned romance novel.”

The centuries-old vampire metaphor is “also about the terrors of intimacy, and about any kind of misunderstood, hated, feared minority — homosexuals, other cultures,” Ball said. “When I first pitched ‘True Blood’ to HBO, I called it ‘popcorn TV for smart people.’”

Still, vampire series are not always surefire. Last season, CBS spiked “Moonlight,” despite its loyal following for undead hero Mick St. John (Alex O’Loughlin).

Like “Moonlight,” “True Blood” plays on the thrill of a vampire-human hookup. But the mechanics of Bill and Sookie’s romance proved tricky for Moyer and Paquin during filming.

“You do get fangs caught in places,” Paquin said, remembering her first lip lock with Bill’s lethal teeth, which pop down when he’s lost in bloodlust.

Although Ball says his series “is true to the spirit of the novels,” there are differences: Ball has given Sookie a female best friend and confidante named Tara (Rutina Wesley).

And, he has expanded the characters of the roadhouse’s gay short-order cook, Lafayette (Nelsan Ellis), and Sookie’s bumbling and sexually indefatigable brother Jason (Ryan Kwanten).

“They’ve given me some really outrageous story lines,” Kwanten said. “Jason just jumps into things before he thinks about them. He thinks he’s Louisiana’s answer to Casanova. Any reservations or inhibitions I had before starting the show have well and truly gone now — in a good way.”

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