
photograph by Jill Greenberg

Photo by Jill Greenberg | Clothing: Boss by Hugo Boss (henley), Joe's Jeans (pants), Jockey (T-shirt)
MacFarlane has handed off the day-to-day control of both American Dad and The Cleveland Show, and he is increasingly delegating on Family Guy. He reviews all the drawings and obsesses more than a little over the music -- there is some stuff he just can't give up. And what's easy to forget is that MacFarlane is also the star of Family Guy. Actually, several stars of Family Guy. He voices three of the six main characters, and is in virtually every scene, sometimes playing several parts at once. He's also the voice of Quagmire, a major secondary player, and hundreds of ancillary characters and one-timers. And, of course, he's the voice of Stan, the lead on American Dad, and almost certain to guest-star often on The Cleveland Show. This summer, he showed up as a voice actor in Guillermo del Toro's Hellboy II and is very soon planning to step in front of the camera in live-action projects. He also intends to direct movies.
One afternoon in August, MacFarlane and two sound engineers are in the tiny control room outside the recording booths in the Family Guy offices. In strolls the actor Gary Cole wearing shorts and sunglasses. For a show that likes to pick on celebrities, Family Guy has little trouble attracting them, especially those whose résumés include the kind of wonderfully awful performances that ultimately get embraced as cult in-jokes: Drew Barrymore, Haley Joel Osment, Gene Simmons, Bob Costas, Phyllis Diller ... Michael Clarke Duncan was in earlier this morning. Richard Dreyfuss is due to arrive this evening.
Cole has done the show 23 times. Today, he's doing Mike Brady, reprising a role he played in The Brady Bunch Movie. In this script, Mr. Brady is verbally abusing Mrs. Brady in one of those trademark pop-culture tangents.
"You know, you can really go as loud as you want," MacFarlane says in director mode. "We've never heard Mike Brady yell before, so this is new territory." He then assumes the role of Carol Brady.
"Huh, I don't remember asking for a warm beer," Cole says, his voice quiet but seething.
MacFarlane, as Carol, flips out: "I didn't want to quit working -- you made me!"
Five minutes later, Cole exits and MacFarlane is off to the next thing, laying down lines in furious fashion, typically in three or four takes, which he then selects from on the fly. His sound engineers tag his favorite takes and move on. He swaps from voicing Stewie to Peter to Quagmire to various odd parts, including a bit as Paul McCartney and another as Vince Vaughn.
Next up: A writer is doing Patrick Swayze, who is not, as you might expect, the butt of a cancer joke, but rather a tight-jeans joke followed by repeated takes of the writer growling, as throaty redneck Swayze, "Roadhouse!" It's another one of those cult jokes, a little snippet of Dada theater.
"Even a hair more badass," MacFarlane directs, and over and over they go until that one simple word becomes absurd in its own right. You can already hear it as a ring tone.
Josh Dean wrote about the legal woes of Bodog CEO Calvin Ayre in July/August.
Recent Comments | 19 Total
October 29, 2008 at 8:25am by Ilya Bodner
From a business owner point of view MacFarlane is a brilliant mind. He was able to utilize his strengths to create something that no one company can stripped away. I think I can speak for the rest of us small business owners - Bravo!
Sincerely,
Ilya Bodner
Small Business Owner
Initial Underwriting Group
October 29, 2008 at 11:39pm by Jim Robinson
As a family operated home-based business, I can really appreciate the talent and the hard work of MacFarlane. I will be watching his career.
Thanks for reading.
Jim Robinson
jim@mortgageinsurancerefunds.com
http://mortgageinsurancerefunds.com
February 24, 2009 at 8:20pm by Ken Hommel
April 24, 2009 at 11:17pm by Atrian Wagner
Great article! It was nice being able to read about the kind of person MacFarlane is; I wish I could be as multitalented as him.