A Likable Villain
- Share via
“I’ve done the bad guy a few times,” says Glenn Plummer, who turns in an electrifying performance as troubled teen-age comic-book aficionado descending into madness in Casey Kurtti’s “Three Ways Home” at the Los Angeles Theatre Center.
In the film “Colors,” Plummer played a gang member. In “The Women of Brewster Place,” he was Lonette McKee’s rapist. And there was a recurring role on “L.A. Law” as a two-time cop-killer.
“But I’ve also been able to do some nice things,” the actor says. “I played a dope dealer with a conscience on ‘China Beach.’ And on ‘War Stories’ (HBO), I played a Tennessee youth who’s wounded in the war--a very bright, bubbly fellow. Of course, he dies at the end.”
It’s something Plummer’s characters have a tendency to do. “It’s true,” the actor, 27, says with a laugh. “Father Clements Story,” “China Beach,” “L.A. Law,”--they all died.”
The Northern California native credits first director Oji Blackston “with teaching me everything I know about acting-- because he knew me . Up till then, I was studying, but I hadn’t auditioned for anything. I was still thinking, ‘Well this might be something I could do--or maybe not.’ ”
Nowadays, the aspirations are slightly higher. “If I had my way,” Plummer says cheerfully, “I’d like to have a long and illustrious career. And then I’d open a school for, say, 5- to 15-year-olds, and teach cultural anthropology: Give the kids a better look at people--and maybe erase some of the prejudice that exists in our world today.
“I don’t want to sound like a radical. I don’t think loving is a radical thing at all; it’s what my mother taught me. I think everyone should be taught it--to the point where it’s almost like a religion. To the point where I can walk down the street and a woman sees me and doesn’t grab her purse and take a few steps away from me. In my school, you’d learn how to trust people. I don’t think that’s a bad goal. And it’s something I can work on my entire life.”
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.