by Rob Kendt - Back Stage West
Best known for: ABC's "Alias," on which he plays Marcus Dixon,
the stalwart sidekick on superspy Sydney Bristow's (Jennifer Garner)
far-flung operations. Agent Dixon is a mystery wrapped in an enigma.
For one, he's "very hooded and shrouded," said Lumbly. "You only find
out about him what you need to know." But Dixon himself doesn't know
a big secret: that the company he and Sydney work for is in fact a
renegade intelligence agency fighting against the CIA. "It's
perverse, but I love that," said Lumbly. "As an actor, it's about as
juicy as you can get." Specifically, he gets off on Dixon's "living a
lie" to his own wife, who thinks he's an investment banker. "But who
goes off on a business trip and comes back with three bullet wounds?"
Bug Bites Reporter: Raised in Minnesota by Jamaican
immigrants, Lumbly was working as an AP reporter in the early 1970s
when he covered an improv group in St. Paul. He thought auditioning
for the troupe would make a good angle for his story; he ended up
working with the company for two years. The appeal? "What they were
doing hadn't been written _ it was happening right there," Lumbly
recalled. "It was curious. It was like a writing form more than
anything."
First big break: He moved to San Francisco and saw a want ad
seeking "two black actors ... for South African political plays." He
went to audition for Athol Fugard's "Sizwe Bansi Is Dead" and "The
Island" and met the director, Robert Woodruff, and co-star, Danny
Glover. After a run at the Eureka Theatre, the two took the show on
tour. Said Lumbly, "That was the play in which I realized I truly
wanted to do this."
V or not TV: Before "Alias" he'd recurred on "Cagney & Lacey"
and landed some memorable roles: "To Sleep With Anger," "Nightjohn,"
TNT's "Buffalo Soldiers." He also went through the TV wringer, first
with 1992's "Going To Extremes," from producer Joshua Brand
of "Northern Exposure" fame, about medical students training -- in
Jamaica. "I thought at the time, This is it, this is a dream come
true." It lasted three episodes. "M.A.N.T.I.S.," about a scientist-
superhero, lasted a short season on the Sci-Fi channel. "It's like
alchemy," said Lumbly. "You always know when you're onto something
good, but you don't necessarily know upfront what will serve as a
hit. I never feel wildly disappointed, but also I'm never really
prepared for it when it happens."
"Alias" was "singular" from the start, Lumbly said, particularly the
lead, Jennifer Garner: "She has an almost retro ingenue quality.
Somehow she was raised in such a way that she comes to the world
without a lot of preconceptions about how she's supposed to comport
herself. She looks people in the eye when she speaks. Whatever star
quality is, she has it." He admires the show's emotional
truthfulness, if not its realism: "I mean, open-heart surgery in a
speeding ambulance? At that point I just have to say, I don't believe
it could be done, but if it could be done, it would look something
like this."
Lumbly also starred in a new version of "Sounder," about a Depression-
era sharecropping family in Louisiana, that aired Jan. 19 on "The
Wonderful World of Disney." Lumbly's performance as the family's hard-
driving patriarch helped to leaven the telefilm's sentimentality.
Against type: Often cast as serious, taciturn, even
traumatized men _ we recall his heartbreaking turn in "Jitney" at the
Taper _ Lumbly said in real life he's "a relatively whimsical
individual. I like art, I love music, I love to get dirty out in the
garden. I'm trying to stave off getting old as much as possible, so
I'm very active, probably more than I should be." He lives in
Berkeley with his wife, actor Vonetta McGee, and their 14-year-old
son. Marriage, he joked, helps him bring some "world-weariness" to
his characters; his son keeps him "in the present tense."
His biggest challenge: As a theatre-trained black actor, he's
had the usual frustrations with audition feedback
like "more "street"' or "blacker." But he's philosophical about
it: "I'm a runner, and I love to run in regional parks, often where
people walk their dogs. I hate to get dog mess on my running shoes,
but sometimes when you run in the park, it happens. That's where the
dog mess is. And if it happens, you rub it off your shoes; you don't
stop running."
© BPI Entertainment News Wire 2003
Back To All About Alias 2003