Clancy Brown, the voice of Lex Luthor in Superman: The Animated Series and Justice League, adds another bad guy to his lengthy resume this Saturday.
Brown is voicing Rhino in "The Invisible Hand," a new episode of The Spectacular Spider-Man scheduled to air on Kids' WB! at 10 a.m.
Brown gives credit to the past as an influence on his current rendition of Spider-Man's ultimate brawn-over-brains foe.
"For me, the quintessential thug was played by William Bendix in The Glass Key," Brown says. "The simpler the character, the simpler the thought process. That means Rhino's motivation is never too complicated -- he's very elemental. He's mad or happy or angry or sad or hungry or whatever. And it never gets beyond his appetites or ego.
"His world-view is limited to what's in front of his nose. Hence the name Rhino. The voice and delivery should be as uncomplicated and direct. Bendix does this perfectly in The Glass Key. He doesn't care what Brian Donleavy has up his sleeve or how clever Alan Ladd's insults are. He just knows he wants to beat Ladd to a pulp. Itches that must be scratched and appetites that must be sated."
Brown, whose many credits also include Mr. Freeze iin The Batman, says it's important for him to see the character during the process of creating the voice.
"Rhino is massive and he must have a voice that matches the mass," Brown says. "The producers aren't mixing it up too much in that regard. You could give him a squeaky light voice and play that opposite joke, but that's not what this show is doing right now. By the way, Bendix had a high voice for a tough guy, which seemed to add a complexity to the psychology of his characters -- but he wasn't creating a vocalization."
A tall man with a deep, gravelly voice, Brown has a tendency to be cast as the villain in both live-action and voiceover roles. While his acting goals don't lean toward always playing rogues, Brown is happy to embrace and bring to life whatever characters he's offered.
"I'll play whatever their paying for -- bad guys are fun, but I have no preference," he says. "The only thing I try to remember is that bad guys don't think they are bad. They think they are right."
For The Spectacular Spider-Man producer Greg Weisman and voice/casting director Jamie Thomason, Brown was an easy choice for the role of Rhino.
"We knew Rhino would require a voice with strength and menace, but Rhino also isn't the brightest bulb on the marquee 00 so we knew whoever we cast would also have to have the acting chops and comic timing to take the character beyond the usual dumb goon," Weisman explains. "Jamie and I have both worked often enough with Clancy to know he could nail it. Not only does he have that great tough, low voice, but he knows how to turn on a dime between dangerous and comedic characterizations."