Lorne (Angel)

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Lorne

Andy Hallett as Lorne
First appearance "Judgement"
Last appearance After the Fall
Created by Joss Whedon
Statistics
Name Krevlornswath "Lorne" of the Deathwok Clan
Affiliation None, formerly Wolfram & Hart Entertainment and Public Relations Division, Angel Investigations, and Caritas
Notable powers Lorne has:
  • Deathwok anagogic abilities allow him to sense and read people's auras, and their futures. He uses this power to set them on their path in life. He can also read their thoughts and sense their emotions when he does this. His powers evolved in a way that he is only capable of doing this when people sing or are in extreme emotional distress.
  • Deathwok physiology grants him immunity to intoxicating effects of normal alcohol (but he is affected by certain magical brews), superhuman hearing, and the ability to survive beheading and removal of limbs (unless his body is mutilated)
  • Capable of emitting high-pitched shrieks in frequencies painful to human beings and of such intensity that it can shatter glass for as long as he wishes
  • Capable of hearing certain transmission frequencies
Portrayed by  Andy Hallett

Krevlornswath "Lorne" of the Deathwok Clan, also known as "The Host", is a fictional character created by Joss Whedon for the cult television series Angel. The character is portrayed by Andy Hallett.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Character history

Lorne was born as Krevlornswath of the Deathwok Clan in the demonic dimension of Pylea. Lorne, as he preferred to be called, wasn't like his fellow Deathwok clan demons, bloodthirsty "champions" constantly undertaking quests against evil. He was a gentle soul who did not share his kin's prejudice against humans (or "cows" as they were called in his world). Lorne would rather flirt with the female demons and enjoy life than train to be a fighter. He also enjoyed beauty, art, and even music, which was difficult considering his world had no music. Lorne refused to train his innate mystical senses to learn to hunt beasts and was considered the shame of his clan.

In 1996, Lorne happened upon a dimensional portal and was sucked through it. He landed in Los Angeles, and discovered music and culture like he never imagined. Lorne learned to hone his mystical senses to read people's auras, but found it easiest to do so when they sang, baring their souls. He decided to open up a karaoke bar on the same spot that he arrived on Earth, an old abandoned building. Lorne contracted the Transuding Furies to cast a sanctuary spell on the spot, which stopped any demon violence from occurring on it. He named the bar "Caritas," the Latin word for "mercy."

Caritas became a success in the morally ambiguous Los Angeles underground scene. To most who visited the bar, Lorne was simply called "The Host." He later states that he didn't use the name "Lorne" in this dimension, because his striking green skin prompted people to make Lorne Greene jokes.

Lorne is always reluctant to help Angel and the other heroes of the series, preferring to maintain a neutral stance and simply provide a peaceful place for all demons, but his essential goodness usually wins out over his reticence. He starts off by giving the characters advice and encouragement, but as time goes on, he becomes more directly involved in the cases of Angel Investigations- even asking for Angel's help to avert the end of the world when Angel had severed ties with the rest of the group after Darla's resurrection- and his many contacts in Los Angeles' magical underworld prove useful. Lorne somewhat reluctantly joins the team in their mission to Pylea to rescue Cordelia, discovering that he could incapacitate the natives by singing songs and causing them to cower from "the strange noise." On leaving, he decides that returning to Pylea had been good for him as it had reaffirmed that he did not belong there and was right to stay away.

In Season Three of Angel, Caritas is raided by Charles Gunn's old gang and it is temporarily put out of action, finally being completely destroyed by Daniel Holtz. After that, Lorne finds himself becoming far more attached to the AI team, and he often looks after the infant Connor while Angel is on business. Eventually, he leaves to start a singing career in Las Vegas, Nevada, but leaves after a crime lord forces him to use his empathic abilities to locate audience members with promising futures so he can steal them. Back in L.A. after being rescued by Angel, Gunn and Fred, Lorne helps restore Cordelia's lost memories and is part of the fight against the resulting Jasmine crisis.

In the show's fifth and final season, Lorne finds himself the new head of Wolfram & Hart's Entertainment Division, at first fitting into the job with relative ease and making various business deals in the film industry. As time goes on, his kindness is slowly replaced by a growing cynicism and self-loathing of his position of "cheerleader" for Angel and his friends, particularly when Gunn is abandoned in a Hell dimension to recover Lindsey McDonald because Lindsey could possess information they needed; Lorne had always assumed that they didn't leave anyone behind.

When his close friend Fred is murdered and her body usurped by the Old One known as Illyria, Lorne becomes filled with despair which he keeps secret from the rest of his equally heartbroken friends. By the conclusion of the series, he announces that he is leaving Los Angeles after carrying out his part in Angel's plan to destroy the Circle of the Black Thorn. When Lorne learns what his part is to be, he tells Angel "I'll do this last thing for you, for us... but then I'm out, and you won't find me in the alley afterwards. Hell, you won't find me at all. Do me a favor. Don't try." Lorne's part is to betray and murder longtime enemy-turned-ally Lindsey, who in his final words mutters at the unfairness of being killed by Lorne, a 'flunky', and not his longtime rival Angel.

In his final scene, after shooting Lindsey with a silenced pistol, a disgusted and broken Lorne walks off into the darkness. He drops the gun and simply says "Goodnight, folks" as he leaves.

In Angel: After the Fall, he is the Lord of Silver Lake. He tries to make his territory a Heaven in Hell.

[edit] Powers and abilities

Lorne can read people's auras, and their futures, whilst they are singing. He uses this power to set them on their path in life. Lorne can also read their thoughts and emotions when he does this, although he has shown an ability to read basic details about auras even without singing. He has excellent hearing, and can hear outside the normal human range. Lorne seems to be immune to the intoxicating effects of normal alcohol, but is affected by certain magical brews. He can also generate tones painful to human hearing, and at the right frequency to cause light bulbs to shatter and spark. Unique to his clan is the ability to survive the complete removal of his limbs and even beheading, unless his body is mutilated after the dismemberment.

In the episode "Life of the Party," Lorne's lack of sleep causes his subconscious to use his powers differently. Instead of reading destinies, he starts to write them, granting him a sort of mind control/suggestion power. He inadvertently transforms Spike into a super-positive person, makes Wesley and Fred act drunk despite Fred having had nothing and Wesley having barely had half a beer, Gunn urinate all over the Wolfram & Hart building (he had told Gunn to "stake out his territory," and Gunn responded by marking his territory in a manner similar to animals), and influences Angel to have sex with Eve after commenting on the sexual tension between the two. His subconscious, unable to cope with the conflicts Lorne usually handled in his sleep, then manifests as an astral projection which possessed super-strength, resembling a Hulked-out version of Lorne that attacked those who had angered Lorne recently, such as a demon who arrived at the party wearing a human's face as a costume. These powers were lost when Lorne's ability to sleep returns to him.

[edit] Romantic relationships

Lorne never embarked on any notable romantic relationships during his time on the show. Despite the character's flirting with Angel (and, to a lesser extent, nearly every main character on the show), the series never made any explicit claims about Lorne's sexuality, and Andy Hallett himself intentionally left it vague, saying that Lorne loved "all humans." The fact that Lorne is from an alternate dimension where even his own mother looks masculine and has a beard suggests our societal structures of gender and sexuality may not really apply. However, Lorne confesses an attachment to Fred in the episode "Underneath", when he states he "started drinking when I found out that a girl I loved was going to die". It was never clearly established whether his love for her was romantic or platonic.

[edit] Appearances

[edit] Canonical Appearances

Lorne has appeared in 78 canonical Buffyverse appearances.

Angel

Lorne became a series regular in the Season Four episode, "Release" and continued as a regular character until the end of season five. He appeared in 76 episodes overall. He has made guest appearances in the episodes:

Angel: After the Fall

[edit] Non-Canonical Appearances

Books & comics 
Lorne has appeared in several (non-canon) extensions of the Buffyverse, his major appearances are in the following stories:
Languages