Azazel (Supernatural)

Azazel
Supernatural character

Fredric Lehne as Azazel
First appearance "Pilot"
Created by Eric Kripke
Portrayed by Fredric Lehne
Jeffrey Dean Morgan
Lindsey McKeon
Christopher B. MacCabe
Mitch Pileggi
Rob LaBelle
Information
Nickname(s) The Demon
The Yellow-Eyed Demon
Yellow Eyes
Species Demon
Gender Male
Children Meg Masters
Tom

Azazel is a fictional character on The CW Television Network's drama and horror television series Supernatural. He serves as the primary antagonist during the first two seasons. A demon, he feeds his blood to infants so that they will grow up to develop demonic abilities. His endgame of using one such child to release Lucifer is not revealed until much later in the series. Azazel is referred to by nicknames such as "The Demon", "The Yellow-Eyed Demon", or "Yellow Eyes" throughout the first two seasons, his true name not being revealed until the third season. Due to the character's demonic nature of taking different hosts, Azazel has been portrayed by numerous actors, but all have maintained his sadistic sense of humor and Jack Nicholson-like mannerisms. Critics and fans alike have met him with universal praise.

Contents

Biography

The tyrannical leader of the demon world,[1][2] Azazel first appears in the pilot episode of the series, but plot devices such as flashbacks and time travel detail his background in later seasons. His earliest chronological depiction occurs in the fourth season finale, "Lucifer Rising". Having spent years searching, Azazel (Rob LaBelle) finally located the doorway to Lucifer's prison in 1972. The fallen angel tasked him with freeing the demon Lilith from Hell—she is needed to break the 66 seals holding Lucifer captive—and to find him a "special child".[3] By the following year, he began making demonic pacts with young individuals; in exchange for a wish, he would be allowed to enter their homes ten years later. Azazel (Christopher B. MacCabe) eventually comes across Mary Campbell, the future mother of series protagonists Sam and Dean Winchester. After taking possession of her father (Mitch Pileggi), he kills her mother and stabs himself to kill his host. Mary's fiance, John Winchester, is the demon's next victim. However, Azazel makes his usual offer, giving her the chance to resurrect John; she reluctantly agrees.[4]

In 1983, Mary discovers Azazel standing over baby Sam's crib; he had been feeding his blood to the infant.[5] Upon being interrupted, the demon pins her to the ceiling, slashes her stomach and causes her to burst into flames. Mary's death inspires John to dedicate his life to hunting down Azazel, at the same time training Sam and Dean to hunt supernatural creatures.[6] As revealed in the fifth season finale, "Swan Song", Azazel sent demons to possess important people in Sam's life, secretly manipulating him as he grew up.[7] However, Sam eventually leaves the life of hunting to attend college. Azazel orders the assassination of Sam's girlfriend Jess, whose death prompts Sam to return to hunting after leaving the life to attend college.[6]

Because demons cannot be killed by conventional means, the Winchesters track down the Colt—a mystic gun capable of killing anything—in "Dead Man's Blood". In the following episode, "Salvation", they trace the omens caused by the demon's presence to Salvation, Iowa. Like he has done with Sam and countless others, Azazel plans to visit a six-month old and feed it his blood so the child will later develop demonic abilities. Although Sam interrupts the demon's plans and saves the family, Azazel teleports away to avoid being shot. Meanwhile, the demonic Meg Masters and her "brother" Tom kidnap John, and then set their sights on Sam and Dean.[8]

Meg tracks the brothers down in the season finale, but they capture her within the titular devil's trap—mystical symbols capable of rendering a demon powerless—and exorcise her. The real Meg, now dying from previously-sustained injuries, discloses John's location. Sam and Dean rescue him—they are cautious and test him with holy water to make sure he is not possessed—and are forced to kill Tom in the process. After being taken to a secluded location, however, John is revealed to be possessed. An angry Azazel chastises them for killing Meg and Tom—he deems them his "children"—and begins to torture the brothers. John temporarily retakes control, giving Sam the opportunity to grab the Colt. Unable to kill his father, Sam shoots John in the leg, and the demon flees from his host. As the Winchesters make their escape, a demonically-possessed truck driver crashes into their car.[9] Dean is left dying in a coma, forcing John to sell his soul and the Colt to save him. Azazel (Fredric Lehne) takes possession of a Reaper (Lindsey McKeon) and saves Dean from death.[10]

Azazel's last appearance chronologically is in the second season finale "All Hell Breaks Loose", where he kidnaps Sam and the other young adults that he had infected. He visits Sam in a dream, and reveals that his "special children" must fight to the death to determine who will lead his army. Although Sam is the demon's favorite, the super-strong Jake Talley becomes the winner.[5] As Dean sells his soul to another demon in exchange for Sam's resurrection, Azazel gives Jake the Colt and coerces him to travel to a cemetery in the middle of a giant devil's trap. Though Sam and Dean, along with other hunters, attempt to stop him, Jake uses the Colt as a key to unlock a mausoleum there; this action briefly opens a gateway to Hell, releasing Lilith and hundreds of other demons. However, John's soul also escapes, and distracts Azazel long enough for Dean to shoot him dead with the Colt.[11]

Azazel returns in the sixth season premiere, "Exile on Main Street", as an illusion in Dean's mind caused by a poison of the creature he was hunting. Dean sees Azazel killing Lisa like he did his mother and poisoning Ben with demon blood, like he did to his brother.

Characterization

Deeming Azazel to be "an angry soul", actor Fredric Lehne believes that him being "denied Heaven and everything else that's good in the universe" has "[translated] into anger and vengeance".[12] A demon with a sense of humor, he takes pleasure in seeing people suffer. "The more pain—mostly psychological pain—he causes, the happier he is," Lehne explained. "He gets off on the power of turning people to his will." This quality suggests to the actor why the demon favored Sam as the potential leader of his army. Being the "most ripe for picking" because he had the "sweetest" heart, Sam was "most desirable for corrupting" of all the children. "If I could turn him," Lehne noted, "then I had truly won."[13]

Development

Though the writers modeled Azazel's personality after Al Pacino's demonic sense of humor in the film The Devil's Advocate,[15] they gave actor Jeffrey Dean Morgan free rein over the character's mannerisms for "Devil's Trap". Only directed to "be different from John", Morgan changed his voice and mimicked Jack Nicholson's "freaky" speech pattern from The Shining.[16] This "Nicholson-esque quality" continues with actor Fredric Lehne.[17] Though uncertain of why he was specifically sought out—Lehne chalks it up to his previous working experience with executive producers Kim Manners and Robert Singer—the role was offered to him without an audition.[12] The actor avoided copying Morgan's portrayal, but noted that the writing "lends itself to doing it in a certain way".[13] Since Azazel changes human hosts periodically, Lehne's initial appearance in the second season premiere, "In My Time of Dying", was intended to be a one-time deal. Thoroughly impressed, however, the show runners kept him for the season finale.[18] A minor scheduling conflict forced him to film his scenes with Morgan in "All Hell Breaks Loose, Part Two" a month apart using green screen.[13] Despite the character's death, Lehne returned to the role in the sixth season premiere as a hallucination.[19]

A dream sequence in "All Hell Breaks Loose" hints at Mary Winchester's connection to Azazel. Although the writers intended to address this in the third season, it was pushed back to the fourth season episode "In the Beginning" due to the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike.[20] Mitch Pileggi was asked by Kripke to enact this revelation—the two had previously worked together on the series Tarzan—and the actor accepted because Kim Manners and much of the Supernatural crew had also worked on The X-Files.[21] While Pileggi emulated Lehne's performance, he also tried to "put his own spin on it".[22]

Morgan, Lehne, and actress Lindsey McKeon wore hard, colored contact lenses during their portrayals of Azazel. The lenses eventually became painful, and would greatly obscure their vision.[13] The production crew placed sandbags on the floor to help Morgan and Lehne locate their marks,[16][23] and a grip held Lehne's hand as he walked around a campfire in "All Hell Breaks Loose".[13] McKeon's brief scene in "In My Time of Dying"—she touches actor Jensen Ackles' forehead—took nine takes to film because she kept missing.[16][23] Although Pileggi was fitted for the lenses, production ultimately added the effect digitally at "appropriate moments".[22]

Reception

Azazel has been met with universal praise from critics and fans alike, with the latter voting him as the best villain of the series in a poll conducted by BuddyTV. "[You] have to realize that without YED there would be no reason for the boys to hunt in the first place," viewers wrote, also calling him the "oldest arch nemesis" and a "classic supernatural badass".[24]

Both Karla Peterson of the San Diego Union-Tribune and Maureen Ryan of the Chicago Tribune felt that Morgan gave "his best and most believable performance of the season" in "Devil's Trap",[25][26] with the latter adding, "He was really on fire in that scene, and it brought a whole new intensity to his performance."[26] Diana Steenbergen of IGN found him "menacing, with his low voice and the cruel words ... trying to tear them apart emotionally before tearing Dean apart literally", and enjoyed the sadistic and "vicious humor" that makes the character "more sinister". However, she believed that Azazel having a family was an unnecessary parallel with the Winchesters that "doesn't quite make sense".[27] After viewing the episode, Brian Tallerico of UGO gave his opinion that the series should follow Buffy the Vampire Slayer's format of having a different recurring villain each season. "If the firestarting demon is the Big Bad for the first two seasons, that's fine," he commented, "but don't drag it out longer than that. Fans will get bored. And there's nothing scarier than that.[28]

Tina Charles of TV Guide was happy to see the "appropriately creepy" Lehne return to the role in "All Hell Breaks Loose". "The second he popped in at ghost town central," she wrote, "the scare factor went up."[29] Likewise, Tom Burns of UGO deemed all of Lehne's scenes "damn near riveting",[30] while Brett Love of TV Squad described him as "a perfect evil menace".[31] Pileggi's casting in "In the Beginning" was "a cool move" for Charles, who found his performance "scary".[32] According to publicists of Warner Bros., the fans "were very happy with what [they] did" in the episode.[22]

References

General
  1. Nicholas Knight (2008). Supernatural: The Official Companion Season 2. Titan Books. ISBN 1845766571. 
Specific
  1. ^ "Sin City". Writer: Robert Singer & Jeremy Carver, Director: Charles Beeson. Supernatural. The CW. 2007-10-25. No. 4, season 3.
  2. ^ Knight, Nicholas (2009). Supernatural: The Official Companion Season 3. Titan Books. p. 105. ISBN 1848561032. 
  3. ^ "Lucifer Rising". Writer: Eric Kripke, Director: Eric Kripke. Supernatural. CW. May 14, 2009. No. 22, season 4.
  4. ^ In the Beginning
  5. ^ a b "All Hell Breaks Loose, Part One". Writer: Sera Gamble, Director: Robert Singer. Supernatural. CW. May 10, 2007. No. 21, season 2.
  6. ^ a b "Pilot". Writer: Eric Kripke, Director: David Nutter. Supernatural. WB. September 13, 2005. No. 1, season 1.
  7. ^ "Swan Song". Story: Eric Gewitz, Teleplay: Eric Kripke, Director: Steve Boyum. Supernatural. CW. May 13, 2010. No. 22, season 5.
  8. ^ "Salvation". Writers: Sera Gamble & Raelle Tucker, Director: Robert Singer. Supernatural. WB. April 27, 2006. No. 21, season 1.
  9. ^ "Devil's Trap". Writer: Eric Kripke, Director: Kim Manners. Supernatural. WB. May 4, 2006. No. 22, season 1.
  10. ^ "In My Time of Dying". Writer: Eric Kripke, Director: Kim Manners. Supernatural. CW. September 28, 2006. No. 1, season 2.
  11. ^ "All Hell Breaks Loose, Part Two". Story: Eric Kripke & Michael T. Moore, Teleplay: Eric Kripke, Director: Kim Manners. Supernatural. CW. May 17, 2007. No. 22, season 2.
  12. ^ a b Supernatural: The Official Companion Season 2, p.142
  13. ^ a b c d e "Something Wicked This Way Comes", Supernatural Magazine (Titan Magazines) (3): 78–79, April, 2008 
  14. ^ Jayne Nelson (April, 2008), "John's Journal: In My Time of Dying", Supernatural Magazine (Titan Magazines) (3): 81 
  15. ^ Nicholas Knight (2007). Supernatural: The Official Companion Season 1. Titan Books. p. 115. ISBN 1845765354. 
  16. ^ a b c Bryan Cairns (February, 2008), "In the Name of the Father", Supernatural Magazine (Titan Magazines) (2): 27 
  17. ^ Supernatural: The Official Companion Season 2, pp.115-116
  18. ^ Eric Kripke, Sera Gamble, and Bob Singer (September 11, 2007). Supernatural season 2 DVD commentary for the episode "All Hell Breaks Loose" (DVD). Warner Brothers Video. 
  19. ^ Carina Adly MacKenzie (2010-07-10). "'Supernatural': Fred Lehne returns as Azazel, plus Jensen Ackles is 'a great director'". ZAP2it. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. http://www.webcitation.org/5rZFYpPfX. Retrieved 2010-07-13. 
  20. ^ "Supernatural Creator Eric Kripke Answers Fan’s Questions – Part III". Eclipse Magazine. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. http://www.webcitation.org/5rZFanzNj. Retrieved 2008-05-25. 
  21. ^ Don Williams (2008-10-01). "Exclusive Interview: Mitch Pileggi of 'Supernatural'". BuddyTV. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. http://www.webcitation.org/5rZFfmCDq. Retrieved 2010-07-05. 
  22. ^ a b c Jayne Nelson (February, 2009), "Blast from the Past", Supernatural Magazine (Titan Magazines) (8): 52–55 
  23. ^ a b Supernatural: The Official Companion Season 2, p.23
  24. ^ Henry Jenkins (2009-04-16). "Supernatural' Fans Name Azazel Best Villain". BuddyTV. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. http://www.webcitation.org/5rZFlTgPu. Retrieved 2010-07-05. 
  25. ^ Karla Peterson (2006-05-05). "Supernatural: May 4". San Diego Union-Tribune. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. http://www.webcitation.org/5rZG1vXY0. Retrieved 2010-07-05. 
  26. ^ a b Maureen Ryan (2009-06-16). "'Supernatural' Comic-Con news and thoughts on Season 1 of the show". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. http://www.webcitation.org/5rZG43tHh. Retrieved 2010-07-05. 
  27. ^ Diana Steenbergen (2008-09-15). "Supernatural Flashback: "Devil's Trap" Review". IGN. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. http://www.webcitation.org/5rZG69fuO. Retrieved 2010-07-05. 
  28. ^ Brian Tallerico. "Supernatural: Tracking the Spirits". UGO. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. http://www.webcitation.org/5rZG8Xujo. Retrieved 2010-07-05. 
  29. ^ Tina Charles (2007-05-11). "May 10, 2007: All Hell Breaks Loose, Part 1 - TV Show Recaps". TV Guide. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. http://www.webcitation.org/5rZGAS4g4. Retrieved 2010-07-05. 
  30. ^ Tom Burns. "Supernatural: Episode 2.21 - "All Hell Breaks Loose, Part One"". UGO. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. http://www.webcitation.org/5rZGCQ88r. Retrieved 2010-07-05. 
  31. ^ Brett Love. "Supernatural: All Hell Breaks Loose, Part 1". TV Squad. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. http://www.webcitation.org/5rZGDvqM2. Retrieved 2010-07-05. 
  32. ^ Tina Charles (2008-10-03). ""In the Beginning" - TV Show Recaps". TV Guide. Archived from the original on 2010-07-28. http://www.webcitation.org/5rZGGtWbK. Retrieved 2010-07-05.