Vancouver Sun

Ninja Turtles voice work a Green dream

- FRAZIER MOORE

NEW YORK — It was Seth Green’s destiny to join the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles team.

This actor-writer-producer-director is unrivalled for popping up all over the place. So why not here? After all, he’s the 40-year-old showbiz ace who, as a youngster, played Woody Allen’s childhood doppelgäng­er in the 1987 film Radio Days and went on to appear in the Austin Powers spoofs. He co-created the Adult Swim sketch comedy series Robot Chicken. He voices Chris Griffin, the deranged teen on Fox’s animated hit Family Guy. He starred in the NBC sitcom Dads last season. His latest film, The Identical, opened last month.

Now, with the start of Season 3 of Ninja Turtles (Fridays, Nickelodeo­n), Green has claimed the job of voicing Leonardo, leader of this quartet of “heroes in a half shell” who go by the names of Renaissanc­e artists.

Green brings a lifetime of devotion to the task. He has followed the Ninja Turtles franchise since its comic-book birth three decades ago. Turtle Power, he says, represents everything a kid loves: “brotherhoo­d and friendship and justice and ninjas!”

But just as he has matured through the years, so has his perspectiv­e on the Turtles.

“Early on, I related to Raphael, the wild one, or to Mikey, because he’s the childish one,” says Green. “But Leo is a really complicate­d character, because he is tasked with being the paternal figure for these brothers. He has a different level of responsibi­lity, and I like being able to bring that kind of gravity to it.”

If he came to this shell game already steeped in the Turtles ethos, there was yet another reason this seemed like a marriage made in heaven: the woman Green is married to. He explains that Clare Grant, his wife of four years, has long nurtured a secret crush on Leonardo. It’s a secret she confided by chance to a Ninja Turtles executive producer a while back, which, according to Green, may have set in motion his enlistment to step in for Jason Biggs, the voice of Leonardo for the first two seasons.

So, to sum up: Green now gets to fulfil a lifelong dream while also bringing to life his wife’s fantasy heartthrob.

“Thank goodness for her hilarious romantic procliviti­es,” he says with a laugh.

Of course, Ninja Turtles is far from the sole item on his to-do list. He continues with Family Guy. In December, he begins work on a new season of Robot Chicken. And he’s developing a film project that he hopes to direct.

Green, who is shortish with red hair and an impish smile, learned at a tender age to be a self-starter. Growing up in Philadelph­ia, he found his passions didn’t mesh with his peers’.

“No one in my school wanted to sing and dance and be on TV,” he recalls. “They all wanted to fix cars and play sports.”

Even so, he landed his first role at 7. But all too soon he began to realize he didn’t look like the little kid from Radio Days.

“I had to redefine myself. And I knew I wasn’t going to be the prototypic­al handsome male lead. So I grew my hair out long and dressed a little more offbeat, and spent the next 10 years playing the best friend of the handsome guy. Or an affable stoner.”

 ?? EVANS VESTAL WARD/NICKELODEO­N/AP FILES ?? Seth Green voices the character Leonardo on Season 3 of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
EVANS VESTAL WARD/NICKELODEO­N/AP FILES Seth Green voices the character Leonardo on Season 3 of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

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