What We Owe Xena
salon.com
SEPTEMBER 15, 2005
by
Cathy Young
I'm not sure when I first heard about "Xena: Warrior Princess," or when
I first tuned in to see what it was all about. I remember watching reruns
on the SciFi Channel and being drawn by the show's unique balance of
dark drama and wacky comedy, the fights that mixed gritty realism with
stylized martial arts, the reinvention of ancient history and myth combined
with snappy modern dialogue -- and the characters, above all Xena herself.
There was something different about this show and its hero. Eventually,
after watching a sixth-season episode that made me curious about story
lines I had missed, I went on the Internet to catch up, and fell in
love.
This month marks the 10th anniversary of the first time Xena rode onto
America's television screens. Actually, not quite the first: the Warrior
Princess, played by New Zealand's Lucy Lawless, had debuted several
months earlier on "Xena's" parent show, "Hercules: The Legendary Journeys,"
as an evil warlord (warlady?) plotting to kill the great Hercules. This
first incarnation of Xena was less a true warrior than a femme fatale
who kicked ass. Still, the character appealed to viewers and producers
alike: Originally meant to turn good, have a fling with Hercules, and
die at the end of a thee-episode arc, Xena got a reprieve and a show
of her own. For the next six years, she battled on, conquered the syndicated
action/adventure market and changed history -- the history of the world
in the Xenaverse and the history of popular culture in real life.
"Xena" is credited by many, including "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" creator
Joss Whedon, with blazing the trail for a wave of female action heroes:
Buffy, Max of "Dark Angel," Sydney Bristow of "Alias," Starbuck in SciFi's
new "Battlestar Galactica" (in which Lawless guest-starred last week)
and the Bride in Quentin Tarantino's "Kill Bill." (Tarantino is an enthusiastic
"Xena" fan: He talks about his love for this "really cool show" in an
interview on the DVD of "Double Dare," a recent documentary about Hollywood
stuntwomen featuring "Xena" and "Kill Bill" double Zoë Bell.) Nonetheless,
the series could have adopted as its own the Rodney Dangerfield mantra
"No respect."
"Buffy" largely eclipsed "Xena" on the cultural landscape as the "girl
power" show, garnering the critical analysis, the accolades for creative
innovations that "Xena" did first (such as a musical episode) and, when
it wrapped up, the grand farewell in the media. Too often, "Xena" got
written off as campy swords-and-sorcery fare, a kids adventure show
or a chicks-in-leather lesbian romp. Yes, of course it was campy, and
it was a fantasy action show with gods and monsters that appealed to
many children. And it did play unabashedly with lesbian themes. But
it was so much more than the sum of all those parts. It had great characters
and smart writing; riveting stories that often drew not only on ancient
history and mythology but on sources as varied as medieval legends,
Shakespeare, Richard Wagner and "The Producers"; and a cool, bracing
feminism that was practiced, not preached.
How was Xena a female pioneer? Let me count the ways. She had no male
support or regular romantic interest. She didn't, unlike Wonder Woman
or the Bionic Woman, have a conventionally feminine day-to-day alternate
identity, though on a mission she could pose as a Roman matron, a virgin
priestess or an exotic dancer. Xena was not "strong but feminine"; she
was unapologetically strong and unapologetically female, sexy and powerful,
unafraid to get sweaty and dirty on the job, and all the more beautiful
for it. Nor did she care about pleasing anyone: In one memorable exchange,
a slick opportunist seeking to enlist Xena as an ally says, "I like
you," and she shoots back, "Don't. I'm not a likable person." (As Lawless
once said, Xena is "a good person who doesn't think she is.")
A flawed hero haunted by her dark past, even the "good" Xena could be
angry, arrogant and, at times, driven by rage and revenge. She could
also be vulnerable and tender, capable of caring and feeling deeply
-- Lawless did a superb job of capturing this blend of toughness and
vulnerability -- but those qualities always felt like aspects of her
humanness, not reassurances of her womanhood. Yet while she pushed the
limits of how much like a male hero a heroine could be, Xena was the
first and probably is still the only action heroine who was also a mother
-- not counting warrior moms who fought only to protect their young,
like Linda Hamilton's Sarah Connor in "Terminator 2." She was, safe
to say, the only one who gave birth and breast-fed onscreen.
The show's groundbreaking depiction of women was not limited to Xena
herself. Her sidekick and friend, Gabrielle (Renee O'Connor), a village
girl who had left home to travel with Xena and pursue her dream of becoming
a warrior, had her own heroic journey. And there were plenty of other
strong female characters: the vengeance-obsessed warrior Callisto, whose
family had been killed in one of warlord Xena's raids; the charismatic
guru Najara, who was either a noble crusader against evil or a dangerous
fanatic; Lao Ma, a fictional Chinese philosopher-empress whom the series
whimsically credited with writing the Tao Te Ching; and Boadicea, Britain's
historical warrior queen.
Unlike some other female-empowerment shows, "Xena" eschewed overt feminist
messages (with occasional exceptions, such as a jab at beauty pageants
when Xena went undercover as a contestant). Xena and Gabrielle fought
a variety of mostly male baddies, but they were not fighting sexism
or the patriarchy. Gender, in the Xenaverse, just wasn't a big deal:
No one questioned Xena's ability to fight and command, or Gabrielle's
desire to be a warrior, because they were girls. Ironically, one of
the few episodes that dealt explicitly with gender issues introduced
a man-hating female outlaw just to teach her the lesson that it's not
women vs. men, it's good people vs. bad. In fact, plenty of the show's
good people were men; its primary male regular, Xena and Gabrielle's
occasional tag-along, Joxer (Ted Raimi), was a comically bumbling warrior
wannabe -- but also, in his own way, a true hero willing to risk his
life for his friends. Meanwhile, the Amazons were not an idealized sisterhood
but tribes with their own power struggles, conflicts and tyrannies.
Women on "Xena" were simply human, no better or worse than men: feminism
as it ought to be.
Yet "Xena" was exceptional for much more than its feminism. This tongue-in-cheek
adventure show not only tackled "big" issues -- redemption and justice,
revenge and forgiveness, personal loyalty and the greater good, pacifism
and violence -- but usually handled them without pat resolutions and
with an understanding that in many situations there are, in Xena's words,
"no good choices, only lesser degrees of evil." Was it right for Xena
to pay for her crimes with death or life imprisonment when she could
do much good as a free woman? Was it just that she should be acclaimed
as a hero when countless people were dead or shattered because of her?
What did she owe her victims, and what responsibility did she bear for
their crimes? How could Gabrielle reconcile her reverence for life with
the need to defend the innocent with deadly force? Was even justified
violence destructive to the soul?
The characters, too, were surprisingly rich and complex. (And brought
to life by a talented cast: Besides Lawless, O'Connor and Raimi, standouts
included the sadly unknown Hudson Leick as Callisto, Kathryn Morris
of "Cold Case" as Najara, Marton Csokas as Xena's past lover/fellow
warlord Borias, and New Zealand TV star Kevin Smith -- tragically killed
in a movie set accident several months after the end of "Xena" -- as
the god of war Ares.) While Xena struggled with her past and present,
Gabrielle grew from a spunky kid into an idealistic fighter who didn't
kill, then a total pacifist, and finally a formidable but battle-weary
warrior. The women's relationship developed from starry-eyed hero worship
on Gabrielle's part and affectionate protectiveness on Xena's into a
deep emotional bond. Yet, more often than not, it was rife with tensions
and conflicts. Less central to the series, but still fascinating, were
Xena's relationships with her nemesis Callisto, with her onetime lover
turned mortal enemy Julius Caesar (yes, the Julius Caesar), with Borias
and with Ares, the god with a very human weakness for the Warrior Princess.
"Xena" was a show that made bold choices: to make its archvillain, Callisto,
a tragic and often sympathetic character with a legitimate gripe against
the hero; to allow the sidekick a series-long character growth arc that
in some fans' eyes made her the true hero of the show, and suggest that
this growth was ultimately tragic; to let a comic-relief character die
a noble and poignant death; to reinvent the history of the transition
from pagan religions to monotheism with Xena as a protagonist. And it
managed to do all that while (almost) never taking itself too seriously
or losing its sense of humor and fun. Even some dark moments that could
have easily slipped into melodrama were given a cool twist by the snappy
dialogue that was one of the series' trademarks. Callisto told Xena,
"A part of me was hoping you would win and put out the rage in my heart.
Sometimes it scares even me" -- and added with a gleeful grin, "But
then I get over it."
The sense of mischievous, quirky, anything-goes fun was heightened by
the setting: a pseudo-historical, kind of mythological world in which
ancient Greeks wore medieval or Middle Eastern clothes and talked late-20th
century American English (where else could you hear an Olympian god
talk about someone's "inferiority complex"?); in which Caesar and Pompey
coexisted with Amazons, centaurs and gods; and in which the Trojan War,
the Battle of Marathon and the death of Cleopatra were separated by
just a few years. This time tweaking culminated in the hilariously demented
sixth-season episode, "You Are There," in which the Xenaverse was invaded
by a Geraldo Rivera-type TV reporter named Nigel, hot on Xena's trail
with a microphone and a camera crew.
Unlike "Buffy" with its tight, carefully planned story arcs, "Xena"
was the product of spontaneous evolution more than intelligent design.
Sometimes, this approach could lead to glaring inconsistencies: The
dialogue in Xena's first onscreen encounter with Ares implied that she
had never laid eyes on him before, yet later on it was hinted and then
confirmed that they had a history in her warlord days. But this spontaneity
was ultimately a strength more than a weakness: a loose, freewheeling
creativity that included actors ad-libbing or changing their lines.
And, somehow, it worked.
Not always, of course. Talk to a few "Xena" fans, and you will hear
a lot of theories about when, if ever, the series jumped the proverbial
shark. Most agree that it reached its pinnacle in the brilliant third
season and had its peaks and valleys after that: There were some wobbly
story lines, some recycled plots and other signs of creative fatigue,
and in the final season a tendency to amp up the sexual titillation
and overly graphic violence (with an overdose of both in an episode
that had the heroines infiltrate a harem to rescue Gabrielle's kidnapped
niece). But at its most uneven, it was still a terrific show.
One offshoot of the show's evolution was the much-talked-about lesbian
subtext. Early on, some viewers -- mostly though not exclusively gay
women -- discerned a romantic attraction in Xena and Gabrielle's developing
bond. Despite an early crop of male love interests, the idea that there
was something going on between the Warrior Princess and her young companion
made the rounds of Internet chat rooms and quickly got back to the show's
producers. After the initial surprise, they began to play to this perception
with deliberate sexual innuendo, from double entendres (when a love-struck
villager asked Gabrielle if Xena had considered settling down, Gabrielle
replied, "No, she likes what I do," then quickly corrected herself,
"She likes what she's doing") to scenes of the duo sharing a hot tub.
The subtext took on a life of its own, and eventually the possibility
that Xena and Gabrielle were "more than friends" was treated as a plausible
reading of their relationship -- preferred in some episodes, downplayed
or contradicted in others. (There was no question that, however defined,
it was the most important relationship in the two women's lives.) In
the last two seasons, another kind of subtext -- between Xena and Ares,
whose dynamic had been rife with sexual tension from the start -- was
also brought to the fore and developed into a complex love-hate relationship.
Late in the series, both of these ambiguous romantic "texts" were explicitly
acknowledged in "You Are There," the off-the-wall comedy with the TV
reporter: The nosy Nigel accosted Xena and Gabrielle with questions
about their special relationship and demanded to know if Xena was in
love with Ares. Both questions, of course, went unanswered.
The subtext gave "Xena" an added edge; it also resonated with vast numbers
of lesbians who saw the heroines as role models and felt empowered by
seeing what was, to them, a same-sex couple at the center of a television
show. Many say that the series helped them come to terms with their
sexuality, such as a 24-year-old British nurse who says that she found
strength and happiness in the fact that everyone involved with the show
thought that "one woman being genuinely in love with another is fine
and lovely and beautiful." For others, the subtext had a flip side.
From the start, many straight female fans were concerned that it played
into some vexing stereotypes: that a tough, independent woman in a traditionally
male role must be a lesbian, that two women who have a close relationship
and no boyfriends must be lesbians, or that a woman's story must be
a romance. Even some fans who appreciated the subtext saw it as a mixed
blessing. One woman, a 28-year-old bisexual New Yorker, told me that
while she's "glad the characters became gay icons," the disadvantage
is that this can overshadow everything else that made "Xena" so great:
"I hate it when I tell someone I love 'Xena' and I get the response,
'Oh yeah, the show with the lesbians, right?'"
One might say that Xena's sexual ambiguity adds to her larger-than-life
quality: She is beyond labels, all things to all people. And yet it's
a pity that so much of the buzz generated by a show about a mythic female
hero has ended up focusing on who she's sleeping with. As openly gay
"Xena" producer Liz Friedman once said in an interview, the show was
"not about the romantic foibles of Xena and Gabrielle," it was about
redemption and friendship.
The fan-driven growth of the subtext illustrates another "Xena" phenomenon:
the special relationship between the show and the fandom. Other than
"The X-Files," "Xena" was the first cult hit of the Internet age: the
face that launched a thousand Web sites. One of the producers and principal
writers on "Xena," Steven Sears, participated in discussions on "Xena"
message boards (and occasionally still does); other staff members and
actors reportedly lurked there as well, and seemed well aware of fandom
debates. In the last season, popular fan-fiction writer Melissa Good
was hired to write several scripts for the series, two of which were
made into episodes.
This involvement with the fandom turned out to be a double-edged sword.
Almost from the start, the fandom was bitterly divided among various
factions, particularly subtext fans pitted against those who saw Xena
and Gabrielle as friends. Fandom wars over relationships are nothing
new: "X-Files" fans clashed vehemently over whether Mulder and Scully
should do the deed. In the "Xena" fandom, though, these wars had the
added angle of sexual politics. Some of the anti-subtext sentiment was
undoubtedly driven by bona fide bigotry. Some lesbian fans, on the other
hand, approached the argument as a real-life gay rights struggle and
labeled all dissent as homophobic: To them, denying a sexual relationship
between Xena and Gabrielle was tantamount to denying the reality of
their own lives, and the "Are they or aren't they" tease was an insulting
way to keep the characters in the closet.
In a way, knowing that the staff paid attention to fan opinions may
have made matters worse: There was an incentive for the rival groups
to out-shout one another to make themselves heard. Many fans who had
no appetite for these wars fled the online fandom. Story lines that
were seen as betraying the subtext, particularly the Xena-Ares relationship
in the fifth season, were met with intense hostility from a small but
vocal group; at other times, non-subtext fans grumbled about what they
saw as pandering to the pro-subtext fan base (such as several sixth-season
episodes emphasizing Xena and Gabrielle's transcendent bond as soul
mates). At the end of the series' run, the Internet fandom exploded
in a hysterical backlash against the finale, in which Xena died to right
yet another past wrong and Gabrielle was left to travel alone. The official
Xena forum at the Studios USA Web site filled with cries of betrayal
and profanity-laced rants against the producers -- who attempted appeasement
by releasing a "director's cut" version, in which the poignant final
shot of Gabrielle alone on a ship was replaced by a hokey image of Xena
standing next to her as either ghost or imaginary friend.
Yet, like "Xena" itself, the fan base, on and especially off the Internet,
transcends the stereotype. Most of the fans, for instance -- including
some devoted subtext fans -- are straight, and quite a few are men.
They are lawyers and stay-at-home moms, high school kids and Ph.D. students,
white-collar workers and artists, soldiers and college professors; East
and West Coast urbanites and residents of Midwestern and Southern small
towns (not to mention Australians, Europeans, Israelis and Russians);
Wiccans and churchgoing Christians. They include a middle-aged psychology
instructor who first started watching because she thought Xena looked
cool and now regards the show as a philosophical guide to living, and
an exploration geologist in his 30s who discovered "Xena" when he wanted
to tape a baseball game and set the VCR to the wrong channel.
The afterlife of "Xena" has been a mixed success. Its ability to attract
new fans has been hampered by the fact that for the past four years
it has aired exclusively on Oxygen, the Lifetime Channel's poor relation,
its limited market access now compounded by the indignity of an 8 a.m.
Eastern time slot. Its DVD sales have lagged far behind those of "Buffy,"
"Angel" and "The X-Files."
In spite of it all, "Xena" lives and thrives. Fans still flock to the
annual convention. On the Internet, several "Xena" boards remain active;
with no new battles to fight over the show's direction, what remains
of the online fandom is a far more peaceful, live-and-let-live kind
of place that continues to draw new members. And in the wider culture,
the impact of "Xena" is definitely still felt. In fact, "Xena, Warrior
Princess" has become a kind of generic term for "tough chick." (Condoleezza
Rice, who does a pretty good Xena-style steely gaze herself, has been
nicknamed "Warrior Princess" by her staff -- much to the dismay of many
left-leaning "Xena" fans.) Recently, a Chicago Daily Herald review of
a gender-bending, nearly-all-female production of "Henry IV" was titled
"Shakespeare Meets Xena," and the reviewer noted that today's audiences
can easily accept the feminization of the play's power struggles and
battle scenes because of "familiarity with battling babes like Xena."
And just last month came the news that a team of astronomers at Caltech
who discovered a new heavenly body that may be the solar system's 10th
planet have nicknamed their find "Xena." It's not going to be the object's
official moniker -- the astronomers have already applied to register
it under another name -- but for now, it has already made headlines
as Planet Xena. Take that, Buffy.
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