“Heir Apparent”: Brothers
Previously on The Brent Spiner Show…
Well, that’s the obvious reading, is it not? “Brothers” is the limit case for Brent Spiner’s incredible versatility as an actor, playing three completely different characters all of whom interact with each other during the same scenes. And there’s no two ways around it, Spiner is simply masterful, effortlessly shifting between Data, Lore and the surprisingly alive (temporarily) Doctor Noonian Soong. It’s the latter of those roles that’s worth speaking the most of here, as it provides the first genuine challenge Star Trek: The Next Generation has thrown at Spiner since he joined the show. It’s not that Spiner’s talents were ever not self-evident: He’s great as Data, obviously, and the way he works his penchant for impersonations into the android’s inherent mutability and impressionable nature is a stroke of genius. And his love of playing unreconstructed psychopaths is on record, as is his profoundly chilling skill at it: That’s pretty much who Lore is here again, and there’s another episode coming up next year that gives Spiner even more room to play in this regard.
But it’s the brilliant, eccentric and aged Doctor Soong that’s of the most interest, because it’s a role manifestly different from the sort of thing Spiner’s played on Star Trek: The Next Generation to date. In fact, Spiner even says he was uncertain how to play the part until he saw himself in the old age makeup, and then it immediately came to him. So, he credits the character of Doctor Soong as much to Michael Westmore as to himself, if not more so, a touching reminder of how much of television is really a group effort. And let’s not forget, of course, the herculean efforts the camera crew and director Rob Bowman had to go through to get Brent Spiner to appear on camera in three different places at once. And Spiner’s performance itself is predictably wonderful: We definitely get the sense that this is a person who’s possessed of great confidence and ambition who, while old age has caught up with him and slowed him down, is as sharp and wry as ever. It’s instantly memorable and one of Spiner’s most iconic performances, really removing whatever upper limit might have been arbitrarily placed on his acting range.
I’ll talk a little bit about Lore as well, because it’s really this episode that sets in motion all the cool stuff the show does with his character from here on out that I particularly like. It’s also the episode that sort of codifies the version of Lore’s personality that sticks and that I associate most with him (not to mention a good deal of Data’s subsequent character arc, particularly in terms of his relationship to Soong). Lore’s not merely a generic evil twin or a violent, thuggish backstabber as Gene Roddenberry wrote him in “Datalore” this time. Here, he’s a clearly twisted and genuinely wicked character who manages to be truly chilling, singing random stanzas from old folk songs, perhaps befitting his name (the song is the frequently-quoted, and just as frequently misquoted, “Abdul Abuldul Amir”.…