COMIC CONSPIRATOR
Scraggly haired Dean Haglund didn't think he'd get the part of
a nerd on X-Files -- but he was wrong
By ALEX STRACHAN
Sun Television Writer
The Vancouver Sun
May 27, 1997
Dean Haglund has his own conspiracy theory about the Kennedy
assassination.
"It was a suicide," he says, with just a slight arch of his
eyebrows.
No, wait. Think about it.
The beauty of conspiracy theories is that they're all true, he
explains.
"No one can disprove a claim when there aren't any facts to support
that claim in the first place. That's the very nature of a conspiracy
theory: something that can't be proved, or disproved."
He waits to see if there's a laugh.
As a standup comedian, a regular in Vancouver's TheatreSports comedy
troupe and part-time bit player -- playing, what else, a conspiracy
buff and Net-head -- in The X-Files, Haglund is constantly prodding
and probing people for their reactions, in his restless, never-ending
search to find out what will make them laugh.
His specialty is improv -- improvisational comedy -- often performed
with the willing if sometimes unwitting participation of regular,
everyday folk in his nightclub audience.
When, four years ago, sometime X-Files producers Glen Morgan and
James Wong first created the Lone Gunmen -- conspiracy-theory buffs
who surf the Net to smoke out details surrounding political
assassinations and their attendant coverups -- the casting call
brought out seemingly every pale-faced, crew-cut nerd in the Lower
Mainland.
Haglund didn't think he'd get the part, but he gave it a try anyway.
At the very least, he suspected his long, scraggly hair and dishevelled
appearance would make him stand out in the crowd.
Haglund was hired on the spot to play Langly, along with Vancouver
stage actor Bruce Harwood as the impeccably dressed Byers and X-Files
assistant-director and part-time actor Tom Braidwood as the unkempt
Frohike.
Initially, the idea was that the Lone Gunmen would make just one
appearance, in the first-season episode E.B.E., about a UFO shot down
over Iraq and secretly transported to the U.S.
Haglund had no reason to think the gig would last any longer than
one of his one-night stands at Punchlines.
Instead, in keeping with the show's unpredictable, meteoric surge
in popularity, the Lone Gunmen have taken on a life of their own,
becoming a key strand in The X-Files' labyrinthine web of deceit,
paranoia and weird doings.
For Haglund, four years of X-posure has been a boon to his comedy
career.
He is a regular on the X-Files convention circuit, where his quick
wit and improv background come in handy when performing for the
show's fans.
He is still active in TheatreSports, and lately has taken his
nightclub routine on the comedy-club circuit across Canada and
the U.S.
In recent weeks, he has juggled gigs in Florida and California with
a trip to Bangladesh to visit his father, a structural engineer who
is supervising a railroad construction project there.
Beginning July 2, he will be performing in TheatreSports' See B.C.,
a lampoon of the West Coast lifestyle, at Vancouver's Arts Club Revue.
"My 10 years of TheatreSports training has allowed me to go into
improv situations and not have to worry about being idiotic, crass
or embarrassing myself," he says. "I know I can go into any kind of
situation and not blurt something out that I'll regret later."
Life in comedy's fast lane isn't all laughs, however.
Haglund's advice to would-be comedians is to do every gig they can
and learn how to handle different crowds.
"A lot of starting comics think they can pick and choose, and avoid
the places they think are beneath them," Haglund says. "My personal
feeling is that every minute you have onstage is gold. There's no
substitute for experience. It's better than any school or any book
or any course.
"It's tough to make a living doing standup in Vancouver. Punchlines
closed, and there aren't that many places left where you can get
that experience in front of a live crowd."
Beginners quickly learn to distinguish between the concept of making
money and the concept of having a career, Haglund says. The two
don't always go hand-in-hand.
"You have to go where the work is, and do whatever you can do to pay
the bills. If you're good, and you stay focused, the career will take
care of itself."
Haglund has shared a stage with everyone from Ryan Stiles, the
Richmond secondary-school grad who has landed a full-time gig as
Lewis, Drew Carey's sidekick on The Drew Carey Show, to the legendary
Robin Williams, recently named by Entertainment Weekly as the
funniest man alive.
"Robin is constantly trying to top himself," Haglund says, recalling
a recent night onstage with both Williams and Stiles.
"He's hilarious, but he's also very giving. He has that innate
ability to set up a routine in such a way that whoever is onstage
with him at the time looks just as good as he does. Just standing
next to him on stage is worth 25 to 35 years of improv experience."
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: DEAN HAGLUND
•Currently: Working the comedy-club circuit, touring Canada and the
U.S. doing improvisational sketches based on his personal experiences
and his career as a bit player in The X-Files.
•Breakout role: As Langly, Wayne's World Garth lookalike, conspiracy
theorist and computer hacker in The X-Files, Haglund is often stopped
in the street and asked to expound on his own conspiracy theories on
everything from the Heaven's Gate cult to the real meaning behind A
Brief History of Time. Langly, incidentally, came to be spelled
without an 'e' because that's how it appeared one day in the script.
•Next project: See B.C., a TheatreSports lampoon of the West Coast
lifestyle, opens July 2 at the Arts Club Revue on Granville Island.
•Home and hearth: The 31-year-old Winnipeg native calls East Vancouver
home, likening it to a small, densely populated corner of Italy, a
cultural melting pot of artisan Florence and decadent Rome, where it's
still possible to play bocce ball, argue about soccer and drink the
city's best cappuccino. The traffic, though, is another story. "I was
driving all over Florida," Haglund says, "for miles and miles, on the
highway, with no problem. Then I'm back in Vancouver and in less than
15 minutes I almost have an accident."
•Past lives: While growing up in Winnipeg, he played drums in a
garage band called the Truncheon Scars. "We considered ourselves
repressed youth," he says now, somewhat sheepishly. "We were four
suburban kids in a white, middle-class neighborhood. The only time we
saw the police was when a car would drive by on the street. We were
just a really awful punk-rock band. Basically, we sucked."
Courtesy of Vancouver Sun
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