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She recognized how pivotal the episode was for Buffy’s story that season and took on the challenge of learning all the songs and choreography and performed the numbers herself.
Buffy once more with feeling episode online full#
Let’s remember that this was on broadcast TV, when full seasons generally ran 22 episodes or so, and they didn’t get extra time to film the episode. Sorry, but there's no other way to say it: Gellar absolutely slayed that song.īrown: Gellar slayed the whole episode. The number rivals the best of bittersweet bickering onstage, including "The Little Things You Do Together" from "Company," "Therapy" from "Tick, Tick… Boom!" and "Take Me or Leave Me" from "Rent."Īlso, "Something to Sing About" is a killer 11 o'clock number: the insightful lyrics about life's meaning, the dance breaks with Caulfield and Trachtenberg, and the haunting way Gellar's sweet voice swells into those minor notes and gets teary during the big reveal. Lee: I adored "I'll Never Tell," in which Xander (Nicholas Brendon) and Anya have simultaneous inner monologues about their relationship issues while dancing like Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in pajamas. He’s easily one of my top "Buffy" villains. Phillips: Hinton Battle's demon Sweet was so smooth and soulful on "What You Feel," both with Dawn (Michelle Trachtenberg) and at the end. Her insistence that bunnies could be responsible for the mysterious musical mayhem, complete with pyrotechnics, has never failed to put a smile on my face.
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But the one for which I know ALL the lyrics and still sing them from my chest is Spike’s heartbreaking “Rest in Peace.” That song had so much meaning and emotion, propelling the story and helping anyone understand how - spoiler alert - Buffy (Sarah Michelle Gellar) could end the episode by doing much more than “whisper in a dead man’s ear.”īrown: If I had to pick a favorite, I’d go with “Walk Through the Fire” - the number Buffy leads as she heads to take on the big bad - for how it captures everyone’s inner conflict building towards what you think you know is coming, plus the quippy quotable asides present even in song.īut the musical moment that brings me the most joy in the episode comes much earlier, when Anya (Emma Caulfield) breaks out into a short rock anthem. One of my favorites was when “Standing in the Way" and "Under Your Spell" became a mashup with Tara and Giles. The crowd went wild.īurkes: The sheer musicality of this episode really, ahem, sang. Phillips: I went to that "in-theater experience" twice and even brought dry cleaning with a sticky note that said "no mustard." At one screening in Westwood, "Buffy" writer-producer Marti Noxon thanked everyone for coming and said, "Someone else wants to thank you." Down the aisle bounded Joss. This was before “Glee” or “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,” so the only real frame of reference for “musical episode” I had at the time was, like, “Xena: Warrior Princess.” (“Bitter Suite” remains a favorite.) And it went on to be shown in theaters for fan-driven, interactive sing-along events, at least for a while. Tracy Brown: It’s not hyperbole to say that I’ve probably seen “Once More, With Feeling” more times than any single episode - a tally mostly racked up when DVD boxed sets were the only way to revisit your favorite TV. What was it like for a devout "Buffy" fan to see this back then? I am low-key pissed that I wasn't allowed to watch this show as a kid because this would have radicalized me.
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So in honor of the episode's anniversary, The Times' resident musical lovers and "Buffy" fans - Dawn Burkes, Tracy Brown, Ashley Lee and Jevon Phillips - gathered to discuss its momentous airing, standout scenes and continuing impact on musical storytelling on television.Īshley Lee: I can’t believe it’s been 20 years since this episode first aired! I must confess that, in those 20 years, I had never seen it, or any other episode of "Buffy." Watching it for the first time the other day - the series is available to stream on Hulu and Amazon Prime Video - I was floored. The passage of time hasn't diminished the Season 6 entry's bold artistic statement, either - even if the reputation of its writer-director, "Buffy" creator Joss Whedon, has been tarnished by allegations of on-set misconduct. Twenty years ago this week, "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" aired "Once More, With Feeling," an all-out musical episode that many (including us) believe to be the best ever made.
