Background and writing Writer
Joss Whedon says that "Rhonda the Immortal Waitress" was really the first incarnation of the
Buffy concept, "just the idea of some woman who seems to be completely insignificant who turns out to be extraordinary". This early, unproduced idea evolved into
Buffy, an inversion of the Hollywood formula of "the little blonde girl who goes into a dark alley and gets killed in every
horror movie". Whedon wanted "to subvert that idea and create someone who was a hero". The idea was first visited through Whedon's script for the
1992 movie Buffy the Vampire Slayer, which featured
Kristy Swanson in the title role. The director,
Fran Rubel Kuzui, saw it as a "pop culture comedy about what people think about
vampires". Whedon disagreed: "I had written this scary film about an empowered woman, and they turned it into a broad comedy. It was crushing." Several years later,
Gail Berman, a Fox executive, approached Whedon to develop his
Buffy concept into a television series. Whedon explained that "They said, 'Do you want to do a show?' And I thought, 'High school as a horror movie'. And so the metaphor became the central concept behind
Buffy, and that's how I sold it." The
supernatural elements in the series stood as
metaphors for personal anxieties associated with
adolescence and young adulthood. Early in its development, the series was going to be simply titled
Slayer. Whedon went on to write and partly fund a 25-minute
non-broadcast pilot that was shown to networks and eventually sold to the
WB Network.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer first aired on March 10, 1997, as a mid season replacement for the show
Savannah on The WB network, and played a key role in the growth of the
Warner Bros. television network in its early years. Whedon has declared in June 2003 that the non-broadcast pilot would not be included with DVDs of the series "while there is strength in these bones," stating that it "sucks on ass."
Music The episode, being the series premiere, features the first usage of the theme song by pop punk band
Nerf Herder.
Parry Gripp, the band's songwriter, guitarist, and admitted fan of the show explained that the band created the theme song after "fancy pants Hollywood" failed to write a theme song that the producers approved. Eventually, "they [the producers] asked a bunch of local, small time bands who they could pay very little money to come up with some ideas and they liked our idea and they used it." Several songs by the band
Sprung Monkey play during the episode. When Buffy is deciding what to wear, the song "Saturated" is playing faintly in the background. At The Bronze, the band plays their songs "Believe", "Swirl", and "Things are Changing". All of the songs featured in the episode can be found on their 1995 album
Swirl. The score for the episode, as well as all first season entries, was created by
Walter Murphy. Whedon hoped to include actor
Eric Balfour in the title credits to shock viewers when his character dies. Unfortunately, the show could not afford the extra set of title credits at the time. However, Whedon's wish was granted in the season 6 episode "
Seeing Red", with the character
Tara Maclay (
Amber Benson).
Brian Thompson, who plays the vampire Luke, returns to the series in season 2 as a different character, the
Judge, in "
Surprise" and "
Innocence". After seven auditions,
Alyson Hannigan was eventually chosen for the role. She was chosen for being able to spin the character's lines with a self-effacing optimism; she stated, "I didn't want to do Willow as someone who's feeling sorry for herself. Especially in the first season, she couldn't talk to guys, and nobody liked her. I was like, 'I don't want to play somebody who's down on herself. Whedon conceived the character as introverted, saying, "I wanted Willow to have that kind of insanely colorful interior life that truly shy people have. And Alyson has that. She definitely has a loopiness I found creeping into the way Willow talked, which was great. To an extent, all the actors conform to the way I write the character, but it really stands out in Willow's case."
Nicholas Brendon, who had recently been fired from his job as a waiter and was struggling financially, was attracted to the pilot script for
Buffy because of how much he had hated high school. Brendon recognized that Xander was based on Joss Whedon when he had attended high school, accounting for why Xander "gets all the good lines".
Charisma Carpenter had originally planned to read for the role of Buffy, but she was late for her audition and instead tried out for Cordelia. Although she had only fifteen minutes to prepare for the character, the producers were "really responsive" to Carpenter's audition, and she left feeling confident she had gotten the part. After Carpenter's audition, Gellar, who had been offered the role of Cordelia before Carpenter, was asked to come back and audition for the part of Buffy.
Bianca Lawson originally won the role of Cordelia Chase, but turned it down due to other contractual obligations. Lawson would later be cast as vampire slayer
Kendra in the show's second season. Cordelia was originally intended to serve as a dramatic foil to Buffy and to represent the characteristics of the less mature and shallower Buffy portrayed in the original film.
Julie Benz, who portrayed
Darla, originally auditioned for the role of Buffy. However, Benz was later offered the minor role of Darla in the pilot episode. Although the character (originally an unnamed minor vampire) was supposed to die in the pilot, Whedon liked her performance so well that he named her, and her character appeared in several more episodes. Benz went on to portray Darla in several episodes of
Buffys
spin-off television series,
Angel. She later went on to say: For me, I was a new actor to
Los Angeles, didn't know the TV business very well, so I was just excited to work and play a vampire. I had no clue what I was going to do or how I was going to be scary. Until that is, they put the vampire makeup on me, and I went into the trailer and smiled, which I thought was creepy. Joss always said he was intrigued that someone who looked like me and talked like me was like the scariest vampire ever. That's what he wanted, my sweet voice and demeanor until all of a sudden I’m just this vicious vampire." Many actors auditioned for the part, but Whedon felt Metcalf played it with more complexity, bringing a "sly and kind of urbane" sensitivity and a charm to the villainy of the character. Bob Flutie, Sunnydale High School's principal, was originally played by
Stephen Tobolowsky in the unaired pilot.
Ken Lerner was cast as Flutie in the broadcast version. Certain scenes, such as the argument between Giles and Buffy in the library and Buffy's first meeting with Angel, were re-shot eight months after the first episode was recorded, with both Whedon and Gellar feeling that Buffy was too angry in the original takes. Whedon subsequently teased Gellar that they were going to reshoot the scenes a third time.
Vampire effects Joss Whedon created the idea of "vamp faces," which was to have
vampires' human features distort to become more demonic. Whedon wanted normal high school students that the other characters could interact with normally, only to have them turn out to be vampires, therefore creating a sense of
paranoia. He also wanted the vampires to be "clearly monsters," so it wouldn't seem like a high school girl was killing normal-looking people. The vampires originally appeared "very white-faced, very creepy, very ghoulish". This was toned down in later episodes as the
makeup was too time-consuming. Whedon claims that people thought the white faces to be "funny looking" but personally found it creepier, comparing them to the monsters in zombie movies such as
Day of the Dead and
The Evil Dead. It was decided that vampires and their clothes would turn to dust after they died. This was done for practical storytelling reasons, so the characters would not have to spend time cleaning up bodies. This episode introduced the idea that vampires' clothes would resemble the era in which they died, with Buffy identifying one by his dated outfit. Joss Whedon felt this concept was a "charming notion" but ultimately rejected it for the most part because he believed that, if every vampire in the show was dressed in old-fashioned clothes, they would cease to be scary. == Reception ==