Archer’s H. Jon Benjamin on Saying Goodbye to the FX Series (and What He Won’t Miss)

"There were many, many episodes where my voice started to give out, for sure," the voice actor explains

Archer H Jon Benjamin Interview
Archer: Into the Cold (FX)
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On Sunday, December 17th, the animation dynasty known as Archer comes to an end; the animated spy comedy, created by Adam Reed, reached its 14th season this year, with the three-part finale Archer: Into the Cold bringing the story of Sterling Archer (H. Jon Benjamin) and his fellow agents to a conclusion.

“It’s hard to end the show, for sure,” Benjamin tells Consequence, saying that he and the rest of the Archer cast learned about the show ending on a group call organized by executive producers Matt Thompson and Casey Willis. “It was kind of a shock, but at the same time, it’s just very unusual for a show to keep going. And year to year, there was always uncertainty as to whether or not the show was going to go another season.”

Benjamin adds that “Archer kind of technically was going to come to an end after Adam Reed left the show in Season 10. After that, I think it was sort of more of a ‘How long do we have left?’ I think they did a really admirable job of recreating the show in the wake of Adam, who was the creative force behind it, for the remaining four seasons. But I think once Adam left, it was maybe a little bit more like, ‘Well, I wonder how long the show can last?’ There’s animated shows that go on for 30 years, so you never know.”

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Benjamin teases that Into the Cold reflects, in a way, the show’s own occasionally precarious history: “In the world of the show, [the spy agency] has always been on the chopping block. So the natural ending for things is going to be like, ‘What’s gonna happen when the agency dissolves, and what’s going to happen to all these characters?’ So, it’s gonna be what happens when everything falls apart. All the characters have gone through so much over the course of the life of the show, and they tend to keep landing on their feet, but the finale definitely explores a real existential crisis for the agency.”

It’s the conclusion of a journey that began with the show’s original premiere in 2009, kicking off a decade-plus run of anarchy anchored by Benjamin alongside one of TV’s strongest voice casts (including Aisha Tyler, Judy Greer, Chris Parnell, Amber Nash, Lucky Yates, and the late great Jessica Walter).

One fun fact about Archer is that Benjamin never had to audition for the title role, instead receiving a direct offer for the series. “I remember how surprised I was,” he says. “It’s really pretty rare I’d get an offer — certainly at that time — so I might have been like, ‘Is this a mistake or something?'”

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In fact, Benjamin says that he definitely remembers “being a little bit concerned that I wasn’t going to be able to play a spy well — I thought maybe I would have to be doing a different character than I had normally done, because my prior work was pretty much my natural voice and a lot of improvisation. So I was like, ‘I wonder why they’re choosing me for a spy?'”

The reason why, it turned out, was that Thompson and Reed were already fans of his, and used some of his performance as another character to animate an Archer test sequence for the execs. That character? Coach John McGuirk from the 1999-2003 comedy Home Movies, “this drunken elementary school soccer coach,” Benjamin laughs. “I guess for them, that embodied what Archer became — this bombastic, arrogant, drunken spy. They saw that and that’s what made it work.”

Adds Benjamin, “They sold me — they did all the work for me. Which was very sweet.”

As a voice actor, Benjamin never had to actually perform any of the outrageous stunts executed by the spy over 14 seasons. However, playing Archer did take a physical toll. “There were many, many episodes where my voice started to give out, for sure,” he says. “That was very common. I don’t want to emphasize the difficulty of voice acting — it’s not particularly difficult — but the volume which Archer would have to be at for a two-hour session, I would literally lose my voice yelling. I would always be like, ‘Oh no,’ when I saw a stage direction like ‘on a motorcycle, yelling’ or ‘gun battle, yelling over.’ Archer yelled a lot.”

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The “least fun” part of the process, Benjamin says, was providing the sort of grunts and groans that would accompany an action scene. “I hated that part,” he laughs, remembering how he’d perform 30 seconds worth of those noises, “then I’d stop and [ask] ‘How long do you want me to go?'”

The response: “‘Well, you’re falling down a 500-foot cliff, so we need a good three and a half minutes.'” Says Benjamin, “A lot of fight scenes, I would be like, ‘How come you guys can’t just pull from the library of fight scenes sounds from before? Why do I have to keep doing it?’ And they were like, ‘It’s a different fight.'”

Looking forward, Benjamin says that while he’s made limited appearances as a live-action actor over the years, he will probably try to do more roles like that, now that “I’m down to one animated show.” (He still plays the titular Bob of Bob’s Burgers on Fox, which was renewed this year through Season 15.)

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“I think I get more work voice acting just because I’ve been voice acting now for like 25 years, and been on a lot of long-running shows. So that’s what I’m mostly known for,” he notes. “But whenever I get asked, I’m up for it. I just get asked a lot less for live-action.”

In the meantime, he’s working on his third album as Jazz Daredevil, a jazz pianist character he created who might be terrible at playing jazz piano. “I’m kind of excited about that, although I have no idea how it’s gonna come out. I think it will be interesting… Controversial,” he adds with a laugh.

And, in the meantime, he says, “I feel like I’m gonna start looking for a new job.”

Archer: Into the Cold premieres Sunday, December 17 at 10:00 pm ET/PT on FX and FXX, and streams the next day on Hulu.

Categories: TV, Features, Interviews