Richard Alpert (Lost)

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Richard Alpert
Lost character
Néstor Carbonell as Richard Franklin Alpert
First appearance"Not in Portland"
Last appearance"The End"
Created by
Portrayed by
Slave
NationalitySpanish
Former
residence
Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain

Richard Franklin Alpert is a fictional character played by

Others, where he plays a role in the group's hierarchy that has been compared to that of the Panchen Lama in Buddhism
by the series' producers.

A major mystery behind his character initially was his seeming agelessness; from the third through fifth seasons, Alpert appears both in the present day and in several flashbacks dating to the 1950s, 70s and 80s; and in all of these different time periods, Richard always appears to be a man in his mid-40s, not having appeared to have aged at all. The nature of his agelessness and his true age is revealed near the end of the series, in the season six episode Ab Aeterno; in the 1860s, Alpert was a prisoner on the Black Rock when it ran aground on the island, and here, the true leader of the Others, Jacob, made Richard ageless in exchange for his loyalty. At the end of the series, following the deaths of Jacob and the Man in Black, Richard becomes mortal.

Originally introduced as a guest star in the third-season episode "

2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike
resulted in Cane being cancelled and allowed Carbonell to return for the final three episodes of the fourth season and several in the fifth.

Character biography

In 1867, Richard Franklin Alpert was a

Spaniard known as Ricardo who lived in the Canary Islands with his wife, Isabella, who was dying from tuberculosis. Richard promised to save her and rode out to the home of the nearest doctor in the midst of a heavy rainfall. The doctor claimed to have medicine which could help her, but Richard could not afford it and was refused aid. He grew desperate and pleaded with the doctor, who wound up getting accidentally knocked back and hitting his head on the table, killing him instantly. Richard took the medicine and rushed back to Isabella, only to find her dead. He was then arrested for murder and sentenced to be hanged. When the time came for his execution, Father Suarez, a priest, sold him to Magnus Hanso, who was setting out to the New World
.

Richard, now a slave, was chained below the deck of the Black Rock, which got caught in a bad storm and shipwrecked on the Island, colliding with the four-toed statue of

Tawaret in the process. The other surviving slaves were executed by Jonas Whitfield, an officer of the ship. Before Richard could be killed, the Smoke Monster arrived and killed all except him. As he worked to free himself, a vision of his wife appeared and told him they were in Hell. She was then apparently killed by the Monster as well. Still in chains below deck, Richard was visited by the Man in Black (Titus Welliver
), the Smoke Monster in human form. The Man in Black freed him on the condition Alpert would help him.

The Man in Black told Richard they are in Hell and he must kill Jacob (Mark Pellegrino), whom he referred to as the devil, in order to get his wife back. The Man in Black gave him a dagger and sent him off to kill Jacob, who lived at the foot of the statue. When Richard arrived, he was attacked by Jacob himself. Richard then told Jacob that he tried to kill him because he had been persuaded that Jacob was the devil and that he had Richard's wife. Jacob then convinced Richard that he is still alive and not in hell by continuously submerging his head underwater until Richard admitted he would drown and die if Jacob did not stop. Jacob explained to Richard how the Island is like a cork in a wine bottle, keeping the Evil contained. The Man in Black thinks humanity was evil and corrupt, while Jacob wants to prove to the Man in Black that humans can do good and was bringing people to the island to contradict his belief. Richard points out that Jacob's policy of non-intervention leaves a vacuum the Man in Black is very willing to take advantage of. This convinces Jacob to give Richard a job as his sole intermediary between him (Jacob) and the people coming to the Island in the future. In exchange, Jacob granted Richard immortality, after stating he was unable to bring Isabella back from the dead or absolve Richard of his sins.

Richard returned to the Man in Black and told him he was joining Jacob. The Man in Black informed Richard he found Isabella's cross on the ship. Richard took it, and after crying buried it at the base of a tree.

Alpert is next seen in 1954, in the episode "Jughead", where he leads a group of Others who have recently killed a detachment of eighteen US soldiers who landed on the island with a hydrogen bomb.[1] Alpert first asked the troops to leave peacefully, but was "forced" to kill them when they refused. He hints he was ordered by someone higher in his chain of command.

The Others captured

ontological paradox
), convinced Alpert to at least hear him out. He told a reluctant Alpert if he was suspicious of Locke's claims of time travel, Alpert should visit Locke's birthplace in two years for proof. Locke was unable to convince Alpert to tell him how to leave the island before another time skip occurs.

Alpert took Locke's advice and visited the newborn Locke two years later on May 30, 1956, in the episode "Cabin Fever". Five years later, he visited a five-year-old Locke, giving him a test not unlike those administered by the Panchen Lama to Dalai Lama potentials, under the guise he was recruiting children for a special school. He showed Locke several items, including the compass, and asked Locke to identify which items belonged to him. Along with several other items, Locke picked a knife; angered by Locke's failure, Alpert left in a hurry, claiming Locke was "not ready" for his school. Alpert tried to recruit Locke again in the 1970s, this time into an internship program with Mittelos Laboratories in Portland, Oregon, but a teenage Locke turned it down.

In 1973, in "

Benjamin Linus (younger, Sterling Beaumon; older, Michael Emerson) in the jungle. Ben expressed a desire to run away from his father, a member of the scientific research group called the Dharma Initiative, and join the Others. Alpert realized Ben is special when Ben mentioned seeing his deceased mother (Carrie Preston
) in the jungle. He agreed to Ben's request, but told Ben it will require time and patience.

In 1974, Richard entered the Dharma Initiative's barracks in "

Dead is Dead
" for bringing Ben to the camp.

Later on, he had another encounter with Daniel Faraday in "

Matthew Fox), and later, Sayid Jarrah (Naveen Andrews) in retrieving the hydrogen bomb in "Follow the Leader
". During this mission, Richard confided in Jack he has been keeping tabs on John Locke and "he is not that special". Jack insists Richard have faith in Locke.

In 1988, Alpert observed the tensions between Charles Widmore and Ben Linus in "

Dead is Dead" when Ben was given the order to kill Danielle Rousseau; Ben spared her and instead stole her child, Alex. Alpert said nothing in this exchange. As an adult in the early 1990s, Ben assisted Alpert in killing the members of the Dharma Initiative with poison gas in "The Man Behind the Curtain
". After the purge, in 1992, Richard consorted with Ben in banishing Charles Widmore.

In 2001, Alpert attempted to recruit Juliet into Mittelos Bioscience in "Not in Portland". Juliet initially declined the offer, offhandedly joking the only way she could go is if her employer, her ex-husband, were hit by a bus; Alpert saw to it that this "joke" became reality in short order.[2] Alpert claimed to have forgotten Juliet's joke when she mentioned it later, and she accepted the job offer. Alpert then admitted the company is not really in Portland, and Juliet was taken to the island. Three years later, when Oceanic Airlines flight 815 crashed on the island, Alpert was in Miami, Florida, filming Juliet's formerly cancer-stricken sister playing with her young son, footage Ben showed to Juliet in "One of Us".

Alpert encountered Locke once again, in 2004, when the latter infiltrated the Barracks, now the Others' community, in "The Man from Tallahassee". Locke destroyed their submarine to prevent Jack and Juliet from leaving the island and was captured. At Ben's request, Alpert fetched Anthony Cooper (Kevin Tighe), Locke's father. Ben arranged for Locke to kill Cooper in front of the Others as his initiation in "The Brig", knowing Locke would not be able to do so. Locke was thus publicly humiliated when he refused. The next day, Alpert hinted to Locke that he was unhappy with Ben's leadership and informed him Sawyer had a connection to Cooper which would make him kill the latter, Cooper having been the man whose con inspired the murder/suicide of his parents. Alpert was then instructed by Ben to take the Others to "the Temple," a safe haven, while Ben negotiated with the Flight 815 survivors in "Through the Looking Glass".

After Ben was taken into custody by Martin Keamy (Kevin Durand) and the mercenary team sent to the island by Charles Widmore, Alpert captured Kate and Sayid to enlist their aid in retrieving him in part 1 of "There's No Place Like Home". In part 2, Ben was rescued and Keamy was shot several times by Alpert; Keamy's bulletproof vest saved his life. Once Ben ventured to the Dharma station called the Orchid and moved the island, time began skipping for the survivors while Alpert and the Others remained in the present.

During one skip, in "

Oceanic Six, the six survivors who left the island, to return. When Locke asked how he could do this, Alpert responded Locke would have to die. In "Follow the Leader", the Man in Black (using Locke's form) is revealed to have directed Alpert to do this. At the Others' camp, Sun-Hwa Kwon (Yunjin Kim
) asked Alpert if he remembered the survivors trapped in the past. He confirms he did, and says he watched them die.

Locke convinced Alpert to take him and the Others present (a second group remains at the Temple) to see Jacob. Alpert expressed displeasure at Locke's style of command, which Ben pointed out was why he tried to kill Locke. Richard led them to the broken base of the statue, within which was Jacob's home. Locke went in with Ben despite Richard's statement only the current leader was allowed to request an audience. As Ben and Locke spoke with Jacob, Ilana (Zuleikha Robinson) and her group arrived at the camp. She addressed Richard as "Ricardus" and asked him, "What lies in the shadow of the statue?" He replied, "Ille qui nos omnes servabit" (Latin for "He who will save us all."[3]). She opened the crate her people brought with her, revealing Locke's dead body; the man visiting Jacob was an impostor.

When Ben emerged from the statue claiming "John" wanted to speak to Richard, Richard furiously threw Ben to the ground in front of Locke's corpse. Later, Richard was shocked when The Man in Black, in the form of Locke, exited the statue and said to Richard it was good to see him out of his chains. At this statement, Richard realized who he was facing: the man who conned him 140 years ago. But The Man in Black, in the form of Locke, knocked Richard unconscious, picked him up, and walked away.

The Man in Black later cut down Richard from a sack he had hung him from in a tree, and promptly apologized for it. Richard asked the Man in Black why he looks like John Locke, to which MIB replied Locke was a candidate. Richard expressed he doesn't know what a candidate was, to which the Man in Black was surprised. He asked Richard to come with him, but Richard refused.

Later, after the Man in Black chased after a blond boy, Sawyer met Richard in a clearing. Richard urgently tried to encourage Sawyer to come with him to the Temple, but Sawyer insisted on staying with the Man in Black. Richard tried to convince him further, but when he heard the Man in Black appearing, he ran off, frightened. He later visited the Temple, realizing everybody there was dead.

While Jack and

another survivor who died by the dynamite. Richard claimed he wanted to die because he was touched by Jacob, who claimed everything happens for a reason, and his life was a lie and had no purpose now that Jacob was dead. Jack lit the dynamite and Hurley fled. Jack then talked Richard into believing Richard still had a purpose and he wouldn't let him die just yet. At that moment, the dynamite did not explode. After that, Jack, Hurley and Richard headed for the beach camp, where they found Ilana, Sun, Ben, Miles and Frank (Jeff Fahey
).

Later, Ilana stated Jacob told her to follow Richard's lead. Richard, though, says he didn't know what to do, but instead he was going to follow another, referring to the Man in Black. He ran off through the jungle, to the place where he buried his wife's cross. Hurley followed him, informing him his wife, Isabella, said Richard has to stop the Man in Black from leaving the island, or they "are all going to Hell".

Against Hurley's advice, Richard, Miles and Ben go off to another part of the island when Hurley insists they have to trust him with following Jacob's wishes. When they go to the Dharma Initiative's barracks, they are told by Charles Widmore the Man in Black is coming for them. Richard and Ben go to talk with the Man in Black, who surfaces as the Smoke Monster and hurls Richard from the Dharma. Miles later finds Richard, as well as a grey hair on his head. Now seeing that he can somehow age again, he regains his will to live. On their way to Hydra Island, the two find Lapidus floating out in the water. Together they repair the Ajira plane. Once the Ajira plane is made airworthy, Lapidus, Miles, Richard, Sawyer, Kate and Claire are seen to fly safely off of the Island by a dying Jack. Ostensibly, Richard leaves the island and survives.

Characteristics

The mysteries surrounding his ageless character were heavily discussed among the fan community.

Dr. Linus", Richard mentions he doesn't age because Jacob touched him. In "Ab Aeterno
" it is revealed Richard lived in 1867, being around 35 years old. Since the current storyline takes place in 2007, that makes Richard around 175 years old.

Development

Richard shares his name with Richard Alpert, former Harvard psychology professor and Eastern-influenced author and figure from the 1960s and 70s, now known as Ram Dass.[6] Lost producer Damon Lindelof confirmed Richard is named after someone famous, but did not elaborate.[7] Néstor Carbonell was originally contracted to guest star in "Not in Portland", with the possibility of the role becoming recurring.[8] After the producers enjoyed his performance,[9] his contract was extended to five further appearances in season three.[8] During production of "The Man Behind the Curtain", Carbonell shot the pilot for CBS drama Cane.[9]

While producing the final episodes of the third season, Carbonell was cast in a starring role on the new

2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike, freeing Carbonell from his contract with CBS.[11] Executive producer Carlton Cuse cited this as an unintended positive consequence of the strike.[12]

Reception

When Richard made his first appearance, Erin Martell of

Batmanuel in the gone-too-soon sitcom The Tick".[14] He also "loved [Richard's] matter-of-fact way of telling Juliet he had spiked her orange juice with a massive amount of tranquilizer ... his silver-tongued temptation was so persuasive, I think any of us would have gulped down that [orange juice]".[14] Chris Carabott from IGN thought Richard featuring in Ben's flashback as a Hostile was "one of the more surprising revelations of "The Man Behind the Curtain" because Alpert doesn't seem to have aged a day in thirty-plus years".[15]

Many reviewers were pleased when Richard returned in season four's "Cabin Fever" after being absent for ten episodes. Jay Glatfelter of

The Huffington Post called him a "fan favorite" and speculated that although it is less plausible his appearance at Locke's birth is due to time travel, this seemed more believable than Richard not aging.[16] This proved untrue, as Locke visited him 2 years prior, telling Richard of his (Locke's) birth in "Jughead." Carabott called it "The biggest and most welcome surprise" because "He's one of the most enigmatic characters on the series and his appearance in Locke's past is an exciting and shocking revelation."[17] Maureen Ryan of the Chicago Tribune said "I get absurdly excited every time Richard Franklin Alpert (the wonderfully spooky Nestor Carbonell) arrives on the scene. I just know he’s going to bust out some major-league Dharma Initiative goodness one of these days, and his mere presence boosted my enjoyment level of an already good episode."[18] Cynthia Littleton from Variety said "Just the sight of Richard puts me on edge. Actor Nestor Carbonell is fantastic."[19]

References

  1. ^ a b Rod Holcomb (director); Elizabeth Sarnoff & Paul Zbyszewski (writers) (2009-01-28). "Jughead". Lost. Season 5. Episode 3. ABC.
  2. ^ Ford Sullivan, Brian (July 27, 2009). "Rants & Reviews – Live at the San Diego Comic-Con: "Lost"". The Futon Critic. Retrieved July 29, 2009.
  3. ^ Godwin, Jennifer (May 13, 2009). "Lost Redux: What Just Happened?!". E!. Retrieved May 19, 2009.
  4. ^ Lachonis, Jon (2007-07-18). "Cane Star Nestor Carbonell Leaves Lost Future in Doubt". BuddyTV. Retrieved 2008-07-07.
  5. Fox, Matthew, (August 1, 2008) "Official Lost Audio Podcast", ABC
    . Retrieved on January 29, 2009.
  6. ^ Ryan, Maureen (May 9, 2008). "'Lost' recap found: Alpert, Jacob and Keamy, oh my!". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on January 23, 2016. Retrieved January 30, 2009.
  7. ^ Jacobs, Evan (December 10, 2007). "Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof Explain Lost: The Complete Third Season". Movieweb. Archived from the original on July 28, 2012. Retrieved January 30, 2009.
  8. ^
    Sci Fi Wire. Archived from the original
    on January 30, 2009. Retrieved January 30, 2009.
  9. ^ a b Lindelof, Damon & Cuse, Carlton, (September 21, 2008) "Official Lost Audio Podcast", ABC. Retrieved on January 30, 2009.
  10. ^ Sepinwall, Alan (2007-07-18). "Lost at CBS". The Star-Ledger. Retrieved 2008-07-07.
  11. ^ Ausiello, Michael (2008-03-12). "Ausiello on Grey's, Lost, Smallville, Tree Hill and More!". TV Guide. Archived from the original on 2008-06-08. Retrieved 2008-07-07.
  12. ^ Jensen, Jeff (2008-02-22). "7 Writers' Strike Postscripts". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on 2013-05-24. Retrieved 2008-07-07.
  13. TV Squad
    . Retrieved 30 January 2008.
  14. ^ a b Jensen, Jeff (April 12, 2007). "Bringing Up Babies". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on October 7, 2012. Retrieved January 30, 2008.
  15. News Corporation
    . Retrieved 30 January 2008.
  16. The Huffington Post
    . Retrieved 30 January 2008.
  17. News Corporation
    . Retrieved 30 January 2008.
  18. ^ Ryan, Maureen (May 9, 2008). "'Lost' recap found: Alpert, Jacob and Keamy, oh my!". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on 23 January 2016. Retrieved 30 January 2008.
  19. ^ Littleton, Cynthia (May 9, 2008). ""Lost": Episode 11, "Cabin Fever"". Variety. Archived from the original on 2 February 2009. Retrieved 30 January 2008.

External links