Lt. Commander Data visits the Honesty Bar: an Interview with BRENT SPINER
Interview by Peter Fraser
www.close-upfilm.com/feat...spiner.htm
In a wide-ranging interview to mark Star Treks Fortieth Anniversary, Brent Spiner talks to Close-Up Film about playing the android Data in the Star Trek: The Next Generation TV series and films, his relations with the Star Trek cast, his least favourite Star Trek film, the future of Star Trek, how J. J. Abrams may direct the next Star Trek movie and the problems facing the world today. Also, the formative and perennial influence of one Robbie the Robot.
Looking youthful for his years and with a slyly satirical, yet charming, sense of humour that recalls his puckish portrayal of Datas mischievous, if not downright evil, brother Lore in Star Trek:The Next Generation (henceforth ST: TNG), Brent Spiner is an entertaining presence. Its extraordinary to think that for seven seasons of the TV series from 1987 to 1994 and then in four feature films from 1994 to 2002, such an expressive personality played an impassive and emotionless android. Nonetheless its the role for which he will always be famed and arguably among the most demanding and memorable persona in the entire history of Star Trek (henceforth ST). With the Fortieth Anniversary of the series this month, its a great time to reflect on the legacy of ST, and its future, with an actor whose character is as emblematic of the ST universe as Captain Kirk or Mr Spock in a surprising and revealing conversation, in which the Hotel Honesty Bar next to our interview room plays an incidental part
Brent, given that ST is no longer appearing on television or in cinemas, and that ST: TNG, in which you played Data, is certainly finished
I may be finished completely?
Not at all, I assume that youre going to continue
my illustrious career.
Yes, indeed, but what is your involvement with ST now?
This moment is my involvement. I have a lot of friends, the actors and producers, who I know from the show and I still see them. I attend occasional Star Trek conventions as well but otherwise, Im not being consulted regularly about the next incarnation.
Presumably its a legacy that youre happy to carry?
You know what? I dont even think about whether Im happy or Im not happy. But if I had to choose between the two then I would certainly say Im happy.
Were you a fan of ST when you were growing up?
Well, [Laughs] let me answer you facetiously. What exactly makes one a fan? Did I watch it? I did see it. I didnt make a date every week but I did see many of them. I think that there were some seventy-nine episodes or something like that. I probably saw thirty. So I consider myself to have been a fan of sorts. I enjoyed it.
Were you interested in science fiction?
Not in the least. Im still not. I dont dislike it but its not my favourite thing. Id put science fiction right about even with westerns. Maybe I like westerns a little more. But its a genre and I like all the genres. I like comedy, I like musicals you name it.
Youve played a few comic roles and youre clearly a very talented comic actor, do you think that your comedy skills helped you to portray Data?
Oh yeah, totally. I mean, he didnt try to be funny but he was funny. It gave me a point of view. It gave me a jumping off point. The fact that I could approach this character in a comic way made it easier. [Mr Spiner pauses and peers enquiringly at the golden coke bottle standing next to my glass of coke].
What kind of coke is that?
Actually I dont know, Ive never seen it before
Gold?
In fact, I think that its World Cup Coke.
You know what? I would keep that bottle if I were you. That could be a collectors item. [Lifts up the bottle and examines it] World Cup Germany. Ive never seen one of these. Let me pause just for one second. [Motions to my tape recorder] Dont turn this off because Im just going to look in this room to see if they have any more of those [Glances slightly incredulously at the title on the door] The Honesty Bar?
For the tape recorder, Mr Spiner has just gone into The Honesty Bar.
Exactly. [Echoing laughter from beyond the door] Ill be honest with you I dont even see a coke in here. Did you get that bottle from in here?
Well, it was given to me. The lady in question came through the door of the Honesty Bar but she may have got the coke bottle from somewhere else
[Comes back in] And she didnt say a word about it. [Settles himself] Ok, go on
Ok, given that you had no particular interest in sci-fi, how did you come to play Data? Im sure that youve been asked this question before.
[With emphasis] Never been asked this before. Every question youve asked so far has been uniquely original.
Ahem, youre being heavily ironic
Indeed. [Laughs] You obviously spent hours coming up with these questions.
Absolutely.
Ok, let me just say something on the side. I do remember that when I was quite young my favourite sci-fi film, the one that really meant a lot to me growing up, was Forbidden Planet. You know that film with Walter Pigeon and of course the great Leslie Nielsen? Because Leslie Nielsen when hes playing it straight is even funnier than when hes playing it funny. So I think that Robbie the Robot was my role model for Data. I would say to myself, how would Robbie the Robot approach this? and I played Data like that. At that point my whole association with sci-fi was based on Forbidden Planet and I thought Do I play this like Leslie Nielsen or Robbie the Robot and you know what? [Laughs] Robbie is who really spoke to me.
I did this show, it was a childrens show, when I was a kid in Houston, Texas, called Kitterick. Kitterick was this woman who dressed in a cat outfit. She had a childrens show every afternoon and she was hot. I mean, there are guys I know from Houston who are around my age and if I say to them today, what about Kitterick? then we both get a glazed-over look thinking about her. Anyway, I went on Kittericks show when I was young and I was picked out from the audience to do some little contest and I dont remember what first prize was but I won second prize. Second prize was my very own Robbie the Robot and I think, ironically, that may have been the key moment when my life changed sort of like my rosebud. And what happens? I end up playing an android on ST. It all goes back to Robbie the Robot. [With a mischievous twinkle] Everything goes back to Robbie the Robot with me.
Robbie the Robot, I can see that. So you didnt seek any scientific advice about how to play an android? I guess that there was none available.
Well exactly. There was none available. Although, I subsequently met Stephen Hawking, who did an episode of the show, and a guy named Marvin Minsky who was the head of the robotics department at MIT University. If Id met Minsky before Id decided how to play the role then I would have asked him. But the beauty of playing an android was that aside from Robbie there really wasnt much to base it on. Theres not much you can do wrong. There are not many people who can say to you, youre not really playing an android correctly here. This is the way that an android should be played. So in that sense it was very liberating, you know?
Although you cant do a lot wrong I would say that you can still do a lot right. Im sure that when many people, who dont necessarily follow science or science fiction, imagine an android, or even the possibility of one, theyll think of Data.
And thats kind of fulfilling.
It must be quite a thought. I saw a TV programme recently with William Shatner about scientists who had been influenced by ST. There must now be a generation who were influenced by ST: TNG when they were growing up.
Yes. I think its already here. I mean how old were you when it was on TV?
I was in my teens.
Well there you go.
Not many actors can claim a similar impact. It must be satisfying to imagine that scientists could take robotics in a certain direction based on something that you did intuitively or even simply on a whim when you were playing Data
Yes, well you would think so, but to be honest I dont think about it. I really dont. [Laughs] I dont really care. You know, existentially, of course Im delighted if people were inspired in some way to do something, anything, by anything that Ive ever done, but really only existentially. On a purely realistic basis I dont care. Im not here to further mankind! I just try to amuse myself and get through the day.
Well, Data was probably the most popular character of ST: TNG.
Its kind of you to say so but I think if it were true then I would have made a lot more money. I think that we were all pretty much equal. I think that there were people who were Data fans and there were people who were Worf fans [Worf - the Klingon in ST: TNG] and there were people who well, nobody was a Riker fan . [Laughs] Im only kidding. Im just saying that because Jonathan [Frakes] might read this.
What were the politics like on set?
The politics were simple. In terms of the cast, Patrick [Stewart, who played Jean-Luc Picard] ruled although not just because he was the captain. You know [with a knowing glance at his PR person] Paramount has created this nonsensical thing about the captains as though theyre actually captains! But Patrick was essentially a captain in a way because hes a born leader. He has that gravitas that people tend to listen to and he has a way of looking at you. He can bend you to his will with a stare. I just tried to hide if possible, you know! Just to stay out of the whole political thing.
Presumably you spent a few hours in make-up every day
I did. More than a few. I spent more hours of the day in make-up than out of make-up.
In a way its kind of a form of method acting
Well in a way it is. You know for seven years I was Data more than I was myself. So much so, that sometimes when I would watch the show and see the ship go by I would think that I was in it! Thats a measure of how disturbed I became while I was doing it.
A lot of people with less reason probably thought they were in the ship as well.
Well thats true, thats true.
As an android, a machine, Data seems inherently incapable of change or progression, and with no emotional life, so how do you keep the audiences interest and plot any kind of character trajectory, if character is the right word?
Well I didnt, the writers did. They did plot a trajectory. I mean Roddenberry from day one - I call him Roddenberry but his name was actually Mister Roddenberry - had this idea. He said, Data, as the series progresses, will become more and more like a human as he begins to assimilate all the humanity around him until at the very end of the show he will be so much like a human and still not. That was the idea and thats the way that the writers took it. He was a classical clown, he really was. He was Chaplinesque in a way. Not to compare anything that I did to what Charlie Chaplin did but I mean Chaplinesque just as an adjective for the sad, tragic clown.
You must have been pleased to play Lore, Datas brother android with an emotion chip that enabled him to behave in a more human, if malign, way
Lore was easier to play. Lore was more like me.
Just sitting here, I can see that
Lore was evil, which was a simple thing to play for me! It was fun.
And how did you feel about the subsequent films? There were three .
There were four.
Of course, I forgot about the third one.
I wish I could forget about the third one.
There was Generations, and then there was First Contact, then Insurrection and then Nemesis, which you were involved in writing. How do you feel about them?
Generations, I thought was rushed. There were things that I liked about it but we started shooting about two weeks after we wrapped the series and the same writers that were writing the series wrote the film. It had some nice things about it but oddly what I think worked the least in Generations was the coming together of the two captains, which should have been the best part of it. Although they really became friends, they worked well together and they liked being around each other, something about that story just didnt blend correctly. Generations was OK. It wasnt horrible.
First Contact was probably our best film just because we had a better script. It was a great idea. You could hardly beat the Borg who were always good even in the series but the creation of the Borg Queen was what really brought it together. Plus we had a great cast with James Cromwell, Alfre Woodard and Alice Krige, who was fantastic as the Borg Queen. We were all at the top of our game by then because wed had some time off and wed come back with a sense of reunion that really made it work.
The third one was Insurrection. What can you say about Insurrection? Some people like it. It got some good reviews but I think that it was our weakest film because it was just too light. The stakes were too small and I didnt understand it quite frankly. We went to this planet to save these people who ultimately when you analyse the story were not really particularly worth saving. [Laughs] They were just these really banal people and their world was like a Renaissance festival. They made bread and thats all that you could tell that they did. They had the secret of life but did they offer to share it with anyone? We risked everything for them. We broke the prime directive for them and they never said to us, look, you must have some people who are old and sick, why dont you bring them here? Never. It was just, thanks a lot, well see you later. We left and I would have liked to have stayed with those people after we left and have them look at each other and say, what shall we do now? I know, lets bake some bread because thats all they did. I think that the story was misguided.
And then there was Nemesis, which could have been our best film. I actually think Nemesis is pretty good. I think its perhaps our second best film. There were some problems with it - Im not sure where exactly - but I dont think they were in the story. I thought the story was good. There was an interesting examination of what the nature of family is, what friendship is and what sacrifice is. I liked it. [Laughs] I mean I dont want to see it again. Its not The Searchers for Gods sake.
Data and the Borg Queen in First Contact had an interesting relationship. That was Data discovering sex wasnt it? Can an android discover sex?
I think that he actually discovered it long before.
Really?
Yeah, like episode one of the series!
Oh dear
Tasha Yar and Data
Youre absolutely right. I remember now.
Maybe he was remembering it with the Borg Queen, going Oh yeah ! This isnt a bad thing
Moving on, when youve been on the Star Trek convention circuit has there ever been any kind of rivalry between the crews?
Yes, theres a lot of mud wrestling we like to do but really there are certain people who like to do it more than others! No names! Seriously, is there a rivalry? Im sure there must be a rivalry of some sort but I feel like that were all part of the same great epic that is ST, that we all belong to this club that has gone on for hundreds of years now and will continue to go on, whoevers winds up in the next film.
In fact J. J. Abrams [creator of the TV series Lost and director of Mission Impossible 3] is supposed to be directing the next film and theyre saying that Matt Damons going to be in it. Thats probably not going to happen but thats what theyve said. J. J. has been quoted as saying that hed like to bridge the ST fans with the general public. You know what, whether hes able to do that or not, whoevers involved in that film will also be part of this whole epic tapestry that is ST.
And that film is in development at the moment?
Yes and I like that. Ive felt more comfortable with Star Trek with each new incarnation. When it was just ST: TNG and the original series it was sort of an exclusive club that I didnt particularly know whether I liked being a part of. Since its expanded more and more, and at this point when I see the people whove been involved in the ST club, I feel much better about the whole thing.
And how do you find the fans?
I find them perfectly fine. You know, theyre nice to me and its hard to be negative about people who have great affection for you.
Do you think that perhaps ST has particularly prospered during times when the USA has felt particularly good about itself, when there is a sense of optimism or enterprise, that it reflects the USAs changing attitudes towards its own values?
[Laughs] I think, as a matter of fact, that question you worked on and on that one Im not sure! Does that mean that Star Trek should be really exploding when the Bush administration is gone? I think that theres something to be said for that. Im not sure. If were looking for US confidence and Star Trek being synonymous then Im not sure that they will ever be another Star Trek because Im not certain that US confidence is ever going to survive what the current administration is doing.
Do you think this idea of the Enterprise boldly going represents the liberal values that arent unique to the USA but which it particularly embodies?
It would be nice to think so. I would love to think that was the case and I would love to think that the USA is going to boldly go where no one has gone before but right now the US administration isnt going where no ones gone before. Rather, theyre going exactly where everyones gone before for far too many centuries. Oil in a way is just a metaphor for that which everyone wants, that which makes one rich. I would like to see the USA go into other areas, like creating one world really.
A Federation as in ST?
A Federation, exactly. You know its interesting that in ST Roddenberry often said that hed projected a world in which peoples differences are celebrated rather than them being something that separated people. I think that theres value in that - I think that his heart was in the right place - but for my taste I would prefer to see a world in which there are no differences. I dont have a problem with everyone being the same. I think that we should be one people. In my opinion there are three big problems in the world today: religion, oil and the environment. The environment is the biggest problem and as long as were interested in the first two problems, oil and religion, were never going to solve the third one. We spend too much time, too much money and too much brain-power fighting people because of the mumbo-jumbo weve created and what we really need to focus on is how were going to save the species.
Given you doubts about the future of the species, what is the future of Star Trek?
After all at the moment there is no new Star Trek series on TV
[Laughs] Thats because the USA isnt confident right? You cant kill ST. Even when theres nothing being produced its on the air everyday somewhere and for forty years theres never been a day when ST wasnt on the air somewhere. I dont think thats going to end and I think that theyll produce more TV series and more films.
Ok, before we end, Ill ask you some quick questions. What has been your most memorable Star Trek moment?
Certainly my most memorable moment was sitting opposite Stephen Hawking and acting with him in the TV series. That was just unbelievable.
Who was your favourite character apart from Data?
[Deadpan] Data was the only character that I had any interest in whatsoever.
And which was your favourite storyline?
There were a lot of them that I thought were good. Just in terms of pure fun, we did a western that I really enjoyed.
Ok, thank you very much!
Beautiful!
Interview by Peter Fraser
www.close-upfilm.com/feat...spiner.htm
In a wide-ranging interview to mark Star Treks Fortieth Anniversary, Brent Spiner talks to Close-Up Film about playing the android Data in the Star Trek: The Next Generation TV series and films, his relations with the Star Trek cast, his least favourite Star Trek film, the future of Star Trek, how J. J. Abrams may direct the next Star Trek movie and the problems facing the world today. Also, the formative and perennial influence of one Robbie the Robot.
Looking youthful for his years and with a slyly satirical, yet charming, sense of humour that recalls his puckish portrayal of Datas mischievous, if not downright evil, brother Lore in Star Trek:The Next Generation (henceforth ST: TNG), Brent Spiner is an entertaining presence. Its extraordinary to think that for seven seasons of the TV series from 1987 to 1994 and then in four feature films from 1994 to 2002, such an expressive personality played an impassive and emotionless android. Nonetheless its the role for which he will always be famed and arguably among the most demanding and memorable persona in the entire history of Star Trek (henceforth ST). With the Fortieth Anniversary of the series this month, its a great time to reflect on the legacy of ST, and its future, with an actor whose character is as emblematic of the ST universe as Captain Kirk or Mr Spock in a surprising and revealing conversation, in which the Hotel Honesty Bar next to our interview room plays an incidental part
Brent, given that ST is no longer appearing on television or in cinemas, and that ST: TNG, in which you played Data, is certainly finished
I may be finished completely?
Not at all, I assume that youre going to continue
my illustrious career.
Yes, indeed, but what is your involvement with ST now?
This moment is my involvement. I have a lot of friends, the actors and producers, who I know from the show and I still see them. I attend occasional Star Trek conventions as well but otherwise, Im not being consulted regularly about the next incarnation.
Presumably its a legacy that youre happy to carry?
You know what? I dont even think about whether Im happy or Im not happy. But if I had to choose between the two then I would certainly say Im happy.
Were you a fan of ST when you were growing up?
Well, [Laughs] let me answer you facetiously. What exactly makes one a fan? Did I watch it? I did see it. I didnt make a date every week but I did see many of them. I think that there were some seventy-nine episodes or something like that. I probably saw thirty. So I consider myself to have been a fan of sorts. I enjoyed it.
Were you interested in science fiction?
Not in the least. Im still not. I dont dislike it but its not my favourite thing. Id put science fiction right about even with westerns. Maybe I like westerns a little more. But its a genre and I like all the genres. I like comedy, I like musicals you name it.
Youve played a few comic roles and youre clearly a very talented comic actor, do you think that your comedy skills helped you to portray Data?
Oh yeah, totally. I mean, he didnt try to be funny but he was funny. It gave me a point of view. It gave me a jumping off point. The fact that I could approach this character in a comic way made it easier. [Mr Spiner pauses and peers enquiringly at the golden coke bottle standing next to my glass of coke].
What kind of coke is that?
Actually I dont know, Ive never seen it before
Gold?
In fact, I think that its World Cup Coke.
You know what? I would keep that bottle if I were you. That could be a collectors item. [Lifts up the bottle and examines it] World Cup Germany. Ive never seen one of these. Let me pause just for one second. [Motions to my tape recorder] Dont turn this off because Im just going to look in this room to see if they have any more of those [Glances slightly incredulously at the title on the door] The Honesty Bar?
For the tape recorder, Mr Spiner has just gone into The Honesty Bar.
Exactly. [Echoing laughter from beyond the door] Ill be honest with you I dont even see a coke in here. Did you get that bottle from in here?
Well, it was given to me. The lady in question came through the door of the Honesty Bar but she may have got the coke bottle from somewhere else
[Comes back in] And she didnt say a word about it. [Settles himself] Ok, go on
Ok, given that you had no particular interest in sci-fi, how did you come to play Data? Im sure that youve been asked this question before.
[With emphasis] Never been asked this before. Every question youve asked so far has been uniquely original.
Ahem, youre being heavily ironic
Indeed. [Laughs] You obviously spent hours coming up with these questions.
Absolutely.
Ok, let me just say something on the side. I do remember that when I was quite young my favourite sci-fi film, the one that really meant a lot to me growing up, was Forbidden Planet. You know that film with Walter Pigeon and of course the great Leslie Nielsen? Because Leslie Nielsen when hes playing it straight is even funnier than when hes playing it funny. So I think that Robbie the Robot was my role model for Data. I would say to myself, how would Robbie the Robot approach this? and I played Data like that. At that point my whole association with sci-fi was based on Forbidden Planet and I thought Do I play this like Leslie Nielsen or Robbie the Robot and you know what? [Laughs] Robbie is who really spoke to me.
I did this show, it was a childrens show, when I was a kid in Houston, Texas, called Kitterick. Kitterick was this woman who dressed in a cat outfit. She had a childrens show every afternoon and she was hot. I mean, there are guys I know from Houston who are around my age and if I say to them today, what about Kitterick? then we both get a glazed-over look thinking about her. Anyway, I went on Kittericks show when I was young and I was picked out from the audience to do some little contest and I dont remember what first prize was but I won second prize. Second prize was my very own Robbie the Robot and I think, ironically, that may have been the key moment when my life changed sort of like my rosebud. And what happens? I end up playing an android on ST. It all goes back to Robbie the Robot. [With a mischievous twinkle] Everything goes back to Robbie the Robot with me.
Robbie the Robot, I can see that. So you didnt seek any scientific advice about how to play an android? I guess that there was none available.
Well exactly. There was none available. Although, I subsequently met Stephen Hawking, who did an episode of the show, and a guy named Marvin Minsky who was the head of the robotics department at MIT University. If Id met Minsky before Id decided how to play the role then I would have asked him. But the beauty of playing an android was that aside from Robbie there really wasnt much to base it on. Theres not much you can do wrong. There are not many people who can say to you, youre not really playing an android correctly here. This is the way that an android should be played. So in that sense it was very liberating, you know?
Although you cant do a lot wrong I would say that you can still do a lot right. Im sure that when many people, who dont necessarily follow science or science fiction, imagine an android, or even the possibility of one, theyll think of Data.
And thats kind of fulfilling.
It must be quite a thought. I saw a TV programme recently with William Shatner about scientists who had been influenced by ST. There must now be a generation who were influenced by ST: TNG when they were growing up.
Yes. I think its already here. I mean how old were you when it was on TV?
I was in my teens.
Well there you go.
Not many actors can claim a similar impact. It must be satisfying to imagine that scientists could take robotics in a certain direction based on something that you did intuitively or even simply on a whim when you were playing Data
Yes, well you would think so, but to be honest I dont think about it. I really dont. [Laughs] I dont really care. You know, existentially, of course Im delighted if people were inspired in some way to do something, anything, by anything that Ive ever done, but really only existentially. On a purely realistic basis I dont care. Im not here to further mankind! I just try to amuse myself and get through the day.
Well, Data was probably the most popular character of ST: TNG.
Its kind of you to say so but I think if it were true then I would have made a lot more money. I think that we were all pretty much equal. I think that there were people who were Data fans and there were people who were Worf fans [Worf - the Klingon in ST: TNG] and there were people who well, nobody was a Riker fan . [Laughs] Im only kidding. Im just saying that because Jonathan [Frakes] might read this.
What were the politics like on set?
The politics were simple. In terms of the cast, Patrick [Stewart, who played Jean-Luc Picard] ruled although not just because he was the captain. You know [with a knowing glance at his PR person] Paramount has created this nonsensical thing about the captains as though theyre actually captains! But Patrick was essentially a captain in a way because hes a born leader. He has that gravitas that people tend to listen to and he has a way of looking at you. He can bend you to his will with a stare. I just tried to hide if possible, you know! Just to stay out of the whole political thing.
Presumably you spent a few hours in make-up every day
I did. More than a few. I spent more hours of the day in make-up than out of make-up.
In a way its kind of a form of method acting
Well in a way it is. You know for seven years I was Data more than I was myself. So much so, that sometimes when I would watch the show and see the ship go by I would think that I was in it! Thats a measure of how disturbed I became while I was doing it.
A lot of people with less reason probably thought they were in the ship as well.
Well thats true, thats true.
As an android, a machine, Data seems inherently incapable of change or progression, and with no emotional life, so how do you keep the audiences interest and plot any kind of character trajectory, if character is the right word?
Well I didnt, the writers did. They did plot a trajectory. I mean Roddenberry from day one - I call him Roddenberry but his name was actually Mister Roddenberry - had this idea. He said, Data, as the series progresses, will become more and more like a human as he begins to assimilate all the humanity around him until at the very end of the show he will be so much like a human and still not. That was the idea and thats the way that the writers took it. He was a classical clown, he really was. He was Chaplinesque in a way. Not to compare anything that I did to what Charlie Chaplin did but I mean Chaplinesque just as an adjective for the sad, tragic clown.
You must have been pleased to play Lore, Datas brother android with an emotion chip that enabled him to behave in a more human, if malign, way
Lore was easier to play. Lore was more like me.
Just sitting here, I can see that
Lore was evil, which was a simple thing to play for me! It was fun.
And how did you feel about the subsequent films? There were three .
There were four.
Of course, I forgot about the third one.
I wish I could forget about the third one.
There was Generations, and then there was First Contact, then Insurrection and then Nemesis, which you were involved in writing. How do you feel about them?
Generations, I thought was rushed. There were things that I liked about it but we started shooting about two weeks after we wrapped the series and the same writers that were writing the series wrote the film. It had some nice things about it but oddly what I think worked the least in Generations was the coming together of the two captains, which should have been the best part of it. Although they really became friends, they worked well together and they liked being around each other, something about that story just didnt blend correctly. Generations was OK. It wasnt horrible.
First Contact was probably our best film just because we had a better script. It was a great idea. You could hardly beat the Borg who were always good even in the series but the creation of the Borg Queen was what really brought it together. Plus we had a great cast with James Cromwell, Alfre Woodard and Alice Krige, who was fantastic as the Borg Queen. We were all at the top of our game by then because wed had some time off and wed come back with a sense of reunion that really made it work.
The third one was Insurrection. What can you say about Insurrection? Some people like it. It got some good reviews but I think that it was our weakest film because it was just too light. The stakes were too small and I didnt understand it quite frankly. We went to this planet to save these people who ultimately when you analyse the story were not really particularly worth saving. [Laughs] They were just these really banal people and their world was like a Renaissance festival. They made bread and thats all that you could tell that they did. They had the secret of life but did they offer to share it with anyone? We risked everything for them. We broke the prime directive for them and they never said to us, look, you must have some people who are old and sick, why dont you bring them here? Never. It was just, thanks a lot, well see you later. We left and I would have liked to have stayed with those people after we left and have them look at each other and say, what shall we do now? I know, lets bake some bread because thats all they did. I think that the story was misguided.
And then there was Nemesis, which could have been our best film. I actually think Nemesis is pretty good. I think its perhaps our second best film. There were some problems with it - Im not sure where exactly - but I dont think they were in the story. I thought the story was good. There was an interesting examination of what the nature of family is, what friendship is and what sacrifice is. I liked it. [Laughs] I mean I dont want to see it again. Its not The Searchers for Gods sake.
Data and the Borg Queen in First Contact had an interesting relationship. That was Data discovering sex wasnt it? Can an android discover sex?
I think that he actually discovered it long before.
Really?
Yeah, like episode one of the series!
Oh dear
Tasha Yar and Data
Youre absolutely right. I remember now.
Maybe he was remembering it with the Borg Queen, going Oh yeah ! This isnt a bad thing
Moving on, when youve been on the Star Trek convention circuit has there ever been any kind of rivalry between the crews?
Yes, theres a lot of mud wrestling we like to do but really there are certain people who like to do it more than others! No names! Seriously, is there a rivalry? Im sure there must be a rivalry of some sort but I feel like that were all part of the same great epic that is ST, that we all belong to this club that has gone on for hundreds of years now and will continue to go on, whoevers winds up in the next film.
In fact J. J. Abrams [creator of the TV series Lost and director of Mission Impossible 3] is supposed to be directing the next film and theyre saying that Matt Damons going to be in it. Thats probably not going to happen but thats what theyve said. J. J. has been quoted as saying that hed like to bridge the ST fans with the general public. You know what, whether hes able to do that or not, whoevers involved in that film will also be part of this whole epic tapestry that is ST.
And that film is in development at the moment?
Yes and I like that. Ive felt more comfortable with Star Trek with each new incarnation. When it was just ST: TNG and the original series it was sort of an exclusive club that I didnt particularly know whether I liked being a part of. Since its expanded more and more, and at this point when I see the people whove been involved in the ST club, I feel much better about the whole thing.
And how do you find the fans?
I find them perfectly fine. You know, theyre nice to me and its hard to be negative about people who have great affection for you.
Do you think that perhaps ST has particularly prospered during times when the USA has felt particularly good about itself, when there is a sense of optimism or enterprise, that it reflects the USAs changing attitudes towards its own values?
[Laughs] I think, as a matter of fact, that question you worked on and on that one Im not sure! Does that mean that Star Trek should be really exploding when the Bush administration is gone? I think that theres something to be said for that. Im not sure. If were looking for US confidence and Star Trek being synonymous then Im not sure that they will ever be another Star Trek because Im not certain that US confidence is ever going to survive what the current administration is doing.
Do you think this idea of the Enterprise boldly going represents the liberal values that arent unique to the USA but which it particularly embodies?
It would be nice to think so. I would love to think that was the case and I would love to think that the USA is going to boldly go where no one has gone before but right now the US administration isnt going where no ones gone before. Rather, theyre going exactly where everyones gone before for far too many centuries. Oil in a way is just a metaphor for that which everyone wants, that which makes one rich. I would like to see the USA go into other areas, like creating one world really.
A Federation as in ST?
A Federation, exactly. You know its interesting that in ST Roddenberry often said that hed projected a world in which peoples differences are celebrated rather than them being something that separated people. I think that theres value in that - I think that his heart was in the right place - but for my taste I would prefer to see a world in which there are no differences. I dont have a problem with everyone being the same. I think that we should be one people. In my opinion there are three big problems in the world today: religion, oil and the environment. The environment is the biggest problem and as long as were interested in the first two problems, oil and religion, were never going to solve the third one. We spend too much time, too much money and too much brain-power fighting people because of the mumbo-jumbo weve created and what we really need to focus on is how were going to save the species.
Given you doubts about the future of the species, what is the future of Star Trek?
After all at the moment there is no new Star Trek series on TV
[Laughs] Thats because the USA isnt confident right? You cant kill ST. Even when theres nothing being produced its on the air everyday somewhere and for forty years theres never been a day when ST wasnt on the air somewhere. I dont think thats going to end and I think that theyll produce more TV series and more films.
Ok, before we end, Ill ask you some quick questions. What has been your most memorable Star Trek moment?
Certainly my most memorable moment was sitting opposite Stephen Hawking and acting with him in the TV series. That was just unbelievable.
Who was your favourite character apart from Data?
[Deadpan] Data was the only character that I had any interest in whatsoever.
And which was your favourite storyline?
There were a lot of them that I thought were good. Just in terms of pure fun, we did a western that I really enjoyed.
Ok, thank you very much!
Beautiful!
Hugs,
~LaVette
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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~LaVette
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Secretary of Imago Earth Center & Enright Ridge Urban Eco Village:
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My Brent Spiner/Data Links Main Page:
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