Advertisement
Some
individuals are natural born leaders while others should never, ever, be out in
a position of responsibility over anyone else. Richard Woolsey is one of those
men. A pain in the ass bureaucrat whose frequent assessments have scrutinized
both Stargate SG-1 and Atlantis teams, Woolsey’s intelligence and quest for the
truth are only matched by his lack of tact or people skills. Nonetheless, when
Colonel Samantha Carter is suddenly reassigned in the upcoming fifth season of Stargate:
Atlantis, someone has the brilliant idea of making Woolsey the new
commander of the otherworldly expedition.
“Frankly,
when they hired me for the job, I went ‘Oh God, that's interesting!’” recalls
actor Robert Picardo on the Stargate: Atlantis set. “Of
course I love working here. I love the company. I'm treated beautifully and I
love coming to Vancouver.
So all the outside things were like ‘Yes, yes, of course I want to do it!’ Then
there was a little voice going ‘Wait a minute! You've set this guy up as kind
of an annoyance, a bit of a prig. I come in and evaluate you so you all better
watch out and be on your best behavior! I'm going to find out who screwed up!’ Now
suddenly he's the guy in charge and he's a briefing room guy. He's a think tank
personality. Woolsey is not a leader. He evaluates other leaders. He's got a
terrific legal mind, he knows the military rule book, knows all the rules about
protocol, eliminating collateral damage, and acceptable losses but he doesn't
make decisions. Woolsey just comes in and tells you how you screwed up.”
“So
that's an interesting dilemma for a character who thinks he knows the right way
to do everything and suddenly is put to the test,” continues Picardo. “I thought
it was very interesting but we've also set up that he's not terribly courageous.
We had great comic mileage in the SG-1 episode 'The Swarm',
where Woolsey is running away faster than anybody else. So we had set up
certain precedents that I was a little concerned about because I didn't want to
suddenly become a different character. But on the other hand, I thought if the
writers are choosing to do this, it's for the exact reason to put someone in
charge who's not a born leader, to see what happens, how he develops, and how
he's accepted.”
All that tangible tension is
business as usual for Picardo. Best known as the holographic medical examiner
The Doctor from Star Trek: Voyager, he has made a career out
of embodying those uptight guys who have the best of intentions but don’t make
very good first impressions.
“Sometimes
they're shorthanded as the guy you love to hate but I like to look at them as
people who just have certain neuroses that create their social mask,” notes
Picardo. “Perhaps they are a little unlikable or a little impenetrable in some
way but then you learn why they got that way from other things that come out
about their personality. Even dating back to the Wonder Years
where I played the gym teacher, if Richard Nixon had an IQ of 60 and a gym cap,
that's who I was. Now you don't think that's going to be a likable person but
what you end up liking about that character is that he cannot help but be that
way. You see whatever motivates him to be that strange and quirky and you grow
to like him anyway.
"Those
characters are fun to play imagination wise because it's not like you set out
to get the audience to like you. You want the audience to find delight in
whatever they notice about you or reveal about you that explains something that
they saw two weeks ago or something about the way you act. I could not play a
straight ahead courageous hero. It's not what I do. They'll hire some other guy
to do that so if they want me, then they want me to put my particular spin on
that. That's more fun for me and I think it's very creative of the producers to
try something like that here because I'm definitely an oddball choice.”
Having been a part of two of sci-fi’s most beloved and longest running franchises, Picardo has some first hand insight into the differences between the Stargate and Star Trek universes.
“There's a kind of freewheeling humorous, we're winking a little at the genre thing, that they do on Stargate very well,” offers Picardo. “Star Trek tends to take itself a little too seriously. They were either very dramatic shows, or if we did a humorous show, it was always a little like ‘Oh, we're doing humor on Star Trek,’ especially on the original series. I shouldn't say this in print but it was always a little painful when they were funny on Star Trek. My character on Voyager, because of the way he was presented, I could go either way. I could be a real buffoon, a windbag, be self-involved, and we could get a lot of comic mileage from him. However, the audience accepted me with gravity when I was in a dire situation so they would follow me in comic or dramatic stories. What I like about this show is they do both at the same time.
"Stargate constantly makes jokes. I was about to be eaten by a Wraith, and not in a fun way, last night. I'm about to be fed upon and I had a line that was quite funny. It had to be played dead serious but it's clearly a laugh in the moment I'm about to be killed. And I think it's cool that they do that. They'll keep both balls in the air very seamlessly and part of it is that they like to wink at the genre. It has that 'Indiana Jones' tone.”
Indeed, Stargate: Atlantis is notorious for its wit, even to the extent Richard Dean Anderson’s Jack O’Neill could have easily held his own in a quip face off with Robin the Boy Wonder.
“And not every character can do that at the same time,” agrees Picardo. “In order to keep the drama, you can't have every character not taking it seriously but you can rotate it around. We've set Woolsey up as a non action guy. He's a theorist, not a real hero, so he's learning that. When there's actual danger, I have to take it extremely seriously because I haven't survived through 80 episodes the way the rest of the guys have. I'm new to it so I can't do that. In a dire circumstance, you won't see my character winking at the camera but I can still have a writer's joke. And you'll still have a laugh at that moment. I had to totally commit emotionally to my fear in that moment, rather than step outside of it the way one of the other characters who are a little more ‘I've looked down the jaws of death before...’ I haven't so I have to play it a different way but the writers are still having a little fun in a very serious moment.”
Most Popular
- Recommended
- Commented
- Obama Makes First Comic Book Appearance as President Elect
- Word Balloon: Marty Pasko - The DC Vault
- Ethan Van Sciver: Your Time Is Now Mine
- Best Shots: Detective, The Stand, Darkness & More
- Best Shots Extra: JSA Kingdom Come Special - Superman
- Best Shots: JSA, Blue Marvel, Berlin & More
- Final Secret Crisis Invasion - But at What Cost?
- Movie Review: Repo: The Genetic Opera
- Could Beyonce Be Wonder Woman?
- Game Reviews: Star Wars The Clone Wars Wii & DS
- Cast-Off! Who Should Play Captain America?
- Dan DiDio: 20 Answers, 1 Question
- Dan DiDio - A Call for Questions
- The Final Three Captain America Contenders: Who Do You Pick?
- Could Beyonce Be Wonder Woman?
- A Call for Dan DiDio Questions
- Marvel's FULL February 2009 Solicitations
- DC Comics FULL February 2009 Solicitations
- 5 Lessons We Hope Obama Learned from Spider-Man
- Video - The Star Trek Trailer - What do You Think?
Community
- Blog@
-
-
11.21.2008 | Matt Maxwell
Strangeways: The Thirsty - Page 12
Yes, I’m late. Sorry, boss. Next time I’ll have the post-o-matic 9000 queue it up ahead of time. I done learned my... -
11.21.2008 | Kevin Melrose
International poster released for Whiteout
It’s been a while since we’ve seen anything about Dominic Sena’s adaptation of Whiteout, based on the 1998 Oni Press miniseries by... -
11.21.2008 | Kevin Melrose
Bring out your dead?
In the wake of the cancellations by DC Comics of Birds of Prey, Blue Beetle, Checkmate, Legion of Super-Heroes and Manhunter, Marc-Oliver Frisch...
-
11.21.2008 | Matt Maxwell
Marketplace Links
- Skip the crystal ball, turn to math for answers.
- Geek Logik can help you solve life’s questions – big & small.
- Don't toss it, Recycle it!
- Find local recycling centers now
- Appreciate the weird & wacky?
- Check out our Strange News for outlandish stories.
- Do you believe that we aren’t the only ones?
- Read up on the latest discoveries relating to life beyond our planet.
- Who doesn’t love Top 10 lists?
- See our Top 10 picks for all kinds of cool stuff- from the scary to the funny to the plain ugly










