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Brain Child
by D. Read and
D. Sumner
For almost eight years actor David
Hewlett has had Rodney McKay's technobabble-intense, egocentric dialogue
running through his brain. As production continues on Season Five of
Stargate Atlantis, he has much more on his mind nowadays: a television
series in development, a movie script, a wife and son and yes -- Stargate!
In this interview, David hints at what is to come in Season Five before
remembering some highlights from last year -- some good, and some not so
good. He also talks about fatherhood, working with new full-time cast
members Robert Picardo and Jewel Staite, and where things are at with
Star-crossed -- a new comedy series he is writing for SCI-FI Channel.
For GateWorld.net I'm David Read, here with Mr. David
Hewlett!
Indeed, the Davids.
Yes, all the Davids are present ...
Yes.
... in his "fresh" trailer here.
Laughter] It's the new Havana Cuban cigar smell, apparently.
It's actually a Cuban cigar candle that Jane gave me. Cause apparently it's
the manliest scent she could find.
How's she doing? How's the baby doing?
She's great. Jane, I think, is some kind of an android who has
been sent from the future to make my life perfect. Because I don't know how
she deals with the kid, myself, and running a house and doing taxes and all
that sort of thing. She's unbelievable. Inhuman, in fact, I would say. She's
my own little "Fran." A "Fran" with attitude. It's great.
And now you're a father.
Mmm-hmm. I've started to spawn! I've found that it's much cheaper
to just have children than to try to recruit crews for things. So basically,
I've just decided to breed myself an army and take over the world from
there. A little army of McKay-like creatures.
Or at least a film crew.
Exactly. At the very least. At the very least a film crew.
Non-union. They'd be cheap. They'd work for milk ... which Jane produces.
[Laughter]
So, basically, we're a self-sufficient little society.
What episode are you currently working on?
We're currently working on Ghost In The Machine. A
lovely Police song, and now a fantastic episode of Atlantis.
And you're bringing Fran back!
We're bringing Fran back. Yeah! We're bringing a few things back
... which I'm sure I probably shouldn't say anything about. It definitely
threw a number of curves at us. It was fun to read because, you know, I like
those episodes where you go, "What?! Oh my God!" And then you're eager to go
to the next page. As opposed to the ones where you don't.
Any stories coming up that are Rodney-heavy that you were
surprised at, or looking forward to?
My favorite script of all time, I just read: The Shrine of
Talus -- Which is Brad Wright. He's just written this script. And
it's good to have Brad. It is truly ... it's the script. It's the one that
is going to blow everyone away. It's unbelievable. It's like a wicked acting
piece. Whether I'm supposed to say this or not, Kate is coming back. We've
got Jeannie back. And it's ... just brutal. It's like total
tear-jerker. It's gonna be neat.
And for McKay, it's fantastic
because there's this whole deterioration thing happening. And it's just ...
it is the one, without a doubt, that I'm most looking forward to right now.
Andy [Mikita] is going to direct it, too. So he's very excited about it, as
well.
What are some of your favourite scenes from last year, ones that
resonate with you now?
Last year? My god! I'm trying to think which episodes jumped out
at me. The Last Man was just an interesting one, for many reasons.
Just because there was so much going on, including the birth of my child. I
mean, we were literally waiting for Jane to have the kid during that
episode.
And it was like four hours of
prosthetics. And talking, just this endless stuff to talk about. And I was
kind of worried, because when I read the script I was like, "That's a lot of
talk." It's a lot of flashback stuff. But I saw the episode and I really,
really liked it. There's poignancy to it that I really didn't expect there
to be. It was a lot of fun. A lot of fun.
Your performance was really solid in it.
Well, thank you. Actually, the funny one was that someone said,
"What did they think of the prosthetics on the face? And did they give you a
thing for your belly?" And I was like, "No. I just stuck my belly out ..."
Because I consciously stuck my belly out the whole time. I took the ...
what's it called?
The fat suit?
No, not the fat suit. The opposite ... the girdle! That's it! I
undid the girdle and I did The Last Man. I did The Last Man as
girdle-less McKay. And it was a lot of fun. It was fun watching Kavan
[Smith] as well. Lorne older, as well -- who looks exactly like Ronald
Reagan. That's what Ronald Reagan looked like when he was older. I don't
know what I'd look like when I was older.
Was it a difficult
acting challenge to approach the character from that [perspective] the first
time?
The makeup was so beautiful that honestly I think there's a
tendency ... the danger there is to act too old, because you're so
enthralled with what they've done to your face. I think the key there is to
try and not flail around the place as much as you did when you were a
"young" man. You know, just keep throwing my back out. I was going to remove
my teeth every so often. I wanted to lose my hair. I told them, "Come on!
You've got to recede it back to nothing!" Because that's just the ultimate
depression for McKay. And myself. Or just have a really, really bad rug. Be
really old and have this dark brown (toupee) that he sort of takes off to
think every so often or something. Surprisingly, they didn't go for that.
They went for poignancy. I saw comic possibilities. A galaxy of
possibilities.
What about Trio/
Mmm.
Now that we can talk about it. Now that it's aired!
Yeah. Trio was absolute hell. I'm not afraid to say that.
You were in a box that moved. With cranes and dust. And we were strangely
miserable to the point of euphoria. Like we got to the point where it was
... I've got to admit, there are worse things in the world to happen to an
actor than to be stuck in a dark box with Jewel Staite and Amanda Tapping. I
don't think you get a lot of sympathy from people on that. And they were
hilarious.
It was so tough and so technical -- because it was so much stuff. You know,
it's funny, because I did this film, Cube, which was all based in
these little boxes. And then, all of the sudden, here we are on a set which
is basically the same thing. Only they had a bigger box and it actually
moved. We had to do all the shaking ourselves on the Cube stuff. We
couldn't afford for hydraulics and things.
But I think Amanda and Jewel and I came up with an entire dinner theatre
musical version of Atlantis that we would do. I think when the show
is finally put to rest, you will probably see a quick little dinner theatre
production.
Parties and bar mitzvahs!
You got it. And then a very shaky video camera edition of it
released on DVD maybe at some point. So we had a lot of those numbers. We
were driving the crew crazy with that. And they're just so good. I don't
know how they do it.
I mean, Amanda's been doing this for so long, she has every right to be the
biggest diva on the planet. I'm the biggest diva on the planet. I'm the only
one who lost his temper the entire time. It was me. And it was just so funny
because ... here's a couple of examples:
There was one where I was supposed to ... I can't remember what it was
exactly. It was a fall. I was supposed to do a fall. I leap out of the way,
because of the fire thing. And I leap out of the way. So we have this stunt
man who does all of the dangerous stuff. All I have to do is leap into a big
pad. So we do the first take and I leap. And all of a sudden I realize that
my trajectory is completely wrong. And I've missed the pad entirely, and I
land on this big thing of rope. And it ... oh my God, it was total agony.
And I look up. And there's Amanda and Jewel trying so hard to look like they
were worried about me -- but just tears streaming down their faces. They're
giggling their little faces off. So there was a lot of that type of stuff.
And then, I lost my temper at one point, and I have been quoted back what I
said. Jewel, everyday, pretty much comes into work and quotes it back.
Martin Wood had asked me to do something, and it was something I was
frustrated with. And I said, "Well, sometimes it's called directing, and
sometimes it's just bullying!"
[Laughter]
And that gets quoted back to me by the bloody Jewel Staite on a
regular basis -- who is in Australia right now, I should add! While we're
all here slaving away, she's swanning around in Australia. I did as much as
I could to alarm her with tales of funnel web spiders and ... what are they
called? The drop monkeys that don't exist.
The thing about Australia ... I love Australia. I literally had dreams about
the colours in Australia. The first night I was there, I slept. And I had
these weird dreams about the colours. Because you don't see those colours
here.
And the other thing: everybody there is a crocodile hunter. You're talking
to a guy on the street and they'll go, "Ah!" and suddenly disappear, and
they'll come back holding a spider. "This is the most dangerous spider there
is! This bites you and you're bloody dead!" And you're like, "Why are you
holding it?!" He'll go, "I just thought you'd want to see it." But it's a
dangerous spider. And he goes, "Yeah! You don't want to be eaten by those."
And the other one was, we went for a walk in the jungle -- this jungle
"thing," for want of a better word. It was a rain forest, I guess. There was
this beautiful little place we stayed at, and there was this little path you
could walk up. And so, me being McKay-like in a way, I went up to the
visitors service and I went, "Look, we're going to go for a walk and I just
want to know: Is there anything we need to be looking out for?" And they're
like, "Nah, nah. You're perfectly safe. Perfectly safe. Stick to the path
and you're fine."
And I'm like, "Stick to the path. Okay. Fine. Is there anything I shouldn't
touch?" They go, "Nah, nah. You're totally fine. Totally fine." And as I'm
walking out, there's this picture of a small child smiling at this giant boa
constrictor that's in front of him, that has just swallowed a pig. So
there's this massive lump that's bigger than the child. And the woman goes,
"Oh! Don't touch anything that looks obviously dangerous! And I said stick
to the path, right? The water's fine, 'cause it's too cold for the crocs
most of the time."
So I did nothing. I walked along the path elbows-in the entire time. And let
Jane go first.
Back to North America for a minute ...
Mmm. That's where we should do a Stargate. In Australia.
We need to do some location stuff. They got to go to Antarctica. I say let's
go somewhere warm.
Not quite like the desert in The Last Man, but ...
We need a real desert. The effects department blowing stuff in
your face is just not the same as the Sahara.
What has become easier,
after working on this show over the past few years? And what has become more
difficult?
Eating. Eating is much easier now than it was before. No, in a
strange way, I think learning the lines has become easier. I've never been
good at learning lines. And I've never had that photographic memory. I mean,
there are people who can look at a page and they have it memorized. I take
forever to do it. I believe, if anything, it's proved to me [the brain] is a
muscle. The more you do, the better you get at it.
You make it look very effortless.
Well ... watch a few takes. There's a lot of agony. I think when
I first came in, I felt you had to get everything right every time. And I
think as you get further and further into a series, you begin to realize
that it's not just about getting through it. It's worth taking the time to
get things right. I think that definitely has become easier for me, in a
strange way. I don't get as frightened by nine or ten-page days as I used
to.
But that's not license for them to go write more. Please don't go longer!
Because they are tough days. But that's definitely something that has been
easier. I also think that once the character has dealt with a lot of these
situations, you tend to get familiar with the sort of way that McKay is
going to react to things. So you sort of know where you're going to go on
scenes before you've read them, in some cases.
So as scary as that may be, it becomes a little natural?
Yeah. I think that's a scary thing. I think I've become so much
... it's beginning to become a very difficult thing to separate the two.
There's going to be some nasty separation anxiety when I finally do have to
pull myself out, peel myself away from that.
Tell us a little bit about Robert Picardo, and what the Woolsey
character adds to the dynamic.
He brings sexy back! That's what he does. Picardo is ... well,
first off, Picardo is a fantastic actor. He's got fantastic mannerisms, all
these beautiful little things. And he does so much work. There's so much
stuff going on and everything -- in every sentence. Obviously, he's thought
of all these little things. He's just really fun to watch.
And what's nice, from our perspective, is that he's so "fish out of water."
I mean, he's the last person who should basically be in charge of Atlantis.
And so there's a lot of fuel for us to be unhappy and to argue with his way
of running the city. Especially after someone like Sam Carter who so
obviously is suited to this stuff, to have Woolsey come in with his
bureaucracy.
And paper! All of a sudden -- five seasons, never saw paper on a desk. And
all of the sudden, he's got all these papers and files. We all get handled
files. And that's it! So, it's just kind of fun. He's come in and put his
stamp on it. And it's fun because you can really play that resentment. And
we all resent him anyways. How could you not?
Woolsey, just like McKay, started off as a guest star on SG-1,
and an antagonist -- someone that you don't really like to like.
You're right. But that's the beautiful thing about guest stars.
The thing is, Stargate is not afraid to play with those un-likable
characters. Especially when you deal with this kind of stuff, you have to
deal with them. When it comes to the sciences, just because you're a nice
person doesn't mean you're a good scientist. Quite the opposite in many
cases. Kavanagh is a good example.
So I think what's neat about the Woolsey character is that he's not another
obnoxious scientist. He's a bureaucrat. And that's the stuff that is just
painful to deal with. It's kind of hard to be a hero when you're constantly
checking the manual -- which is funny, because that's in a way what McKay
was doing at the beginning, anyways. He was very academic in his
understanding of what was going on as opposed to ... his hands-on approach
hadn't quite kicked in yet.
It's also really nice to have someone who's sort of the same out-there
character. We get to sort of butt heads, but at the same time we're both
still in our own little worlds, which is kind of fun. Because it's true.
Both Woolsey and McKay are so in their own little worlds. It's kind of fun
to see them in scenes together because everything is misconstrued.
Do they clash a lot?
We haven't actually clashed a lot. But anything I say to him I
say with utter disrespect. It just tends to be a bit of that kind of stuff,
which is sort of fun. But anything I can twist to make it sound like "You're
an idiot" -– which is generally what I do with McKay anyways -- every
question, every comment, anything that happens is generally someone else's
[fault].
One of the things that we were talking about was that often when I have a
line that says, "Oh, I thought this was going to happen sooner" or "I didn't
think that was going to happen and I was wrong" ... I change it to "we."
"We" had no idea that was going to happen."
How does Rodney take Carter's departure? Does he take it hard?
Well, it's open-ended enough that it didn't feel ... to be
honest, McKay doesn't know that she's gone for any length of time, anyways.
I think, both for logistical reasons and for story reasons, there's a very
big open window there -- which I'm very much hoping (and assuming) that
we'll be seeing her again very soon. I hope. I really do. Because I think it
would be a huge, huge loss, frankly. I love that dynamic.
And in a selfish way, I love having Amanda around. We had so much fun last
year, and I hope it's not going to be just one season.
We've got [Michael] Shanks coming in for an episode. And it just makes
sense. I don't want us to be completely distanced from SG-1. The
whole point is that this is all part of the same universe. There has to be
that crossover stuff and that back and forth.
Selfishly, as an actor, Amanda's just fantastic to work with. I love that
dynamic that McKay and Carter have. If we hadn't gotten along the first
time, I wouldn't be here. I'd be like Kavanagh. I'd have long hair, probably
living in my parents' basement.
Rodney is kind of the Anti-Carter. He's Bizarro Carter.
It's true. And she's also this strangely idyllic version of what
he sees for himself, in a way. What he sees for himself in a girlfriend, and
also what he wishes he was. He still has such a hard time marrying the fact
that she's brilliant and beautiful and brave all together. Because he
doesn't have those. He's never all three at the same time -- or very rarely!
We're hearing hints
that there is a love triangle that kind of grew out of Season Four.
I heard about that.
What about poor Katie Brown?
Well, Katie dumped me pretty good. That's the basic idea. Again,
with McKay, he's absolutely, basically "special needs" in a relationship. He
has no sense of how to maintain or create a relationship. He's so used to
everyone hating him so much that God help you if you actually like him --
because I think that's a sign of weakness, as far as he's concerned.
But what's happened, with the introduction of the Keller character, there's
definitely been a sort of interesting shift there. Because this is someone
who he hasn't built up into a mythical figure like Carter, or Katie. This
is, I guess, the first female friend that McKay would ever have had. And it
sort of snuck up on him, which I think is a different thing for McKay to
deal with.
And I think it's funny. None of the writers were really expecting
it either. It just kind of grew naturally out of ...
I think so, yeah. And I think Jewel might kind of have the same
sense of humour, too. So I think there's a tendency to play in scenes that
way. That also helps with that kind of stuff as well.
Again, we have so many actors here who do these neat little things, neat
little ways of acting in these scenes. She's one of those great people who
does stuff and you find yourself going, "What the hell are you ... well,
that's neat!" These cute little, quirky sort of things that she does. That's
really fun. So yes, a love triangle could be rather amusing, too.
You were a big fan of Jewel from Firefly.
Oh, God, yeah.
After working with her for a year, what are your impressions of
her?
So disappointed. All of my ... I had really built her up in my
mind. And then you meet her and it's such a grave disappointment.
I'm a huge Firefly fan. I loved that show. I mean, thank God it isn't
still going, because then we wouldn't have Jewel. Every once in awhile,
you'll catch her looking off into the distance and saying, "Ahh ...
Firefly." Just to tease the hell out of us.
Call her "Kaylee" sometimes.
Yeah, that's it. It's hard enough for us not to call each other
by our own names! I mean, Joe keeps coming into scenes where he goes,
"Rachel? Ah, damn!" And then we blame Rachel because we say she's not acting
Teyla enough. Otherwise, we would have called her Teyla.
I mean, again, we go back to Trio. I'm in a box with two icons of
science fiction. And as a nerd, I always feel a little bit like I snuck in
somehow and got a behind-the-scenes pass. And I drill her about Firefly
all the time.
Atlantis is entering a phase in its life where a lot of
shows get cut. What do you think the show has to do to stay above that bar?
I think we've just got to keep it interesting. Keep mixing it up.
I think a lot of it is just making sure that we are seeing the characters
through.
There's always going to be space stuff. There's always going to be
futuristic stories and time travel and all that kind of jazz. But if people
aren't connecting with the characters, then you know ... If there aren't a
lot of people who want to be McKay or want to avoid him, or just love/hate
him, then there is no show there.
I get that sense. You know, I go on GateWorld and stuff. I like to go into
the forums every so often to get a sense of [that]. I never actually really
say anything. Because God knows what would happen if I got stuck on there!
You'd never come out!
"You are so not McKay! You would never have said that!"
But, that's the thing. As long as those characters are well served, I think
we're in good shape. But you never know. It's such a different market than
it was 13, 14 -- what was it? -- 12 years ago. SG-1 started 12 years
ago. It's a whole different world now. So, who knows? I do hope it
continues.
With the production schedule as tight as it is, especially for
you with all the exposition, [it] doesn't permit a lot of personal time. And
now you are starting your own family. How do you feel about that? Do you
find yourself thinking -- your mind wandering -- thinking about your son?
"Man, I wish I was home right now."
You can't help that. Definitely. You don't see Baz in the morning
and you miss him at night. So you definitely do that kind of stuff. But you
know what? The reality of it is that without this -- I mean, sure, I'd love
the time with Baz -- but Baz would also not be eating.
I think having a job that you like doing and going home -- you are there on
the weekends. If you're having to do this, this is a good way to be. I'd
rather see my dad three days a week or two days a week and have him happy,
than have him around all the time and have him miserable. That's the way I
convince myself. But also, we try to drag him by whenever we can.
What do you see yourself doing next? You've been working on
Star-Crossed with SCI FI.
Yeah, we're working on Star-Crossed. We're developing
that. I wrote a pilot for them, I guess this last season. And the decision
there is that they have this whole new sort of Web launch that they are
doing. And they wanted to do it for that. So we're just sort of morphing it
from its original TV style to something that will work better on the Web.
And it's just bloody time-consuming.
It's so funny, because I'm used to things like A Dog's Breakfast,
where just being able to sort of knock it off and go in and shoot. I love
that rebel without a crew sort of [thing]. That get in there, down and
dirty, and just do it. That's the stuff I love doing.
So I'm definitely learning a lot by doing this sort of development stuff
with SCI FI. And they've got some really good ideas ... which is sort of
irritating! Because you want to go, "Stupid network notes!" But the reality
is, they're really good. You go, "Oh, that is good. Let's go try that." So
you go off and try that and come back. There's a lot of back and forth on
stuff.
But they're really behind it and they really like it. They get the humour.
So I'm really, really hoping that's something that's going to be off the
page soon.
Is there a time table for that yet?
There isn't, no. They've been really cool about it. They've said,
"Look, we're just going to keep hammering away at this with you until we get
the scripts we want," and that kind of stuff. We haven't even gotten to the
script stage at this point.
So as a result, in the meantime, I've been working on a bunch of other
stuff. There are a couple things, actually, that I do want to do. Things I'd
like to knock off and see how they fly. And the Web allows you to do that.
Where you just couldn't do it before.
What do you think about Star-Crossed going on the Web
instead of television? It's not exactly what you had in mind.
No. You can't help ... there is a certain sense of letdown. The
reality of it is, there's still a bit of a stigma attached to the whole Web
site stuff -- like it's not good enough to go to television, so it goes to
the web.
And I think I have to sort of kick myself in the butt about that. Because
the reality is that things are changing. This is the change everyone's been
talking about for years and years and years. So you've got to get over
yourself and start realizing that this is the way that pilots are going to
be done in the future. They're going to put them on the Web, and if they fly
on the Web, then they may move to film, or to television. Or they may have a
market for themselves on the Web.
You know, there's no difference between watching something on TV or watching
stuff on the Web anymore. The quality is just as good. Sanctuary
proved that. They have HD-quality television on the Internet. That's it!
That's the Grail right there. How is that any different? The quality is
better on their downloads than it will be when they air it on SCI FI.
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