TAPPING INTERVIEWED BY CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Actress Amanda Tapping, who plays Lt. Colonel Samantha Carter on the show, was interviewed 9 July by Maureen Ryan of the Chicago Tribune “Amanda Tapping: Not Stargate Barbie”.

TAPPING on the changes in Carter this year and her relationship with police officer Pete Shanahan.

In the episode where Teal’c gets an apartment, Carter’s relationship with Pete goes a bit further, there’s more fleshing out of her personal life. Finally she’s got a guy in her life who doesn’t die! (laughs)

It is [scary] for her. It’s an opening up of a sheltered and protected harbor. She’s opened her heart in a big way, so it’s scary for her. Until last season, we hadn’t really done that much [on that side of Carter]. My fear is that it’s a double-edged sword. It’s great to round her out and it makes her more accessible, but have we taken anything away from her strength and integrity? Those are the things that prompt women to write me letters about how much they admire Carter. You do have that fear, how much do you want to reveal [about Carter’s personal life]?

You can read the rest of the interview at the Chicago Tribune Online Edition. You must be a registered user to access the article, but registration is free. We would always recommend that you read the terms and conditions before registering at any website.

Read the rest of Amanda Tapping’s interview at Chicago Tribune online edition

SPOILERS: TV GUIDE REVIEWS NEW ORDER

Follow the Leader
Stargate SG-1
(9 pm/ET, SCIFI)

Hey! Teal’c has hair!

Stargate SG-1’s resident alien (Christopher Judge) has outgrown his Kojak look and has opted for a hipper image in the two-hour eighth-season opener. And at the risk of incurring the wrath of its legion of fans, it’s a makeover that’s long overdue.

The Stargate devoted have littered the Web with tribute sites in French, Nordic, Russian, German — and even English. Criticizing the series could easily result in an international — or interstellar — incident. The fans’ loyalty may seem excessive, even obsessive, but I can relate. My friends can’t get me to shut up about the Yardbirds, let alone Monty Python. So who am I to judge the SG-1 faithful? This column is not about the fans; it’s about the show.

Tonight’s episode is titled “New Order” and it picks up where last season’s finale left off. O’Neill (Richard Dean Anderson) was cryogenically frozen in the aftermath of the team’s epic dust-up with Anubis over the fate of the Earth. Dr. Elizabeth Weir (Torri Higginson) has replaced rock-steady Gen. Hammond (Don S. Davis) as head of Stargate Command. The absence of O’Neill reduces the team to Teal’c, archeologist Daniel Jackson (Michael Shanks) and Samantha Carter (Amanda Tapping), who takes over as leader.

Obviously, the first order of business is to find O’Neill, but Weir does not want to risk SG-1 on what could turn out to be a wild goose chase. Carter’s determination quickly wins Weir over, but there’s a catch — Daniel must stay behind.

It turns out to be a shrewd move. Shortly after Carter and Teal’c embark on a quest to enlist the aid of an O’Neill ally, a party of Goa’uld System Lords contacts Stargate headquarters with an offer. Weir and Jackson are wary of their parasitical foes — particularly when they adopt a conciliatory tone and inject words like “deal” and “alliance” into the conversation.

In the meantime, Carter and Teal’c catch up with O’Neill’s friend Thor just in time to help defend his vessel from a swarm of Replicators — insect-like robots programmed to destroy Thor’s planet, Asgard. But their target isn’t Thor — it’s Carter.

The hallmark of Stargate SG-1 has always been consistency. Basically, the unit is made up of science-fiction archetypes. O’Neill is the irreverent leader, Teal’c the stoic alien, Jackson the romantic idealist and Carter the sexy, sensitive tomboy. But after seven years, consistency has morphed into tedium with the possible exception of the sudden death of Dr. Frazier (Teryl Rothery) in last year’s finale.

Happily, tonight’s show is full of surprises. The departure of Davis’s Gen. Hammond, coupled with the transfer of Higginson’s Weir to the spin-off Stargate Atlantis necessitates several changes within SG-1 that radically alter the dynamic among the characters. Although Davis’s departure could leave the gang without an anchor, a superior replacement isn’t out of the question.

However, the best part of this story is Tapping, who easily outclasses her castmates. She single-handedly elevates the episode from curious to riveting in a wrenching scene that puts Carter at the mercy of a vengeful captor.

There’s no denying that Stargate SG-1 has captured the hearts of millions, but let’s face facts: This cult series is, at best, an acquired taste. Now, I don’t begrudge anyone for wanting to gobble up this gumbo of stock characters, esoteric argot and escapism. At the same time, don’t hold it against me if I pass on the meal. — G.J. Donnelly

TV Guide Online Review

ANDERSON INTERVIEWED BY CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Richard Dean Anderson, who plays Brigadier General Jack O’Neill on the show was interviewed 9 July by Maureen Ryan of the Chicago Tribune “Richard Dean Anderson: Leaving”

On possibly leaving after Season 8.

At this point, right now, with all that’s going on in my life outside all this, it’s very unlikely I’d be able to come back. I know what’s the most important thing right now. I’m very well aware of the fact that that may interfere with a very successful franchise.

Whether the show would go on without me … I think it could. I don’t know whether it will or not. Honestly I can’t answer that question, and it’s silly for me to start conjecturing, not until I’ve had conversations with MGM or Sci Fi.

I do feel as though this is my last season. I know what I have to do right now, given my real-life situation. There is a twinge of . . . not remorse, but I get a little sad about it. It’s been a very unique experience. On “MacGyver” I was flying solo for the most part, but this is a more character driven [ensemble] show.

It’s something I’ve been reflecting on lately more than before. I know how lucky we are to have this kind of camaraderie and rapport. It doesn’t always work out that way. There have been shows that go under because of differences of opinion. The main kids here like each other and we make each other laugh.

You can read the rest of the interview at the Chicago Tribune Online Edition. You must be a registered user to access the article, but registration is free. We would always recommend that you read the terms and conditions before registering at any website.

Read the rest of Richard Dean Anderson’s interview at the Chicago Tribune online edition

CHICAGO TRIBUNE REVIEWS “NEW ORDER”

It’s a classic bit of “Stargate SG-1” dialogue.

“That’s the bright side?” sighs Dr. Elizabeth Weir (Torri Higginson), who’s discussing the finer points of some of Earth’s interstellar adversaries with scientist Dr. Daniel Jackson (Michael Shanks).

“Mmm, more of a slightly less dark side,” answers Jackson dryly.

Wry overstatement is the domain of O’Neill, who, when he finally defrosts, does so much heroic stuff that he gets a big promotion.

“I’ve spent my whole life sticking it to the man. . . . I don’t think I can be the man,” O’Neill says. “I don’t even have a desk.”

“For the record, sir, you do have a desk,” Carter deadpans.

Read the rest of the review of Season 8’s premiere “New Order” and some hints of what is in store for the characters in the rest of the season at the Chicago Tribune online edition.

Read the rest of the article at the Chicago Tribune online edition ‘Metromix’ entertainment section

SHANKS INTERVIEWED BY CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Actor Michael Shanks, who plays Dr. Daniel Jackson on the show, was interviewed 9 July by Maureen Ryan of the Chicago Tribune “Michael Shanks: Back And Loving It”

SHANKS on the relationship between Jack O’Neill and Daniel Jackson.

It’s a great dynamic between Rick’s character and Daniel Jackson, to have that sort of earnest enthusiasm and this boyish naivete and altruistic belief in the concepts of science fiction, and then have O’Neill as the voice of the audience, saying, “Oh, come on.” It’s fun to have one character believe and then have another character mock that a little.

There is an element of moral debate there, though. It’s great to ask the what-if questions, we don’t know what time travel or [travel to the stars] would be like, why not take people from our present time and put in all the SpongeBob jokes and see what would happen in those situations. As long as you don’t take the audience out of it by taking it to pure camp. But I love Rick’s character’s sense of humor to escape the seriousness of a situation.

You can read the rest of the interview at the Chicago Tribune Online Edition. You must be a registered user to access the article, but registration is free. We would always recommend that you read the terms and conditions before registering at any website.

Read the rest of Michael Shanks’ interview at the Chicago Tribune online edition

IGN INTERVIEWS AMANDA TAPPING

IGNFF: So you enjoyed the directing process?

TAPPING: Loved it. Just loved it. And that’s a career path for me. I want to continue acting, obviously, but directing is something that I’m definitely pursuing.

IGNFF: Have they slotted in your next stint behind the camera?

TAPPING: No, I’m still pushing for it…

IGNFF: So this interview will help…

TAPPING: This interview will help. “Let Amanda Direct!” should be your headline.

IGNFF: And I’ll say it right here – you should be allowed to direct again… I mean, they let all those other guys direct…

TAPPING: Exactly…

Read the Film Force intreview with Amanda Tapping

CARTER GETS PERSONAL IN SG-1

From SciFi Wire, 1 July 2004

Amanda Tapping, who pays Maj. Samantha Carter in SCI FI Channel’s original series Stargate SG-1, told SCI FI Wire that the upcoming eighth season may complicate her character’s personal life. Carter’s on-again, off-again beau, Denver police Detective Pete Shanahan, played by David DeLuise, will play a larger role in early episodes.

But Tapping said not to expect Carter’s personal life to overshadow her ongoing mission to help save Earth from the Goa’uld. “I don’t want it to become about Carter’s personal life getting in the way of what she does, because the thing that makes me so proud of this character and something that we’ve worked on for eight years is that she’s so professional and so smart and so on top of her game and so competent,” Tapping said in an interview during a break in filming on the show’s Vancouver, B.C., set. “The dynamics between the four of them is so important, and the loyalty to the team and to the program and to exploration and to science. I mean, I don’t want her to become too much the other way. But now I have a life, and I have a boyfriend, and I’m happy. I don’t want it to be about that, you know what I mean? That’s an interesting part of her that, like I said, opens her up. But I don’t want her to become that girl. I’ve also always said that I don’t think that Carter should ever be qualified… by whether or not [she’s] with somebody.”

Tapping added that Carter will continue to be an integral part of SG-1, particularly once Jack O’Neill (Richard Dean Anderson) finds himself going on fewer “away missions.” “It means that Daniel [Michael Shanks] and Carter and Teal’c [Christopher Judge] go off alone a lot,” she said. “We actually never go off alone: We always have another SG team with us. But we don’t have Rick. So that’s a different dynamic. It’s great fun for Michael and Christopher and [me], because, a) we really enjoy each other, and b) [we] have such fun playing off each other. But it’s different. It is very different. What I find, though, [is that,] because Rick’s days are limited, when he’s here, he’s here. And the scenes between the four of us are so great, because we fall into that old pattern. And they’re funny scenes, and you see how tight these four people are. But it is odd. The first time we go through the gate without him, it’s like missing your arm.” Stargate SG-1 returns with a two-hour season premiere at 9 p.m. ET/PT July 9.

CULT TIMES: FEISTY FEMALES

Stargate SG-1
• She’s bold, she’s beautiful and she’s taking over SG-1: Amanda Tapping discusses the promotion of her character, Sam Carter, to colonel, and the changes for the show’s eighth season.

Stargate: Atlantis
• A feisty female of the future: We wander over to the set of the new Stargate spin-off and speak to star Torri Higginson, aka Dr Elizabeth Weir, about following in some big footsteps…

To order Cult Times Special #30 “Feisty Females” click here

SEASON 8 NEWS IN SCIFI MAGAZINE

‘Who’s the Boss?
Amanda Tapping and Richard Dean Anderson Get Promoted in a Season of Change on Stargate SG-1

By Thomasina Gibson
SciFi Magazine
August 2004

[excerpts of the 3-page article follow]

[Regarding the new season, Exec Producer Robert C.] Cooper states, “We’re basing a lot more stories around the SGC partly because of the economics and also because SG-1 has become less of an exploratory unit and more of a defense. We’re looking forward to the challenge of keeping our stories exciting and appealing and as interesting as they alwyas have been from this new perspective.”

[Regarding O’Neill’s promotion to Brigadier General, Richard Dean Anderson says:] “Being the man in charge is not going to make much difference,” he suggests. “I got away with virtual murder playing a colonel, and was irreverent at that rank, so essentially I’m a higher-ranking officer with my same sensibilities and relative insanity. […] Sure there are changes in all of their [SG-1 team’s] lives, but the camaraderie and the friendship and that closeness is still there.”

[Amanda Tapping confirms that Carter will continue her relationship with Detective Pete Shanahan.] “I mean for sure, Carter loves O’Neill. She adores him, and she’s allowed herself the knowledge that she cannot keep pining for this man that she can never have. […] I think what she’s learned to do is to be a pragmatist about it and say, ‘OK! I can’t have this guy [O’Neill], and he is pretty fantastic, but this guy over here [Pete] is not so bad either.’ […] Plus he’s cute and he’s charming and is a great kisser.”

“I’m glad we’re doing another year,” says Tapping. […] “It is going to be different this year, and I hope the fans like the direction the show will be taking. It’s a natural progression, and I think it will be well received.”

[Explaining why he returned for an eighth season, Anderson says,] “I just like to work, and I think that my presence to some degree is helping the transition both in taking Stargate further and bringing Atlantis forward.”

[On the SG-1 team dynamic, he says,] “I’m talking a lighter role this year in order to free some time to devote to other facets of my life, but no matter what happens with regard to our physical locations or what happens in the stories this year, SG-1 will remain a team. We always have been and always will be.”

ROBERT COOPER – VANCOUVER SUN

VANCOUVER SUN, MAY 3, 2004
LYNNE McNAMARA

As a kid, Robert C. Cooper experienced a trauma that may well have influenced his career path. When he was an impressionable seven-year-old in Toronto, Cooper’s dad took him to see Jaws, the screechingly scary shark flick that’s kept so many of us out of the water since 1975.

“I don’t know what possessed him,” laughs Cooper, now 36, who still vividly recalls his terror as we chat on the phone from his office at The Bridge Studios, where he now executive produces and writes for MGM’s sci-fi show Stargate SG-1 and its spinoff series, Stargate Atlantis, which he co-created with fellow executive producer Brad Wright.

“It scared the living hell out of me. For two years I didn’t sleep, I had nightmares — I don’t know why they didn’t take me to a therapist,” he says, obviously still smarting a little.

But the incident may have been a learning experience for the kid, albeit a nasty one.

“Despite the fact that it literally scared the crap out of me, I saw the power of that medium. I wanted to control that power that had possessed me. I didn’t want to scare other kids the way I had been scared, but there was a power there, there was a way to get inside people’s heads, and that was very intoxicating.”

He started out writing serial comics for his sisters to read as bedtime stories, and after graduating from York University’s film school in 1990 and being accepted into the prestigious Osgoode Hall law school, much to his mother’s chagrin he decided to postpone further education and take a shot at screenwriting.

She must have been just thrilled when his first few scripts — Blown Away (starring “the two Coreys,” Feldman and Haim), The Dark and the Club — were produced and went straight to video.

“What impressed people, initially, was that I wasn’t just a guy with one script,” laughs Cooper, who’s penned more than 15 features, including The Impossible Elephant, a family film produced in 2001, and Copy Cat, now in development hell.

As many of us understand only too well, there’s nothing less glamorous than being a writer.

“Certainly in features, you get really mistreated,” admits Cooper. “One of the reasons I decided to commit myself more to television is that in TV the writer really becomes the boss. The pinnacle for the writer in television is executive producer and you eventually work your way up to the point where you’re kind of in charge of how that piece of writing gets realized. The immediacy of television is so great. Writing something one week and seeing it produced the next week and seeing it on the air a month later, that’s quite satisfying,” he admits.

“It’s just so great compared to writing a feature and seeing it optioned for years and floating around to different companies and talked about as being attached to this person or that person and, ultimately, never getting made.”

Cooper has been with Stargate SG-1, now shooting its eighth season, since before the pilot was shot back in 1996.

“I flew myself out to Vancouver and they said, ‘So, what brings you to Vancouver?’ and I said, ‘This interview.'”

They hired him on strength of the outline he wrote for the show’s first episode. He began climbing the ladder from executive story editor immediately, even being promoted mid-season a couple of times. By fifth season, he was executive producer (with Wright).

This year, says Cooper, he and Wright are supervising more than $70 million US in production with the two shows, now shooting simultaneously on three large stages at The Bridge and three in a nearby warehouse.

“And that goes to local Canadian crews, actors, post-production houses and visual effects vendors. There’s a lot of feeling in the Canadian business that we’re (Stargate) the big bad American show, but really we’re a Canadian show. We have an American star (Richard Dean Anderson) but the fact of the matter is that everybody — all the writers, the executive producers, the entire cast, the entire crew, except Richard — are Canadian.” (Ditto for the Atlantis spinoff– with the exception of Joe Flanigan, who has the lead role of Major John Sheppard on the show, which premieres July 16 on Sci Fi channel.)

Stargate, which is also seen and lauded in Germany, Japan, Australia, England and France, premieres its eighth season on the network July 9.

“It’s a phenomenon around the world,” says Cooper of the cable show, “and it’s just starting to catch up in the States, but more and more we’re getting mainstream recognition. (After the cover shot on TV Guide last year, ratings spiked.)

But, ironically, the economics of producing the show are becoming increasingly difficult to sustain, due partly to the rising Canadian dollar and actor’s rising fees.

“It’s salaries, it’s all about salaries,” says Cooper. “By the time you get to season eight, you kind of get top heavy, even with the crew, too. So when you start fresh, you start fresh, with everyone. That’s why we created Atlantis. To a certain extent, it has been designed to take over.”

They’re hoping that the core Stargate audience will be able to transfer the passion to Atlantis. To that end, Anderson’s character, Col. Jack O’Neill, appears in the Atlantis pilot and is “wall to wall” in a couple of episodes.

“We’re going to thin it out with him in the middle of the season, and get back to him toward the end,” says Cooper. In spite of it all, Anderson, who’s made it clear he wants to work less and less these days, is doing so, but, says Cooper, “I don’t want to put words in his mouth, but he seems to be having a great time.”

And, as for season nine, who knows?

“Most shows start to peter out towards the end — it’s more of a question, ‘When do we cut this thing off before it becomes embarrassing.'”

SG-1’s move from Showtime to Sci Fi a few seasons ago made the show available to 80 million homes or more and its ratings only get stronger each year, with re-run ratings now as high as first-runs.

“We grew not just in season six but in season seven,” adds Cooper, incredulously. “Our ratings have really kind of anchored their whole network.”

So where will Cooper be this time next year?

“We won’t know until mid-October whether Atlantis is picked up for season two,” he concedes. “We’re very positive and hopeful. The cast is really jelling and there’s a great chemistry there, we feel very good about it, but jeez, you never know.”

“‘We’ll see,’ is what is keep telling my wife (Hillary) and everyone in my family,” which includes daughters Megan, 4, and Emma, 2. “We love Vancouver, we’re very torn. It has really become our home and it’s a beautiful city with all the best elements of Canada, really, but certainly, the one thing that still draws us back east is family.”

Obviously he holds no grudge against his dad about that shark thing. “He certainly lost as much sleep as I did, so he paid,” says Cooper with a laugh.