13-4-13: Stargate Atlantis Season One

Cast of Stargate Atlantis Season One

We’ve reached a kind of fork in the road in our trip down memory lane: Stargate SG-1 and the new spin-off Stargate Atlantis ran concurrently during SG-1‘s eighth season! So, we’ve got a treat here: two articles in our Thirteen Weeks for Thirteen Years (13-4-13) series this week, and this will be true for three weeks since both shows ran concurrently for three seasons! (Visit the SG-1 article for Season Eight for that side of the journey.)

SG-1 stars Richard Dean Anderson and Michael Shanks helped start the adventure that Atlantis had to offer by appearing in the new show’s premiere “Rising.” Shanks shared in an interview, “That was, for me, a flashing back to when we first started doing our series. Here was this new group of people who were very excited about what lies ahead and also interested in any advice Rick and I might have to pass on to them. The main thing I tried to focus on telling the actors that I talked to was ‘Just relax. Concentrate on the work as well as the big picture and let all the little things take care of themselves.’ The Atlantis cast has a great deal going for it in terms of acting and scripts. I’m sure things will be just fine.”

In order to set the stage, SG-1‘s Season Eight premiere, “New Order,” followed Dr. Elizabeth Weir’s trek from being the commander of Stargate Command in Colorado to becoming the leader of an international investigative team at the new Ancient Outpost in Antarctica that SG-1 discovered at the tail end of Season Seven in “Lost City.” So, if you’re starting from the beginning and are wondering at what point you should pick up Atlantis, make sure to watch SG-1‘s “Lost City” and “New Order” first. To be fair, if you’re interested in the entire saga of the search for the Lost City of the Ancients, you should start at SG-1‘s Season Six finale “Full Circle,” or visit our article in the Stargate Wiki for the summary. šŸ˜‰

Faced with having to produce 40 episodes of television in a regular 20-episode production schedule, Brad Wright and Robert C. Cooper split the responsibilities: Cooper stayed on as showrunner for SG-1, while Wright took the reins for Atlantis.


Atlantis Season One


Make sure to return here and vote in our poll below once you’ve finished watching Season One’s episodes:


Brad Wright


From “New Order” at RDAnderson.com (2004):

John Sheppard and Jack O'Neill in 'Rising'

SG-1 has become a little bit more mainstream now than it was, say, in season one or two. And Atlantis isnā€™t so far out there either. It’s not going to be steeped in such mythology that if you miss an episode you think, ‘I donā€™t know whatā€™s going on!’ We’re trying to tell slightly more mainstream stories and just good solid science fiction stories.

“Here’s the thing about any television show: As much as we like to think it’s the writing, and a lot of it is, what it is in terms of ratings numbers is, do people want to invite these characters into their homes every week? If they like these characters, if they want to spend an hour with them, care about what’s going to happen to them, that’s a successful show. I mean, what’s the plot of Friends? Theyā€™re friends! But you would love to spend a half an hour with them every week. You just love that friend. A science fiction show is that plus the worlds we take them to, the imagination that we bring to it on top of that.

“It is a different show [from SG-1]. I mean, it’s set in a different milieu, it’s got different characters. It’s got the same writers, though, with our sensibilities of storytelling.

Wraith attacks Marshall Sumner in 'Rising'

“We wanted to set up the human Replicators as a potential villain for Atlantis, but with us doing Atlantis and SG-1 at the same time, which we really never planned to do, we had to come up with another villain for Atlantis.

“Right now, for the whole season, we’re cut off. But we’re going to make it home at least once at the end of the season, or connect with people from Earth at least once, to touch base, to provide the opportunity for the Stargate universe to occasionally cross over. After this season it will become much more possible for any one of the SG team members to appear.”


Joe Flanigan


From “Sheppard’s Try” in TV Zone #180 (Sept. 2004):

John Sheppard in 'Rising'

“At one point in college I was so shy that I’d drop out of a class if asked to speak in front of other people. After graduating from college I worked at a variety of jobs, from banking to politics. I enjoyed whatever I was doing at the time but I didnā€™t love my work. That changed, though, after I was fired from Interview magazine. I was living in New York City and flat broke. My next door neighbour was an actor and he always seemed to be having more fun than I was. He convinced me to give acting a shot, but because of my shyness I was sure it would be a lost cause. Even so, I went to the New York Neighborhood Playhouse, began to study the craft, and after a while realized, ‘This might just work.’ So I went out to Los Angeles and was lucky enough to start getting jobs right away.

“My manager was at the Golden Globe Awards with one of his clients, who won an award. MGM TV President Hank Cohen also happened to be there and he came over to my manager to congratulate him. He also said, ‘By the way, we’re making this TV show and we’re desperate to find a leading man. Do you have anyone?’ My manager said, ‘Actually, yes.’ The next day I met with Hank and within 48 hours the deal was done. It wasn’t one of those long painful audition processes, which I’ve been through before.

“So all the pieces fit together right away and I couldn’t have been more pleased. Of course, I love my character. There’s a level of self-deprecation with Sheppard that I feel is critical, especially with this type of genre. Shows that take themselves too seriously are ones I tend not to watch. The exception being a programme such as Cops, which deals with serious real-life events. However, on Atlantis, we’re facing situations that are in some ways incomprehensible, and in the real world you’d need to be able to laugh a bit in order to survive.”

From “Gating Away From It All” in Cult Times Special #31 (Sept. 2004):

John Sheppard shoots Sumner in 'Rising'

“[Shooting Colonel Sumner] was the ultimate crux for my character in [‘Rising’]. I mean, he had to kill his commanding officer and that made for an odd emotional tug of war. On one hand there was appal at what Sheppard had done, and conversely there was a level of celebration in that his actions saved the lives of everyone else. It was an odd balance to strike. However, having a guy like Robert Patrick there made it easier. When you’re working with such a great actor everything just seems to fall into place.

“Funnily enough, ‘Rising’ was my first real foray into the world of Sci-Fi. Before that, I was used to doing more tightly-knit dramas. With a programme like Atlantis you have to be a little bit more expressive and extroverted because that’s the genre. So that was the transition I had to make and it was an interesting one for me.

“Then, of course, there are the SFX, which at times were bewildering to me simply because there were so many. Although you’re reading something on paper you don’t really know what’s going on. For instance, we’d be choreographing a fight scene and it was like, ‘The Wraith are over there. OK, now there’s one over there, and another to your left.’ That took a little getting used to. On the whole, though, shooting the Atlantis pilot was a very exciting and enjoyable experience. Again, it was especially fun to have Robert Patrick with us. He was quite helpful in explaining what to expect from the sci-fi world because he’s been in it before.”

From “Chicago 2009: Joe Flanigan, Man of Action” at WormholeRiders (Aug. 2009):

The iratus bug clings to Sheppard's neck in 'Thirty-Eight Minutes'

“Probably that bug episode [‘Thirty-Eight Minutes’] with the bug on me [was my least favorite episode]. We had not built the sets properly. For some reason we built the space ships as though they were really space ships, and we couldn’t get in them. We’re like, ā€˜But this is for TV. We need to get a film crew in there!’ So we were all shoved in there. It was like the fourth or fifth episode, and it was hot and sweaty and they wouldn’t pay for the air conditioning because they weren’t sure whether we were going to last, I think. They went, ‘I ain’t paying for air conditioning!’ It was hot, and sweaty, and miserable. And Rainbow [Sun Francks]—who I love to death—kept messing up all of his lines and my bug was stuck on my neck, and I was like, ‘Come on! Come on! Get me outta here!’ And it was frustrating. But I learned.”

From “In Sheppard’s Care” in Stargate SG-1: The Official Magazine, issue #2 (Jan./Feb. 2005):

“My favorite episode to shoot was a show called ‘The Defiant One.’ We’re marooned on this island and the Wraith and I are at each other. That’s just complete action, and it’s a lot of fun because I love doing action stuff.

John Sheppard in 'The Storm'

“I think the most interesting episode we’ve done so far is the [two-parter] ‘The Storm’ and ‘The Eye.’ I haven’t seen the cut yet but I think it’ll cut together pretty well.

“We also have a show called ‘Underground’ with Colm Meaney, and that one is particularly good. That’s one of the first times we’ve really hit all of our targets. My issue is [always] ‘Are the characters getting the right storylines?’ It continually gets better, and I thought it worked well in ‘Underground,’ so I was really happy. It’s been great. Things are a lot easier now than they were in the first six to eight weeks.

“‘Home’ definitely explores [the loneliness of being stranded away from Earth]. I think that when one is idle, one will certainly want to get home. However, the amount of threats that are coming in our direction at all times—and we know there is an imminent attack—are all very frightening. It’s leading towards a climatic place where we have to prepare ourselves for something intensely serious. So we’re not really finding that we have time to reminisce and wax nostalgic over Earth. We’ve become a fairly self-sustained group.

John Sheppard in 'Underground'

“There are characters I have played where I’ve dreaded the idea of a long run. This is a character that I think would get continually more interesting, so I look forward to hopefully doing this role for a long time and seeing where he ends up in five years’ time. It would be fantastic if we can explore that.”

From “Sheppard’s Try” in TV Zone #180 (Sept. 2004):

“I’m hoping that my character retains his sense of humour as well as that level of self-deprecation, both of which are what drew me to the role. Yes, John Sheppard is in many ways a hero, but he’s not always certain that he’s going to end up the hero, do you know what I mean? He’s not one of those stereotypical sure-footed types of guys who can save the whole world without blinking an eye. Call me crazy, but I like the potential uncertainty of the outcome where the major is concerned.

Elizabeth Weir and John Sheppard in 'The Gift'

“The relationship between Sheppard and Dr. Weir tends to be slightly combative because she has to act as an administrator. She’s driven primarily by her intellect whereas my character is driven primarily by his instinct. They’ll handle a situation differently and have the occasional clash of opinions, but the two definitely respect one another.

“As the season unfolds, I think you will see a greater level of confidence with Sheppard. There’s also a little more playfulness within the group because they’re not under as strict a leadership as before. For example, Sheppard has developed a certain repartee with Dr. McKay, which I don’t think was expected. McKay was originally conceived as a very different character, but the writers decided to go in another direction after David Hewlett was cast. He brings a neat comedic element to the stories and one that plays nicely off the military aspects of our characters.

Sheppard's Team in Season One

“There’s a solid camaraderie between the major and Lt. Ford. He’s a young guy who likes to have fun, which is essentially who Sheppard is. He doesn’t really want responsibility; he just ended up with it. Paul McGillion’s character of Dr. Beckett is great. He’s the medical whiz kid. Then, of course, there’s this attractive young alien woman named Teyla, but I can’t tell you anything more about the major’s relationship with her. [smiles]

“Everyone on Sheppard’s team has his or her own expertise and together they get the job done.

“Collaboration [is what I find the most rewarding about my job]. I don’t like doing things solo. I’ve tried writing, but I hate being alone in a room. I’d rather be around people and that’s especially true here on Atlantis. Everyone is open to ideas and making things work, and I’m betting that’s what’s going to make this show a success.”


David Hewlett


From “Doctor on Call” in TV Zone #181 (Oct. 2004):

Dr. Rodney McKay in '48 Hours'

“On Traders I played this very strange fellow who lived in a broom closet. Apparently, Robert [Cooper] liked the idea of someone like that on Stargate. Originally I was supposed to play a very similar character in an episode. However at the time I was working on a project in Los Angeles, so things didnā€™t pan out. However the part of McKay in ’48 Hours’ then came along and they just offered me the job, which was great. As a guest star you really have the hardest job on TV shows because you’re coming into a totally new environment where everyone knows each other. I’d watched Stargate a few times but I didnā€™t know anyone on the programme. Fortunately, my first few scenes were with Amanda Tapping. She is just so lovely and we immediately got along. Amanda has the same sense of humour as I do and that allowed us to get a nice on-screen banter going. From that point on I was able to relax and have fun with the role.

Rodney McKay and Samantha Carter in 'Redemption 2'

“I’m always pleasantly surprised when I get invited back to someone’s house for dinner. My dad always said that the testament to a relationship is if someone is willing to pay you to come back. Chances are you weren’t mistaken in believing your first visit went well. It was marvellous to be asked back to Stargate. As before, the problem was timing. The producers would call and I’d be like ‘I just got another job.’ Thank God we were eventually able to work out the scheduling because doing that second story was even more of a treat. Let that be a lesson to all young actors—be as obnoxious as you can in the role and chances are good that as long as you don’t offend anybody you’ll be back. It also helps if your character dodges bullets and any other dangers that comes his or her way.

Dr. Rodney McKay (first season)

“Originally the producers were looking to bring me into the series and then decided to go a different way. They created a new character called Dr Ingram and were casting for that. So I was both flattered and disappointed. However one day I received a phone call saying they had re-thought their approach and would I like to come in and read for the part of Ingram. I said ‘Sure.’ I think I have an advantage in this genre because I’m such a big Sci-Fi fan anyway. The technical jargon doesn’t seem like jargon to me. Half the fun is figuring out why you’re saying what you’re saying. The most important thing is to get the information out to the audience and still keep some personality to your character.

“So I did the audition, had some laughs with the material and before I knew it they had changed the characters name back to McKay and offered me the role. Filming had already begun on the pilot by the time I was flown up to Vancouver. My first day on the job, Brad Wright took me on a tour of the Atlantis set. There were all sorts of people putting things together, standing on ladders and painting walls, etc.; I was stunned. This is such a huge undertaking. Two days later we were shooting on the set and it was just incredible. The set is designed in a very modular fashion so that sections can be pulled out and that allows you to extend spaces. It’s like a new room every day, so invariably I always get lost while wandering about trying to find where the food is. Iā€™m like a rat in a maze. They keep changing things around so I can’t get a snack. As you can probably tell, food is very important to me and McKay.”

From “The Man from Atlantis” in Dreamwatch #122 (Nov. 2004):

“For me, there was never any question of wanting to do this show. And itā€™s been amazing. The time, energy and money they’ve spent on this thing is incredible—there’s something about walking on set and seeing this 30-foot tall Stargate and this massive Frank Lloyd Wright-style set. It’s just perfect for people like me. I get a kick out of it!

Carson Beckett and Rodney McKay in 'Hot Zone'

“From the pilot episode [‘Rising’] on, the thing that I’ve really noticed—and I was quite surprised by it—is that the episodes are really quite dark. We do some very questionable things. SG-1 is a military operation, so there are rules and regulations and checks and balances as to how they approach things. We don’t have the benefit of that. Because this is a research trip, with the military obviously a big part of that, we make some huge political mistakes and we make a lot of enemies because of that. We’re out here floundering around in a galaxy we know nothing about with technology we know nothing about.

“I’ve always liked the darker aspects of the sci-fi genre. Part of science fiction to me is the ability to explore both the positive and the negative sides of the future. What I like about this is there are enough loose ends to debate about. There’s nothing worse than pat, black and white answers in sci-fi, because technology invariably doesnā€™t solve the problem for people.

Rodney McKay examines Genii bomb in 'Underground'

“Speaking of making mistakes, [‘Underground’] is an episode about us really nudging a race into the atomic age, simply so that we can get food. If you looked not too far into the future, you would see that perhaps that’s not a good idea. And as it turns out, it’s not! But it’s all about survival and I think that’s quite a topical theme. We are forced to use technology we don’t understand and there are repercussions to making those choices. So that’s the stuff I’m loving.

“There have been so many things that I’ve worked on where it’s just been so obvious that it’s just been a matter of ‘OK, whatever. Letā€™s just get through the day.’ The thing that I loved about Stargate SG-1 and that I love about Atlantis, is that people love being on the show, and they love working on it. The whole crew is behind it—and there’s nothing more surprising than when there’s some huge guy standing behind a lamp holding your lines up for you! You know you’re getting through when people you wouldn’t think care at all about the dynamics of the character are throwing back lines to help you.”


Torri Higginson


From BBC Cult interview (Feb. 4, 2005):

Elizabeth Weir steps through the Stargate in 'Rising'

“[Dr. Weir] had been introduced before and [I had to] make decisions about how much I researched the actor that played this character before and how much do I just go from here and make it my own. I didn’t really worry too much about it. I discovered that she’d been introduced already after I was offered the job, which was great, because if I’d known that it might have been a more intimidating process, I might have second-guessed my instincts in the audition room wondering what it was they liked about the other actor.

“I just made my own choices based on my instincts and the scripts they gave me. When I discovered that she had been introduced already I decided to see her episodes, to get the backstory, but every actor is so dramatically different, it’s apples and oranges no matter what you do. I think Jessica Steen made some very interesting choices. I liked what she did and I allowed it to sit in the back of my head, [feeling], maybe that can add some texture somewhere, but I can’t be her, and if they wanted me to be her, it would be her here doing it.

Elizabeth Weir

“I love conflict and insecurity in people; that’s my love affair with human nature, and I get frustrated that I can’t explore that side of her more. I can’t explore her loneliness or her fear, her insecurity; she has to just be powerful because she’s responsible for a large number of people who are not military, who haven’t been trained to take care of themselves. They’re there just as researchers and scientists and she feels very responsible for those people, very mother lion-like.

“What I like about her strength is she doesn’t have the ego to be scared to say, ‘I don’t know what to do here right now.’ That is a great sign of strength, which I don’t know that I have. When you are insecure you cover that with bravado, and I like she doesn’t do that.”

From interview with Stargate Alpha during Level 3 convention (Nov. 2004):

Elizabeth Weir in 'The Storm'

“I have a few [favourite episodes] for different reasons. I loved ‘The Eye’ cos that was just fun, that was just hard. … We had wind towers and rain towers and literally I was shaking and shivering for two days and soaking wet…and you couldn’t see because water was in your eyes and you were screaming every line. But it was just fun, it was very sort of—it was that thing of no action required.

“Then I did ‘Before I Sleep’ and it was a really great one for me to do because I had to age ten thousand years and play opposite myself. That was really challenging because I think I got three hours sleep in two weeks. It took four hours to put the make-up on and then you’d shoot my half of the scene as an old lady and then take the make-up off and shoot half my scene as myself younger and I was having to act with video tape of what I’d done that morning. So it was really challenging and really fun, so probably they’re my two favourite episodes.”

The two Elizabeth Weirs in 'Before I Sleep'

From interview with iF Magazine (Aug. 11, 2006):

“You know what was one of the coolest things about that episode [‘Before I Sleep’] is I lost my grandmother about three years ago, and she was my favorite person in the world bar none. She still is, she was just an amazing human being. When Todd Masters did all the make-up and I saw myself in the mirror, I saw my grandmother. I went to him almost in tears and I said, ‘I can’t believe you’re that good,’ he had aged me in the way that my family would age. He’s amazing and does extraordinary work.

“I am such a non-business actor, I really am. I’m one of those actors that on a whole, hates talking about it, I hate the business part of it, but I like doing it. Guys will come in every Monday and list the numbers and the ratings, and I just say, ‘Do I still have a job next week, am I still coming in to work?’ I really am not aware of it. I was aware of the huge buzz the first year, because we were all scared about our fate. We were the spin-off of a spin-off; we’re spinning off of a show that has a loyal fan following of ten years that will probably hate us. They’ll think we’re coming in to take over. We were so nervous, but people loved us. There were rumors that they were going to cancel Stargate and we were going to take over, and I’m glad that didn’t happen. I think had it happened we would’ve been faced with a lot of animosity.”

From interview with Darren Rea archived at Review Graveyard (early 2005):

Elizabeth Weir in 'Home'

“We’ve been much too sincere in the first season, but it’s something that we talk about. Every thing is still being established on Atlantis. I think that’s one of the elements that makes SG-1 so successful: that absolute irreverence and that wonderful fine balance they have of exploring things seriously and having great ideas, but at the same time stand on the side and take the piss.

“Richard Dean Anderson’s character does that so beautifully. It’s a very hard balance to achieve and I think with Joe [Flanigan]’s dry sense of humour and [David] Hewlett’s very manic and self-deprecating character, we have the ability to explore that more. I think that it’s a very important thing to do and the more we do that, the more successful we’ll be.

“I think we have laid more on the sincere side this season and I truly believe that they will lighten up a little more next year [laughs].”

From BBC Cult interview (Feb. 4, 2005):

“[I’m] very excited [about the renewal for Season Two]. As a medium television is not very loyal, and as an actor I’ve learnt to live as a pessimist, as that allows me to always be pleasantly surprised instead of continually disappointed. I feel very very lucky and very grateful.”


Rachel Luttrell


From interview with Joel Murphy at Hobo Trashcan (April 2007):

Teyla Emmagan in 'Rising'

“Initially, way back in the audition process, [Teyla] was described to me as a leader of her people. I remember someone saying, ‘Just think of her as a sweet little islander taking care of her island tribe,’ which is a much more tepid description than I would ever endeavor to use for my character but that’s kind of how it was posed. There was no real talk about the fact that she was going to be a fighter, warrior, any of that kind of an aspect. Obviously, there was a sense that she had to have a knack for leadership and that kind of a weight to her.

“And the audition process was initially not so different from any of the other auditions that one goes through during pilot season. You go in, you meet with casting agents. Then, if the casting agent likes you, you go back and you might meet with one producer. Then you go back and you meet with a director. It’s like several, several stages before you actually get to do the screen test, which is done in front of a committee of people, suits as well as people who are creative. The producer and the creators of the Stargate franchise were there.

Teyla Emmagan in '38 Minutes'

“And I remember it going incredibly well, except for the fact that I had to sit outside in the waiting room for two hours. It was painful waiting for my turn to go in there and do my job. I took my best friend with me to keep me calm. But it went great. I stepped outside and everybody was congratulating me including some network executives and it just seemed like, okay, I guess this is meant to be.

“A few days went by, a few days turned into a week and we hadn’t heard anything and finally my agent put a call in and I found out I did not get the part. There was somebody at the network who just couldn’t quite wrap their head around me being the right choice. And so, I moved on and started to audition for other things and it wasn’t I think until, oh my goodness, it might have been even like three weeks after that screen test that I got a phone call from my agent saying that they had finally made up their mind and I got the job and I needed to be on a plane the next morning and I think it was 5 p.m. the night before that I found out I had to be on a plane and we were going to start shooting the pilot in three days and I hadn’t read the script. It was really quite a whirlwind. So that’s the incredibly long-winded story, I hope you are still awake.”

From interview with Gilles Nuytens at The SciFi World (Jan. 25, 2006):

John Sheppard and Teyla Emmagan spar in 'Dead Zone'

“[M]ost of my physical training in the past has been dancing, and no, I had never done any martial arts whatsoever. When I got up here, our stunt coordinator, whose name is James Bamford, I was introduced to him, and he saw I had an athletic form, so he decided he would start teaching me the basics of a martial art, called Kali, which is a martial art out of the Philippines. That was my very first introduction to it. When he showed it to me originally, I was quite concerned because it looked like something I would never be able to do, but I practice, and practice, and practice. I think because of my dance training, it’s a little bit easier for me to pick up the choreography. I break it down as if it were a dance when we are doing fight sequences, and that is how I learn it. I’m learning more, but I was a novice when I started.

“Iā€™m a physical person, I like to be physical, and I like to keep my body strong, and any other physical activity that I can do, I always embrace. Itā€™s been very very interesting, Iā€™ve gotten to meet quite a few interesting people, and learn about different martial arts disciplines, their background, their history, and philosophy. It’s been quite fascinating. I do enjoy it quite a bit.”

From interview with Sci Fi Brain (Mar. 2006):

Teyla fights in 'Suspicion'

“Obviously I’m learning how to make it look a little more convincing—more like a fighter, and less like a dancer. That was something that, in the first season actually, our stunt coordinator every once in a while would try to get me to bend my knees a little bit and that kind of thing. But, I think, what has happened is we’ve developed a style that is uniquely me. It makes Teyla look a little moreā€¦ I donā€™t knowā€¦ ethereal? It’s different, and my dance background has definitely helped with that.

“…I knew that SG-1 was incredibly popular, and that we were in the hands of the same people so there was potential, but I was just here taking it one step at a time. The truth of the matter is, I thought that I probably was going to be up here for like six months, and I was like, ‘Okay this is going to be cool. Go up there, get to explore this new character, check out the city and then go back to Los Angeles.’

Teyla in 'The Siege'

“We did start with a bang, but that’s because we’re in good hands. Our guys upstairs—Brad and Robert and all of our writers—they’ve got a handle on what works, and they did a great job with season one…ā€

From interview with Gilles Nuytens at The SciFi World (Jan. 25, 2006):

“What I love is her mystery, her untold story and depth. I think she has so much depth, whether it be compassion, or, I love that there is so much yet to be discovered about her, and that she is just brimming with possibility and intrigue and that makes me very excited. When I auditioned for her, that is what drew me to her. That there is so much sadness in her life, and so much that is different (in her) from our own sensibility. And that makes me excited about playing her.”


Rainbow Sun Francks


From interview conducted at Polaris 22 in Toronto for “Ramble with Russell” Podcast (Jul. 2008):

Aiden Ford in 'Rising'

“I was actually living here in Toronto at the time. I was a MuchMusic VJ—which is like MTV—about three years and I decided to stop that and go back to acting, which is what I had done since I was four years old. I started on Sesame Street—American—I’m a dual citizen. So, I had stopped that job and I actually have a hip-hop group called The Oddities and I toured the country twice: once with solo members, once with Blackalicious. When I got back, I decided I wanted to get back into the audition room. So, the first audition I had—I called my agent and was like, ‘OK, I’m off my contract…I’m allowed to act again, put me in a room!’

“The first thing she handed me about two days later was a Stargate Atlantis audition. She said, ‘Stargate spin-off, you know, here you go; here’s a script.’ So I got this pretty much blank script that had nothing on it. I went in, I read, I ended up auditioning maybe five…six times that week and then went back. I had to do a live stream audition to Vancouver and Los Angeles, and I did two that day. I hadn’t slept because I had a radio show that I hosted called Circle Research here in Toronto and so it went till six in the morning, so I ended up going—I had the audition at nine…so I called my agent. ‘I can’t do the audition! I can’t do the audition!’ She said, ‘Do you want the job?’ And I said, ‘Well, yeah, I want the job!’ And she said, ‘Well, then, you better get your ass over there!’

John Sheppard and Aiden Ford in 'Rising'

“So I went over, did the audition—tired. They said, ‘Wait here a minute.’ I found out that Brad Wright wrote a small piece that was just for the audition—I found this out later—but, it was this story that the Ford character would have to tell about Sheppard and I did it…I did it…did it again…went out of the room…did it again…all streaming. I did about twelve auditions in a like a three-day period and then finally I went home. They called me and they said, ‘You’ve got to get on a plane in twelve hours or fourteen hours and fly to Vancouver and they’re shooting the pilot.’ One of the craziest weeks in my life to—really fun, though—it was really cool. Next thing I knew, I was shooting the pilot.”

From “The Diary of Rainbow Sun Francks” in the Season One DVD Set (2005):

“It was more than a whirlwind for me; it was a hurricane, a tornado, and a tsunami crashing in on me all at once. It was incredible; it was a good feeling, but overwhelming all together. I’ve only been here a couple of hours ’cause it was an interesting time at home in Toronto. This is overwhelming!

Aiden Ford and Marshall Sumner in 'Rising'

“So I got the script in my hands, started shooting the pilot with Martin Wood and had no idea who Ford was, had no idea who Rainbow was at that point. I was just a body walking around talking. No friends, no family, no nothing, but I had some of the most fun times in my life during the pilot. Got to work with Robert Patrick and almost the entire cast of SG-1 and then right away got into the mix on Atlantis. I had no idea what I was in for!

“Everyone kind of became friends quickly, I think, right after the pilot. We hung out a bunch of times. It also helps being a part of something like the Stargate family. When I got there all the directors that we have in-house are wonderful and they’ve done it for so many years that they’ll show you the ropes. It’s not like they’re coming into it fresh as well, and so I think that has a lot to do with it, too. We’re getting into such a big cushion coming in that all you gotta do is lay down and feel comfortable and we all did that and so…it worked.

“‘Thirty-Eight Minutes’ was a big episode for Ford. It was so intense to do that episode and it was early on in the season. So for me, it was like I wish I could have shot it now.

Aiden Ford leads Beckett and Teyla to the rescue in 'The Eye'

“The mid-season two-parter, ‘The Eye’ and ‘The Storm,’ is one of my favorites, mostly because for Ford, it gave him a chance to lead his own team for the first time. Sheppard’s in trouble and they have to get back as soon as possible and he got to lead his team once he got back. It was like, ‘OK, you guys, now we’re in a military situation and I’m the leader, so listen to me and we’ll get things done.’ And we did.

“‘The Siege’ two-parter: that is ridiculous! I never thought I’d be doing some of the stuff that I’ve been doing as far as, you know, getting on a huge rail gun that shoots at four times the speed of sound and ripping around with the team. The Wraith are trying to take over the city and get back to Earth and there are so many things that go right and go wrong. So, it’s definitely one of my most memorable episodes.

“It’s a brand new show; we’re all working together for the first time and it’s been a long year. I’m just getting to know Ford now and we’re at the end of the season [laughs].

“But now that it’s over, I don’t really remember when we started…seems like it’s always been a close-knit family. We’re all such good friends now, but throughout the season, I mean, there’s been some good times…there’s been some good times.”


Paul McGillion


Even though Paul McGillion wasn’t in the opening credits as a regular cast member until Season Two, he appeared in enough episodes of Season One that it would be a shame not to include him here, providing some of his impressions of how he got the part and what he was allowed to do with the character that led up to his becoming the “beloved” Dr. Carson Beckett.

From The Gateroom Interview (Jan. 28, 2005):

cast portrait of Paul McGillion as Dr. Carson Beckett (season one)

“Well, firstly, the script, the pilot, for ‘Rising,’ was just phenomenal, and when I got that passed to me, I was very excited about reading for the character of Beckett. And following up the great success of SG-1, any chance to work on a franchise like that was a great opportunity. Of course, the character of Beckett originally was a recurring character, with an international flavour, and I, being born in Scotland, I decided to bring the Scottish accent to the table and I thought it was really appropriate for the character and luckily it seemed to work out for me. So I would have to say that the wonderful script was what originally grabbed my attention.

“I initially had a lot of input, because they didnā€™t know what the character was going to be—he was very open ended. Beckett was, as I mentioned earlier, a character with an international flavour, so they were reading actors, I believe, both men and women, for it, primarily men though, I believe, anywhere from about 25 to about 55. There were characters going with Russian, German, Czechoslovakian, English accents, and I came in as Scottish. So I guess I had a great input in making him Scottish initially.

Carson Beckett in the chair in Antarctica in 'Rising'

“So Brad Wright and Robert Cooper…are the creators of the project, and they give you a lot of liberty as far as playing with the Scottish dialect. As the character started developing, they started writing more for the character, and they’re very open to suggestions—it’s a very open set like that. Of course, when you’re getting great scripts to begin with, it’s just a matter of tweaking it, and throwing suggestions up, but they’re very open to that, which is a great benefit to have. The atmosphere is just wonderful, and right from the get-go, from the pilot, it was just a great feeling—we knew we were doing something special.

Carson Beckett in 'Sanctuary'

“I think that every character an actor plays is an extension of yourself to a certain degree, and I think the well-rounded character that the writers have developed for Beckett is a great pleasure to be able to play. I think I bring my sense of humour to the character, and, when given the opportunity, which I have been in the first season, there a sense of drama that also comes into the character—Beckett could be the cowardly lion as well as the reluctant hero at times. And, so, it’s a really nice opportunity to play a character like that. As far as me, Paul, I think there’s a lot of me in Beckett! I think I’m a little more confident, though, than the character is with the ladies, being honest with you! Or I’d like to think I am, anyway!

Carson Beckett at microscope in 'Poisoning the Well'

“I think when you are dealing with human lives and bio-ethics, you have a moral dilemma to deal with. It’s a very interesting plot to deal with. It’s something that’s not easy, and the character struggled with that. It’s a wonderful aspect that Damian Kindler wrote into ‘Poisoning The Well,’ this internal struggle that Beckett has with Perna, and it really develops the humanity of the character. I think, for me, that was the episode that fans bought into Beckett. Prior to that, he was more of a comedic character, and you saw the real human side of Beckett in ‘Poisoning The Well.’ When I got the script for that, I was overwhelmed—six episodes in, and a fairly large Beckett episode! It was such a pleasure, as an actor, to chew into that. I really, really loved it—I was grateful to have that kind of script.

Carson Beckett with the dying Perna in 'Poisoning the Well'

“It had a very different tone to the rest of the scripts in the season—it was very dramatic, and it wasn’t heavily action-orientated. It was a real pleasure for me to be able to work with Allison Hossack, who played Perna, and Alan Scarfe, who played the Chancellor. They did a terrific job, as did the director for that episode, Brad Turner. When we were shooting the pilot, Martin Wood said to me ‘Damian Kindler wants to have a word with you. He’s shooting a heavy Beckett episode.’ When he said that to me while shooting the pilot, he wanted me to jump in the office, so I went up, and I really felt like I was part of the team. Right after Martin said that to me, I felt this was going to go great places. I just make sure I’m prepared, and do my job, and I just have the time of my life out there. What a great place for an actor to be in!

Young Ernest Littlefield in 'The Torment of Tantalus'

“I was fortunate enough to do an episode of SG-1 a while back, called ‘Torment of Tantalus,’ and my character in that episode was called Ernest Littlefield, and that was my first taste of the Stargate world. I really enjoyed that process, and to become a regular on Atlantis, well, all actors strive for something like that—the security on the job, and, not only that, the atmosphere on the set. It’s like playing cops and robbers as a kid—you go onto a set every where there’s a new adventure in every episode, and it’s just a delight for me to play that. Not only that, but the scripts can be comedic, they can be dramatic, and I think that Brad Wright, Robert Cooper, Martin Gero, Damian Kindler and all the many other writers have just been so gracious in developing the character. That gives you, as an actor, such a wide opportunity, and I really couldn’t be happier.

Carson Beckett in 'The Gift'

“I know where Beckett lies, and I’m a piece of a very large puzzle. I was very happy with the way he developed in the first season, and I was in 17 of the 20 episodes, so I was pretty regular anyway. If he does a bit more [in the second season], that’s fantastic—I’m totally game for whatever happens. More importantly, I’d just like to see the series develop, and, if that involves a bit more Beckett—great! If it doesn’t, then that’s okay too. I have no problem taking a back seat to a great script, and we have lots of great actors who can do the job, so if I can do my piece, then I’m happy. Hopefully, the fans are happy.

“I’m really enjoying the character, Iā€™ll be honest with you. He’s grown into such a fully rounded character that he’s just a pleasure to play. I look forward to it every day. I’m blessed that I had an opportunity to play this character.”


Solutions


[Thanks to Alison for her help in putting together the Joe Flanigan section.]

David Hewlett Interview: "I'm a Genius"

“I’m a Genius” is the title of an interview that Stargate star David Hewlett had with the French fansite “David Hewlett – FR”. It’s a special day in France as today (July 1) is the release day for Hewlett’s A Dog’s Breakfast!

The lengthy interview covers nearly all aspects of Hewlett’s “genius”-ness in the world of television and movie production. From writing, to acting, to directing, to producing, the versatile and talented actor continues to endear himself to his fans by remaining down-to-earth and accessible.

You’ll need to visit the webpage (where the audio interview is available for download and is transcribed in both English and French) to get the full picture of what Hewlett’s doing, but here are some of the highlights that might interest Stargate fans:

First up, Stargate star Christopher Judge’s appearance in A Dog’s Breakfast:

adb-christopher-judge

The part of Christopher Judge in your movie is excellent, how did you come up to have him on the board?

Chris Judgeā€¦I always say about Chris Judge that there is a type of actor that has, for want of a better word, a ā€œlightā€, like thereā€™s something about him when he walks into a room you canā€™t help, you always look at him, you always pay attention to him. And he doesnā€™t have to do anything, heā€™s just standing here silently and he becomes the centre of attention, heā€™s just like this almost magical beast. He is incredibly funny, he has done Stargate for God-knows how long and he rarely has anything to do on Stargate, you never really see him say many lines and he was just so funny and so completely wrong for the part that it seemed right to give it to him. It was actually Janeā€™s idea, I had originally thought he should be, you know, he was a guy that couldnā€™t get a date, he should look like somebody who canā€™t get a date and she actually said: ā€œWouldnā€™t it be funnier if it was Chris Judge because itā€™s so silly to think that Chris Judge couldnā€™t get a date if he wanted oneā€. So at first I thought that she was crazy, but we did the read-through, we all sat down and read it, and he was so funny in this one little scene that I had written for him that I ended up extending the part, probably to three times the size and I wish I had put him in it more because he was so much fun to work with and the day he was in was just my favourite day, it was the only day that I really sort of relaxed because he just puts you at ease and heā€™s just the most ridiculously inappropriate and funny man youā€™ve ever come across and every time I sit down to write something there is always and there will always be a part for Christopher Judge in my stuff because heā€™s justā€¦heā€™s a movie star! Thereā€™s nothing else you can say about him. Christopher Judge is a movie star, I just keep waiting for him to get his big break in that regard.

Then, there’s the filming of the “Starcrossed” scenes for the movie on Stargate‘s Daedalus set with Atlantis’ Paul McGillion and Rachel Luttrell:

adb-starcrossed

So how is doing the production of ā€œStarcrossedā€?

Ha-ha. Well ā€œStarcrossedā€ was the last thing we shot, we shot for one Saturday on the Stargate set, and we were told that we were allowed to use as long as it didnā€™t look like a Stargate set. Of course the Stargate fans all know it right away, but if you donā€™t know Stargate then I suppose that you might be impressed by how big the sets were. It was really, really funny because Rachelā€¦ lovely Rachel, the poor woman, I basically cast her as Teyla again, and I apologized to her for it, but I did say that they made her look beautiful in it, and I think she looks fantastic. And again, sheā€™s got a great sense of humour. I actually just read a script that she has written, a sort of short film that sheā€™s written, which is very, very funny and itā€™s exciting, thereā€™s a lot of action and stuff tooā€¦

Having her and Paul McGillion and the whole crew around, and Michael Lenic, it was that much more amusing because we were in the middle of shooting Stargate so all of Starcrossed suddenly seemed very sort of close to home because it was a bit like ā€œGalaxy Questā€, it amusingly mirrors our experiences shooting Stargate sometimes. Itā€™s obviously sillier but I think thereā€™s a very funny side to shooting Sci-fi. Sci-fi is all very serious and stuff but watching it being shot is very amusing soā€¦We actually have a show that we are working on now called ā€œStarcrossedā€ which is a behind-the-scenes comedy about making Sci-fi because we were just so taken with that part of the film. And the fans really liked that part of the film as well.

And there’s more…the first Stargate Atlantis movie, currently titled Stargate: Extinction, and perhaps working with Amanda Tapping once again in Sanctuary:

sga-carter-mckay

About Atlantis, have you seen the scenario of the movie or are you totally out of the loop?

Totally out of the loop, the actors are always the last to know of these things. Iā€™ve heard rumours that weā€™re going to do a movie, Iā€™ve heard rumours that weā€™re not going to do a movie. I basically just wait, thatā€™s it, thatā€™s all you can do, just hope for the best. Stargate was just the best job Iā€™ve ever had, it was just fantastic, amazing people to work with, and just a great experience and I miss it terribly. And also as a sci-fi nerd I was a part of the sci-fi entertainment industry, which is just fantastic, to be there, to do ComicCon every year and to do all that kind of stuff. So I definitely miss it, I really, really enjoyed my time on that show. What is nice about not being on a show everyday is that youā€™ve got time to pursue your own stuff, which is basically what Iā€™ve been doing. Thatā€™s the hope. I mean thereā€™s definitely keeping an eye out for acting jobs as well, but basically just focussing on getting my own stuff made.

Amanda Tapping is an inspiration to me on that, because sheā€™s just on such a fantastic job of transitioning from the Stargate franchise into her own franchise with Sanctuary so I think sheā€™s a great example of alternate means of distribution and how that can succeed. I mean, she ended up with a TV series, itā€™s fantastic! What theyā€™re doing over there is incredibly inspiring and she is a very smart one so I look forward to battle with her again.

Yes, Iā€™ve seen this series. Are you planning to work with her again in Sanctuary?

Yes, I would love to. Unfortunately I got a call about possibly doing some stuff with them again but the schedule didnā€™t work out, as always. Unfortunately I was busy when they were doing it. But I hope so, yeah, a lot of those guys are from the Stargate days and obviously working with Amanda is such a treat so Iā€™m hoping that another opportunity will come up in that regard.

Even the new Stargate Universe got a mention:

stargate-universe-logo

Back to the Stargate franchise, what is your point of view on Stargate Universe?

You know, Iā€™ve got no point of view. I havenā€™t seen it soā€¦itā€™s one of those weird things, as an actor who is no longer doing the show itā€™s that sort of weird bittersweet thing. I think itā€™s fantastic the franchise is continuing and Iā€™m curious to see what they are going to do with it but at the same time I think ā€œHow could they possibly do a show without me?!?ā€.

Youā€™re not going to play a part in the season premiere or a small appearance?

Nope. No. They are already shooting and I have not been a part of it thus far. Theyā€™ve talked about really trying to move it in a different direction so I think itā€™s difficult to do that if you have all the same characters. I know there are some crossovers and there have definitely been some crossovers with the SG-1 characters and suchā€¦ I donā€™t know what happened there, I mean I would obviously love to be a part of it, and Iā€™d loved to have been a part of it but I understand they have to have their own lives, they have to do their own things. So you know, itā€™s not really my call. Hey, if I had my way Iā€™d be in every episode of every show ever! So, you know, weā€™d get pretty bored watching television so itā€™s probably good somebody else is running things.

Right now Iā€™ve been trying to work on my own little science-fiction thing so we will see how that sorts out.

Most assuredly, there’s much, much more, so visit David Hewlett FR: I’m a Genius!

[Thanks to SGAngeL for the screencaps from A Dog’s Breakfast. Stargate images from MGM and Sci Fi (Syfy).]

David Hewlett to Write, Star in New TV Movie

David Hewlett (MGM)

Based upon his twittered tidbits, David Hewlett has a new development deal with MGM to write and star in a feature-length TV pilot that can also stand alone as a Sci Fi (SyFy? not sure) movie. From his tweets, it appears David has only to sign the contract for it to be in place. He was excited and confident enough about it that he and his wife, Jane Loughman, went off to buy matching iPhones in celebration.

While he and his family have been living in Los Angeles, he tweeted that the movie/pilot will be filmed in Vancouver and the “wilds of BC”. Describing it in a nutshell, he said it would be “Midnight Run with aliens instead of mobsters.” Midnight Run starred Robert De Niro and Charles Grodin and was about an accountant (Grodin) on the run from bounty hunters (De Niro), the FBI, and the mafia. We can assume David will play the character on the run, and an “arrogant genius” to boot.

As for co-stars, Joe Flanigan raised the question in a recent fan Q&A whether fans would like to see him, David, and Chris Judge together in a TV series. We have no idea if he was referring to this project of David’s, and it’s important to note David might not have control over the casting. In fact it would be highly unusual if he did!

Here are David’s relevant tweets, in time order from the past few days:

MGM paperwork just completed…Here we go! First, self-gifting of new iphone to celebrate…Jane gets one too for some reason šŸ˜‰

MGM deal for writing a new feature length TV pilot, which can stand alone as a Sci Fi movie, or be the start of a whole new series for me!

damn right! Want to shoot in the wilds of B.C. for some of it if I have my way…with a paid crew

Reading over contract is going to take longer than writing the film! Iphone box just for scale ā€¦honest;-) http://yfrog.com/7grootlzj

basically it’s Midnight Run with aliens instead of mobstersā€¦and an arrogant genius that should make Stargate fans happy! šŸ˜‰

We look forward to hearing more about David’s project as it develops, and of course we’ll report it here!

David Hewlett Retakes Control of “Starcrossed”

In response to a question posed to a SyFy representative on Twitter, David Hewlett has revealed he is taking back the rights to his sci fi comedy concept, Starcrossed.

David declared (see his Twitter page):

SyFy tells me that they’re going to give the Starcrossed rights back to us…once paperwork clears we shoot it!

A few minutes later, in response to another question about whether it will still be a made-for-web series, David said:

really depends on what SyFy allows with the paperwork…I want a 2 hour pilot!

Starcrossed grew out of Hewlett’s movie A Dog’s Breakfast, which featured a character playing an actor on a science fiction space opera.

Sci Fi Channel announced they would make the concept into a web series, as we reported here. The idea of the show is to take a comedic look at the backstage happenings of a TV science fiction production.

We hope David will get to take Starcrossed before the cameras soon, and that we’ll see some familiar faces in the production.

Stargates Nominated for Canada’s Constellation Awards

Coming right after the many Leo Awards nominations announcement, the list of the nominees in the 2009 Contellation Awards has been made available! According to their official website, “The Constellation Awards are Canada’s annual science fiction awards focused on rewarding excellence in science fiction film and television. Now in its third year, The Constellation Awards celebrate and honour the actors, writers, and technical artists behind the best of today’s science fiction film and TV works – with an added focus on Canadian contributions to science fiction film and television. The Constellation Awards are also the only Canadian science fiction film and TV awards where YOU, the Canadian viewing public, get to select the nominees and winners in all categories.”

The categories in which Stargate has nominees:

Best Male Performance in a 2008 Science Fiction Television Episode: David Hewlett, “The Shrine”

Best Science Fiction Television Series of 2008: Stargate Atlantis

Best Male Performance in a 2008 Science Fiction Film, TV Movie, or Mini-Series: Richard Dean Anderson, Stargate: Continuum

Best Female Performance in a 2008 Science Fiction Film, TV Movie, or Mini-Series: Amanda Tapping, Stargate: Continuum; Claudia Black, Stargate: Continuum

Best Science Fiction Film, TV Movie, or Mini-Series of 2008: Stargate: Continuum

Best Technical Accomplishment in a 2008 Science Fiction Film or Television Production: Digital Effects (Rainmaker Digital Pictures), Stargate: Continuum

Best Overall 2008 Science Fiction Film or Television Script: Brad Wright, Stargate: Continuum

Outstanding Canadian Contribution to Science Fiction Film or Television in 2008: Amanda Tapping, Canadian Actress/Producer; The Stargate Franchise, Canadian Produced Series/Films.

Additionally, Tapping’s Sanctuary was also nominated in several of the same categories as Stargate.

The awards will be presented at Polaris 23 on July 11th, 2009. Congratulations to all nominees!

Here are the instructions on voting, which is now open until June 8, 2009:

In order for you to be eligible to vote, at least one of the following must be true:

1) You are either a Canadian citizen (not necessarily living in Canada) or a permanent resident of Canada,

OR

2) You were a member of the TCON Promotional Society during the Polaris 22 convention in July, 2008,

OR

3) You have purchased a membership to the TCON Promotional Society which does not expire before Polaris 23 (July of 2009).

Ballots missing voting information or payment will not be counted. Note that you do not need to vote in all categories.

Stargate Garners Many Leo Nominations

leo2009logoThe nominations for the British Canadian Film and Television 2009 Leo Awards were announced today. Among the nominees are many for Stargate, both for acting and production. Only shows and films that are produced in BC, Canada, are eligible. Here are the nominees!

(Note: David Hewlett has now said on his Twitter page that he is not eligible, because he lives in Washington state, not BC. What a pity!)

  • Best Lead Performance by a Male in a Feature Length Drama – Michael ShanksStargate Continuum
  • Best Lead Performance by a Female – Amanda TappingStargate Continuum
  • Best Direction in a Feature Length Drama – Martin WoodStargate Continuum
  • Best Screenwriting in a Feature Length Drama – Brad WrightStargate Continuum
  • Best Cinematography in a Feature Length Drama – Peter WoesteStargate Continuum
  • Best Picture Editing in a Feature Length Drama – Brad Rines Stargate Continuum
  • Best Overall Sound in a Feature Length Drama – Paul Sharpe, Iain Pattison, Graeme HughesStargate Continuum
  • Best Sound Editing in a Feature Length Drama – Devan Kraushar, James Wallace, Kirby Jinnah, Jay Cheetham, Dario DiSantoStargate Continuum
  • Best Production Design in a Feature Length Drama – James RobbinsStargate Continuum
  • Best Costume Design in a Feature Length Drama – Christina McQuarrieStargate Continuum
  • Best Visual Effects in a Feature Length Drama – Michelle Commens, Stephen Bahr, Christopher Stewart, Krista McLean, James KawanoStargate Continuum
  • Best Dramatic Series – Stargate Atlantis (Joseph Mallozzi, Paul Mullie, Brad Wright, Robert Cooper,Carl Binder, Martin Gero, Alan McCullough, John Smith – Producers)
  • Best Lead Performance by a Male in a Dramatic Series – David Hewlett – SGA – The Shrine
  • Best Lead Performance by a Female in a Dramatic SeriesĀ  – Jewel Staite – SGA – Tracker
  • Best Direction in a Dramatic Series Steven A. Adelson – Robert Cooper – Stargate Atlantis – Vegas
  • Best Screenwriting in a Dramatic Series –
    • Joseph Mallozzi, Paul Mullie – Stargate Atlantis – Remnants
    • Brad Wright – Stargate Atlantis – The Shrine
    • Alan McCullough – Stargate Atlantis – The Queen
  • Best Cinematography in a Dramatic Series –
    • Michael Blundell – Stargate Atlantis – Vegas
    • Jim Menard – Stargate Atlantis – The Shrine
  • Best Picture Editing in a Dramatic Series
    • Mike Banas – Stargate Atlantis – Vegas
    • Brad Rines – Stargate Atlantis – The Shrine
  • Best Overall Sound in a Dramatic Series – Kelly Cole, Bill Mellow, Joe Watts, Hugo De Le Cerda, Kevin Belen (SGA – Enemy at the Gate)
  • Best Sound Editing in a Dramatic Series – Steve Smith, Matthew Wilson, Kirby Jinnah, Jay Cheetham (SGAĀ  – Enemy at the Gate)
  • Best Production Design in a Dramatic Series – James Robbins (SGA – Search and Rescue)
  • Best Costume Design in a Dramatic Series – Valerie Halverson (SGA – The Queen)
  • Best Make-Up in a Dramatic Series – Todd Masters, Holland Miller, Kyla-Rose Tremblay, Nicholas Podbrey, Brad Proctor (SGA – Vegas)
  • Best Visual Effects in a Dramatic Series – Mark Savela, Shannon Gurney, Kodie MacKenzie, Vivian Jim, Dan Wier (SGA – First Contact)

Atlantis will have some alums amongst their competition, Sanctuary has had ten nominations, including Amanda Tapping for Best Lead Actress in a dramatic series for the episode “Requium” and Chris Heyerdahl (Halling/Todd the Wraith of SGA) in the episode Revelations II.

Brad Wright and Robert Cooper have already been singled out for a special achievement Leo for the 2009 ceremony.Ā  Congratulations to all the Stargate nominees!

The full list of nominees can be found here.

io9: David Hewlett Wants to Look Forward

David Hewlett (MGM)

Stargate Atlantis star David Hewlett was interviewed by io9 concerning the end of his show’s run as a weekly engagement on Friday nights on the Sci Fi Channel. The actors finished shooting a few months ago, but there still are two episodes to be aired before the show is actually “done”. Episodes “Vegas” and “Enemy at the Gate” will debut January 2 and January 9, 2009, respectively.

“It was miserable!” Hewlett said about filming these last episodes. “It was absolutely miserable. There’s nothing worse, we find out that we weren’t coming back I guess a couple, a few weeks before the end, and it just makes it painful.

“You’re in this weird situation where you know that it’s over, and you’re acting your little heart out like usual, cuz you’re used to having to keep going, but there’s a part of me that’s like, I want to go now. Like if it’s over you don’t want to be hanging around, you want to rip the band-aid off and move on type thing, so you’re desperate to go away and do something else, and at the same time you’re dreading it being over and stuff. I just can’t imagine what it must have been like for SG1 after having been on for ten years. Everyone was really sort of upset about it.”

Actually, it isn’t quite “farewell” for Hewlett and McKay. A telemovie is in the works, being penned by Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie. If all goes as planned, the movie will be filmed during the summer and premiere on the Sci Fi Channel in the fourth quarter of 2009 as a fill-in for the first mid-season hiatus of the new Stargate Universe series (which premieres in July 2009). Mallozzi has said that the movie will pick up where the Season Five finale “Enemy at the Gate” leaves off, although the final episode of the television series is not exactly a cliffhanger.

“There’s an extra special ending,” Hewlett said about the finale. “Yeah again it was so weird too, I can’t help thinking there’s nothing you can do in one episode that’s gonna sum up five years. I hope if anything out of this, I hope it sets up further adventures for Atlantis. I think what’s nice about the episode is there’s enough unanswered stuff there. There are still things that need to be dealt with that I hope there will be more Atlantis for people to see, in cheaper formats, TV movies or DVD movies or whatever they want to do. But I do hope thatā€™s something we can look forward to.”

In the meantime, the actor is busy with his own project. “I have a sort of 30 Rock behind the scenes of a scifi show thing that I’m working on now, called Star Crossed, originally looking at developing it as a TV pilot but I think we’re going to develop it as a film now, just to open it up for people. Basically we had a half hour sitcom style thing.”

Star Crossed had its beginning as a show-within-a-movie in Hewlett’s A Dog’s Breakfast. Then, the Sci Fi Channel expressed interest in it as a half-hour sitcom. The project then was considered as a web-based project instead. Now, it looks like Hewlett will develop it as a movie. If Hewlett continues the trend he’s set with A Dog’s Breakfast, we’ll likely see some of his Stargate co-stars and production crew in the new project.

To read the rest of the interview in which Hewlett talks about McKay’s romantic lead status and Joe Flanigan’s hair, among other things, visit io9: The Great Rodney McKay Says Goodbye to Stargate Atlantis.

[Image from MGM.]

Hewlett, Momoa, and Luttrell Appear at Con

Today, David Hewlett, Rachel Luttrell, and Jason Momoa appeared at the Creation Stargate Contention in Burbank, California. All were in great spirits and entertained the audience into fits of laughter, especially for the 45 minutes when they were on stage together. A complete con report will follow, but here are a few hot news items:.

  • Jason looks very good after his injuries, with only very thin red marks visible on the left side of his face. Most of the damage from the glass was around his eye, which he kept covered with sun glasses to protect it from light. He said he’s very grateful he didn’t lose his eye or his sight. Although he can’t see well from it right now, it will heal. He also said his tear ducts are “messed up”, requiring him to dab at his eye with a tissue. Still he was in very good spirits. He noted that chicks like scars. He did mention the guy who attacked him is in jail.
  • Rachel Luttrell said no one on the cast has been officially contacted about the Stargate Atlantis movie, and it’s only through the grapevine that they’ve heard it might be filmed next June. So, they are not at the point of negotiating contracts. Both Rachel and David seemed disappointed there was nothing definite yet.
  • David is busy writing, and now thinking of bringing his Starcrossed behind-the-scenes sci fi comedy concept to a film in some form, rather than as a Sci Fi Channel series. He didn’t clarify what had happened to the previous plans, in which Starcrossed had been green-lit as a series by Sci Fi. However he said the Sanctuary model has inspired him and others to seek alternate ways to funding and production

That’s the actual production news I can recall. Full report and photos to follow in the next few days!