S8 GUEST STARS

“New Order: Part 1” Episode: #8.1 – 9 July 2004
Steve Bacic… Camulus
Vince Crestejo… Yu-huang Shang Ti
G. Patrick Currie… Fifth
David DeLuise… Pete Shanahan
Torri Higginson… Dr. Elizabeth Weir

“New Order: Part 2” Episode: #8.2 – 9 July 2004
Steve Bacic… Camulus
Vince Crestejo… Yu-huang Shang Ti
G. Patrick Currie… Fifth
David DeLuise… Pete Shanahan
Torri Higginson… Dr. Elizabeth Weir
Chelah Horsdal… Com. Officer

“Lockdown” Episode: #8.3 – 23 July 2004
Alisen Down… Dr. Brightman

“Zero Hour” Episode: #8.4 – 30 July 2004
Steve Bacic… Camulus
Eric Breker… Colonel Reynolds
Colin Cunningham… Major Paul Davis
Alisen Down… Dr. Brightman
David Kaufman… Mark Gilmour

“Covenant” Episode: #8.7 – 2004
Charles Shaughnessy… Alec Colson

“Affinity” Episode: #8.8
David DeLuise… Pete Shanahan
Brad Sihvon… Joe

“Sacrificies” Episode: #8.9 – 2004
Jolene Blalock… Ishta

“Prometheus Unbound” Episode: #8.11 – 2005
Don S. Davis… Gen. George Hammond

ANDERSON TALKS NEW SG-1

Richard Dean Anderson, the star and an executive producer of SCI FI Channel’s original series Stargate SG-1, told SCI FI Wire that he has reduced his shooting schedule in the upcoming eighth season, but not necessarily his appearances in the show’s episodes. Speaking in an interview on the show’s Vancouver, B.C., set, Anderson (Jack O’Neill) said that he has reduced the number of days he shoots in Canada to allow him to spend more time at his home in Southern California, where he cares for a 5-year-old daughter.

“We worked out a schedule that has me working essentially three weeks out of the month and then having a week off,” Anderson said. “And even, like, three or four days per week that I’m working, and then that one week off. So I have weekends with my daughter, and then I’ll have some time in midweek. … So it became very workable and acceptable.”

Anderson added that he appreciated that the show’s cast and crew have accommodated his schedule “by creating nothing but hardship for themselves, primarily.” Among other things, producers schedule scenes featuring Anderson’s character from several episodes on the days when he’s in Vancouver and work around him on other days. That allows O’Neill to appear in almost all of the episodes.

Anderson also discussed a few spoilers for the upcoming two-hour season premiere. By the episode’s end, O’Neill wins a promotion and a new job. “The cliche that I reference in talking about the character now in his current position is that of a fish out of water,” Anderson said. “O’Neill, on paper, really doesn’t belong in [that] position. … But he’s, you know, embraced it as much as he can. … [But] in so many ways [he] would rather be on the front lines. He’d rather be a man of action than a man of great thought or great organization. … But … we’ve made the adjustment, I think, and accommodated the character quirks that I’ve developed over the years, and to a great degree I think that it’s been successful. People are pretty happy. The writers were having a ball in the beginning, because they all know me well enough to know that I’d be putting a certain twist to it. But I still wanted to be respectful to the Air Force.” Stargate SG-1 returns with a two-hour episode at 9 p.m. ET/PT July 9.

SCI FI Wire

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

LOWDOWN: FROM STARGATE TO ATLANTIS

From Stargate to Atlantis: A SCI FI Lowdown looks at the history of Stargate SG-1 as the series prepares for Season Eight and launches into the next phase of the ongoing saga: Stargate Atlantis.

The one-hour special features new interviews with Richard Dean Anderson, Amanda Tapping, Christopher Judge and Michael Shanks, as well as classic clips from SG-1 and exclusive behind-the-scenes footage of both shows in production — including a never-before-seen look at the amazing Stargate Atlantis sets.

Get a sneak peek into what’s upcoming, meet the creators and the casts of both shows and catch up on the stories and the backstory of television’s hippest science-fiction programs!

STARGATE SG-1 TWO-HOUR SEASON PREMIERE
SCI FI Friday, July 9, at 9/8C

STARGATE ATLANTIS TWO-HOUR SERIES PREMIERE
SCI FI Friday, July 16, at 9/8C

SG-1 S8 & ATLANTIS PREMIERES ON SCI FI

As an introduction to the new seasons of SG-1 and Atlantis, SCI FI Channel will be showing “From Stargate to Atlantis: A SCI FI Lowdown” on Monday July 5 at 10pm.

Season 8 of Stargate SG-1 premieres on the SCI FI Channel on Friday July 9. Festivities begin with “From Stargate to Atlantis: A SCI FI Lowdown”,airing at 8pm. The two hour Season 8 premiere, “New Order”, picks up where Season 7 finale “Lost City” left off, airing at 9pm, repeating at 11pm.

On Friday July 16, the Lowdown is repeated at 6pm and 1am. Stargate SG-1 has a 2 hour slot beginning at 7pm, possibly a reprise of “New Order”. The Stargate: Atlantis premiere “Rising” is airing at 9pm, repeating at 11pm.

Friday July 23, Stargate SG-1’s 8th season settles into its regular timeslot of 9pm, repeating at 11pm, while Atlantis’ 1st season follows, airing at 10pm and repeating at 12am.

For more information, check out the SCI FI Channel schedule

SEASON 9 FOR STARGATE?

Is there life for Stargate SG-1 beyond Season 8?

‘Stargate’: Rise of a Fertile Franchise
Sci Fi’s Risk Pays Off With a Signature Show That’s a Spawning Ground
BY MARY MCNAMARA — Multichannel News, 5/3/2004

SG-1 inhabits Sci Fi’s Friday 9 p.m. slot. The series recently concluded the latter half of its seventh season ­ its second on Sci Fi since leaving Showtime ­ with a 1.9 HH average, up almost 20% from the same period the year before.

The season finale leaped to 2.1, just shy of the 2.2 record set in January, when the show delivered more viewers than any episode of any original series on Sci Fi Channel.

“And then we gave the viewers a Monday night block,” said [Sci Fi Channel President Bonnie] Hammer. “We figured this was a way to give the fans consistency. It was there in a reliable block where they could come to it at their leisure. “

This popular stack of reruns from Stargate seasons one through five is telecast every Monday night from 7 to 11 p.m. Even though these classics are now in their fourth round of continuous play, ratings continue to climb. The Stack has delivered for the network since its launch in 2002. As of the first quarter of 2004, Sci Fi’s Monday numbers were up 114% over first-quarter 2002.

In the first quarter of 2004, the block averaged a 1.5 rating ­its third consecutive quarterly uptick. The highest rated hour, the 8 p.m. telecast, averages a 1.6 rating. Sometimes single episodes score between a 1.7 and 1.9, rivaling the numbers achieved by the first-run Friday originals.

In October 2003, Sci Fi introduced a Monday-Friday 6 p.m. telecast of reruns from the first through fifth season of Stargate. Ratings jumped 100% in the time slot, first-quarter 2004 versus a year ago. Stargate SG-1 alone now comprises 22% of the network’s primetime (8-11 p.m.) schedule.

SG-1’s ratings momentum begs the obvious question: Is season eight, rumored to be the last, truly the end of the line?

“I don’t! I don’t think it will be.“ [Stargate SG-1 Executive Producer Michael] Greenburg asserted, “If the demand is there, I think the show will be there. I think it can continue. Sci Fi’s a fairly new network. We’re the highest rated show they’ve ever had. We’ve broken their records. It just feels like it’s too early to go away.”

Can Atlantis and SG-1 really co-exist in parallel universes? “Yes, absolutely. I don’t know if Rick [SG-1 star and Executive Producer Richard Dean Anderson] would continue. But who knows? You never know until the offer’s on the table. But I think the franchise now is becoming bigger than the people.”

Even Hammer leaves the door ajar. “Never say never. We love it, we embrace it…it’s such an amazing franchise. I couldn’t honestly say to you: now it’s season eight and it’s over. It just might not be.”

SG-1 now costs about $1.7M an episode. As series age and costs escalate, contract negotiations inevitably get tougher.

Asked if he can weather another negotiation season (insiders say an unusually robust game of brinksmanship played out last year between the supporting cast and the powers that be), Greenburg is the sanguine veteran who’s been there, done that.

“There’s a lot of bravado and a lot of hemming and hawing and white knuckling,” he said. “I’ve been doing this for three decades. I just roll with the punches now. As long as there’s a name on a parking spot that resembles mine I’ll pull into it and show up for work.”

Boys, boobs & biscuits
By Jayne Dearsley — SFX 117, May 2004

We know that Stargate is definitely getting an eighth season…could there be more?

“I think there’s a possibility of a ninth season because of our ratings spike in America,” [Michael] Shanks ponders. “I’m not saying that’s a sure thing at all, I’m just saying business logic dictates that they say, ‘Um, maybe we don’t want this to go away!'”

“It’s showbusiness, so you have a responsibility to the shareholders and all that,” [Christopher] Judge declares.

Would they sign up for a ninth year? Both men are evasive; it’s far too early to know such things. “Creatively, if the scripts for season eight are the same quality and integrity as they have been this past year then I’ll be interested,” is all that Shanks will say. In that case, we [SFX] think there’s a good chance. The latter half of Stargate’s seventh season has been great: it’s as though the show has regained some lost energy reserve, and all the characters have had their moment to shine.

Two Worlds Collide
By Paul Spragg — Cult Times Special #29, May 2004

As for the long in-development feature film…”I’ll just say that it seems to change with every year the show gets renewed,” sighs [Michael] Shanks. “As far as we know, if the film does happen, it’ll happen at the end of the series, when it actually does actually really end for good.”

“And when’s that gonna be?” asks Christopher Judge.

“I have no idea! Chris was saying that with the ratings that the show is getting on SCI FI Channel, which are better than they’ve ever been before, there’s renewed interest in another season, which’d be a ninth season. We haven’t even started the eighth, so I’m just going, ‘Naaaaagh!'”

Is a long run a good thing, or will it stretch the premise beyond breaking point? “I don’t think we have been stretched because we’ve definitely had finite end-dates and itwas the reaction and the ratings to the shows that kept us on longer,” believes Judge. “As soon as the show’s shit, the ratings will reflect that, you know?”

“Our show is for the most part about exploration,” adds Shanks. “We’re explorers unravelling different mysteries every week. It is a bit linear in the war aspect of it, but there’s a lot more to the show than just that one dimension. So long as we still have that, it doesn’t end. The exploration doesn’t end. I think that’s what the whole benefit of the magic hula hoop os, there’s a lot more to it than just one continuing arc.”

It seems that no one is willing to completely rule out a ninth season. Watch this space…

USAF COLLABORATES ON SG-1 VIDEOGAME

MGM Interactive, Perception PTY to Collaborate With Air Force on ‘Stargate SG-1’ Videogame Development
LOS ANGELES, May 11 /PRNewswire/

MGM Interactive Inc., a unit of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, Inc., and Perception PTY Ltd. announced they will work closely with the U.S. Air Force to ensure the authenticity found in the hit “Stargate SG-1” television series is carried into the much-awaited videogame based on the show.

The Air Force’s involvement with “Stargate SG-1” has ensured accurate portrayals of military details in the television show, ranging from Air Force character traits, plausibility of plots and storylines to military insignia and weapons depicted in battle. “The U.S. Air Force is pleased to have been part of the “Stargate SG-1″ team since the beginning of this highly successful television series,” said Pentagon spokesman Douglas Thar. “Our continued cooperation with the series and now the eagerly anticipated videogame will ensure the authenticity of each will not be compromised,” said Los Angeles-based Air Force liaison Lt. Danner.

MGM Interactive and Perception will continue the successful collaboration to remain true to “Stargate’s” winning combination of science fiction and realism, bringing into the videogame world the high production values that have captivated TV audiences worldwide.

ABOUT MGM INTERACTIVE

MGM Interactive, a unit of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. manages business development and production of interactive products for a variety of multimedia platforms, as well as talent and developer relationships. MGM Interactive’s other upcoming game titles include “Rocky Legends” from Ubisoft, the next round in the hit “Rocky” franchise, and mobile phone games and downloads for “Pink Panther,” “Rocky” and “Stargate SG-1.” For more
information, visit http://www.mgm.com.

ABOUT PERCEPTION

Perception is a privately owned software developer based in Sydney, Australia, making both original and licensed games for console, PC and coin-op platforms. Games are developed completely in house using facilities that include a state-of-the-art recording studio. For more information on Perception, visit http://www.perception.com.au.

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.

STARGATE SG-1 CHANGES COMING

SCI FI WIRE, 09:00am ET, 11-May-04

Joseph Mallozzi, co-executive producer of the SCI FI Channel original series Stargate SG-1, told SCI FI Wire that there will be a lot of new developments as the series begins its eighth season. “We’re looking at the return of an old villain and sort of a Freddy vs. Jason-type throwdown, a big villain-vs.-villain conflict on a cosmic scale,” Mallozzi said in an interview. He added: “There will be a big change for a main character, O’Neill [Richard Dean Anderson].”

Mallozzi, who was recently in Los Angeles to collect SG-1’s Saturn Award for best syndicated/cable television series, said that the end of the seventh season saw a few character upheavals as well. “One of our established characters [left] the show at the end of season seven,” he said. Mallozzi declined to indicate who would be leaving, but, he added, “there will be lots of changes for all of our characters.”

Mallozzi also said that the series was in no danger of running out of ideas. “It all hearkens back to the fourth season on the show, when we were looking ahead at season five and saying, ‘We’re all out of ideas. I don’t know how we’re going to come up with ideas for season five,'” Mallozzi said. “Amazingly, the longer the series goes on, the easier it is to come up with ideas, because you’ve got the backstories. You’ve got past episodes you can draw off of for future episodes. The longer we go, the more stories we have. I’m looking ahead to seasons 12 and 13.”

Stargate SG-1 airs Fridays at 9 p.m. ET/PT. Season eight commences July 9. The SCI FI Channel spinoff series Stargate Atlantis premieres July 16.

SG-1 WINS SATURN AWARD

The Academy of Science Fiction Fantasy & Horror Films
30th Annual Saturn Awards

Stargate SG-1 was honoured to receive a Saturn Award for Best Syndicated/Cable Television Series for SCI FI Channel in the Academy’s 30th Annual Awards. The award was collected by writer and Co-Executive Producer Joseph Mallozzi, who flew to Los Angeles to represent the makers of the show.

SG-1 received 4 nominations in the 30th Annual Saturn Awards: Best Syndicated/Cable Television Series, Best Actor in a Television Series for Richard Dean Anderson and Michael Shanks and Best Supporting Actress for Amanda Tapping.