|
Michael Shanks Interview.
By:
MGM
Publication: MGM Sci-Fi Newsletter
Volume 3
Date: November, 2001.
MGM
Sci-Fi Newsletter had the distinct pleasure of sitting down with
Stargate SG-1's Michael Shanks, to discuss everything from his roots
in acting to his young daughter. Here's the exclusive interview
for Sci-Fi Newsletter readers.
Sci-Fi:
You started your acting career on the stage. How does doing television
compare to your stage work?
MS:
It's "real" different. The main difference is on stage there's a
lot more acting as part of the process, whereas on TV there is a
strong technical side, which is necessary, but a lot more time consuming.
Also, on stage there's that live audience element which really gets
your adrenaline going. Obviously being in front of a live audience
can compel and drive your performance more.
Sci-Fi:
How old were you when the acting bug first bit you?
MS:
I must've been about four or
five. I watched way too much TV. I used to act out and role-play
the Six Million Dollar Man, Wonder Woman… not that I played Wonder
Woman or anything. (laughs) Those shows just got me interested in
role-playing and I guess my acting progressed from there. I started
pretty young.
Sci-Fi:
Where did you study acting?
MS:
At the University of British Columbia. I was in the Bachelor of
Fine Arts Acting Program. My major was Theater.
Sci-Fi:
So when did you get your first big acting break?
MS:
Still waiting for it. (laughs)
Sci-Fi:
Do you do anything extra to psyche yourself up for a scene? Any
tricks for bringing out different emotions to the characters you've
played in the past?
MS:
It really depends on the scene.
I mean, I always do tricks. Once you've done the same type of thing
enough times, you find that the raw emotional part doesn't always
work necessarily as well as it did when you were younger. You get
a little bored with yourself, so you find different ways of coaxing
yourself to play scenes with a new twist. I like to draw from personal
association. It's what makes acting the most personal and gives
the audience true access to true feelings that you really feel or
have felt in the past.
Sci-Fi:
Getting away from raw emotion and true feelings for a moment, have
you ever done any comedy?
MS:
Only on stage. I've never done a sitcom, although I'm looking forward
to doing that. But the only comedy I've done so far is in the theater.
Sci-Fi: Since
you've tackled every medium, which do you prefer? Stage, television,
or film?
MS:
Each has its benefits. As an actor, stage, definitely. But I do
enjoy TV as a visual medium, and film, well, it's great for capturing
both of those. But I do prefer stage, although I realize there's
not a great living to be had there. And there's certainly a lot
of great stories being told on TV and in film
Photographer
Matthew Welch with Michael Shanks
Sci-Fi:
There's definitely a lot of great stories out there, and a lot of
great actors too. Any actors in particular that you admire?
MS:
I have a wide range of admiration for a lot of actors, but I guess
if you were to ask me point blank, I'd have to say Harrison Ford.
Sci-Fi:
Do you ever make it a habit of studying other actor's performances?
MS:
Oh, all the time. Not to steal their portrayals outright, but any
smart actor will try to pick up little ticks and twirls of an actor's
personas. I think to study actual actor's personas are important
as an actor. As they say, steal from the best, and if you can do
that and make it your own I think that's the nature of the craft.
Sci-Fi:
Okay, let's get to the juice. What's your favorite Stargate SG-1
episode?
MS:
Favorite episode? I don't know if I have "one" favorite episode,
but the one that registers in my mind is an episode from the first
season, "The Torment of Tantalus". That show sort of embodied all
the aspects of Stargate SG-1 that I thought would be successful.
I thought that was the path that we should be going down, involving
that discovery of something that gives us insight into our past,
that basically asked more questions than it answered. That show
is the most prominent in my mind, though others have followed since.
But that's the one that registers strongest with me.
Sci-Fi:
A good part of your job on Stargate SG-1 is acting against the CGI
special effects. What's the most challenging aspect of that?
MS:
I think just the idea
that we're not really sure what we're seeing. We do get pictures,
but sometimes it's just a big question mark of asking yourself,
how would a person really react to something that is that fictional?
All you're looking at is a big, giant green screen when you're doing
CGI scenes. So all you can do is wonder how that thing that you're
supposed to be seeing would really affect you even though you can't
see it and can't really imagine how it's going to be put in front
of you. Yeah, the use of your imagination is constantly the biggest
challenge.
Sci-Fi:
You have some directing under your belt. Do you prefer acting to
directing, or vice-versa?
MS:
I prefer acting. Acting comes easier to me, though directing is
definitely something I want to explore. I don't feel directing is
something that I'm the most apt at right now. I still have a lot
of homework and learning before I'm really capable of cutting my
teeth with it. Acting's simply more fun at this time because I'm
more relaxed when I'm doing it, so it's definitely the road I want
to continue to go down.
Sci-Fi:
If you weren't an actor, what do you think you'd be doing for a
living?
MS:
Boy, that's a tough question. I think I'd probably be a lawyer or
a politician, some equally slimy craft in which I could use my public
speaking abilities for financial gain. (laughs)
Sci-Fi:
Anything you'd like to share with us that you do in your downtime?
MS:
Yeah, I like to spend time with my daughter, you know, watch her
grow up. I'm also trying to get back into playing a lot more hockey.
Yeah, playing hockey, watching hockey and especially spending a
lot of time playing with my daughter, that's basically what I like
to do.
Sci-Fi: Sounds
like you like being a daddy?
MS:
My daughter's the most important thing in my life. She's given me
a different perspective on life, made me look at the world's issues
a little closer. Being a parent, every cliché that you've ever heard
holds true. Once you've looked into your kid's eyes, you really
realize that they're the most important thing in the world to you,
and my daughter is certainly the most important thing in the world
to me.
Go
to the MGM Sci-Fi Newsletter
Back
|