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So Long, Daniel
Jackson, until we meet again... ?
By:
Steven
Eramo
Publication: TV Zone #146
Date: December, 2001.
After
five years as Daniel Jackson, actor Michael Shanks has decided to
bid farewell to Stargate SG-1. In this exclusive and
candid interview, Shanks reveals why it's time for him to move on…
MOST TV ACTORS dream of getting a job
as a regular on a show. If the series turns out to be a hit, then
all the better. For Michael Shanks, his dream became a reality back
in 1997 when he won the role of Dr Daniel Jackson on Stargate
SG-1. "I'll never forget when Christopher Judge [Teal'c], Amanda
Tapping [Major Samantha Carter] and I visited the set for the first
time and saw the Stargate," he says. "The three of us were overwhelmed.
We were like, 'Oh, my God, this is for us. This is our show, our
universe.' It was an awe-inspiring experience.
"I should add, though, that on our
first day working on-location we had what was probably the ultimate
feeling in the opposite direction," jokes the actor. "It rained
the entire time, most of the film got ruined, parts of the set were
washed away, the extras were ready to mutiny, etc. It was pretty
much a nightmare. That day we were all thinking, 'What have we done?
We've stepped onto our own Hindenburg. We're about to be part of
the biggest disaster to ever befall Vancouver-based filming in the
history of TV.' Thankfully, it was not the beginning of the end.
Everything seemed to go uphill after that."
In the 1994 Stargate feature
film - which inspired the TV series - Daniel Jackson (played by
James Spader) joins a team of military explorers, SG-1, on their
first mission through the Stargate. They arrive on the planet Abydos
where they meet Ra (Jaye Davidson), a member of a race of hostile
alien symbiotes called the Goa'uld. Over the centuries, Ra and his
race have been masquerading as Egyptian gods. They use the Stargate
to travel to other worlds in order to gather slave labour as well
as hosts for Goa'uld larva. With help from the Abydonians, SG-1
succeeds in defeating the false god. At the end of the movie, Jackson
chooses to stay behind on the planet and marry Sha'uri (Mili Avital).
Colonel Jack O'Neill (Richard Dean
Anderson) leads SG-1 on a mission back to Abydos to find Jackson
in the two-hour Stargate series pilot Children of the
Gods. They need his help to defeat Apophis (Peter Williams)
a new Goa'uld System Lord who is threatening Earth. Unfortunately,
Apophis escapes, taking with him several Abydonians including Sha'uri.
Vowing to find his wife, Jackson signs up (as a civilian) with SG-1
to help them explore the universe. Since then, he has,amongst other
things, visited an alternate reality (There But For The Grace
of God); been addicted to the effects of the Goa'uld sarcophagus
(Need); had his body taken over by an alien (Holiday);
been driven insane (Legacy) and held captive by a Unas while
on an off-world dig (The First Ones). However, after five
years of adventures, Jackson's alter ego has called it quits.
"The show was moving in a direction
that seemed to hold less and less a place for my character," explains
Shanks. "There were a number of conspiracy plots developing and
other Earth-based scenarios that were being done in order to flesh
out the different aspects of dealing with the Stargate. Admittedly,
some of them were very interesting. For instance, the fifth season
episode Desperate Measures was actually a particularly good
story because of its X-Files-brand of conspiracy involving
Maybourne [Tom McBeath]. In fact, when my girlfriend Lexa [Doig
- Rommie of Andromeda fame] and I were watching it
I said to her, 'This is a great show. I wish I were on it.' It's
like when you watch a really good episode of The X-Files
and think, 'Wow, this is a great show. I wish I could guest-star
on it.' Well, there I was watching Stargate and saying, 'This
is an interesting TV show. I wish I was… oh, wait a minute, I am
on it!' It was one of those moments that were becoming more and
more frequent where I'd think, 'I'm spending nine months a year
doing this show and I'm really not in it a lot. I'm not getting
the chance to challenge myself as an actor.'
"Stargate had become a programme
about a military group in a military institution surrounded by all
the various aspects and organizations that people in the military
might have to deal with. As the sole civilian of the team, other
than Teal'c, there wasn't much for Daniel to do. For example, in
the fifth season we seemed to revisit many of the same planets we
had been to in the fourth year. Being an anthropologist/archeologist,
Daniel goes to other worlds to meet new races and study new cultures.
Instead, we were dealing with old situations and becoming further
entrenched in past conflicts. As a result, the archeological and
cultural interests of my character had to take a backseat.
"I actually said to Brad Wright [executive
producer] last season, 'You need to have this fourth team member
be a military person, maybe a corporal or a lieutenant with a bit
of a background in archeology. This was if you need such expertise
this guy's got it. If not, at least you have someone who can pick
up a gun and start fighting.' It was getting to the point where
Daniel was in scenes just to be there, you know, and frankly, I
didn't want to do that any more."
THE ACTOR MAKES his final appearance
as a Stargate SG-1 regular in the fifth-season penultimate
episode Meridian. In it, Daniel Jackson is visited by the
non-corporeal being Oma Desala (Carla Boudreau), whom he first encountered
in the third-season episode Maternal Instinct. Regular viewers
will recall that she saved the Harcesis child from Jaffa warriors
and took him under her protection. In Meridian, Jackson joins
her kind when he ascends beyond his mortal body. The character's
farewell story was a bittersweet one for Shanks.
"There were a number of agendas that
had to be solved," says the actor. "Not only did they need to finish
off Daniel's journey if you will, but they also had to introduce
a new character. With so many things going on it really wasn't clear
why Daniel was being written out in this fashion. I thought there
was a bit of chickening out with how it all happened. The big problem,
I think, was they were so intent on saying to the audience 'Daniel's
not dead!' This was mainly for the benefit of the same viewers who
apparently got so upset last season when Martouf [JR Bourne] was
killed off in Divide and Conquer. The powers that be wanted
to quell any backlash that might take place with the fans concerning
Daniel's departure. What they ended up doing lessened the impact
of his leaving/ They didn't give the viewers a chance to grieve
the 'passing' of the character.
"Of course, the dual storyline involving
the new character didn't help either. Having said that, I understood
why it had to be done, and in all honesty unless I can think of
an alternative way of handling something I usually keep my mouth
shut and don't gripe. So I didn't really protest and just figured,
'OK, fine'. I knew it was the end of the road. I didn't mind the
story. I just wished there was a better way that it could've been
done, but that's neither here nor there at the end of the day."
The actor says there was a lot going
through his mind during the final days of filming. "On my very last
day I worked only with the actor that was going to be replacing
me, which was a bit ironic," he chuckles. "The day before, though,
was different. It was my last one working with Christopher and Amanda.
We spent a lot of time talking about where we had begun, where we'd
ended up and the unfortunate circumstances that led to this particular
point. So it was a very emotional day. Funnily enough, I felt more
like the dying guy who had to make certain that everyone else knew
he was going to be OK. I was being more of the comforting person
in the situation.
"This may sound odd, but I'm not sure
even now that I fully realize it's over. On that particular day
it felt like just another day at work. Coincidentally, it was the
end of the season, so we were all ready to go on break anyway. There
was a great deal of reflection on my part insofar as how my life
had changed and how much my child had grown up over the course of
my time on the show. All in all, my thoughts were positive ones."
If given the chance, what would Shanks
have done differently with his character? "That's a tough one,"
he muses. "I think I would have liked to have gone back to Daniel's
roots. We touched upon that a bit in the story The Curse.
It would have been fun to go back to Egypt or someplace like that
and discover a new element associated with another race out there
amongst the stars. It needn't have even been connected to the Stargate.
That would have created yet another mystery for us to try to solve.
It was something we broached in Crystal Skull, but we never
returned to that planet! I enjoy the stories like that as they allow
us to delve into the great unknown, which is a subject that has
piqued the interest of Humanity for centuries."
AS WITH MOST ACTORS playing a regular on a TV series, Shanks spent
the majority of the past five years at work with his co-stars. Not
surprisingly, he is taking with him many fond memories of them. "I'm
going to miss Richard's stories," he says. "He'd always come out with,
'This reminds me of something that happened to me 20 years ago'. He
was a great source of inspiration.
"With Chris, I'll miss the camaraderie
we shared and the closeness of spending every day at work with a
good friend. Actually, that daily interaction is probably what I'll
miss the most. There were the bitching sessions," he laughs, "the
hours we spent in his trailer playing Playstation hockey and his
great sense of humour. Happily, Chris is going to be a friend of
mine for a long time to come, so we'll still be able to share good
times.
"Amanda is the most positive person
around. She's the type that when you bring your child to the set
she always plays the big aunt. No matter how much energy or time
it takes Amanda always seems to make room in her life for everyone.
Such positive traits are rare to find in an individual today, especially
in our industry.
"Don Davis [General George Hammond]
is a wonderful father figure who always had these great pearls of
wisdom," continues Shanks. "I'm sure that Don and I will work together
again in the future. However, for now I'll miss his fatherly influence
and seeing him struggle whenever he'd flub a line in front of the
cameras. We'd watch this dignified actor lose it, then try to get
it back and in the process make things all the worse for himself,
but funnier for us.
"Because we'd work together for so
long, the four is us - Richard, Amanda, Christopher and myself -
had become a squabbling, playful family. If you came in off the
streets and saw us you'd think, 'They're so unprofessional,' but
we were just having a good time. When you're with the same group
of people so much you have to tease each other like that, otherwise
you'd go crazy. Luckily for her, Teryl Rothery [Dr Janet Fraiser]
wasn't with the rest of us all the time. So she'd come in every
now and then and be this wonderful professional. It was great to
have that sort of grounding or calming influence. At the same time,
it was fun to throw Teryl off every now and then and watch her sweat
it out because she was so concerned about doing a good job. She
always had a good sense of humour about it, though."
Since finishing Stargate SG-1,
Shanks has been taking a breather and spending time with his little
girl. He recently read for a part in the new Star Trek feature
film Nemesis. "The role I auditioned for was that of a younger
version of Patrick Stewart's character [Captain Picard]," he says.
"I don't envision myself getting the part, but it was still fun
trying out for it." After the New Year, the actor plans to travel
to the UK for a holiday to meet Stargate SG-1 fans at various
organized events. Given the impact he made as Daniel Jackson, Shanks
is sure to be associated with the character for a long time to come.
He has no problems with that.
"I enjoyed playing Daniel," he says.
"I think what I liked most was his excitement whenever he discovered
something new. We saw this in the episode The Tomb with some
of the discoveries he made. Certainly they were less important to
the story once we got through the front door of the ziggurat but
it was fun for a while to see the character in his element. It was
the same in 2001 when he put together the pieces of the puzzle
to solve a mystery. Daniel never lost his passion for exploration
and I'll always be grateful for that."
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