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Michael
Shanks - Loss of Innocence.
By:
Steven Eramo
Publication: TV Zone Special
#38 - Stargate SG1
Date: August, 2000.
SG-1's
dashing doctor takes a new approach to life.
Michael
Shanks, alias Dr Daniel Jackson, sits down in his trailer on the MGM
Bridge Studios lot for a break after spending the morning working
on The First Ones, the eighth episode of Stargate SG-1’s fourth season.
The actor has been made to look ‘roughed up’ by the make-up team in
preparation for his next scene with a creature called a Unas. He recalls
SG-1’s first encounter with this alien species, which took place way
back in the show’s first year.
“Boy, that
was a long time ago,” muses Shanks. “It’s funny, I’m going to be
directing an episode of our show later this year and because of
that I’ve taken much more of a visual interest in it, so I’ve been
watching tapes of the old stories. When I look at some of the stuff
we did in the first season it’s hard to believe that it’s the same
group of people, and that includes myself,” he laughs. “It really
hasn’t been all that long time-wise, yet so much ground has been
covered in terms of a tv series. It’s amazing to see how much our
characters have grown.
Moving
On
“As for Daniel
Jackson, I think I’ve definitely made a break from James Spader’s
interpretation of the role in the StarGate feature film. That was
the initial niche that my character was put into. Rick was doing
such a different rendition of Colonel Jack O’Neill than Kurt Russell
did in the movie, and since James Spader’s portrayal of Daniel was
successful it was decided I would stick fairly close to what he
did. This way, viewers wouldn’t have to get used to too many changes
right from the start.
Making
Michael
“Since then
I’ve taken the character and made it more my own. I started off
playing him with this childlike innocence and then as each season
passed the writers and I have delved into darker aspects of his
persona. Daniel has become somewhat less, I hate to say naïve, but
I guess somewhat less innocent. However, he’s still very passionate
about what he does.
“Some of Daniel’s
innocence and naïvete was bound to wear off after a while,” continues
the actor. “We can’t continue to play our roles the same way all
the time. I think it’s a common theme in television that viewers
become attached to a certain character on a show and it becomes
so successful that no one wants to change it. Well, you have to
remember Stargate SG-1 isn’t a film, it’s a tv series. As such,
our characters experience new things every week that affect their
lives and personalities in some way. After all, that’s what happens
to people daily in real life, right? So I’m thrilled that Daniel
and the others have evolved since day one”
Shanks is especially
pleased with the witty rapport and verbal shorthand that has developed
between Daniel Jackson and Colonel Jack O'Neill (Richard Dean Anderson).
"I love it," he enthuses. "Rickj and I didn't really
know each other before we began working together on Stargate, but
midway through the first season we discovered we had a similar sense
of humour. We decided to play with this in the show and, once we
saw that it worked, kept it up. The writers began writing lines
for us in the scripts. For me, that's one of the highlights of doing
this show. It's great that within the very serious genre of Science
Fiction we're still able to poke fun at each other. Sometimes this
can lead to a bit of, let's say, antagonism between Daniel andJack,
but I just think that helps further define thair relationship."
The
Search for Sha're
As part of the
SG-1 team, Daniel Jackson's standing orders are to help seek out
new allies and prcure new technology to aid in the defence against
the Goa'uld. However , beginning with the show's pilot, Children
of the Gods, the dontor's personal mission has been to find his
wife Sha're (Vaitiare Bandera), whose body was made host to Amonet,
a Goa'uld parasite and mate to Apophis (Peter Williams). All that
changed, though, when Teal'c (Christopher Judge) was forced to kill
Amonet/Sha're to save Daniel's life in the third-season episode
Forever and a Day.
"Unfortunately,
Daniel was starting to relate eberything to his quest to find Sha're,"
explains Shanks. "It got to the point where both myself and
the show's writers, and I'm sure the audience to some degree, were
saying, 'Oh my God, is he going on about this again? He's getting
really pathetic and whiny.' We finally decided, OK, we have to poop
or get off the pot. Either we get Sha're back and find a way to
work her into the show or around her within the show or we just
get rid of the character, which is what the writers did. Of course,
then the question became, 'Well, now what do we do with Daniel?'
With Sha're go ne, he no longer had a storyline.
"Luckily,
out of Forever and a Day came a new journey for Daniel, which was
to find the Harsesis child, who carries all the knowledge of the
Goa'uld. The difference with this mission was that it has more of
a hate/antagonistic feel to it, do you know what I mean? It allowed
me to take my character into a much darker place than in previous
season, which I spoke of earlier. This resulted in his encounter
with the Monk [Terry Chen] in Maternal Instinct. He taught Daniel
to let go of his hate and how to rediscover the beauty and joy of
life. Daniel also realised once he found the child that he had to
allow it to be looked after by its guardian Oma Desala [Carla Boudreau],
but with the hope that they would one day meet again. It was, I
felt, quite a pivotal turning point for him."
Family
Matters
Another inportant
episode for Shanks' character last season was Crystal Skull in which
Daniel Jackson re-establishes ties with his grandfather Nick Ballard
(Jan Rubes) "Daniel, for all intents and purposes, has been
booted around the block," notes the actor. "His parents
died, his foster parents, well, we don't really know what happened
to them because they're never spoken of, his wife is dead and the
Harsesis child is gone. You think, 'Jeez, the poor guy'. Something
positive had to happen in Daniel's personal life, hence the discovery
of that one last thread of family. Of course, getting him and granddad
together wasn't easy.
"Crystal
Skull actually evolved from a script that [executive producer] Michael
Greenburg wrote involving Jack O'Neill's past. When Rick decided
that he didn't want to go down that road, Michael approached me
about it. I had been asking the writers to do a story about the
myth of the crystal skull for a while, so I suggested it to Michael.
He and I worked together to incorporate that angle into his script,
which he had changed to focus on Daniel Jackson. I thought it worked
out nicely and I had fun playing out the emotional aspects of the
story," says the actor.
Driven
by Character
Is the actor
pleased with his character's development so far this season? "I'm
more a fan of the character-driven episodes and we each get two
or three of those a year," says Shanks. "The one we're
doing now is my first Daniel story of the season and I'm having
a great time. Overall, I'm quite happy with how the series is going.
We're shooting on 35mm now and it looks visually stunning. As far
as character evolutionary points I think those are yet to come,
so we'll have to wait and see."
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