Stargate’s Gun-shy guy
Michael Shanks can thank Richard
Dean Anderson for his acting career.
Shanks is co-star of the Stargate
SG-1 series, shot in Vancouver (shown in this market on Ontv) starring
Anderson.
When Shanks was an impressionable
young guy, attending business school at UBC and intent on becoming a pro
hockey player, a friend told him about an audition. So he wandered down
to the beach where they were shooting Macgyver and Anderson was playing
the guy in Macgyver.
“It looked like a lot of fun,”
Shanks says over the phone from Vancouver. The baby sound effects are courtesy
of his fourteen month old daughter, Tatiana. It was on that beach that
Shanks shifted his career goals.
He was born in Vancouver,
raised in Kamloops, and has been acting professionally since 1993. Armed
with a Fine Arts degree, Shanks headed east to the Stratford Festival,
where he did the requisite spear-holding roles as well as more substantial
appearances in Amadeus, Macbeth, King Lear, Merchant of Venice.
In between the last two seasons
of Stargate, he did Hamlet at the Vancouver Playhouse just because he needed
to.
“When I did Hamlet, half the
people came because they’re fans of Stargate,” Shanks allows. “Paul Gross
(Due South) is playing Hamlet because he’s a famous Mountie – but he put
bums in chairs.”
On Stargate, Shanks plays
Daniel Jackson, a scientist instrumental to the SG-1 team because of his
vast knowledge of past ancient civilizations and mythology.
And he’s a stranger in an
ever stranger land. His is the voice of reason, the pacifist among the
armed and dangerous.
“Daniel is one of the most
likeable characters,” Shanks explains.
“I admire Daniel’s naivete,
passion, innocence and curiosity toward certain subject matter. Daniel
was sold in the movie concept (a 1994 incarnation starring Kurt Russell
and James Spader) as a bookworm and geek. The writes make Daniel the brunt
of violence, he gets beat up a lot, which is because he’s a pacifist.
“He tries to intellectually
get out of situations and not blow it up, but talk around it. The show
is geared around Richard Dean Anderson, a military type character, so the
show bows to that direction. We’re supporting roles in an action-oriented
show.”
But they actually gave Daniel
a gun this season, the third. “Daniel can use a gun – he knows how – but
my first instinct is that it would never happen. Only in extreme or defensive
situations.
Does that mean there won’t
be a Daniel action figure? After all, what kind of action figure says,
“Don’t shoot,”
“They were supposed to come
out after the fist season,” Shanks insists, “but there was a flux at MGM.
The action figures (out now) are from the feature film. A friend brought
me one, it was of the old star, James Spader, and they played him with
the stereotypes so he was far more geeky. Yet in his action figure, he
had huge machine gun, huge arms, gritted teeth and a sadistic grin. This
is ridiculous – no way this character would have been like that, it would
have completely violated the character. It’s very laughable. I’ll show
my daughter the action figure and tell her it was done when I used to work
out.”
Shanks’ resume reads like
a Trekkie wish list: Mission to Mars, Outer Limits, Highlander...
Not that he’s a sci-fi guy.
“No, I’m not,” he demurs,
it’s just a lot of what is shot in Vancouver. They have higher budget to
do the flashy stuff and tends to be in the largest percentage of American
shows. But it does have its advantages because I learn 75 different aspects
of filmmaking and I’m interested in directing and producing.
“The Stargate storylines are
heavy with action-oriented sequences, stunts and special effects and computer
generated imagery, post-production on green screen...”
The whole sci-fi shooting
match.
“I’ve been told to come in
to the editing room and they said, ‘You don’t do any reaction shots. I
can’t keep you alive in the scene.’
“I needed to make more eye
contact, to push the ball to the other actor. As an actor, you are worried
about motivation. As a producer/director, you are interested in the entire
story.”
Shanks learned the lesson.
“And they used my face more.
I made it more organic and I got more screen tome.”
~ Rita Zekas