![]() "Ticket to Slide"
As Quinn Mallory, Jerry O'Connell visits new dimensions each week in Sliders. Yet if he had to leave our plane of reality and travel to an alternate Earth, it is unlikely he would do so. Our world has been very kind to the young actor. O'Connell is not leading man in a hit television show, but also has a flourishing film career, with major roles in Stand By Me, Joe's Apartment and Jerry Maguire to his credit. Furthermore, he recently made his professional writing and directing debuts with an issue of the Sliders comic strip and a third season episode of Sliders respectivly. Oh, and he just celebrated his 23rd birthday. "Everything's been going really well," says O'Connell."I've been very fortunate. When I graduated from collage, I thought to myself,'You know, maybe I'll try my hand at acting for a while.' It's actually turning into a career, which has taken me totally by surprise." Infinite Possibilities O'Connell first became involved
with Sliders during his final year of studying at New York University
Film School. Realizing that the pilot season was about to begin, the actor
asked his agent to find him a suitable role in a tv series. Of all the
scripts that came his way, O'Connell was most impressed by the Sliders
pilot, a Science Fiction adventure series which followed the dimension-hopping
adventures of Quinn Malloy and his fellow travellers, Wade Wells (Sabrina
Lloyd), Renbrandt 'Crying Man' Brown (Cleavant Derricks) and Professor
Maximillian Arturo (John Rhys-Davies).
Despite its premise, Sliders has faced one problem after another since its debut in March 1995. The series narrowly escaped cancellation during its first and second seasons, while a number of creative disagreements led to several members of the show's production staff moving on, including series creator Tracy Torme. Amidst this uncertain landscape, however, Sliders itself has gone from strength to strength. Its leading characters have become more belivable, likeable and sympathetic than in the pilot, while its storylines are more unpreditable and imaginative. O'Connell its both proud and relieved that Sliders has made it to a third season. "I really am surpised that we're still around,"he admits."The chances of a show making it past six episodes are pretty slim. But making it three years is a real long shot. We've had a very good fan base on-line who were really responsible for keeping us on the air, so I'm very grateful to them." The X-Factor Qne of the biggest changes to the production of Sliders came when the series moved from Vancouver to Universal Studios in Los Angeles for its third season. O'Connell believes that this has helped the show immensely. "When we were up in Vancouver for the first two seasons, the weather made it a very dark show,"he explains."It was constantly raining there, which gave Sliders a very dark X-Files look to it. Now that we're out here in Los Angeles, where it's sunny all the time, the show has a bit of a brighter and more colourful look. In Sliders, we go to different worlds each week, and moving to Los Angeles has been like going to different world, so the move is very in keeping with the show." The move from Vancouver has meant that the cast and crew of Sliders no longer get to spend time with their X-Files counterparts, who were based on the adjacent film lot. In particular, Jerry O'Connell misses his regular basketball matches with FBI Special Agent Fox Mulder, alias David Duchovny. When asked who would usually win their contests, O'Connell gives a diplomatic response."I have to say that Duchovny's got the outside shot, but on the inside I can pretty much take him,"he laughs."I have a couple of inches' advantage!" The various setbacks haven't prevented the very different quartet of regulars from becoming good friends both on and off the screen. "We're a very amiable group here on Sliders," remarks O'Connell. "Working on this show has definitely been one of the best experiences I've ever had with a cast. I'll give you an example of what I mean. I think it was last Thanksgiving that we were shooting on location in Vancouver, and they don't celebrate American Thanksgiving up there. All the Americans were working that day, and we all felt a bit homesick by the end of it. At the end of the shoot, John Rhys-Davies said, 'You know, I think I'm going to have a little tonight - nothing formal, but just stop by.' When we got there, he had a 25-pound turkey roasted and ready for us! I was like, 'All right, this is my new family!' I think I had a better time there than I would have done with my real family." Writing and Directing O'Connell hasn't confined his association with Sliders to the small screen. He has represented the series at several Science Fiction conventions, corresponded with the show's fans via the Internet, and even written for the Sliders comic strip. "Working
on the comic was a blast, " he says. "I studied writing at film school,
but with comic book writing, you're not only writing the dialogue, but
you're also describing the images that you have in mind. They give
you a budget of so many panels and you basically have to budget out your
story and write dialogue for it. It was a real treat."
Rock 'n' roll vampires, dimension-conquering aliens, gun-toting business executives, lawyers, futuristic witch-doctors... Where else would you find such diversity other than Sliders? For O'Connell, the two best things about starring in the show are its variety and unpredictability. "In most series, you're always in an Emergency Room, or a law office, or a police precinct, but in Sliders, it's a different world every week. We frequently meet ourselves as doubles, wo we're constantly creating new characters, and don't get bored of their own characters. It's very tough working on a show where you play the same character every single day for up to eight years, it it's a hit show. It's very limiting. With Sliders, the possibilities are limitless," Looking back at every slide Quinn Mallory has taken over the past three years, O'Connell's favourite took place in the second season episode Love Gods. "I really liked the episode where 90% of the male population of the world was wiped out because of a disease, and the remaining 10% were being used for breeding purposes only. I liked that ratio - you're guaranteed a date there!" Early Breaks
Following Stand By Me, O'Connell swiftly amassed film and television credits, including My Secret Identity, Camp Wilder, The Room upstairs, Calendar Girl and Blue River. Last summer, he starred in Joe's Apartment as an innocent young man who moves to New York City, only to learn that his apartment has 50,000 squatters - an army of smart-talking, all-singing, all-dancing cockroaches. "Joe's
Apartment was a really funny movie and definitely one of the best experiences
of my career, " says O'Connell. "First of all, got to live
at home in New York, rather than be flown to Los Angeles or Vancouver.
That was really nice. It was also a lot of fun because it was filmed
entirely in the Lower East Side of New York, in these apartments that were
disgusting and would never pass health codes. But that's where you
have to go if you want 'roaches! IT was actually the 'roaches in
the film who insisted that we shoot it there!"
Lucky, Lucky,
Lucky
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