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2.
"The
Mighty Quinn"
Jerry O'Connell discusses
the appeal of being one of the Sliders.
By David Richardson
. Reprinted without permission. © 1997 Visual Imagination.
A
Cult Times teaser: what's the link between Sliders and top
Hollywood star Tom Cruise? The answer is Jerry O'Connell, who plays Quinn
Mallory
in
the popular Science Fiction saga, and has a hit movie on his hands with
Jerry Maguire, in which he plays one of Cruise's co-stars.
Yet
celluloid stardom is nothing new for O'Connell, who came to the recognition
as a teenager in Stand By Me, the acclaimed adaptation of Stephen
King's short story about four children who discover a dead body.
As
he matured O'Connell took a break from acting to further his education,
but came back to the screen with Sliders, playing the brilliant
physicist who has discovered a way of travelling between alternative dimensions.
The
series has suffered some patchy scripts and has faced cancellation more
than once, before re-defining itself in its third season with top-notch
storylines that have attracted a wider audience.
Cult
Times recently travelled to the set of Sliders at Universal
Studios in Los Angeles, and met with Jerry O'Connell during a break in
filming the third season episode 'The Fire Within'.
How
did you originally become involved with Sliders?
I
was going to NYU film school; I was a junior and I wanted to get back into
acting. I knew that graduation was a year away, and it would be time
to get a real job and I thought "Why get a real job when I have a shot
at acting", which is a lot more fun than working in an office. I
told my agent I would be interested in doing a pilot, and you get sent
the usual scripts. Sliders was one of the two hour pilots that I
got..
What
was your first initial reaction to the script of that first episode?
I
remember thinking after reading it, "Wow this would be a great show if
it ever became a series". The unlimited storylines were there - you
could go to any world. I really went all out and tried to get it.
The
show has been through a number of false starts - the curtailment of the
first season and a short second season - before being commissioned for
a full run with series three. Has this uncertainty been frustrating
the cast?
It
was little crazy. I kind of like it because I was able to go back
to school and finish up because it wasn't a full season where you work
eight months a year. It would have been a lot harder for me to graduate,
but certainly working six months of the year allowed me to go back and
get my diploma.
How
has Sliders changed since the first season?
I
think it has become a lot sharper. It's a tough show to make because
of the basic premise - it has no boundaries, so we can pretty much go to
any world and we can make any show that we want to.
As
an actor do you find the variety of Sliders satisfying?
That's
an appealing part about it: it does change every week and you can't get
bored with it. One of the toughest things about working in television
is if you do get locked into a series for five years you're saying the
same lines in the fifth year as you were in the first year and you're on
the same set. But with Sliders we're doing something completely
different every week. Another fun thing is that we can portray ourselves
as doubles, and that's great because you're not playing the same character
every week, you're constantly coming up with new ones. In television
that's unheard of, you're constantly playing the same character, and that's
why a lot of actors hate TV. In one episode we go to a world where
capital punishment is judged on television on a big game show and I got
to play myself as a double - a hustler, a two-bit criminal. It was
a lot of fun and I got to wear some flashy clothing. Sometimes I
come into work on a Monday and I don't even know which world we're
on. It's a fun show, and it keeps you really interested.
The
Fox Network has given Sliders a major boost of confidence by relocating
the show's production base from Vancouver to Los Angeles this year.
Some viewers have also noted there has been an increase in the amount of
action compared to previous seasons...
Yeah,
I think we have more money now than we did then. The network made
a commitment to the show and pumped some more bills into it, and that's
great because we can do bigger and better stunts, but the nice thing about
Sliders is that it isn't strictly an action show. It is very
socially conscious, which is what the best Science Fiction is - if you
ever see some of the early Twilight Zones... Sliders does make comments
on our society using the disguise of parallel societies, so it's nice in
that sense - we don't feel that we're making a bubblegum action show.
You're
playing a scientist - are you at all interested in science yourself?
He
was getting his doctorate in physics when he left the world he was on.
That's a lot of fun for me to play because I know nothing about physics,
and science and maths were my weakest points at school. It's very
educational for me. But at the same time he's a 25 year old kid and
he's thrown into this crazy situation a lot of times his science does help
him but he also has to rely on his basic idea for self preservation.
It's a nice balance for me - I get to play a brain and at the same time
a leading action guy.
Certainly
Quinn seems far more realistic and accessible in the latest episodes -
less of a science geek and more of an everyday kind of guy...
Maybe
that has a little to do with me. I graduated school, I moved out
to LA, I'm shaving once every other day now... also three years is a long
time and characters develop. I think of all the characters mine has
developed the least. I think the Professor has come a long way and
Crying Man as really done a real turnaround, and also Wade Wells is a lot
stronger now than when we first started. The producers are very close
to the cast and really work with them, it's a real team effort.
Do
you ever find yourself having a shower in the morning or just driving the
car and suddenly thinking, "Hey wouldn't it be great if we did an episode
where..."
Yeah,
but it's kind of impossible to work on the show and not have those flashes.
The fun thing about it is I'll be in a bar at night and someone will
say, "Hey Sliders right?" and I'll say, "Yeah". And they'll
say, "You know what would be a great idea for a world..." A lot of
people say that, and again that's basically what attracted me to the show
in the first place - that the basic premise sparks imagination.
Do
yo have any aspirations to write and episode?
I
wrote an issue of the comic and that was a lot of fun. Basically
we go to a world where narcotics are not only legal; but they're pumped
into food and water. You come up with hundreds of ideas, and you
can just go from there. It must be fun for the writers but it also
must be kind of frustrating. It must be like "OK, we have to get
some order to this madness..."
Sliders
is broadcast in America in a prime time slot on Friday nights. You
were originally placed immediately before The X-Files, until that
series moved to Sunday nights and Millennium began.
Have there been any concerns among the cast and crew that the family orientated
content of Sliders and the very adult packaged Millennium
make an uneasy package?
First
of all, I love The X-Files - I think it's one of the best TV shows
ever made - and I've seen Millennium and it's right up there.
Our show is not quite as dark as theirs, partly because we're on at 8pm
but also because the fact that there are four main characters in this show
it's a real diverse crowd and when you get diverse crowds like this it's
impossible not to have fun.
There
seems to be a very relaxed atmosphere on set - everyone is extremely friendly...
When
have such a blast on set, and that comes out on the show. It's such
a good time, the cast is the best, John Rhys Davies [Who plays Professor
Maximillian Arturo] - what more can you say? Cleavant Derricks [Rembrandt
'Crying Man' Brown], the guy's a Tony winner - he won in 1984 for Dream
Girls, he's super-talented. That's what helps us not to be so
dark, but we're not a peachy keen show - it gets pretty hairy at times.
Are
there any episodes of Sliders that you feel are particularly dark in tone?
We've
got one episode, Dream Masters, directed by Geoff Levy, and it's
pretty freaky. Making it I was freaked out, but I saw the cut and
it's a little frightening - and I'm a hard scare!
The
final episode of the second season also seemed quite menacing, as it introduced
and alien race that could slide...
Yeah,
and I think they're going to come back, but I'm not sure. Tracey
Torme, the guy who created the show, came up with that storyline and he's
a whacky one. He always comes out these freaky scripts - it's fun
to see what he comes out with.
Sliders
has amassed a following of loyal fans. Have you had much contact
with your audience?
I've
done a couple of conventions. Science Fiction fans are like a double
edged sword - they're the best and most loyal fans in the world, and at
the same time they're the most critical. I go online a lot and I
check out what's going on on the Sliders web site and some of these
people know more about the details of the show than I do! I think
making a Science Fiction show brings everybody up to another level, because
they know the fans are really watching and there's no room for error.
But I like that - it adds a little pressure.
You
recently portrayed the football player Frank 'Cush' Cushman in Jerry Maguire.
What attracted you to the part?
The
opportunity to work with [director] Cameron Crowe. I can tell you,
as a 22 year old, that his work appeals to a lot of people in my generation.
So when I read the script, I went after the role pretty hard.
How
would you describe Cush?
I
think the character of Cush says something not only about athletes today,
but society in general. It's no longer about being part of a team
and having your heart in the game. It's also about money, entertainment.
Jerry Maguire is trying to convince everyone that it's about heart, but
he's pretty much the only one who feels that way. He's the last real
martyr.
What
can you reveal about the Sliders episode you are shooting today, The
Fire Within?
This
week we're in fire world - we go to a world where natural gases are abundant
and fires are all over the place, and then we go to an oil refinery world
and bring back some fire with us. This week it's pretty hot on set!
Do
yo think that because of this limited format, Sliders has the potential
to carry on forever?
It
could, it really could.
If
the series does run for a long time, will you stick with it?
As
an actor you try and so as many parts as possible, and that's where the
challenge comes. But Sliders keeps it rolling - it's impossible to
get bored.
It's
a ludicrous question, but if a portal to another dimension were to open
right next to you now, would you step through it?
Probably
not. I'm kind of chicken, and I'm not into this 'no fear' mantra.
I go skiing, and I like to stay on the beginners' slopes. I've been
invited to go sky diving a couple of times, and I will do that. I
certainly would not step through a portal. If someone told me it
would mean five seasons on a TV show, I might! |