A personal website of movie reviews and observations by a movie fan. Primarily a movie site, there will be other entertainment related segments particularly with respect to television and cable/satellite broadcasts. Occasionally, other areas may involve sports, news, and just about anything that strikes my fancy. I hope you find this site useful for information and in helping to determine if a film is worth your while. I appreciate your interest and feedback.
Sunday, July 11, 2010
SHORE LEAVE 32 AND GALACTICA STARS
Shore Leave 32, the annual sci-fi convention weekend, in Hunt Valley, Maryland, had its usual merchandise dealers and celebrity guests including Kevin Sorbo (Hercules), Torri Higginson (Stargate: Atlantis) , Catherine Hick (Star Trek IV), Dominic Keating (Star Trek: Enterprise), Katee Sackhoff (24), and Edward James Olmos (Miami Vice). The show was a great opportunity to get personal insight into an actor’s career. I had the chance to talk to both Olmos and Sackhoff and to attend their Q&A sessions. Both were very nice, forthcoming people.
With longer, gray hair, Olmos looked older from his days on Miami Vice but no less distinguished. He was lavish in his praise for the recent Battlestar Galactica series which took a simple 1970’s concept and expanded on its human elements and important themes and garnered Emmy nominations and the Peabody Award. His costar Katee Sackhoff was a mainstay on that show as well.
The Emmy winner was asked about other work in his career including Blade Runner and Stand and Deliver for which he received a Best Actor Oscar nomination. Stand and Deliver is based on a true story of an inner city math teacher whose class took the advanced placement test and excelled to the astonishment of the country. Triumph of the Spirit was also a true story about a boxer in Auschwitz concentration camp during World War II, the only non-documentary film allowed to film on location.
When asked about who influenced him as an actor and who he rated as an admired contemporary, he chose the legendary actor Paul Muni as the most important. Meryl Streep is the one current actress he acknowledges as being so good, that she stands alone in her abilities.
Katee Sackhoff was smaller in person than I thought, with auburn brown hair and not the blonde villain, Dana Walsh, as portrayed in the final season of TV’s 24. She told of how she did not know she was the traitorous mole until later that season and subsequently knew her character would die. Her death scene, which had her shot by Keifer Sutherland as Jack Bauer, involved explosive blanks and blood squibs at close range. She said she forgot to put earplugs in her ears and could not hear for days.
She had just heard that her pilot, Boston’s Finest, was not picked up for the upcoming TV season but that she had two guest spots in Big Bang Theory. Such is the life of a working actor. She auditions all the time for roles that often go to the likes of Katherine Heigl and Claire Danes and failed to win roles in It’s Complicated and Million Dollar Baby. She would love to be on the TV show Glee and just auditioned twice for a role in Mission Impossible 4. She owns a Harley Davidson Fatboy motorcycle and plans to ride to New Orleans and follow the Easy Rider route this fall.
There was a good turnout for this event, and many fans were dressed as favorite characters from sci-fi shows. Klingons, Star Fleet officers, Cylons, Stargate soldiers, and even R2D2 made appearances. After a search for collectible film memorabilia, I was ready to switch from groupie to civilian.
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