Hail to the Chief
By: Sharon Gosling
Date: December 2005 / January 2006
Source: Battlestar Galactica: The Official Magazine (#2)

He's
managed to keep the Galactica and her complement of Vipers space-worthy
through the very harshest of circumstances ... AARON DOUGLAS talks Chief
with Battlestar Galactica Magazine.
For a character that was originally planned merely as a background face
aboard the Battlestar Galactica, Chief Galen Tyrol has certainly
exceeded his bounds. Firstly embroiled in a torrid affair with a fellow
officer, viewers watched anxiously as his lover, Sharon Valleri, was
initially revealed as a Cylon operative and then assassinated. Now, as
Tyrol adjusts to the change aboard Galactica with a second - pregnant -
Boomer aboard, life just got so much more complicated.
Battlestar Galactica Magazine: Chief Tyrol went through a massive arc
from the beginning of the mini-series to the end of season one. Were you
expecting that when you signed on?
Aaron Douglas: No, not at all, actually. When you read the first
script for the mini-series, the one that I actually auditioned from, Chief
only had about 15 lines. He was a really small character. But I'm a big
ad-libber so if I see that I can get away with it I ad-lib stuff in! And a
couple of days in, Mike Rymer (director) and David Eick (producer) talked
about it and started adding me to scenes. So the Chief has grown
exponentially. In the mini-series I think I ended up with five extra days
of shooting because I had so many more scenes. They liked the character
and gave me more to do in season one. And they've given me much more in
season two!
Battlestar Galactica Magazine: Season two means filming 20 episodes
instead of the 13 that made up season one. How has that been for you?
Aaron Douglas: It's nice this year, in that last year I was just
contacted as the series went on. I didn't know where the Chief was going,
I wasn't locked in long-term for the show, and I didn't really have as
much feedback last year as I'm getting this year. So I didn't know if he
was going to be killed off, or if he was going to have stuff to do. But I
had a really good talk with David Eick in the off-season, and they made a
really strong commitment to me, and to the character, and I've
reciprocated and made a really strong commitment to the show, so I'm
thrilled. Unless something happens, I'm here for five years like everybody
else. And now I get lots to do, so it's very cool.
Battlestar Galactica Magazine: Committing to five years is always a
big decision for any actor. Did you hesitate at all?
Aaron Douglas: It is a long time. I think most people would prefer to
do just two years at a time. It's funny, because I sort of relate it to
sports. Athletes want the long term deal, [which is] guaranteed money. But
[acting], even if they sign you for five years, they may not pick you up.
So they always have an out, but you don't really have any control over it.
It was really tough to know - "Do I really want to do this for five more
years?" But it's a good show, and it's great writing. It's so weird. You
work so hard for so many years to be regular on show, and then when you
finally get the opportunity to be a regular on a show, you go, "I don't
know, maybe I'll wait for the next thing..." [laughs] You really just have
to smack yourself for a while and go. "What are you doing? This is the
thing that you've been wanting for so long and finally it's here and
you're going to screw it up?" Once I'd made the decision, everything
started falling into place. The network and the studio and everybody have
been excited, and there have been great accolades from so many magazines.
So it's really clearly the right decision.
The
advantage that I have is the Tyrol wasn't in the original series, so he
doesn't have that hatred from the original series fans! And he's just
enough of a peripheral character that I can go do other things and not be
labeled as, "Oh, that's that Apollo guy from Battlestar Galactica,"
for example. So I have a little bit of anonymity - people don't recognize
me, so I can walk around anywhere, Rarely do people come up and ask, "Are
you on that show?" So I go into auditions, and directors and producers
have sort of heard of the show but they've never seen it and they don't
really care. Which is odd, but nice!
Battlestar Galactica Magazine: Chief Tyrol started season two on Kobol.
How was that for you?
Aaron Douglas: It's interesting being on location, because it's a
space show and so much of the time [we're in space]. Last year, I went on
location once for one day for episodes 12 and 13 and the rest of the time
we were in the studio, so I never got to go outside! So it's nice to go
out and run around through the forests. It was long days, but it was a lot
of fun. It was difficult only because of all the emotional stuff that goes
on in those episodes - they've started calling me the Angel of Death
because people keep dying around me! But it was a lot of fun to do. And it
was nice to have Michael Rymer back, he's my favorite director.
Battlestar Galactica Magazine: Tyrol has had to deal with a lot of
conflict, in particular in dealing with Sharon Valleri. How do you prepare
for those scenes, as an actor?
Aaron Douglas: I don't know, it's an odd thing. I don't do anything.
It used to drive me crazy, because I'd see everyone around me going
through these great pains to prepare for scenes and studying the night
before and breaking down their scripts and all that - and I don't. I show
up for work, I get my sides, I learn my lines in rehearsal and then I just
do it! So I can't explain. I still have a hard time trying to articulate
what I do to prepare. I just follow my gut, and I give what I get. So the
look of the other person, what they're saying - I respond to that. So I
don't really have any tremendous insights [laughs]! It can be very, very
emotional. The difficulty I find sometimes is having to do the exact same
thing take after take after take. because I just go with where I'm at. If
my body's not really feeling like crying at that moment, it just won't
cry! And so I don't manufacture it, I just go with what's there. Some
directors really like that, but some are like, "Well, we need to match
what you did before".
Battlestar Galactica Magazine: Chief Tyrol had a rocky ride with
Sharon 'Boomer' Valleri, but her death still seemed to hit him hard. Were
you expecting that, or was her death a surprise?
Aaron Douglas: I thought that they were going to have to do something
with one of the Boomers, because you can't have two or three Boomers on
the ship at one time. I was kind of hoping, actually, that something would
go terribly awry and the Chief has to kill her. I thought that would be
pretty cool, as an actor, to play euthanizing the woman you love. That
would be just crazy. But that's obviously not to be. I think I've killed
enough people in the first half of the season already!
I had a scene in episode
five, right at the end, where I'm talking to Adama. At the end they're
talking about what I liked about Boomer and about love and stuff, and he
says, "You know you'll see her again, because there are many copies." And
he leaves the Chief there thinking "Holy shit, I'd never thought of that."
So it's going to be interesting. The next Boomer has all the memories of
the Chief and the relationship, but doesn't have any first hand experience
with it. That would be really weird, to see a loved one come back from the
dead a couple of weeks after she died in your arms, right?
Battlestar Galactica Magazine: There's also the inevitable conflict
between the Chief and Helo.
Aaron Douglas: Helo is in love with that Boomer and that
Boomer is carrying his child. The Chief isn't going to like that too much,
and Helo's not going to like the fact that the Chief and Boomer were once
an item and now he's back. So yeah, that will be interesting for sure.
Battlestar Galactica Magazine: What would you like to see happen for
your character?
Aaron Douglas: I would like to have a scene eventually at some point
with Mary. I think it would be interesting if she, looking for a voice of
the people, goes down to the blue-collar workers. The President goes to
the auto-body shop and starts talking to those guys instead of just
talking to management, just to get a sense of what's really going on. That
would be kin of fun. Although I just trust the writers to take him where
they go, because they always write good stuff to do.
Battlestar Galactica Magazine: Do you feel that you can talk to the
writers if you have something specific you want to contribute?
Aaron Douglas: Oh yeah, they are tremendous guys, with open doors. We
have the email addresses of the writers - David (Eick) and I are good
friends, and every once in a while we sit around and talk. I think David
lives vicariously through Tyrol! I think the Chief is like his
swashbuckling sort of gun-toting superhero guy, who he loves! And he'll
go, "And then the Chief beats someone up, and the Chief has sex with this
girl...l" he just loves this stuff! So he'll call me or he finds me on set
or emails me and he'll go, "Oh, oh, oh, in this episode, you're going to
be doing that, I can't wait to see you do it!" Then he likes to watch me
film it. He gets really excited, it's really funny. So yeah, I can go talk
to him and give him ideas and spout things off - and they listen.
We see
an episode or two ahead, but they have the entire arc of the story. And
you can sort of find out where they're going by giving them thoughts, and
they'll say, "No, that's not the direction we're going in". [laughs]. So
you pick your spots! The less you say, the more they listen.

[click thumbnails to enlarge] |