Aaron Douglas -
gallactic amongst fans
By: Scott Casey
Date: April 13, 2007
Source:
Brisbane Times
Aaron
Douglas, the star of science fiction favourite Battlestar Galactica,
is taking time out of his busy schedule of fighting robots and defending
the human race to visit his fans in Brisbane.
The Canadian native is
best known as Chief Tyrol in Battlestar – a role which has
launched him into science fiction stardom. The show won a cult following
in its first incarnation in the 1970s – and the remake, in which Douglas
stars, now has a massive following on the Sci-Fi Channel. Douglas has also
had smaller roles in hit movies such as The Chronicles of Riddick
and X-Men 2, and television shows Dark Angel and
Smallville.
He spoke to
brisbanetimes.com.au entertainment reporter Scott Casey
this week.
SC: You
entered acting later than most of your contemporaries – what led you into
an acting career?
Aaron:
For four years after high school I was a floor layer – I did a lot of
construction work until my knees gave out. So I went and worked for a
software company doing marketing, then a sports nutrition company… and
quit when I was 26 or 27. After a year at acting school, I got an agent
and here I am. My mom says I used to say I wanted to be an actor but I'm
sure I wanted to be a lawyer…now I'd only be a TV lawyer. If I had to sit
in front of a computer for 16 hours a day I'd want to shoot myself in the
head!
SC:
Battlestar was your big break – why do you think the show has been so
successful?
Aaron:
Battlestar's popularity really starts with it's great writing. It's real
human drama, with real human emotion, and the writers don't pull an
punches – they really tell it like it is, hold a mirror up to the world
and start discussions. It's just top to bottom an outstanding show to
work. Compared to the other shite that's on TV, you don't have to go far
to whip them.
SC: How
intense is the filing of Battlestar?
Aaron:
We take eight days to film each episode. When you are in scenes that are
in different locations then you'll work a lot – they go to one set and
shoot all the scenes from that set, so if you're in multiple scenes then
you'll work a whole bunch. Battlestar starts filming on May 14, so once we
start we're going we'll shoot until March 2008, so we don't really have
time to do much else.
SC: So
here's the Sci-Fi geek question, how would you react if you were fleeing
the Cylons?
Aaron: I
hope and think that I'd respond in the same way that Tyrol does. He's a
pretty courageous guy and he's tough – everybody's a hero sitting on their
couch but once the bullets start flying it really separates the men from
the boys.
SC: The
Chief has developed a stronger role in the series, what do you think of
that? And where is it going?
Aaron:
I have no idea where it's going in season four, but I'm thrilled with what
they've done with the Chief. He was a pretty small character in the
mini-series and he wasn't supposed to amount to much – he's just grown and
they've given me more to do. I identify with him in a lot of ways.
SC: So
what else is in the pipeline for you?
Aaron:
I just finished a film called Blood, A Butchers Tale, it'll be out next
year – it's all green-screen like 300 or Sin City – a very stylised, comic
book sort of video game look, it'll be very cool. I play the Butcher in
that, the main guy, so I'm looking forward to that.
SC: Its
been leaked on the internet that Battlestar is ending after the next
season, how would you like to see it end?
Aaron: I
would like us to find Earth and then discover that Earth is completely
populated by Cylons – that the people on the ships are the only humans
left in the entire universe and the Cylons have been on Earth the entire
time…
SC: What
are you looking forward too about the conference and about Brisbane?
Aaron:
I'm looking forward to seeing (Lord of the Rings star) Karl Urban again. I
really want to see the sites, meet the locals and get a real taste for the
culture, have a pint and talk sports. I'm looking forward to some sunny
days…sunshine and a couple of beers, that's all I need.
Aaron Douglas
will be in Brisbane for the Supanova Pop-Culture Convention at the RNA
showgrounds this Saturday and Sunday, April 14-15. Entry is $20 for a
daily pass or $30 for the weekend. Children under 12 are FREE.