Chief Among Men
By: David Bassom
Date:
December 2005
Source:
Dreamwatch #136
Season two of BATTLESTAR GALACTICA has seen Chief Petty Officer
Galen Tyrol facing betrayal, pain and loss - and actor AARON DOUGLAS
couldn't be happier.
Aaron Douglas has
absolutely no complaints about where Battlestar Galactica is taking his
character in the second season of its quest for Earth.
"For me personally, it
seems like the longer the show goes on, the more really cool stuff I get
to do," explains
Douglas, who plays the Battlestar's resident engineering wizard, Chief
Petty Officer Galen Tyrol.
"In the mini-series, Tyrol
was a really small, ancillary character. He originally had about 15
lines in the script and was just supposed to be this guy in the
background who brought some life to the ship. But [writer/executive
producer] Ron Moore liked what I did with the character in the
mini-series and started to write more for Tyrol, and he found him
interesting to write in the sense that he was a blue-collar
worker/everyman type character. I think that had a lot to do with Tyrol
growing into a much larger role."
"During the course of
season one and now this year, I've grown to feel vital to the show,"
he notes.
"I really wasn't sure what
was going to happen to Tyrol after season one, but season two has just
been a wonderful experience for me. They just keep writing more and more
really great stuff for me to do. I've had a few episodes where it's been
the Tyrol story, and I really feel valued and appreciated by Ron and
David [Eick, executive Producer]."
"Having said that,"
he adds playfully,
"now watch me get killed at the end of the season!"
Dressed in casual civvies
and sporting a decidedly un-Tyrol-like small earring on his left ear,
the cool, relaxed and extremely likeable Douglas really isn't kidding
about his character's contribution to Battlestar Galactica's second
season. Picking up from season one's cliff-hanger ending, the opening
episodes of season two have seen Tyrol fighting for his life on the
planet Kobol and facing accusations of being an undercover Cylon agent
just like his former 'secret' lover, Lieutenant Sharon 'Boomer' Valerii
(Grace Park). As the season has developed, Tyrol has also been forced to
face the deaths of several people close to him and has struggled to come
to terms with the arrival of a second Cylon Sharon and her lover,
Lieutenant Karl 'Helo' Agathon (Tahmoh Penikett).
"I've definitely taken a
much more active role in the storylines this year,"
reports Douglas.
"The first three episodes
were really action packed for me. I was just running around and getting
shot at and shooting back! They were my chance to do Saving Private
Ryan. And then when Tyrol got back to the ship, I got to do some
great scenes with Michael Hogan where Colonel Tigh suspects me of being
a Cylon. It was very cool to do that because I think Michael is one of
the best actors on the show - he's a fantastic actor and a great guy."
"Tyrol's relationship with
Sharon has been interesting this season,"
he continues.
"I was fully behind Ron's
decision for Tyrol to split up with Sharon, as I knew that would give us
a lot to play with. So at the start of season two, Tyrol is pulled out
of his denial about Sharon being a Cylon and he's shocked to find out
about her attempt to kill Adama. I had a really cool scene with Eddie
[James Olmos], where Commander Adama talks to Tyrol about his
relationship with Sharon and asks Tyrol if he could really love a
machine. That was fun to play."
"It's also been
interesting to explore Tyrol's feeling towards Helo when he returns to
the Galactica. Tyrol's nose is put out of joint and it makes him angry,
although he doesn't really know what he's mad at."
After playing a key role
in several second season episodes, Tyrol takes center stage in the
season's ninth instalment, Flight of the Phoenix. Written by the
show's executive story editors, Bradley Thompson and David Weddle,
Flight of the Phoenix follows Tyrol as he attempts to build a new
ship from scratch.
"Episode nine is basically
the Tyrol Show,"
says Douglas with a grin,
"Tyrol goes a little mad
and crawls into the hangar deck one night and starts building a ship!
It's very cool."
"Bradley and David write the best stuff for me. Those guys are
unbelievable. I worked for six of the eight [shooting] days on that
episode, and I got really immersed in it. And Michael Nankin, who
directed the episode, shot it in sequence, which was great."
The US Sci Fi Channel's
premiere of Battlestar Galactica's second season went on hiatus in
September following the broadcast of its 10th episode, Pegasus. The
remaining 10 episodes of the season are in production at Canada's
Vancouver Film Studios, and will debut during the opening months of
2006. With shooting set to wrap in December, Douglas is excited as the
show's viewers about learning what the rest of the season holds for
Tyrol and his crewmates.
"I don't really know a lot
about what's coming up in future episodes,"
he states. "David
Eick has told me a few little things, but I generally find out things
for the first time when I get the script for a new episode."
"I think people are going
to be surprised by where the Pegasus storyline is going,"
he says of the
Pegasus/Resurrection Ship two-parter, which reworks the popular original
series adventure The Living Legend.
"I've been blown away by
how everyone has been geeked up by episodes 10 and 11, and I know the
producers have some interesting plans for the Pegasus. I don't think the
ship's necessarily going to go away at the end of episode 11."
Douglas' work on
Battlestar Galactica represents the highpoint of a busy acting career
that began just five years ago. A native of New Westminster, Vancouver,
Douglas first tried his hand at various occupations ranging from
salesman and marketing officer to sports nutrition rep, before deciding
to focus on a career in acting. After studying at the William Davis
Center for Actors in Vancouver (an education he funded by working as a
waiter between lessons), Douglas quickly started to crop up in such
local film and TV productions as Taken, Smallville, X-Men, Stargate SG-1
and Dark Angel. More recently, the popular character actor has also
played brief supporting roles in the likes of I, Robot, The Chronicles
of Riddick, Catwoman, White Noise and The Exorcism of Emily Rose.
Douglas first became
involved with Battlestar Galactica in 2001, when the show was set to be
revived by X-Men director Bryan Singer and Tom DeSanto. As a childhood
fan of the original series, Douglas quickly made it known that he wanted
to be a part of Singer's planned continuation TV movie.
"A casting director I know
was in negotiations to do the continuation,"
recalls Douglas.
"I told that casting director, 'Look, I have to be on that show! I will
work for you for free for a year! I'll do anything. I'll be a Cylon
metal toaster!' I really wanted to be a part of it, because I was a fan
of the original show. But I never heard anything after that, because
that project just went away."
Nearly a year after the
cancellation of Singer's TV movie, Douglas got a second chance at
working on Battlestar Galactica when Moore's mini-series remake entered
pre-production. Douglas' initial audition for the role of Captain Lee
'Apollo' Adama brought him to the attention of Director Michael Rymer,
who invited him to read for the part of Lieutenant Gaeta and then Chief
Tyrol. Although Tyrol was initially meant to be significantly older than
Douglas, the role was reworked to suit him.
Since signing up for the
Battlestar Galactica mini-series and its subsequent weekly series,
Douglas has been allowed to develop Tyrol into a tough, first-class
engineer whose gruff exterior hides a heart of gold.
"Tyrol is, first and foremost, a mechanic who really loves his job,"
notes Douglas. "He
always wants to do a good job and make everyone proud. He has a bond
with his guys, the Deck Gang, but he also maintains a distance between
himself and them because when you are in charge of a group you need that
distance."
"Tyrol is like the dad of
the Deck Gang, and I'm like the dad of those actors in real life," he
adds. "We're all friends in real life and I think you can see the
affection between us on screen."
As Chief Tyrol is an
entirely new addition to the Battlestar Galactica franchise, Douglas has
been spared a lot of the controversy surround Universal's decision to
commission a remake of the show rather than a continuation. However,
he's fully aware of how some fans of the original series have objected
to the dark, reality-driven reinvention of the once grandiose,
fantasy-orientated sci-fi franchise.
"That still pops up every
now and again," he
reveals. "I
occasionally get people coming up to me pissed off that Starbuck is now
a woman or complaining about some other change, and I always go, 'Well,
I'm sorry, there's nothing I can do about that. If you don't like it,
change the channel - or go for a walk."
"The thing is, you
shouldn't really compare the two shows, They're both great for different
reasons. The original show has such a magical, wonderful appeal, but it
couldn't do a lot of things we can do in the new show, Our effects are
better and the original show had that usual, larger-than-life sci-fi
genre acting, whereas we don't do that. The new show is really well
written, well produced and well acted."
"When season one
started, I remember thinking to myself that if I wasn't in the show, I
would watch it. And I've gotta say, I think season two is even better
than season one. It's fantastic."
With the bulk of his work
on season two nearly complete, Aaron Douglas is clearly enjoying every
moment of his time aboard Battlestar Galactica. And he hopes that Chief
Tyrol survives the Cylons' pursuit of humankind for several seasons to
come.
"I feel very blessed to be
a part of this show,"
he declares. "The
cast and crew are great, we all get along really well and have a lot of
fun and laughs, and the show itself is fantastic. This is the first time
I've been a regular on a series, and I could be stuck on some terrible
TV show where I was feeling lucky to be working steadily but hating the
show and feeling that I was missing out on better things, but that's
really not the case on Battlestar. I just love working on this show."
"Eddie Olmos has joked
that we should be ready for the 15-year run, but if that happens, I'm
there!" he admits
with a laugh. "I'm
having a blast."

[click thumbnails to enlarge] |