Brooks also continues to do Sisko as Voiceovers in video games.
If he hadn't had Data killed in Nemesis, there would be umpteen threads on the BBS right now about how "Data's supposed to be an android, but he keeps aging, WTF?" instead Spiner said, "well it's hardly realistic for me to keep playing Data at my age, so I won't insult the fans intelligence" and he's villified for it.
Or to be more specific, he's done a single one since the show ended.Brooks also continues to do Sisko as Voiceovers in video games.
If he hadn't had Data killed in Nemesis, there would be umpteen threads on the BBS right now about how "Data's supposed to be an android, but he keeps aging, WTF?" instead Spiner said, "well it's hardly realistic for me to keep playing Data at my age, so I won't insult the fans intelligence" and he's villified for it.
If he hadn't had Data killed in Nemesis, there would be umpteen threads on the BBS right now about how "Data's supposed to be an android, but he keeps aging, WTF?" instead Spiner said, "well it's hardly realistic for me to keep playing Data at my age, so I won't insult the fans intelligence" and he's villified for it.
It was stated in TNG's Inheritance that Data had an aging program.
How do people know that Terry Farrel left because of a money dispute?
Because we had Richard Arnold as an annual guest at Australian conventions. AFAIK, when the cast's five-year contracts were up for renewal, Terry Farrell was the group's union representative and she rallied them to stick together and fight for greatly increased pay and conditions. Which they won.
When the seventh season contracts had to be renewed, she again rallied the troops but Paramount circumvented her attempts and tried the ol' Hollywood "divide and conquer" strategy to keep the budget as constrained as possible. They went to each actor and made offers they couldn't refuse (more money, bigger trailers, reduced makeup chair time, directorial opportunities), then they offered Farrell what amount to no increase at all. They reminded her that she was the most easily replaceable character, but she stuck to her price and Paramount couldn't (or wouldn't) match it, so she walked...
Then, they used her voice in a Season Seven episode, without first informing her agent that the standard royalty would be forthcoming. This put Paramount into an arbitration situation, meaning that the writers could not plan any Farrell flashbacks in other future episodes. Even though Farrell was on very good terms with the production team, and attended the final rap party alongside the new Dax, no footage of Farrell's Dax could be used in the final episode's flashback montage.
Well, she essentially walked straight into the "Becker" pilot filming at Paramount, a resulting successful series in which - ironically - Farrell was released from her contract in a pay dispute, and replaced: almost identically to the DS9 situation.I read that she asked to leave and Paramount got her a job in another show right after she left DS9
I'm just saying...if you're going to be interviewed on your thoughts about Star Trek, you sort of come across as a douchebag when the first thing you say is, "I was happy about the money". Fine, but keep that to yourself when you're being recorded for posterity to supposedly open up and say what's in your heart when it comes to being part of Star Trek.
While her colleagues can't be blamed for looking out for their own individual best interests, it must have left Farrel with a sour taste when Paramount finally exacted its revenge for her successful advocacy on behalf of herself and her buddies the previous year. Shabby, but then that's Hollywood.
The "oft-repeated claim" was mentioned in many articles and interviews at the time. Check out some old "Starlogs".It leads me to ask whether you have any insight into the real story behind Season 3's BOBW cliffhanger and the oft-repeated claim that it was deliberately left that way because the studio and Patrick Stewart were in the middle of negotiations and if worse came to worse that Frakes would commence season 4 as captain.
I've always wondered how true that was considering the 6-year contract that Stewart et al signed
As I understand it, Stewart was locked into his standard five-year contract just like the others, but he was the inarguable star of the show and, when the star and his agent are complaining people lesson. His agent had probably complained that starting salaries on new series had jumped incredibly, and they were asking for some kind of better deal. Imagine the panic if a star walked... even if it meant him paying a huge release fine, or taking a case to arbitration, to get out of his contract.Were the rumours just part of a manufactured keep-the-fans-on-edge studio play or were they based on something more substantive?
As I said, everyone's contracts - except, I assume, Gates had a new 5Y contract to start Season Three - came up for renewal after Season Five. There were huge negotiations going on behind the scenes, but the cast were essentiall happy on the show, so there was little doubt they'd all sign. Then, for Season Seven, the added carrot was a major motion picture deal.I'd been led to believe that the real spadework as far as negotiations between Stewart and studio are concerned came as season 6 was ending, when Stewart called a halt to his participation in anything beyond one more year of the series – which is when the movies came into play as part of the deal.
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