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A RETURN TREK FOR SPINER
Scripps Howard News Service ^ | December 10, 2002 | LUAINE LEE

Posted on 12/10/2002 6:11:14 PM PST by new cruelty

By LUAINE LEE Scripps Howard News Service December 10, 2002

NEW YORK - Don't ask Brent Spiner, the lovable yellow-eyed Data from "Star Trek: The Next Generation," what happened in Episode 17. Or 42. Or 135, for that matter.

Spiner doesn't watch the show much, even though he starred on it for seven years and is back again, squeezed into his Spandex leotards and pancake-batter makeup for the new feature, "Star Trek Nemesis."

"I didn't watch the show," he says, looking strangely normal on this brisk afternoon in a bustling hotel here. "I did it one time, and it was over. ... I like other things (aside from science fiction). I'd seen a lot of the original series when I was in college, seen about 20 episodes of our series, and that's it. For the most part, I'm not a huge sci-fi fan. For me, I like Jack Haley in 'The Wizard of Oz.' "

Spiner admits he was worried about accepting the role when it rolled around 15 years ago, and he was still a hand-to-mouth thespian. "I was really afraid to take it because I thought it would ruin my career. It wasn't that I was constantly working, but I worked a lot at that time before I did 'Star Trek.' I'd already done four Broadway shows. I had done a lot of guest shots, other pilots. Things were happening, I was working. Then I got offered this and a friend of mine, who's an actor, I said to him, 'I don't know if I should take this. I may never work again.'

"He said, 'You're crazy, you'll work MORE.' He was right, really. I think I've been working a great deal since the series ended in other things. I don't know, I may have never really emerged in any sort of way. I may have been a journeyman actor - which is what I was and might've been completely happy with that."

Even so, Spiner, 53, admits that his life changed with the advent of Data and his total recall. "The biggest difference for me was the luxury - being an actor - of being able to pay my rent every month without thinking about it, of knowing for sure I could pay my rent or mortgage or whatever. It was a huge difference and huge luxury for an actor. That's been the biggest difference. And my parents don't really worry about my future because I'm an actor."

Spiner, whose gentle spirit shines through the heavy makeup and limited emotionality of his android character, admits he's playing a new role now for which he's singularly unqualified: The role of father.

"I don't know the first thing about being a father because I didn't have a role model. I didn't have anyone doing it every day for me to know what to do for my son," he says.

Spiner's dad, who owned and operated a furniture store in his native Houston, died when Brent was 10 months old. His mother married five years later and his stepfather adopted him and his older brother.

"Fortunately, I think it (parenting) comes naturally," he says, shifting in his chair, a shaft of sunlight piercing the afternoon haze. "As long as you respect your child, loving him becomes really natural. I don't know what I'm going to do when he's older and things like discipline are concerned. I'm just not sure how I'm going to deal with that."

Becoming a father was a revelation, says Spiner, who's married to Loree McBride. "What I discovered about me was that I was capable of doing it, which is something I just doubted for a long time because I didn't have a real role model for it. I really questioned whether I could do it, and I'm having a really nice time with it."

While many famous television personalities, like Henry Winkler, Carroll O'Connor, Roseanne, Richard Thomas and Mary Tyler Moore, have had difficulties erasing their indelible TV images, Spiner hasn't suffered a similar plight. "It's not a problem," he says, shaking his head.

"I don't think the industry knows who I am. I've done 10 other movies since the series ended that haven't been 'Star Trek.' I've done other television shows and Broadway. I did '1776' here five years ago, the lead in a Broadway show. I never had done that before. I did the series, so obviously it hasn't hurt me," he says, shrugging.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: brentspiner; enterprise; sciencefiction; startrek; tng
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To: new cruelty
Worf delivers what I consider the best line in the series. In the episode Qpid, where Q appears and sends the bridge crew off to Sherwood Forest where they play out Robin Hood. Worf says at one point in a stern voice, "I am not a merry man."
21 posted on 12/10/2002 7:50:55 PM PST by altair
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To: red-dawg
I saw Mirina at a Trek convention about 12 years ago.

She's, ahem, grown as an actress.
22 posted on 12/10/2002 7:56:29 PM PST by TC Rider
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To: Revolting cat!
Not all of us are blessed with a room temperature IQ like yours Revolting cat!. Some of us love this show.
23 posted on 12/10/2002 7:57:15 PM PST by altair
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To: TC Rider
I'll say this, she certainly has aged well.
24 posted on 12/10/2002 7:59:12 PM PST by altair
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To: altair
So did I (like this show) until after about a dozen episodes I detected a pattern of good old liberal obsessions in the stories. Yawn! Whoopie Goldberg? Pleeeze! Didn't mean to spoil your fun, but then, it's Spiner who's the spoiler you ought to address!
25 posted on 12/10/2002 8:02:00 PM PST by Revolting cat!
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To: Revolting cat!

Silly Trash?!?

I always thought it was good entertainment and I like science fiction. I am also aware that Gene Roddenberry was somewhat of a Liberal but I overlooked it.

26 posted on 12/10/2002 8:07:01 PM PST by red-dawg
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To: altair
Worf delivers what I consider the best line in the series. In the episode Qpid, where Q appears and sends the bridge crew off to Sherwood Forest where they play out Robin Hood. Worf says at one point in a stern voice, "I am not a merry man."

I remember that- good line.
That almost makes up for him springing out from behind cover and yelling "Drop your weapons" and calling it "a warrior's reaction".

27 posted on 12/10/2002 8:07:57 PM PST by Riley
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To: new cruelty
I never seem to recognize him in the other projects he does until he speaks. I can recognize his voice before I can recognize the face.
28 posted on 12/10/2002 8:08:20 PM PST by Shooter 2.5
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To: Revolting cat!
Yawn! Whoopie Goldberg?

I used to refer to her in TNG as 'the fifth wheel'.

29 posted on 12/10/2002 8:09:38 PM PST by Riley
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To: red-dawg
It was good entertainment, sure! But the obsession, the naive, liberal utopianism, the concern with current trends, the feminisms, the "racisms", and a kind of lack of humanistic perspective rising above the headlines of the day was what turned me off! It was often transparently propagandistic. I thought the potential was in the end wasted.
30 posted on 12/10/2002 8:12:18 PM PST by Revolting cat!
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To: Revolting cat!
I agree, Revolting cat.

But I enjoyed the mind candy while it lasted.
31 posted on 12/10/2002 8:14:24 PM PST by new cruelty
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To: new cruelty
Top Ten Reasons Why The Three Stooges Could Easily Take Command of the Enterprise

10) Troi would not comprehend their emotions: "Captain, I sense...whoo! whoo! ...You numbskull.... Why, I oughta..."
9) Riker will be reduced to tears when they call him "Fat Boy."
8) Transporter. Cream pie. You get the picture.
7) Curly could jam turbolifts with his head, rendering security unable to leave their deck.
6) Larry, Moe and Curly have already been where no man has been before.
5) The Enterprise crew will be mesmerized by Curly as he does the curly shuffle, and Moe and Larry will take control of the ship.
4) Wesley won't be there to save the Enterprise in the last few minutes with something he learned in science class.
3) Picard doesn't know The Block.
2) If Curly can take a lead pipe to the head, he's just going to laugh at a phaser on stun.
1) Any stooge can outrun Enterprise security.

32 posted on 12/10/2002 8:22:45 PM PST by Brett66
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To: Brett66
ROTFLOL
33 posted on 12/10/2002 8:25:35 PM PST by new cruelty
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To: new cruelty
A recent Star Trek marathon rebroadcast many of the early episodes. When Riker observes that Data is like Pinnochio he establishes the character's persona for the series.

As an ardent Asimov afficiando, (aliteraton anyone), I enjoyed the character Data, as much as his early guise as "Robbie the Robot"

"Warning Will robinson!!!"

And who can forget that sinister character from "Captain Video and his Video Rangers" You know, the evil Tobor, (which was robot spelled backwards)!

34 posted on 12/10/2002 8:27:10 PM PST by Young Werther
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To: Revolting cat!
All I can say is that I tolerated the liberal "slant" for the sake of a good science fiction, entertaining show. I am not always using my conservative filter in search of a good flick. I also liked 2001: A Space Odyssey.

But my favorite movies are good old kick butt war movies.

35 posted on 12/10/2002 8:32:05 PM PST by red-dawg
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To: red-dawg
Speaking of flicks... avoid SOLARIS at all cost.
36 posted on 12/10/2002 8:33:20 PM PST by new cruelty
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To: Revolting cat!
I was disappointed with the first year and stopped watching after that. It wasn't until the 5th season a friend convinced me it had gotten much better and I started watching again. Although I found some of the episodes were dopey (Journey's End with the Indians comes to mind), there were others that were extremely well done. My favorite episode was Timescape.

It did get better as time went on. Also, I think part of my initial reaction to it was that the cast was too large and I was getting confused about who was whom. Once I recognized everyone and the story lines improved, I was hooked.

37 posted on 12/10/2002 8:50:43 PM PST by altair
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To: Riley
Whoopie Goldberg is probably the only character who never appeared in an episode where I liked her part. I'm not sure what they saw in her.
38 posted on 12/10/2002 8:56:24 PM PST by altair
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To: Ciexyz
I once went to a Star Trek convention (at least ten years ago) at Valley Forge and Brent was the guest speaker. He came off as a real down-to-earth guy (no pun intended) and you couldn't help but like him. I think he said it was his first convention, and that Patrick Stewart had helped talk him into finally doing conventions by telling him, "You are really missing the boat".
39 posted on 12/10/2002 9:07:54 PM PST by Lancey Howard
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To: Young Werther
Actually, Robbie the Robot was from Forbidden Planet, not Lost in Space. They were NOT the same robot.

The robot on Lost in Space was just called Robot.

There was one episode they both appeared in.
40 posted on 12/10/2002 9:46:30 PM PST by chaosagent
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