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Interview with Robert Duncan McNeill


We'll Always Have Paris
An Interview with Robert McNeill

by Michelle Erica Green


Despite rumors that this will be the season when Voyager finally gets
home, Robert Duncan McNeill isn't in any rush for the starship his
character pilots to get back to Earth. "I don't want to get home! If we go
back, I don't have a job, I have to go back to jail, and I lose the
paycheck. It's a lose-lose situation," he groans. 

McNeill has just started shooting his fifth season on Star Trek Voyager,
where he plays the cocky, heroic Lieutenant Tom Paris.  A recent guest at
the annual Shore Leave convention in Hunt Valley, Maryland, McNeill
assures fans that "we're not going back to the Alpha Quadrant yet, which I
think is a good thing." Known to Next Generation fans as Nick Locarno, the
Academy classmate who convinced Wesley Crusher to lie to a board of
inquiry, McNeill was an obvious choice for the role of Tom Paris on
Voyager, though he had to convince the producers that instead of looking
for "a Robert Duncan McNeill type,"  they should risk comparisons by
casting him. It paid off: Paris has been one of the consistently popular
characters on the series. 

"Tom is a man who has made mistakes, but hasn't allowed those mistakes to
ruin his life," says the actor, who likes the balance of Starfleet
idealism and Maquis rebelliousness in his character. In addition to his
piloting skills, Paris is known for his knowledge of 20th century culture
and his skill at holodeck programming, which will be featured in an early
episode next season when Tom plays a superhero in a holographic B-movie.
Over the course of the past few seasons, Paris has progressed from the bad
boy whose dalliance with the wife of an alien nearly got him executed to
the captain's confidant in a scheme to smoke out a traitor. 

The transformation from troublemaker to model citizen has happened a
little too quickly for McNeill, who says that he prefers to see a little
more of Paris's dark side. This past season, Paris became romantically
involved with B'Elanna Torres, another development about which he has
somewhat mixed feelings. "She's rough, isn't she," he jokes dreamily of
B'Elanna, but grumbles when asked whether the characters will commit to
one another on the series, lamenting the loss of potential storylines with
other characters. Next season with Brannon Braga at the helm, the show
will reportedly become darker but wittier, meaning that the
less-than-perfect Tom Paris of earlier seasons could return. 

Jeri Ryan's character Seven of Nine was brought on last season to shake up
the series, which she did with great success, but there has been
considerable fan criticism about the emphasis on her character to the
detriment of others. Asked whether Ryan's presence caused problems among
the cast, McNeill jokes, "Yeah, we're all fighting over her," but admits
that there was tension about the media hype and ongoing promotion of her
image. "Jeri is a really wonderful, professional actress and fits in
beautifully into our cast - she's got a great sense of humor, she's a
trouper like the rest of us," he says, adding with a wicked grin that "she
works long hours while they have to paint that suit on her body." 

But there was certainly a feeling among the cast that her character seemed
to be getting more than its fair share of attention. The actor explains,
"Because there was a new character, and UPN in its desperate attempt for
ratings somehow felt like they could publicize something very easily
because it was visually ... unique ... and because it was a new thing, an
easy sell publicity-wise because of Jeri Ryan's very stunning physical
attributes, eighteen of the twenty-six shows were about Seven of Nine. She
was the superhero savior of the ship. And we all felt like there were
eight other characters that had very strong contributions to make. If
we're creating a show about nine heroic Starfleet people, then we all need
to contribute in our unique way." 

McNeill is confident that this season, the writers will redistribute
contributions more equally among the cast. He does a hilarious parody
onstage of a typical fourth-season scene between Seven of Nine and Captain
Janeway: "'Seven, I don't want you to do that.' 'Captain, I'm going to do
it anyway.' 'No you won't.' 'Yes, I will.' 'Go to the brig.' 'No!' It was
the same scene. To play that for eighteen episodes ... we've seen it!" 

"Now we need to see something else," he continues. "Nothing against Jeri
Ryan, but it's an insult to the rest of the cast. I think hopefully the
network will realize that the ratings didn't improve.  This is their only
hit, it's the only show that seems to be bringing in reasonable numbers.
If it wasn't for Star Trek, there wouldn't be a UPN." Next season the
series reportedly will return to an 8 p.m. time slot, though its first
episode, "Night," will not air until mid-October. This time slot could put
it into direct competition with Babylon 5 in some markets, but McNeill,
who thinks Voyager is more successful appealing to young people than
developing R-rated themes, thinks the earlier time works better for the
show. 

One issue which has come up again and again is Tom's relationship with his
father, a Starfleet admiral who was Captain Janeway's mentor.  Viewers
learned in the pilot that his son's courtmartial and expulsion from
Starfleet caused an irrevocable rift in an already strained relationship. 
In last season's episode "Hunters," in which the crew received letters
from the Alpha Quadrant, Paris waited in fearful anticipation for a letter
from his father which never came. "[Former executive producer] Jeri Taylor
has written this new book, Pathways.  She said to me last year that she
was going to really try to define Paris's background and what he did to
get in jail, and define his relationship with his father, which we seem to
refer to a lot - I'll read the book, and I'll tell you," McNeill promises.

Tom's transformation from ladies' man to B'Elanna's steady has left the
actor with mixed feelings - he was a big fan of the relationship in its
early development, but now laughs that he can't ever date the alien babes
which the ship encounters. He admits that it's not setting a good example
for younger audience members for the series to focus on short flings
rather than long-term relationships, but insists that the show has a
greater responsibility to entertain than to promote a given set of values.

"My hesitation to get tied down to B'Elanna on the show is that because
it's a series and each week you're doing a new story, sometimes a new
relationship can create a very interesting story, whereas the same
relationship can become a little boring as a story,"  says the father of
three. "I think there is a responsibility for television to set a good
example, but the most important responsibility is to tell a good story.
Sometimes with alien-of-the-week stories, you get a relationship that you
can explore in a really focused way, and you can tell a story in that
experience - it's more difficult to sustain characters episode after
episode, and keep that interesting." 

The plan this year for Tom and B'Elanna is not to focus on the
relationship as such unless it's part of a bigger story. "Last year when
they explored the relationship it was a lot of therapy-speak,"  the actor
admits. "It became not very dramatic - that kind of conversation might be
really healthy and great for my real relationship, but it's kind of boring
to watch people on TV talk that way. Their intention for the relationship
this year is to find really interesting stories for the characters, and if
there's an opportunity to let the relationship enhance the story, then
we'll deal with it.  We just filmed an episode where B'Elanna is dealing
with some self-destructive behavior, and we had a great scene where it was
really about that. It's more interesting to see the dance that people do
in relationships where they don't talk about exactly how they're feeling." 

The relationship also suffered a bit last season because actress Roxann
Dawson was hugely pregnant ... as was McNeill's wife Carol, who gave birth
to their son Carter within a few weeks of the birth of Dawson's daughter
Emma. "It was kind of funny playing love scenes while she was pregnant -
at home I'd get hormones, at work I'd get hormones! I was used to it. But
they'd always have to compromise the shot and do a closeup, they couldn't
do a big wide master," he recalls. 

contiune


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