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- TF01
- 3,Jim Davidson - Interviewed!
- 4,by Simon Plumbe
-
- 41 year-old comedian Jim Davidson has been quite open about his love
- and appreciation for Star Trek. While recently appearing at the now-
- closed Kings Theatre nightclub in Birmingham on 28th and 29th March,
- Simon Plumbe went along to see him for a chat about the influence
- that Trek has had on his life...
-
- (For those of you who know about his stand-up comedy routine, you'll
- have a good idea what to expect in this interview. Please note - some
- of the language in this interview is somewhat stronger than that
- normally found in The Final Frontier.)
-
-
- SIMON - How long have you been a Star Trek fan?
-
- JIM - I can remember sort of discovering it... I would be about 19,
- maybe before that. Ever since I can remember. I mean, I can't
- remember it suddenly coming on, I just always remember it
- being there. About 17 I guess, 17 years of age.
-
- SIMON - How did you first get introduced to Star Trek?
-
- JIM - It just used to come on, didn't it? And I remember that one
- series had finished and then everyone would be miserable, and
- then it would come back on again and it would be great. And
- then I thought that I was the only one that liked this. I
- think this is why I loved it so much because I thought I'd
- discovered it and I could tell others about it - show off as
- if it was my little baby.
-
- And then there was a public outcry - people wrote to the
- newspapers demanding that Star Trek be shown again and it
- was. I thought, "Wow, everyone else likes it!", and it's nice
- to be involved in something everyone else likes. It's great.
-
- SIMON - Which Star Trek series do you prefer and why?
-
- JIM - Next Generation. I think The Next Generation because it's
- slightly more real, there's more money spent on it. I think
- it's because I'm older now as well and I get alot out of what
- it teaches.
-
- SIMON - What about a favourite episode?
-
- JIM - "Family". I like "Family" best. It's a three-parter really,
- isn't it, but that last episode, "Family", had everything in
- it for me, absolutely everything right to that little
- shooting star at the end. What's he doing out there? Oh, the
- hairs on my head standing up now as I even think about it!
- It's excellent. There are some very good ones. I like "Time's
- Arrow", and I liked the one that Doctor Crusher directed...
-
- SIMON - "Genesis"?
-
- JIM - Was that the one where she was playing with the Scottish
- ghost?
-
- SIMON - The one she directed was the one where they all de-evolved,
- "Genesis".
-
- JIM - Oh that's right, yeah. Who directed the one with the
- Scottish...
-
- SIMON - I think that was Gabrielle Beaumont, the other woman
- director, but I'm not too sure about that.
-
- And about the films. Any favourite out of those?
-
- JIM - No, I like them all. I haven't watched them as often as I've
- watched the others. I mean, I've now got them in widescreen
- and I've built a Dolby Surround system at home so I can sit
- and really get into it. The films I would say... I think "The
- Wrath Of Khan". When that first came out I thought, "This is
- amazing, this is really good." Like the silent submarine
- fight, you know, the two ships together, and I just thought
- that Ricardo Montalban was fantastic, really good.
-
- SIMON - Sticking with the films, with "Generations", how did you feel
- about Kirk getting killed off?
-
- JIM - Very sad, wasn't it. I cried my eyes out. I introduced them
- all at the Empire [for the premiere in London], you know,
- actually introduced all the actors - I was cacking myself! I
- remember going back and sat next to the wife and another
- comedian who's a big fan...
-
- SIMON - George Marshall?
-
- JIM - George, yeah. Well, I got him involved in it really. He
- realised I was a fan and suddenly came out of the closet in
- some kind of style and I got him an invite to the premiere.
- And I came off stage and I grabbed him and I was really up,
- and then of course he met all the actors later on and started
- doing impressions of them to them - because he can do the lot
- of them, you know. He's doing my summer season in Great
- Yarmouth at the Wellington Theatre - he's working for me and
- I've put a laser in there specially so he can beam himself
- on.
-
- About Kirk dying, well I don't know. I read something in the
- paper about he shouldn't really die because it doesn't make
- the storyline quite true. Actors are actors, they can't last
- forever, you know, and I think he died quite well. The shock
- that, "Oh god, I'm going to die here!" - I thought that was
- quite good. I got a letter from a fan bollocking me saying,
- "Fancy saying in the papers that Kirk died." and I wrote back
- saying, "You're the only fan in the world who DIDN'T know he
- was going to die!".
-
- I met Patrick Stewart afterwards - he was charming - and it
- really was a great day for me, I didn't know what to do,
- because I know Marina Sirtis - she worked with me in an
- episode of "Up The Elephant And Round The Castle". She played
- a Russian spy, she was very good... and I should have married
- her! If she'd have had me!
-
- SIMON - How did your friendship with Marina come about?
-
- JIM - Well, we were doing that dreadful "Up The Elephant And Round
- The Castle" series and she turned up as an actress, very
- smashing and wonderful and that was it. And then, I remember
- watching about the third episode of Star Trek [The Next
- Generation] and I thought, "I know that woman!" and I looked
- and I saw that it was Marina Sirtis! Wow, I couldn't believe
- it!
-
- And about two years into the series, I was driving along and
- she phoned me up in the car! She'd been to her agents and her
- agent said, "You know Jim Davidson's a big fan, give him a
- ring!". and she said, "Oh, hello Jim." and I said, "Who's
- this?", and she said, "Guess!", and I said, "Who the **** are
- you?" and she said, "Don't swear at me", and then she said,
- "I did your TV show and I believe you're a fan of mine!" And
- I said, "You don't sound familiar." She said, "Don't make me
- do the voice, Jim!" And I went "Ooooh!" and nearly ****ing
- crashed the car!! I said, "Oh, Marina, oh god, your bloody
- series has changed my life! It has, it's given me such
- enjoyment. What it was really made for - enjoyment, even
- learning lessons from certain things the Captain does. Oh,
- marvellous." and she said, "Oh, come on," and I said, "No, it
- really has. I'm afraid I am exactly what Gene Roddenberry
- wanted to touch, I am that person. It was me." And she was
- quite chuffed about that!
-
- I saw her again at the premiere and she was very pleasant and
- charming and then I went to see her at the Albert Hall
- [Generations] where she did an hour's stand-up spot there. My
- company was going to get involved in that, my production
- company was going to do the sound and lights for that, but
- they already arranged it. And I went and told them I thought
- it was crap, and the P.A. people said, "You're the only one
- who's complained." and I said, "One is enough!"
-
- SIMON - Star Trek appeals to millions of people the world over. What
- is its particular appeal for you?
-
- JIM - I just think it is so well made. Being a producer myself and
- everything, I sit down now and look at the trailer at the
- beginning, you know the little trailer for Star Trek, and I
- think, "Wouldn't it be wonderful to have done that." It's so
- well done. It's brilliantly played by attractive people,
- great stories... I mean, there are some trick stories, I mean
- "Masks" hardly wants to make you sit up and shout, does it?!
- But I just think it's well written, well played and it does
- jump on that set of morals for mankind. And Jean-Luc Picard,
- he says himself he's to the left-wing of politics - I'm
- slightly to the right-wing as you heard in my act last night
- - but I do learn alot from him. I do learn alot from the
- things he does and I know that he puts alot of himself into
- the part, alot of the morals. It does make you think.
-
- When I was in the clinic, the psychiatrist said to me about
- Star Trek - this is when I went into the clinic to stop
- drinking, the British Betty Ford Clinic - he said, "Which
- Captain do you prefer?" And I said, "What's this? A test, a
- Star Trek test in a nut house?" He said, "Do you prefer James
- T. Kirk or Jean-Luc Picard?" and I said, "I prefer Jean-Luc
- Picard." and he said, "Why not Kirk?" I said, "Well, what
- chance does that give me? I've got to pick one." He said, "Do
- you think Kirk is more real?" and I said, "Yeah, I suppose he
- is, Kirk's more real, he makes mistakes, falls in love, goes
- wrong, but the Captain [Picard] is too perfect."
-
- But I was in Sarajevo three weeks ago and I got a helicopter
- out to HMS Illustrious and I went straight up to the bridge
- and I'd never seen a clean, quite, more exactly like... crisp
- white shirts and the captain only said a couple of words and
- everyone was running round him and there was two sea harriers
- waiting to launch - ARMED sea harriers - "Permission to
- launch, Captain?", he picked up his cup of coffee and he
- stood with me and he just said, "Yes, permission granted." Or
- "enable" or just one word that allowed him... "Make it so!"
- Or the naval equivalent of "Make It So" and these two sea
- harriers launched and flew off into the Serbian warlines. He
- was as calm as Captain Picard, so the psychiatrist was wrong!
-
- SIMON - Would you consider yourself to be a fan in the sense that you
- watch Trek whenever you get the opportunity, or are you a
- more devoted fan, collecting merchandise as well?
-
- JIM - Yeah, I collect the merchandise. I collect all the stuff.
- I've got all the videos at home. In fact, people I become
- close to who are not Star Trek fans normally get all of them
- for a Christmas present or things like that. My son's going
- to get them for his birthday this year - he doesn't quite
- know it yet. Yeah, I watch them a lot. For different moods, I
- find one which creates a mood and put one on. If I feel
- really melancholy and fed up I'll watch "Family" alot - I
- think that is the BEST TV episode I have ever seen - and the
- last series, of course, was great, wasn't it. The last one,
- that was real sad. I just wish Jean-Luc Picard's make-up was
- little better in that - it looked like a stick-on beard,
- didn't it?!
-
- SIMON - I think with some of them when they try to age the cast they
- tend to get it slightly off, don't they?
-
- JIM - Yeah, they do.
-
- SIMON - I think the only time they did a really good job was with
- Brent Spiner in "Brothers".
-
- JIM - Yes, excellent. It was very good.
-
- SIMON - The problem is I think the make-up was a bit TOO good,
- because you couldn't tell it was Brent underneath all of it!
-
- JIM - I didn't know his father was Brent at first. Brent was quite
- a nice little guy. My wife said, "My god, he's just like
- Data!". The captain loves Data, doesn't he, and I think
- Patrick Stewart loves that part. That's what he said when I
- introduced him on stage. He said, "I'd just like to say that
- I LOVE Data." and that was it.
-
- I thought "Unification" was very good. I thought that was
- excellent. That is another great bit where Spock mind melds
- with Picard and he shows the agony in his face and Picard
- shows the serenity. That is just absolute genius, and there's
- nothing ever in anything ever been made or ever will be that
- will sum that up in one camera shot like that. I just can't
- say enough about it.
-
- SIMON - I was a little bit disappointed with "Unification" as a story
- though. They had Spock there and it was the first re-
- appearance of a Classic Trek character - there was that many
- wasted opportunities.
-
- JIM - Yeah, a little bit.
-
- SIMON - They could have had him on the Enterprise, meeting up with
- Worf and they could have had a scene tying in with Star Trek
- VI and Worf's grandfather and things like that...
-
- JIM - The next film...!
-
- SIMON - It's a possibility but from what I have heard it's likely to
- be the Borg, the next next film.
-
- JIM - The Borg? Nasty bastards! Apart from Hugh.
-
- SIMON - Back to the merchandise again, what is your favourite piece
- of Trek merchandise and why?
-
- JIM - A six-foot Quark! I love Quark - Quark is my favourite out of
- all the characters. He makes me laugh my arse off! He is
- brilliant. I want a Ferengi as a mate! I've got Quark T-
- shirts - in my bar, behind my bar is Quark and you still shit
- yourself because you forget he's there and you go "Uuugh!"
- and people say, "Who's that ugly bastard?". "That's Quark!" I
- think he's great, I really think he's great. He's exactly the
- type of person you want to run a bar. A character that is
- funny. That holds Deep Space Nine together for me. I really
- try and like it, I try my hardest and it's good. I think
- Sisko's a bit wooden, isn't he?!
-
- SIMON - Have you seen any of the third season?
-
- JIM - No.
-
- SIMON - He gets ALOT better.
-
- JIM - Good, because I'm going to start to stock up.
-
- SIMON - He's relaxed alot more, letting his hair down... what there
- is of it! There are a few scenes between Sisko and Quark
- where he's really taking the piss out of Quark and winding
- him up!
-
- JIM - Good, good.
-
- SIMON - There's one episode where Sisko is trying to get Quark to do
- something ["The Search, Part 1"] - Quark just won't have it -
- and Sisko's managed to get hold of the staff from the Grand
- Nagus and Sisko forces Quark to kiss the head of the staff!
-
- JIM - Wasn't it funny, the Grand Nagus. He's there, shagging all
- those women in the holodeck! "Of your advanced years" they
- said, not too old! I think he's great. [Jim then proceeded to
- impersonate him!] "Quark! Remember Quark, the bigger the
- smile, the sharper the knife!" He's great, ain't he!
-
- SIMON - Sticking with the merchandise, what do you think is the most
- unusual piece that you've bought?
-
- JIM - Unusual piece? I've got a couple of the things that fly open
- and a couple of the noises. The guys buy me things at work in
- the production office. I've got a Klingon Cruiser and I've
- just got a Bird Of Prey, I've got an old Enterprise, and I've
- got an Enterprise phone! That is great, because it's my
- private number in my office [makes Red Alert sound] - it
- lights up and I piss myself! Once, when I first bought it, I
- put it in my flat in Chelsea and I phoned it up on my mobile
- phone - I just stood there pissing myself laughing!
-
- And then I went out in the car and I phoned it up and I could
- hear it ringing - but just an ordinary ring - and I was STILL
- laughing at the thought of it ringing on its own. It's great,
- I love it!
-
- I've got a Generations green suede bomber jacket - Paramount
- sent it to me for my help. That is great. They were really
- smashing.
-
- SIMON - What about the most valuable piece that you've got?
-
- JIM - I don't have any personal things. The most valuable thing to
- me is a picture of all the Next Generation cast signed to Jim
- for my birthday, from Brian - the little wardrobe guy - did
- you see that on the video ["To Boldly Go..."]? Yeah, good
- wasn't it! Now that was good because I went on tour and I
- always use the Star Trek music as a play-on whenever I'm
- doing a theatre show. I use star clothes and lasers - I mean,
- the opening of that "To Boldly Go..." show was sensational.
- There was Star Trek music and lasers and I just sort of
- appeared. On the video that's not quite how it was actually,
- that was a big trick.
-
- SIMON - Actually, I think the theme tune was edited out, wasn't it?
-
- JIM - The theme tune was edited out, all the logos - I used to do
- the Star Trek logo like on a big gauze over the audience with
- "Good night. Live long and prosper" with the Star Trek music,
- and then it said, "Now **** off and buy a video!" in big
- letters like this.
-
- And then I used to finish with the Deep Space Nine music with
- the logo and the stars. And I had the band in Star Trek
- uniforms - I didn't do any gags about it, it was just the
- set. And the drum riser - it was Kenny Jones from The Who's
- riser - and it was exactly like a communicator badge. So it
- was just the feel about it. And I used to do a routine about
- Star Trek - not jokes - I used to sit and talk to the
- audience about how wonderful I thought it was. And I wasn't
- allowed to use any of the stuff. But I still got the
- uniforms...!
-
- SIMON - Well, it's hard to edit that out really!
-
- JIM - Yeah! I've got the dancers as Klingons up on the Marti Caine
- show - I'm directing Marti Caine and Roger DeCoursey at the
- Wellington Theatre, Great Yarmouth - and I'm opening that
- with a laser and Star Trek tribute with six dancers as
- Klingons and Marti will appear through the dry ice. So that's
- going to be sensational?
-
- SIMON - Full head latex or just the...
-
- JIM - No, no, well I can't have the head latex. I think I'm just
- going to have to have them in Klingon costumes with human
- faces and funny wigs. I don't know, we'll have to see about
- that. I like Klingons.
-
- That was a good episode, what was the one with a million
- Datas in the wild west?
-
- SIMON - "A Fistful Of Datas".
-
- JIM - It is funny that is. I love it at the end you see, because my
- wife don't like Worf, but at then end of that when he smiled
- and looked and he showed his... that's a great bit of
- writing. People say to me, directors say, "It's got to be
- written different, it's got to be more real." and that made
- Worf lovable - it showed a little bit of, you know.
-
- And there was the famous story when I was arguing about my
- son's school fees with my ex-wife. I don't fly very well and
- I had to fly to Australia so I took my laptop with me and a
- dozen episodes of Star Trek in a big bag. And I was watching
- the episode where young Alexander says to Worf, "Are you my
- father" ["Reunion"], "Yes, I am your father." and I got to
- Singapore, phoned the wife and said, "I'll pay for
- everything!". And I sent her a telegram saying, "Thank the
- Klingons." I rattle on a bit, don't I?!
-
- SIMON - What is your most memorable moment as a fan?
-
- JIM - Oh, introducing them at the premiere. It was fab.
-
- SIMON - I was actually down there for the convention but I couldn't
- afford the premiere as well. It was fairly expensive tickets.
-
- JIM - Who did you see talking, did you see them all?
-
- SIMON - Yeah, I was there the full weekend.
-
- JIM - Was it good? Did you enjoy it?
-
- SIMON - Yeah. I mean as a convention it was a bit weak, because it
- was more like an American-style show. With the fan-run
- conventions you actually get to mingle with the guests all
- the time. So you actually get to chat and speak to every
- single one of the guests that turn up.
-
- JIM - That's quite good. I spoke to Patrick Stewart's agent about
- doing a theatre tour with him and Marina Sirtis, just talking
- to the audience like that, but they don't have the time and
- they get paid fortunes to do it and it is a business, after
- all.
-
- SIMON - There's one company in America, Creation, they've pretty much
- got a stranglehold on the convention market. I think Patrick
- Stewart can demand about £10,000 a time per convention.
-
- JIM - I think more than that. I think a lot more than that. I KNOW
- a lot more than that!
-
- SIMON - They can pull in the money quite easily though.
-
- As a comedian, your act is targetted towards an adult
- audience. Do you think that this caused some surprise amongst
- your fans when you revealed that you were a Star Trek fan
- considering that Star Trek is aimed at a family audience?
-
- JIM - No, not really. Well, my adult audience are only part of a
- family, aren't they? Half of a family, so they realise that
- why I aim for an adult audience is because I'm not a kids
- entertainer. I sort of am when I do Big Break, I think adults
- realise that I'm doing them a favour by not embarrassing
- their children. and they know I love Star Trek, everyone
- knows I love Star Trek. I got out of that one quite well!
-
- SIMON - What direction do you see Star Trek going in the future?
-
- JIM - Well, a woman captain, eh?! Let's hope she hasn't got to
- reverse it into spacedock! I don't know, I just jope it never
- ends. I hope they don't lose that personal touch. It really
- is, it's just like a very good soap opera set in a spaceship.
-
- SIMON - How did you feel when you first heard about Gene
- Roddenberry's death?
-
- JIM - It was just a shame really. It wasn't a devastating blow - I
- never knew the bloke. I knew it was in good hands with Rick
- Berman. Everynoe's got to go.
-
- SIMON - I can remember when I heard about it. I had the day off work
- to do some work on my magazine - I was just sort of gutted,
- really. I think I spent most of the night on the phone to
- dozens of friends, "Is it true? Is it true?".
-
- JIM - Yeah.
-
- SIMON - I'd never actually met him either - the one regret I think
- I've got as a Star Trek fan, never actually managing to get
- to meet him.
-
- Do you think that Star Trek has suffered since Gene died?
-
- JIM - I think the spin-offs could be in danger of losing its touch
- a bit. I don't know if it's suffered since Gene died because
- I think although Rick Berman is the producer, the way
- television works is that all the actors have a little say and
- they all remember the way that Gene Roddeberry talked them
- into doing it in the first place so it will always be there -
- it will never really die. He will live on within the
- characters.
-
- SIMON - Are you looking forward to the future of Star Trek, i.e.
- movies with the Next Generation crew, or Voyager?
-
- JIM - I'm looking forward to the lot, yeah. Have you seen any
- Voyager yet?
-
- SIMON - Yes, I've seen the pilot.
-
- JIM - Is it good?
-
- SIMON - Absolutely fantastic.
-
- JIM - Is it?!
-
- SIMON - From what I've seen - I mean, my favourite series out of all
- of them is the original series, but I would say that Voyager
- is as good as, if not possibly better! And that's just from
- the pilot!
-
- JIM - Who plays the captain?
-
- SIMON - A woman called Kate Mulgrew.
-
- JIM - Where do I know that name from..?
-
- SIMON - It's just that all the cast fit together really well as a
- family, which comes across quite well. The effects are
- incredible. The ship has it's warp nacelles sticking out to
- the side, but when it goes off into warp the nacelles fold up
- and then it shoots off.
-
- JIM - Great, like a swing wing!
-
- SIMON - It's just an unbelievable series.
-
- JIM - Oh good, good. Thank god for that. I'm going to have to get a
- bigger house to put all these tapes!
-
- SIMON - Voyager's due out on 4th June I think. A special edition for
- the pilot.
-
- JIM - Rick Berman said to me, "When you come over to Los Angeles
- look me up and I'll show you around the sets." And I thought,
- "Oh, I can't do that!"
-
- SIMON - For your "To Boldly Go..." tour, as we said earlier, the band
- were in...
-
- JIM - Oh, the band, yeah...
-
- SIMON - Did you have much trouble persuading them [to wear TNG
- uniforms!]?
-
- JIM - No because they are all Star Trek fans anyway. I think they
- have to be with me. The music is so good and I think that
- musicians especially like stuff like Star Trek because
- musicians like stuff that's put together well and they like
- the excellence that goes with it. But there was no problem
- there.
-
- SIMON - Do you think the popularity of Star Trek will be strong into
- the next century, and beyond, maybe even reaching its own
- century (23rd/24th)?
-
- JIM - Oh, now what a question! I hope so. I watched an original
- series Star Trek the other evening - which one did I watch?
- Oh yeah, the one with Gary Seven...
-
- SIMON - Assignment Earth.
-
- JIM - Oh, you're an expert, aren't you! It was quite good. Now what
- can you tell me about that episode - who was the girl?
-
- SIMON - Teri Garr.
-
- JIM - Who played what part in Close Encounters? She was the guy's
- wife in Close Encounters. You know, Richard Dreyfuss' wife -
- the same girl. Good Trivial Pursuit question!
-
- SIMON - When she was in Trek I think she was only about 16 at the
- time.
-
- JIM - Well she played [Richard Dreyfuss'] wife in Close Encounters
- so she's really plagued by spaceships! Yeah, well that's
- [Classic Trek] still enjoyable and it still all happens and
- that's quite a way off, I mean although it's only 30 years
- old, I mean technology has advanced so much so what
- technology's going to be advanced in another 50-60 years I
- still think it will hold up. I still think when I see that
- shooting star go across Rene [Picard in "Family"] it's
- wonderful.
-
- SIMON - In both your live shows and in Big Break, you seem to include
- as many references to Star Trek as possible.
-
- JIM - Have you noticed that?! I drive John Virgo mad with it! "Oh,
- not another ****ing Star Trek question!" There's a whole
- episode - in fact it's on video, I might be able to get a
- copy for you - once Star Trek was on at 5:00 pm on SKY and we
- do a dress rehearsal which lasts about 40 minutes and because
- we had run late it looked as if we were going to miss Star
- Trek. Now me and the guy who writes the questions, Toby -
- he's a big fan as well - so we did the whole show in 14
- minutes!! We did the whole thing but speeded it up and at the
- end said, "We're going to watch Star Trek!".
-
- It's great, and there are lots of references to Star Trek in
- it. They always play the Star Trek music and once when we
- were rehearsing, instead of having the `click click click'
- seconds were had the `hmmm hmm' you know from the doctor's
- thing [medical heartbeat scanner in sickbay].
-
- SIMON - Will you be encouraging your own children/family to watch
- Star Trek?
-
- JIM - Yeah, I guess so.
-
- SIMON - Have you ever been to a convention?
-
- JIM - Only the one at the Albert Hall.
-
- SIMON - Just the one day was it?
-
- JIM - I thought it could have been done a little better.
-
- SIMON - Do you plan on going to any more?
-
- JIM - Yeah. I'd love to have gone to the one in Malta but I can't
- go.
-
- SIMON - I think they've just cancelled it anyway!
-
- JIM - It's been cancelled?
-
- SIMON - Yes. From what I've heard, the hotel's part Libyan-owned.
-
- JIM - Oh god!
-
- SIMON - So Paramount have had to pull out of it...
-
- JIM - What, because of the sanctions?
-
- SIMON - Yes. Have you thought about going along to any fan-run
- conventions over here at all?
-
- JIM - Yeah, I'd like to go. I've always thought that I'd be
- sticking my nose where I don't belong though, quite frankly.
- Because I'm just a fan like everybody else. I could go along
- and watch, yeah.
-
- SIMON - What tends to go on at a fan-run convention you'll have video
- rooms showing episodes 24 hours a day...
-
- JIM - Really?
-
- SIMON - 4 days, 24 hours a day non-stop, 4 or 5 rooms just devoted to
- Trek. Several talks from guests - there's one in Scotland I'm
- going to in a couple of months that has Majel Barrett
- going...
-
- JIM - Oh, lovely.
-
- SIMON - They're trying to get hold of a few other people - a guy
- called Richard Arnold. He used to work behind the scenes at
- Paramount - he knows everything there is to know about Trek!
- I mean, the amount of knowledge the guy's got is just
- unbelievable.
-
- JIM - I got beaten by a celebrity mastermind. I wrote a gameshow on
- television that Steve Wright does called "Home Truths" - I
- devised that. We did the pilot and in the celebrity
- mastermind section I put myself on it - I did the Falklands
- War - Jeremy Handley, the Conservative chairman, did Rock 'n
- Roll, and Lorraine Kelley from GMTV did Star Trek... and she
- won! And I did the questions for her as well. I got her with
- a couple, she got a couple wrong!
-
- SIMON - I think you'd enjoy a fan convention. It's a really good
- atmosphere. With the ones in Glasgow, which is an annual one,
- if you could imagine 1,000 p***ed Star Trek fans getting
- together for a party all weekend!
-
- Other than Star Trek, do you enjoy watching other sci-fi
- shows?
-
- JIM - No, I'm not a science fiction fan really. Funny that, isn't
- it?! I couldn't watch Doctor Who if you strapped me to a
- chair!
-
- SIMON - I used to be a big Doctor Who - I got to know some of the
- fans and that put me off for life!
-
- JIM - No, I'm not a science fiction fan.
-
- SIMON - Any final comments?
-
- JIM - No, not really. I just get really excited by it and I think
- anything that's that good deserves excitement.
-
-