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- @2"RED DWARF" AMERICAN STYLE
- ==========================
- @1
- The man responsible for bringing Red Dwarf to America is writer\producer
- Linwood Boomer, who penned the pilot script and served as executive producer.
- Although Boomer actually suggested acquisition of the series from it's
- British creator, he eventually left the project in 1992, a few months before
- NBC abandoned the pilot.
-
- Boomer's first exposure to Red Dwarf came about early one Saturday while
- flipping TV channels. "I was sitting home watching TV," he explains "It was
- about 7:30, and I turned on the educational channel. I saw this show and
- just FLIPPED. It was very fresh and very funny, and I called the studio
- the next day and said, 'Let's see if we can bring it over here.'"
-
- One of Red Dwarf's biggest attractions, according to Boomer, was its
- originality. "It's very rare to see a comedy that has that kind of bite to
- it, and that kind of imagination behind it. Most of the time you get three
- people in a living room talking about Billy's bad report card, and this
- just seemed like a great opportunity to do something different."
-
- After selling Universal on an American Red Dwarf, Boomer set to acquire
- the series from it's production company, Noel Gay Television. "I flew to
- London with Universal executive Brad Johnson to talk to Rob [Grant] and
- Doug [Naylor]. We told them that we wanted to do it, and convinced them
- that we were the right people for the job."
-
- Boomer used the British series' first episode, "The End" as the basis for
- his pilot script. Although he made a few changes in the story structure,
- the writer insists he did nothing to "Americanize" it.
-
- "I thought the humor was far less British than in many British comedies,
- which I like a lot. They're an acquired taste," he says. "With Red Dwarf,
- the characters are so sharply drawn and well-defined that I think they're
- appealing right off the bat. There was the tailoring for the actors, which
- is only smart, but as far as crossing over, I honestly didn't think that
- would be an issue. the show's basic sense, basic flavor, seems to be very
- much in line with what Americans would like."
-
- As executive producer, Boomer was also responsible for the pilot's casting,
- and his choice of actors did prompt a few revisions. "The biggest change
- was in Lister," he explains "The old Lister was a real slob, and that was
- mostly what his character was about: Never washing his feet, never doing
- his laundry, whatever disgusting things he used to do. We ended up with a
- terrific young guy named Craig Bierko, and it would have been a mistake
- to force him to play a part that wasn't right for him. We focused more
- on what it would be like for a human being to be thrust into this
- outlandish situation, and I think it was big improvement."
-
- For the other roles, Boomer cast Chris Eigeman as Rimmer, mostly on the
- strength in his work in Metropolitan, and Tony-award winning Hinton
- (The Tap Dance Kid) Battle as the Cat. The only actor to cross over
- from the British series was Robert Llewellyn, who played Kryten. "We knew
- right from the start that we wanted Robert," Boomer avers. "He was so
- talented and so funny we had to have him."
-
- Why would an American audience be interested in Red Dwarf? Linwood Boomer
- says it's all a matter of quality. "The jokes are funny, the production
- values are good, it's well acted and directed, and everyone really broke
- their butts to put on a good show. We HAD a commitment to do something
- terrific."
- - Joe Nazzaro