ID4 Convention Interview w/Brent Spiner and Jeff Goldblum


Q: Do you have anything in the works?
A: We just started filming for the next Star Trek film, but other than that
   there's nothing in the works. I do have something coming out after
   Independence Day, called Phenomenon, in which I have a brief scene with
   John Travolta.
Q: Are you ever going to be on DS9 or Voyager?
A: I haven't been asked to be on DS9 or Voyager. But I think I would
   enjoy it.
Q: What is it like acting to nothing when you have to do those special
   effects?
A: I try to imagine I'm looking at the Pillsbury Dough Boy. [much laughter]
Q: Is Data planning to keep his emotion chip? A: I don't think _Data_ is
   planning anything. [more laughter] It's not up to me, really.
Q: I have to know what it was like working with the best Star Trek actor
   of all time. I mean, he really was the best. What was it like working with
   Spot? [mucho laughter]
A: Well, as you know, there's been more than one Spot. The first Spot
   couldn't act a lick. [laughter] But he passed away and we now have two
   new Spots. Their names are Brandy and Monster. These new ones can
   _act_!
Q: [from a child] I have a really rare toy that I can't send in the mail. Will
   you sign it for me?
A: A rare toy? [smiles] Ok, come on up here. [boy comes up] Yes, that is
   a rare toy. [shows it off to Goldblum] See, this is a Data action figure! I
   may run off with this myself. There you go.
Q: In Generations, was it more like playing Lore, or like playing Data? 
A: It was more like playing ME, only with lots of makeup.
Q: How much control do you have over your characters?

 Brent and Goldblum kind of hedged this question and passed it to Dean
 Devlin, the director/producer/creator (?) of ID4. He said something about
 the character always coming out different than the way the writers pictured
 it, but that's part of the creative process etc. also:

A: Brent brought the character [of the doctor in ID4] to life and just made
   it a really big part of the movie--so of course we had to add more scenes.
          [wild cheers from audience]
Q: [to Goldblum] When are you going to be on Star Trek?
A: Well, I'd like to. Yes, but no one's asked me. We could be brothers,
    you know.
Brent: Yes, we could do the Android Lounge Act.
Q: A friend of mine ran into Denise Crosby and she said that you do a
    great imitation of her grandfather. Could you do that for us?
A: [laughs] yes, well, [to Goldblum] do you know Denise Crosby? She
   was Tasha on the first season of Star Trek and her grandfather is Bing
   Crosby. She told me that her grandfather called her "niecie". So, when I
   call her, and I don't often, but when I do, I leave a message on her
   answering machine, saying, [I didn't hear all of this, there was too much
   laughter. Presumably it was an imitation of Bing Crosby] "This is grandpa .
   . ."
Q: What's it like working with each other?
A: [Goldblum] Brent is fantastic. He's relaxed, fearless, _very_ funny . . .
A: [BJS] Jeff's good too. [laughter] One of the reasons I was so excited to
   do Independence Day was because I had been a fan of Jeff's for a long
   time. When we were introduced on the set, they brought me on and said,
   "Here's Dr. Okun [sp?]" and I thought, "My god, there's Jeff Goldblum, I
   can't believe it." 
Q: What are your characters in the movie?
A: My role is not huge. Jeff is the star of the movie. [cheers] It's a sweet
   part. I play an Air Force Research Scientist who has some secrets to
   share with the President. It was a very, very fun part to play.
Q: Do you find it easy to work with the crew of Star Trek?
A: Oh, yes. We started filming two weeks ago, and it was so natural to be
   back. In fact, Patrick Stewart and I had a scene together and someone
   commented, "Boy, these guys know each other, don't they?!" It was like a
   Martin and Lewis routine. I'm not sure which I am. [laughter]
Q: [from a child] How do you read that fast? [laughter]
A: [grins and says very matter-of-factly straight to the kid,] It's done with
   mirrors. [fans obviously LTAO]
Q: What's it like working with Will Smith? [another actor in ID4, also star
   of The Fresh Prince on tv]
A:He's the sweetest guy to work with. We had maybe one line together,
   and he sent me a Christmas card. I love the guy.
Q: [the inevitable] Could you sign this for me?
A: No, I'm afraid not. I'd love to, but it wouldn't be fair to all these other
   people out here. [cheers] You can send it to me and I'll sign it and send it
   back. Yeah, send it to me . . .[smile] and you'll never see it again.
   [someone knows his own reputation ;) ]
Q: [from a kid] In the next Star Trek movie, are you going to act that
   way? [obviously disapproving of whatever _way_ he had acted. You
   know, how your mom used to say, "how could you act that way?" ]
  [hysterical laughter from crowd]
A: [that caught-off-guard-Data-face, a grin, and raised eyebrows.
    Followed by more laughter from the crowd] Well, . . . it will be different. .
   . . No, I'm not going to act _that_ way. I'm going to act _another_ way.
   [more laughter]
Q: Did you do a voice-over on a Gargoyles episode? 
A: Yes, I did three or four episodes, actually. [did anyone else know this?
   What are the others besides The Mirror?] I played a character named
   Puck.
Q: Did you enjoy playing Puck?
A: yes, that's what I always play. [this wasn't entirely clear to me. Whether
   he was saying he always plays Puck on Gargoyles or whether he was
   saying there's a bit of Puck in every character he plays. ;) ]
Q: How do you think your career will go from here?
A: Up, I hope. That's where I'd like it to go.
Q: How do you feel working with Jonathan Frakes as a director?
A: Great. Jonathan's terrific. We always thought that his episodes were the
   best. We're having a great time.
Q: Have you ever had your lenses fall out?
A: I've never had them fall out. I've had trouble getting them out.
Q: [from another cute, but naive kid] Where'd you get the name Spot?
   That's not a cat's name! It's a dog's name! [obviously very upset that Data
   could be so stupid] [intense laughter from the crowd]
A: I didn't do it, to be honest with you. I always thought it should be
   named Spock. [laughter]
Q: [from yet another kid] Is Spot your real cat?
A: No, Spot is not my cat. In fact, Spot is not even a real cat. He's
   actually a very, very small dog who plays a cat brilliantly. [pause for the
   crowd to get back in their seats] No, Spot is a professional cat. He has
   these great trainers who do . . . absolutely nothing with him. They have all
   these stage directions written into the scripts and Spot only ever followed
   one of them. It said, "Spot walks over and eats the tuna." He did that well.

          People kept asking Jeff Goldblum to repeat lines he had done in Jurassic
          Park. So finally Brent asked him: Remember that time in The Right Stuff
          when you vomited over the side? Could you . . . [laughter from crowd]

Q: [yes, it's another kid] How do you take your head off? [more laughter]
A: [another grin] How do I take my head off? When I auditioned for the
   part of Data, there were all these guys there. And I was the only one who
   could take his head off and that's how I got the part. [more laughter from
  audience]
Q: [same kid] Can you do it now? [still more]
A: Can I do it _now_? Well, see, I'd love to, but for insurance reasons, I
   can't. [laughter]

          Someone asked Brent a question which I don't have written down, but I
          did write that he noticed her Sunday in the Park With George t-shirt.
Brent: That's a great shirt. Did you see that? I was in that, you know.
Jeff: you were?
Brent: yes, I was in it. 
Jeff: you were?
Brent: Yes.
Jeff: Well, can you sing some of it for us? Which songs were you in?
Brent: Well, I was in a number of them. I was in the big Sunday number
       and The Day Off and I had the line, [sings] "Work is what you do for
       others, Liebchen, art is what you do for yourself."
       [at this point my notes get kind of sketchy because that was my favorite
       line in the whole musical, and I was no longer capable of any coherent
       thought. :) ]
Q: Have you found yourself typecast in science-fiction movies?
A: I did a lot of plays that weren't science fiction. And I didn't even know
   that ID4 was science fiction until we watched that clip. [laughter] I thought
   it was a romantic comedy . . . But it is [turning to Dean Devlin] the BEST
   movie I've ever been in!

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