View Full Version : Scott Bakula Talks "Enterprise"


JamesG
03-26-2013, 02:10 PM
Scott Bakula Explores "Star Trek: Enterprise's" Legacy with Blu-Ray Release
Mar 26, 2013
by Ileane Rudolph


Season 1 of "Enterprise", the fifth (and so far final) "Star Trek" TV series finally arrives on Blu-ray Tuesday.

Besides all 25 episodes, the six-disc set is chock full of special features including an eight-part documentary including new cast and crew interviews about the launching of the space exploration prequel series and behind—the-scenes footage, deleted scenes, cast commentary, and a frank conversation with shows creators Rick Berman and Brannon Braga, who admits his true feelings about Diane Warren's theme song.

Scott Bakula, aka Captain Jonathan Archer, commander of the Enterprise NX-01, shared some memories about his time on the show.









"Enterprise" was perhaps the most polarizing "Star Trek" spinoff.

Some loved its pre-Kirk early space exploration appeal but other Trekkers complained it wasn't really "Star Trek", because it was before Starfleet and the exploration of lots of alien planets.

[Laughs] It always cracks me up. It reminds me of a letter we got on "Quantum Leap" from someone who seriously told us, "You're breaking all the rules of time travel." The rules were mostly the one set up by Mr. Spielberg in Back to the Future.

In a funny way, I think our show, as time goes by, is going to resonate and we're going to enjoy it more. I hear it all the time. "I didn't give it a chance when it came out. I'm watching it now and I love it."







Why was there so much opposition?

It was a challenge to do something 100 years before Kirk and Spock. Our world had so radically dramatically changed since 1966 when the original show was on. So we really couldn't use that technology that was available then. We had to make artistic choices that would seem balanced and appropriate. Some people took issue with that.

I was very impressed with how the Enterprise crew managed to take the world today, what the near future would look like and blend them into a watchable show. I think they did a great job.







Tell the truth. Did you ever get that much maligned "Enterprise" theme song 'Where My Heart Will Take Me' out of your head.

Oh, no. [Laughs] That's a sign of a good theme song. It's very memorable and fans still ask me to sing it.







Why do you think "Enterprise" only lasted four years?

The difference between our show and the other franchises was that we were not syndicated.

Had we been syndicated and not on UPN, I believe we would have run at least another year, probably the full seven years that the other shows did.







Were you surprised that your show turned out to be the final frontier, at least on TV?

I don't know if it's the last show in the franchise, though a good portion of the people who were big fans are not at Paramount any more. Also, the new Star Trek movie franchise is so incredibly successful that it takes the focus away from TV.

Clearly Star Trek and Star Trek fans are not going away. If one thing's true in our business, people tend to repeat successful things as often as they can. So I won't say it's over.







Would you like to appear in a Star Trek movie?

I would love to. I haven't been asked but my dog and I got a mention in one movie. That might have to do. But you never know.







How did you get involved with the Blu-ray project?

I saw Brannon one day and he asked if I had done any commentary for the Blu-ray version. He told me it was unbelievable and I should call them. So I called and wound up talking for two hours about the first season — about the cast, about coming into such an iconic franchise, what it was like the first day as a Star Trek captain.

A lot of the cast and technical people were interviewed as well as Brannon Braga and Rick Berman. It's pretty informative.







What's one of your strongest memories from that first season?

It was pretty overwhelming to walk on the stage where all the sets were built for the first time. Henry Zimmerman designed them and they were so well conceived; beautiful to look at, camera friendly and they were real! We were able to go up and down the stars, things were made of steel.

The props actually worked because we were set earlier than the Kirk days, we had to manipulate controls and not just talk to computers. We had cool moving pieces that worked for four years. I joked when the show was over we should take the sets and turn them into playgrounds because my kids, who were young at the time, had a blast on the set climbing up and down things.

http://www.tvguide.com/News/Scott-Bakula-Explores-1063174.aspx