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Décembre
1998 : Interview de Cleavant Derricks
Saison 5 (X-Posé)
As Cleavant Derricks becomes the elder statesman of Sliders,
David Richardson asks him how he feels about the changing series and his
co-stars.
It appears that Sliders can never die. The show has survived numerous
cancellations, change in producers, a shift in format, the departure of
series regulars Sabrina Lloyd and John Rhys Davies, and now even the loss
of leading man Jerry O'Connell and his brother Charlie has not shut down
the wormhole. A fifth season entered production at the beginning of October,
once again for the Sci-Fi Network, with Cleavant Derricks and Kari Wuhrer
signed up to reprise their roles, and Robert Floyd and Tembi Locke confirmed
as two new characters, the 'melded' Mallory and Diana Davis.
With the O'Connell's departure, Derricks is the only cast member to have
endured since the beginning. Those four years have seen major developments
in the character of Rembrandt Brown, the washed-up rhythm and blues singer
who became an unwilling participant in Quinn's slide through parallel
dimensions.
As Sliders has matured; so has Rembrandt; no longer a figure of fun, the
'Crying Man' gained a new lease of life in the fourth season. Interned
by the Kromaggs, brutal creatures who are subjugating parallel Earths,
Remmy became a darker, troubled soul. He was even revealed to be a traitor
in the standout Slidecage, programed by the aliens to deliver Quinn to
them.
The re-invention of Sliders as a more intelligent, character-based show
has certainly paid high dividends, attracting excellent audience figures
and widespread critical acclaim. In terms of quality it is streets ahead
of the sometime aimless, derivative series that somehow managed to survive
three years on the Fox Network.
"I wasn't surprised that Fox let us go," says Derricks, looking
back to Sliders' cancellation at the end of season three. "Being
in the business as long as I have, and recognizing when a network is not
quite in your corner, you can see the writing on the wall, you're pretty
much aware whether you're going to be back next season or not. I had hopes
that the Sci-Fi Network would come in and rescue us and put us where I
think we belonged in the first place, and so all of those things came
into play, and it's been a lot of fun."
"We were never what you would call an 'in-house' show for the Fox.
Fox didn't own us. We were owned and controlled pretty much by Universal,
and any time that a network doesn't own you, they feel like they don't
have a complete hold on you. What happens is that executives at studios
change constantly, so at the time we came in there was an executive there
who loved us. After he left, there was an executive there who hated us.
That's the cross you have to bear sometimes when you're doing television.
Interestingly enough there's a much higher turnover in terms of executives
than actors in front of the camera, so you expect those things to happen."
The problem was exacerbated by the scheduling of Sliders on a Friday night,
an evening that network recognize as hard to win an audience. Worse still,
it was paired with Millennium, Chris Carter's unrelentingly dark and oppressive
series which, at the time, explored the world of serial killers.
"Millennium was so dark, and Fox was after us to make [Sliders] darker,"
he shrugs. "We made it darker, and somebody said, 'Wait a minute,
you can't be X-Files, so let's try something else.' [On] a network, whatever
they do for one, they've got to do for the other. Obviously, Millennium
was their in-house show, so they're going to do more for that."
Derricks remembers the summer of 1997, as a time of unrest, when it seemed
that Sliders might finally have bitten the dust - and this period of regular,
enjoyable employment could be over.
"The thing about this particular show is that we always have fun,
so the possibilities of that not coming into play anymore was a little
bit discouraging," he asserts. "You have a life and a lifestyle
you want to maintain, and [it's tough] thinking of going back to the drawing
board, seeing what else is out there, meeting the payments again
But all in all it seems to come through each time, because from day one
since we've have with this show, it's always been 'Maybe you're coming
back', and then at the last minute they pull us in. You do it enough,
you get somewhat used to it."
For the fourth season, Sliders remained with Universal Studios in Los
Angeles, but suffered a significant cut in its budget (reportedly from
$1.25 million per episode to under $1 million).
"We were doing a lot of location shoots [for the season three],"
reveals Derricks. "They were taking us 45, 50 miles out [of L.A.],
and putting us up in hotels to do certains shows. Quite frankly, they
felt that last season a lot of money have been wasted on that aspect."
As a result, most of the Season Four episodes have utilized standing outdoor
sets on the Universal lot to create a diverse range of parallel Earths.
Likewise, there is a smaller production team, and a number of inventive
stories set within the Chandler Hotel - like The Alternateville Horror
and Data World - helped to save money.
"It seems to be more relaxed," offers Derricks, while comparing
working for the Sci-Fi Network to the days with Fox. "It's a tighter
group, and you've got one man at the helm, David Pekinpah, instead of
three or four with differents ideas. That's the way it needs to be - someone
with the vision, to tell us what to do. That way thing don't get confused,
with three or four ideas coming across and trying to convey them to an
audience.
"I feel so much better with the Sci-Fi Network. I feel like they
care, I feel like it's a network that's behind you 100 per cent."
Thanks to the inventive talents of writers like Bill Dial, Marc Scott
Zicree and Chris Black, Sliders no longer boasts pedestrian fare like
Dinoslide, Slither and Desert Storm - formulaic crowd-pleasers intended
to cash-in popular movies.
"When you do stories like we did last year, like the dinosaurs and
the hurricanes and the volcanoes and so forth - it's very difficult when
you don't have a big budget. The movies can do it and do a great job of
it. When you have a small budget, it's difficult to give the kind of effects
that audiences are used to seeing. This time we've done more human interest
stories, more character-driven stories, which I find interesting. What
we, as actors, are always looking for are character-driven scripts where
we get a chance to participate and the character get a chance to grow.
And the audience gets a chance to love, hate, communicate or identify
with your character. I think that's what makes television work."
What didn't work, he believes, was the somewhat two-dimensional Rembrandt
that writers created for the early seasons. Concerned that the character
could slide into the realms of cliché, Derricks took his grievance
to the new producers - and found that they were totally in tune with his
thinking.
"The guys looked as it, they saw it, they understood what I was talking
about," he beams. "They knew it going in, and they've been 100
per cent supportive of what I felt about the character. I've seen changes
each time we've come back, and this time you've seen more depth. As an
actor I'm interested in growing.
"Rembrandt is the character that everybody pretty much relates to.
He asks the questions that I think the audience asks. He's the person
the audience looks to to provide real information, to talk down-to-earth,
so they can understand what's going on. He also has a lot of heart, he
has a lot of compassion."
With the discovery in Season Four's opening story, Genesis, that Quinn
was actually born on a parallel Earth, the series gained a new direction,
as the war with the Kromaggs intensified, and Colin Mallory (Charlie O'Connell)
was introduced.
"I like him a lot," says Derricks of the sadly short-lived new
recruit. "I think his character certainly adds something to the show.
It helps me because it adds some of the humor, so a lot of that is taken
off my character's shoulders. So they don't look at my character so much
to be just the funny guy all the time, it gives me something else to play.
I'm impressed with Charlie's work."
Like critics and audience, Derricks recognizes that Sliders is now better
than ever, offering strong Science Fiction stories mixed with its own
unique, light-hearted touch. The commissioning of 18 more episodes for
1999 is a welcome bonus, and, if the quality is maintained, there's no
reason at all why the show could continue beyond that.
"This is the year that we've have really found our niche," enthuses
the actor. "This season we truly found it. We're starting to bring
a viewing audience into the Sci-Fi Network. I think we can do at least
one more really good one."
Article paru dans X-Posé #29 de décembre 1998.
© Visual Imagination 1998
Tapé avec ses doigts par François Etiemble. Merci !
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