Interview by
Scott Juba
Published: July 6, 2006
As one of the stars of the popular sci-fi series Battlestar Galactica,
receiving praise is nothing new for Jamie Bamber. Some of the nation's top
publications have hailed the series as one of the best shows on television.
Bamber, who plays fighter pilot Lee Adama (code named "Apollo") on the show,
says Battlestar Galactica's critical acclaim puts both more and less
pressure on the cast. "There's nothing as good as knowing that people are
appreciating the work you're doing," he tells me. "In a way, that lessens
the pressure, because there's relief there. You know what you're doing is
good, and you know the people around you are doing a good job. There's also
more pressure, because there are going to be more people watching. There are
viewers that wouldn't ordinarily watch sci-fi who are going to come to our
show, and we can't let them down."
Bamber credits much of the success to the show's elemental storyline and
well-written characters. "It's a bunch of people running for their lives,"
he says. "A lot has been written about 9/11 and the parallels of people
being attacked from nowhere and catching everyone by surprise."
He adds, "[The show] has really good characters in really claustrophobic
situations. That makes for good drama. You can't help but have
good stories when people are fighting for their lives day in and day out."
Despite the positive media attention and increasing fan base Battlestar
Galactica continues to generate, Bamber says his job involves more work
and less glamour than many people think. "It's not the glitz and the glamour
everyone thinks it is," he says. "About 99.9 percent of it is the working
life like what everyone else does… I can count on one hand how many red
carpets I've walked down. My total time spent walking down red carpets
is probably under 30 minutes of my life."
While Bamber is best known for his work on Battlestar Galactica, this
British-born performer has been acting from a young age. His first role came
when his actress mother selected him to play the Wicked Witch of the West in
"The Wizard of Oz." Yet, he insists his mother was not a stage mom who
pushed him into the profession. "When it became time to make acting a career
choice, my parents weren't encouraging me to make that choice," he explains,
"but once I made it, they were encouraging. I think my dad was a little more
skeptical about it, because he'd lived the life of an actress via my mum and
he'd seen how difficult and frustrating and unrewarding it can be along the
way. So I entered into the career with very real expectations."
Bamber says his acceptance to the prestigious London Academy of Music and
Dramatic Arts gave him the confidence to pursue acting full-time. "I was
considering what to do with my life, so I took the responsibility out of my
hands," he recalls. "I said, 'I'll apply to some of the best drama schools
in the country. If get into them, I'll pursue it.' If I hadn't
gotten in, I honestly think I would have given up acting and pursued
something else."
There seems little doubt that Bamber made the right choice, because the
high-flying career of this TV fighter pilot shows no signs of coming down
any time soon.
http://www.the-trades.com/article.php?id=4486