By TERRY MORROW, Scripps Howard News Service
July 15, 2005
When actor
Jamie Bamber saw a script for the remake of "Battlestar Galactica," he had a
shrinking feeling. "But I guess that's normal for any remake," says
Bamber, 32. "You should go into it wondering why (anything) should be
remade."
After
nabbing the role of swashbuckling Apollo Adama, Bamber realized how serious this
new version would be. The producers shipped him and other cast members off
to a two-day Army boot camp for physical training and "to get the right mental
attitude," he says.
"We did
drills, running around, taking orders, learning rank structure," Bamber says.
"They didn't take any (stuff) off us. I come from a very non-military
background, so this was different for me."
This was the first project that Bamber agreed to do after leaving a British
military series called "Ultimate Force."
On
"Battlestar" (returning with new episodes at 8 p.m. EDT Friday, Sci-Fi Channel),
Bamber plays the survivor of a planetary disaster.
After the
villainous Cylons devastate his world, he and other refugees head toward Earth.
Apollo's father, Commander William Adama (Edward James Olmos), is in the thick
of political infighting among the leadership of the refugees.
Unlike many
sci-fi shows, which emphasize special effects or alien threats over character
development, Bamber says "Galactica" has a different style.
For his
character, the show is "more about the relationship between a father and a son,"
he says. "That's what I have locked into because it's a fundamental relationship
that we all have. You try to make different decisions than your dad as you grow
up.
"Sometimes
it works. Sometimes it doesn't. I was struck by how that works for this
character."
Apollo is trying to prove himself in the shadow of a father who is larger than
life, says Bamber.
The actor is a U.S. citizen who has never lived in the States. He lives in
London, but plans to move here. His father is an American.
He has three
children, two of whom are twins. They are all under 2 years old.
Bamber is married to Kerry Norton, a British actress. "Marriage is all
about that," he says, "bringing up the kids. When we got married, we
already had a 3-month-old, and the twins came shortly after that." He says
he likes how family elements can work well in a cosmic drama.
"When sci-fi
is all about the surface, about gadgets and what-not, then I am not as
interested in it and I don't think the audience is either," he says.
"When it is about relationships, the human drama, then it's much more interesting to explore. Good sci-fi shows how different the world may be, but how much we have in common."
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