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Sonntag, 9. Oktober 2016

Happy Birthday Scott Bakula!

Running for me has always been a great place to get away. It's a great stress reliever for me. It's great if I need to be working on something in my mind, whether it's things I need to be memorizing or thinking about, or I have some presentation coming up. 

My daughter, when she was younger, was crazy about 'The X-Files,' so I'd watch that with her.

The guy that picked me up at the airport in 1985 when I was out in L.A. for my first audition was selling a script. I was a nobody coming off a plane to read for a new show.

By all standards, except for 'Star Trek' standards, 98 episodes of any television show is a wildly successful run.

To be quite honest, I find that it's easier to do parts that are wrapped up in different hair and wardrobe and eras, and different period behavior, than it is to play closer to the present.

My favorite thing about running is running when it's as hot as it can be, which is a little odd.

I haven't really thought about where to scatter my ashes when the time comes, but I doubt that it would be in space.

My kids are good athletes and runners. They run in a bunch of sports.

'Certainly Men of a Certain Age' was different for me and allowed people to see me in a different light. Maybe that opened up minds a little bit.

My oldest son started to like 'South Park' and 'Family Guy,' so we'd watch together so I could spend time with him.

The biggest challenge for everybody to realize out there is that we're in a very complicated business world and that were all under one umbrella and it's very challenging for everybody to figure out where the priorities lie and where the loyalties lie.

On the whole, show business is a hard business in which to be married.

I don't even know how many times I auditioned for Danny Zuko in 'Grease.' 

One of the hardest things to do is to be present and open and clear about who you are and what you stand for. We all have issues with that.

I'm a runner from sports. I've been a runner, but I wasn't a cross-country runner or anything like that. I played a lot of soccer growing up.

The 'NCIS' franchise is beyond successful.

I get nervous even guesting on other people's shows.

The end of shows are a nightmare for everybody because there is so much pressure to satisfy everyone, which of course you can't do.

Sunday night was such a big night for television when I was growing up - you know, 'The Wonderful World of Disney.' 

The further away you can get away from yourself as an actor, the more fun you have.

I like fantasy. I've always been the kind of kid who likes to dream about other things I could be and exotic situations I could be in.

The great thing about show business is that there's no mandatory retirement age.

I've always been a big fan of time travel, and I'm very into the notion that some day we'll be able to do it. Beam me up!

The longest show I've ever done was four and a half years, so I can only imagine what ending an eight year show is like.

I like pop, rock n' roll, big band, Broadway - I like all those elements.

The movies are about big tent pole movies and big action and effects.

I love 'White Christmas.' That's one of my favorites just because I love the music. I love the story, Bing Crosby. It's just one of my all time favorites. And it's hard to have a Christmas without seeing a little bit of Jimmy Stewart and angels running around town.

These sci-fi fans are phenomenal in the standards that they hold you to.

I was a huge fan of the original 'Star Trek,' and I'd never even dreamed that I would someday be captain of a starship.

To do something for other people when they need it most just feels good.

Ideally, people find mates with whom they can express both their masculine and feminine sides.

I'm... first and foremost I'm a theater guy and everything that I know comes from the theater.

I was actually cut out of 'L.A. Story'... and rightfully so. 

What we are as actors, for better and for worse, is visible.

You want to try and bring a character to life in an honest a way as you possibly can. It doesn't matter whether he's a doctor, an actor, a car salesman or a captain of a starship. If you can bring truth and honesty to that character, then your audience will believe you.

With any kind of sci-fi, the imagination continues, and the world exists, and you create that in your own mind, and it lives in you.

I'd really like to play bad guys or guys that have something a little bit off about them. And I get to do that periodically. 

Years ago, I did a CBS audition. I was nervous. They introduced me as 'Scott Bakoola.' Not a good sign. I also didn't get the show. 

Liberace was a miracle. You talk about who he was and what he did, and then you look at who he inspired, from Elton John to Cher to Michael Jackson to Bette Midler. There are so many people that came to see him. Elvis was there, watching his shows.

And I've always felt comfortable certainly in a courtroom because you're just performing. And there was a time in my life when I thought when I grew up I'd be a trial lawyer myself.

I'm a musical theater guy. That's where I came from. That's where I go whenever I have the chance. It's my first love. 

'Behind The Candelabra' is an HBO movie. It's the Liberace story. Michael Douglass and Matt Damon. I play a small part in it. I play a choreographer who introduces, brings Matt Damon to Las Vegas for the first time. 

New Orleans has a unique history as a great melting pot of all kinds of cultures, and that manifests itself now through the food, the music, and the kinds of people who live there.

Clive Barker is just genius, and he's incredibly gifted in so many different ways. He can write and direct and paint and do all these different things, and he can do them all extremely well. 

I'm constantly involved in theater, looking at theater, trying to do work in theater, support theater. And that's kind of my creative passion.

For a long-running TV show, you're looking for a character who is interesting and vibrant and you can imagine going into all kinds of different areas.

The reality of our business is that for every actor who's rolled up his tent and given up and gone home, the next day you hear about some shoe salesman at Macy's who had this audition and now he's Harrison Ford. There's always that carrot out there in our business.

For actors, we always feel like there shouldn't be any divide for anybody. The industry is the one that kind of creates the idea that if you're such-and-such an actor, you can't be on the big screen. 

I've always been told I had an old face. So when I was in my 20s, I never got to play a teenager.

I am very much against weapons in space. And I wish we could be spearheading that program to come to some kind of international agreement so that doesn't happen. That is my only - fear - in further space exploration like always, we hope it doesn't get abused.

It's a joyful, humbling feeling to be in different places around the planet, and people have seen shows that I'm proud of being a part of, that do have things to say about the human condition, the planet, and who we are and where we've come from, that will sustain.

I don't think that a company should own a studio and the network, and program for their own network. It hurts the creativity - it is not a level playing field.

I've done a lot of work other than sci-fi, and between half-hour comedy, stage, and various movie roles, I've really tried to avoid being typecast. 

I grew up in St. Louis, and I don't know if you've ever been to St. Louis in the middle of summer. There are days in the summer sometimes, weeks in the summer, where the temperature can be over 100 degrees and the humidity can be 100 percent.

A lot of people don't know that I'm a singer - that's my thing, really.

I think the challenge in hour television or half-hour television is that the more it's around, certainly on commercial television, the less time you have to tell stories these days, because the more commercials they're putting in.

If I can avoid looking at myself, I will. I don't care to examine myself or see much of what I do. I never care how I look.

I went into show business because I love to work with people, and what I enjoy most about acting is rehearsing and getting to know people and their talents, forming relationships. Working in this business, barriers drop and you get into people real quickly.

I've always had an affinity for lawyers. My dad is a lawyer. He's retired now. My brother is a lawyer. It's always been easy, the legalese.

I've composed a fair amount in my life, and some of them have made it on to the screen, some compositions that I've done, a few. And I like doing that. I had never really considered doing a full-length thing. I've worked with other people creating full-length pieces.

If you're a fan of Shirley MacLaine just like I am, I'd kinda go anywhere to work with her.

I've done great theatre, great films and had a lot of opportunities in television. I also love to sing, and I've been able to do that once or twice in the television shows. 

After 'Quantum Leap,' a lot of sci-fi things came my way, and I had to say, 'I can't do that right now.'

I've shot a lot of places, and I've produced. I always thought, 'Gosh, when you shoot in a big city, it's so difficult.' And New York, I always think, 'Where are you going to park the trucks? How are you going to stop the traffic?'

In the fantasy, sci-fi world, the fans are so discerning and they're so tough and they're so intelligent, and they're so critical.

'Quantum Leap' gave me a huge opportunity as an actor. The nature of the role and it's demands allowed people to perceive me as a versatile actor, and the wide success of the show around the planet gave me a certain notoriety that helped me get other work.

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