CBS’ New ‘Star Trek’ Adds Gene Roddenberry’s Son as Exec Producer

March 03, 2016 12:30pm PT by Graeme McMillan

Trevor Roth, COO of Roddenberry Entertainment, also signs on for duty.Rod Roddenberry, Trevor Roth  Courtesy of CBS

Trevor Roth, COO of Roddenberry Entertainment, also signs on for duty.

CBS’s upcoming Star Trek series has added two more members to its intergalactic crew, with Rod Roddenberry, son of Trek creator Gene Roddenberry, and Trevor Roth, COO of Roddenberry Entertainment, named as executive producers on the new project Thursday.

They will join Alex Kurtzman, Heather Kadin and Bryan Fuller as executive producers on the show, which will debut on CBS in early 2017 before transferring exclusively to CBS’s All Access digital video on demand service. News of the addition of Roddenberry and Roth follows Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan‘s Nicholas Meyer joining the show’s writing staff last week.

“Gene Roddenberry, the Great Bird of the Galaxy, left a finely feathered nest for all who love ‘Star Trek’ to enjoy,” showrunner Fuller said in a statement. “It is only fitting that Rod Roddenberry and Roddenberry Entertainment join our new Trek adventure to ensure that his father’s legacy of hope for the future and infinite diversity in infinite combinations runs through our tales as Gene Roddenberry intended.”

Roddenberry added, “While I will always be humbled by its legacy and the legions of fans who are its guardians, it’s a genuine honor to be joining a team of imaginative and incredibly capable individuals whose endeavor it is to uphold the tenets of Star Trek’s legacy while bringing it to audiences in a new era and on a contemporary platform.”

In addition to producing the 2011 documentary Trek Nation, Roddenberry served as a consulting producer on the fan-produced Star Trek: New Voyages series released online between 2003 and 2011.

Graeme McMillan

Graeme McMillan

THRnews@thr.com

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‘Gotham’s’ BD Wong Talks New Villain Hugo Strange: “He Has a God Complex”

February 29, 2016 6:00pm PT by Graeme McMillan

"He loves controlling people, he loves manipulating the human brain and messing with people and seeing if he can use his knowledge to actually change a person," the actor says of the Fox show's latest arch nemesis. Jessica Miglio/FOX

“He loves controlling people, he loves manipulating the human brain and messing with people and seeing if he can use his knowledge to actually change a person,” the actor says of the Fox show’s latest arch nemesis.

[Warning: This story contains spoilers from Gotham’s “Mr. Freeze” episode.]

Welcome to Gotham, Hugo Strange.

Monday’s return of the Fox drama brought a new villain to the show in the form of Arkham Asylum’s charming, creepy head psychiatrist, played by BD Wong. After a conversation that made new inmate Oswald Cobblepot very nervous, the sight of a fellow patient seemingly driven insane by Strange’s treatment suggested that there’s far more to Dr. Hugo Strange than meets the eye — and that was before the audience discovered that he’s very interested in re-animating the dead. THR caught up with Wong to discuss what makes the latest big bad on the show tick.

Who is Hugo Strange to you? Did you come into the show with an idea of who the character was?

I see him as someone sophisticated, not an average, scrappy villain, but someone who’s intellectually superior, and articulate, and in some ways elegant. His obsession with psychiatry and the human brain leads him to behavior and choices and activities that lead him to feel better than other people. He has a God complex.

But despite that, he’s unusually charming and restrained, especially for a show like Gotham, which has traditionally gone for far more dramatic villains. He’s not like Jerome, Oswald, or even Fish Mooney. He’s far more restrained.

He’s not a show-boater. The thing that is a really huge thing for him — in his behavior, but also every other choice that he makes — is control. He loves controlling people, he loves manipulating the human brain and messing with people and seeing if he can use his knowledge to actually change a person. But he’s also a very controlled person himself, so control is a recurring theme with him. I think his behavior is informed by a desire for control.

That comes through in the scene where he meets Oswald (Robin Lord Taylor) for the first time. There’s a feeling that they’re both feeling each other out, and Strange is pushing at Oswald’s boundaries, trying to get a sense of how to manipulate him.

I think it’s safe to say that his meeting with Oswald is a sign of how he’ll interact with the other characters. In the episodes that I’ve shot already, that is kind of his M.O., what makes people nervous around him. You’re not scared of him because he’s got a gun on you necessarily; you’re scared of him because of what he might make you do. You’re not quite caught up to him yet, he’s ahead of you. That’s what scares Oswald, I think, the feeling that [Strange] is ahead of him.

What’s that like as an actor, playing this master manipulator?

It’s great! You have permission in a show like this to not worry about life — there’s a freedom to the fantasy aspect of the show that allows you to explore things that are really just fun to play. It’s fun to play someone who’s smarter than you, but you have to use your own intelligence to make it believable that you’re smarter than everyone else. That’s really scary in some ways, but it’s really fun, too. I’m a very competitive kind of person, but I quite fancy the idea of pulling that off.

Unlike a lot of characters on the show, your Hugo Strange looks like the comic book character. You’ve got the glasses, you’ve got the bald head, the beard. Was that something that you wanted, or did the producers ask for it?

It evolved. When the producers first came to me, they said, “On our show, we usually try to shake things up a little bit and not try to make the characters look the way they do in the comics.” But I wanted to try elements of the comic book look, and they gave me permission to have an all-day hair and makeup session where we tried, I think, 10 looks to try and determine what would work the best. At the end of it, I was really convinced that the classic look was the best look.

I really love the challenge that, when you look at the archival evidence of how the character has looked over many decades, I don’t really look like that person at all. He’s obviously caucasian, he seems older, he’s a larger person — he’s very imposing, and scary looking. I wanted to take those elements fans remember and put them with my body and face. How would that look? Would it look ridiculous, would it be a strange juxtaposition? But we tried it, and I really liked how it looked.

You described him as scary looking, and there really is something about Strange that’s … disturbing, if not downright scary.

He does like to say things that are seemingly calming, but are not calming at all. (Laughs.) The language, the way he presents himself, they appear to be calming but there’s something about it that is really unsettling. I like that. That makes him very interesting to me — he’s a person who’s in the business of supposedly healing people’s minds but is really messing with them at the same time.

Looking ahead to the rest of the season, it’s clear that Strange has a specific, if mysterious, agenda. Should fans expect to see him stay behind the scenes, convincing others to do his dirty work for him, or will he come into conflict with Gordon and Bullock directly?

I’m all for something being not just one thing, but two things at the same time, being complex and layered. That’s what’s interesting to me. I like that there’s a puppet master element to Strange, but you’ll see as things progress, he becomes more actively involved with affecting the situation he finds himself in. I like both of those things. As the character evolves, he becomes more intense, and that’s very interesting to me.

What does Strange want with Oswald, and just why is he interested in bringing the dead back to life? Leave your guesses below. Gotham airs Mondays at 8am on Fox.

Gotham

Graeme McMillan

Graeme McMillan

THRnews@thr.com

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Dynamite Entertainment Revives Comedy Central’s ‘Brickleberry’ For New Comic Book

February 19, 2016 1:52pm PT by Graeme McMillan

Show creators Waco O'Guin and Roger Black will help create the new series. Courtesy of Dynamite Entertainment

Show creators Waco O’Guin and Roger Black will help create the new series.

Comedy Central might have ended the animated series in 2015, but the park rangers of Brickleberry National Park (and Malloy, the narcissistic bear) will live on in a new Brickleberry comic book series, announced by Dynamite Entertainment Friday.

Brickleberry, a sitcom about a group of park rangers that featured the voices of Daniel Tosh (who also served as executive producer of the show), Natasha Leggero and Bob’s Burgers‘ David Herman, ran on the network for three seasons from 2012 though 2015. The show was created by MTV2’s Stankervision veterans Waco O’Guin and Roger Black, both of whom will be working on the new comic book.

“We are so excited to be in business with Dynamite to tell more Brickleberry stories,” O’Guin said in a statement accompanying the news. “Our first issue is an insane tale that picks up where the Brickleberry finale left off.” Black added that the new comic “will make all our Brickleberry fans very happy.”

The announcement, made during comic retailer conference ComicsPro, follows Dynamite’s success with its Bob’s Burgers comic book series, which launched in 2014 and has become one of the New Jersey publisher’s most consistent best sellers.

The new series will launch digitally and in comic book stores in June.

Graeme McMillan

Graeme McMillan

THRnews@thr.com

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