On May 4, 2007 Marcel Damen
caught up with
Ryan Robbins, better known as the
Armistice Station Officer in the Mini Series
as well as
Charlie Connor in Season 3 of the
Battlestar Galactica 2003 series. He talked to
him for over a full hour about his love for hockey,
his career as an ever reinventing character actor
and his parts on both the Mini Series as well as the
regular series.
In a previous interview with
Aaron Douglas, he mentioned that you were also a
Vancouver Canucks fan.
Yes, very much. Aaron and I go to
the games together.
Ok. You also go together with
Dan Payne, right?
That's right, yeah. Sometimes
with Dan Bacon as well. Actually I think I'm going
to Aaron's house tonight to watch the game after I
get off the phone with you.
So Vancouver is down three
games to one against the Anaheim Ducks [in the 2007
Western Conference Semifinals]. What do you think
they've done wrong?
What do I think they've done
wrong?
I think that they've been sitting
back when they get a lead. I think that what
happened in the last game is that they were ahead,
and every time they get ahead, they'd just sit back
and kind of play slow defensively and you can't do
that in the playoffs. I think you have to come out
strong and play to score goals, not play to just
hold on to a lead. That's what I think is going on,
and I think they need to spend more time looking
after their goalie as well.
Do you think it's possible to
come back against the Ducks?
Yes! Of course it's possible! Of
course they're going to come back. Of course they're
going to win the series! (laughing) (Editor's note:
Anaheim defeated Vancouver four games to one, and
went on to beat the Detroit Red Wings in the Western
Conference Finals and the Ottawa Senators to win the
Stanley Cup.)

actor
Ryan Robbins
If this is as far as Vancouver
goes, will you consider this a successful season?
Yeah, it's been a really
successful season, especially considering early on
in the season when there were a lot of people that
were talking down on the Canucks saying they had a
young team, they didn't have what it takes, and it
would take time for them to get together as a team.
And probably as of December, they came out strong
and they really started showing a lot of potential.
And of course, with Roberto Luongo in goal, I think
that really inspired the team to play that much
harder. Some players that I wasn't really all that
impressed with in the regular season came out super
strong in the playoffs and have really been playing
their heart out. As a matter of fact, we have a new
guy on the team for the playoffs who I absolutely
love. His name is Jannik Hansen, and he's from
Denmark. He's the first Danish player to ever play
in the playoffs in the NHL.
Ok. So how much is the loss of
Jeff Cowan, with the knee surgery, a loss for the
team?
I think it's a bit of a loss
because we also don't have Matt Cooke. So it's a
considerable loss, those two guys hit really hard,
and they're really aggressive players. They're
playmakers, and they're very fast, and they're
tenacious, and we need those guys. However, I heard
that we brought up a young kid named Brandon Reed
who I really like. He's a smaller guy, but he's very
fast, and he's very aggressive. He's like a little
pest which we need, him and Burrows, hopefully him
and Alex Burrows together will hopefully create some
opportunities for the team.
So how do you feel about the
Sedin brothers? Henrik and Daniel?
I think they're great, and I
think they've been amazing for us all year. The
Sedins have been a force all year. I wish that
Henrik Sedin wouldn't feel so compelled to pass the
puck all the time and would shoot it some more. They
definitely seem to be a little bit off their mark in
the playoffs but... I guess having said that, Henrik
has scored some very important goals in the
playoffs, and has been responsible for some very
important goals in the playoffs, but there's a
couple of times where I wished he would shoot more
often. And then Marcus Naslund, he's Markus Naslund.
He's doing everything that a Captain should do, and
that's step up his game during the playoffs. And
he's one of the guys who's had a bit of an off
season, but when the playoffs came on, he came out
and pushed really hard. He's played his heart out,
he plays with a lot of heart and a lot of passion,
and that's what you need in your team captain.
Yeah, so it's going to be an
exciting game tonight then?
It has to be. They've got to come
out so strong and never stop. I think that they have
to push the pace this game, start to finish, and
play hard hitting, fast paced, aggressive game. They
need to put lots of traffic in front of the net.
That's one thing we haven't been doing is getting
bodies in front of the net. I think we do a lot more
of that, and then they'll have a chance. But there's
no reason...we shouldn't have lost that last game.
There's no reason we can't win these next bunch of
games.
So I guess we should talk
about you as an actor now.
But we've had so much fun talking
about hockey. (laughing)
Yeah, but I still wanted to
get some questions about you in there as well.
Sure. (laughing)
You were born Ryan John
Currier. Where does the name Robbins come from?
My stepfather. When I was young,
about six years old, my mother had remarried a
couple years previous [to that], and then her and my
stepfather filed adoption papers, and they changed
my last name. So yeah, it changed when I was about
six years old, which was a bit of a strange
transition for a first grader to try to explain why
your name changed when you don't really understand
it yourself. But no, it's not a stage name. It's the
name I've grown up with since I was six or seven.
You began your career in the
arts performing in the circus? How did you end up
there?
Well, I had gone to theatre
school, and a very arts oriented high school, and
I'd done a lot of martial arts growing up since I
was very young. And through a series of events, I
ended up traveling to Australia by myself when I was
17. I ran out of money quickly and ended up with
this circus working as a laborer, and because I was
Canadian and it was an international circus, they
needed somebody to make an appearance on behalf of
the circus at a school. So I put on a clown costume,
and I went to this school and did some acrobatics,
some things I knew, and performed for the kids. The
circus liked what I did, and they said we should
train you up and get you in the ring, and that's
what they did. I trained harder than I've trained
for a lot of things in my life, and ended up very
quickly performing in the ring, doing a whole
variety of circus acts.
How long did you stay in the
circus?
Well I was in the circus for a
few years, and then I had to have surgery, and I
lost a contract. I was supposed to go to Spain and
Italy, and the surgery caused a delay, and I ended
up losing that contract, and I just didn't pursue it
after that. I just sort of realized that it was fun,
it was amazing, it's the hardest work you can
imagine. It's incredibly grueling hard work. [It's]
very rewarding, not financially rewarding.
(laughing) But I wanted to be acting. I wanted to be
doing films and so I decided that I would find a way
to pursue that, and I had no idea how to that, and
instead I ended up in a band, (laughing) and I did
that for a long time.
I've read you talked to
Richard Hatch about that as well since he also
started out in the circus. What did he do?
Well Richard Hatch, I don't know
how many people remember, but several years ago when
he was actually on the original Battlestar
Galactica, they used to do this series called
"Circus of the Stars", and they would get TV stars
and movie stars. They would train them as circus
performers and they would do these circus acts.
Richard had some experience, some gymnastics
experience before that I believe, and he ended up
being a cast member that came back quite regularly,
I think, on "Circus of the Stars". He was really
good at it, so he stuck with it. He performed with
"Circus of the Stars". I think he did a few things.
I think he did trapeze and some other stuff. I can't
quite remember, but...There's a bit of camaraderie
there when we talked about it, because there's not a
lot of people that have had to go through that kind
of training, and experienced that lifestyle.
While playing in a band you
were discovered as an actor. Can you tell us a bit
about that?
Yes. There was a local filmmaker
who was a fan of my band, and she was making a
movie, and she knew that I had also studied acting,
and if you've seen my band you'd know there's a high
performance aspect...She put myself and a guy in
another band as leads in this movie, and I came out
well in the movie. My performance caught the
attention of some agents and some other people, and
from that point on, that's how I finally got to be
an actor, which is what I'd been wanting to do all
that time, and it took me until I was about 26 years
old to figure out how to...Actually I never figured
out how to become an actor, it finally just came to
me. I didn't know anybody. I didn't know any actors.
I didn't know anything about agents, or how to
become an actor, and it eventually just presented
itself to me, so I ran with it with everything I
had.
Did you have any formal
training for acting?
Mostly for theatre. I had gone
to, like I said, a very arts oriented high school
that had a very progressive theatre program, and
then I also went and did a little stint in theatre
school. And when I was with the band, I was actually
taking acting classes, and still to this day
sometimes when I get free time, I taking acting
classes. It's like going to the gym, getting a
workout and staying sharp. I really believe I will
always have something to learn as an actor, and I'm
always willing to learn those things.
You also did some theatre
work. How was that like acting in front of a live
audience?
Yeah, I did theatre when I was
younger. I did quite a lot of theater; Shakespeare,
and quite some other plays as well. Not as much
theatre as I would have liked. I really love theatre
and I don't get to do much of it anymore, but I
still like to go and watch a good play.
Since being discovered, you
starred in an incredible amount of different
television series over the past 8-9 years and you
also change your looks for each part that you play.
What parts do you prefer to make you say: "I'd like
to read for that one" and "I want to do that part"?
Well, it's more about the parts
that will become available, and when I get the
audition, I think "How can I make this interesting
for me to play and hopefully interesting for people
to watch?" I like the idea of trying to bring
something to each role that's a little different
every time. Something that's identifiable. I went
through a string where I played a lot of bad guys,
but I think the key for playing a bad guy, for
example, is that I don't think that bad people think
they're bad. They think that they feel very
justified in what they're doing. And they think what
they're doing is a good thing, and that way you give
them a much more identifiable quality and people can
at least relate to them on some level, and
understand them on some level, and it makes it more
interesting to watch. As far as looks and appearance
goes, that's just me anyway. I like change. I get
bored easily, and I'm always changing my look. There
was one stint where I was very frustrated as an
actor, and I had just come back from Los Angeles,
and I was all but ready to call it quits. I was so
frustrated with the industry and the business, and I
was playing parts I wasn't happy with, and then I
thought "Screw it! I'm just going back to the old
me." I shaved my head into a Mohawk, and spiked it
up, and said "Forget it! I'm going to be this guy
for awhile." The next thing I know I worked for an
entire year with various forms of my Mohawk.
(laughing) I worked nonstop after that, with that
haircut, so it's kind of funny how that worked out.

actor
Ryan Robbins
You've done comedy, drama,
sci-fi. Any particular genre you like best?
I don't think I have a favorite.
I think it just depends on the project as a whole.
You know, the premise of the thing. Comedy's fun. I
think there's something about a good drama that you
feel like you're telling a story that is making a
difference. I mean those really don't come along as
often as you'd like, where you can really get behind
it, and do the research you need to do, and do the
work you need to do. Because you know you're telling
a story that may make a difference in somebody's
life. That may really impact somebody. I know that
it sounds really cliché for an actor to say, but I
really truly want to do more of those projects.
Where I feel like I'm contributing in some way, and
in some way inspire somebody, or change their mind
about a certain point of view. I think shows like
Battlestar Galactica are great for that.
Battlestar Galactica presents a moral dilemma,
and then tries to solve it, or discuss it, in an
unusual way. It's not cliché at all, and it's very
relevant the way that they address politics, and
religion, and very intense issues from various
perspectives. That to me is great! It's why it's
such a fantastic show. It's why it's critically
acclaimed. Those shows don't come around nearly as
often as they should. I think if more people got
behind shows like that, then television and film
would be considered a much more important medium.
[Don't get me wrong,] entertainment is fantastic,
it's great to be entertained. It's absolutely great,
and if a good fiction entertains you, great. If a
good comedy entertains you, great. But sometimes
it's nice to feel connected to the rest of the world
in some way, if that makes any sense.
It does. I've also read you
did stunt work for I, Robot. Is this true?
Nope. Not true. Don't know why
that's up there [on IMDb.com.] I worked on I,
Robot as a reader for Will Smith. Basically what
happens is that I got hired to come in two weeks
prior to shooting while they were doing script
revisions, and I would go from location to location,
and I would play all the other characters opposite
Will Smith. We would just work the scenes together,
and then we'd sit around and do table reads of the
script, when the other cast started showing up.
Everybody would just discuss how to make the scenes
tighter, and rewrite this and change that. Which was
an amazing experience for me to just hang out with
Will Smith and Bridget Moynahan...but I did not do
stunts. I did attempt to do stunts early on in my
career. From my circus background, it was a natural
transition, and I went to stunt school, and tried to
do all that. It's not a good way to break into
acting. It's very competitive, and my hat is off to
all of the stunt performers in our industry because
they really go through a lot for a few seconds of
screen time that can really make a gigantic
significant difference in a film. I do tend to try
to do as many of my own stunts as possible, when I'm
working. I'm very active that way, and I'm very much
into it. I did a movie with The Rock which was a ton
of fun, you know, speaking of just pure
entertainment, and having that being a really fun
genre as well, without all of the intense stuff I
was talking about before. I did a movie with The
Rock called Walking Tall, and I got to do all
my own stunts in that film. One of which was jumping
off of a very high balcony onto The Rock, and he
pressed me over his head and slams me through a
blackjack table. I was in the film for about five
seconds, but it was awesome! It was awesome!
What was it like to work with
professional wrestler turned actor "The Rock"?
He is an exceptional individual.
He's incredibly smart. He's very talented, and his
work ethic is awesome. He's a really hard worker. He
has an acting coach with him every day because he
really wanted to do good work all the time. His time
was required constantly. He had to be around doing
stuff all the time, and he was always very nice,
very accommodating, very friendly. I worked on that
film off and on for three and half months. We got to
know him quite well. I found out that I was going to
be having a baby while I was shooting that movie,
and his daughter had just turned two, so we had lots
to talk about. He was giving me all this advice
about fatherhood and this business. I really have a
lot of respect for him. I think he is a wonderful
guy and he's great. When we were talking about doing
that stunt, he came up to me when he found out I was
doing it, and he was like "Man, I'm not much about
jumping off heights, but going through tables is SO
much fun, you're going to love it" (laughing) I have
the opportunity to basically jump off the top of the
cage onto The Rock, and get thrown through a table.
Why would I not take that? I'd kick myself for the
rest of my life if I didn't take that opportunity.
And of course, everything was done with the utmost
safety and consideration, and he was great. It was
an absolute blast, a really, really fun time for me.
Yeah, because you said you
were a huge UFC fan, right?
Well, I'm a big fight fan, a
gigantic mixed martial arts fan. I also like a
little bit of the boxing, but yeah. I've trained in
martial arts since I was probably 11 years old, and
I still box a little bit and I still train from time
to time, just for the exercise. I've been watching
UFC since UFC 1. I missed about four years of it at
one time, because I went through a different
transition in my life, but I love it man. I'm a
huge, huge fan.
You've said that your secret
obsession is watching men beat the crap out of each
other. If there was a celebrity UFC tournament,
would you enter?
A UFC tournament for celebrities?
Yeah.
It would depend on who I'd get to
fight. (laughing) If it was a celebrity tournament,
then yeah, I would. I'd consider that, because that
would just be fun and no one would really want to
kill each other. I don't know who I'd fight though.
I'll tell you one guy I wouldn't fight is Joe Rogan,
the guy who commentates UFC, because the word on the
street is that guy is a tough kid. He still trains,
and you don't get to know that much about that style
of fighting without having experienced it a little
bit, so that's one guy I wouldn't fight. There's a
few guys that I could think about that I wouldn't
mind getting in a cage with. (laughing)
We'll publish this, you know
that, right? (laughing)
Yeah, that's fine. As long as
we're not mentioning names. (laughing)
Going back to The Rock, did he
really have a handle on acting, or was he more of a
fish out of water?
No, he was great. He had a great
handle on acting. You know, he's a performer, so a
lot of it comes naturally to him. To tell you the
truth, I want to see him do more comedies. He's
great at the action thing, but he's a funny, funny
guy. He's so witty, and so sharp, and he's really
intelligent. I think he's actually, if I'm not
mistaken, he's got a comedy coming out pretty soon.
(The Game Plan) I think people should see more of
him doing comedy. I didn't see Get Shorty,
but apparently he was awesome in it, and I think he
was funny in that.
Yeah, he was funny in that.
That's the stuff he should be
doing, man, because he's talented. And like I said,
anybody that works that hard, is only going to get
better and better. You know, I loved The Rundown.
I thought he was great in that movie. The dynamic
that those two had, that's great screen pairing. I
know they're going to do another movie together,
which I think is a great idea.
Ok, let's switch over to
Battlestar Galactica. Did you watch the original
Battlestar Galactica series back in 1978?
I did. Yeah, I did. Obviously,
they're nothing alike, but I was a definite fan of
the original series. I wanted to be Boxey
(laughing).
We have something in common
here. I also wanted to be Boxey. I even dressed up a
dog to be Muffit.
No way. That's awesome!
Yeah, I was dressing it up
with boxes and everything so he'd look like a robot
dog.
Well I was a little disappointed
when it first came out, the new Battlestar
Galactica, that there was no dog. There was no
Muffit. I was kind of upset about that, but I get it
now.
So what were your feelings
when you heard they were redoing this series?
To be honest, I was tentative. I
had mixed feelings at first. Until I read some of
it, and realized that it was a re-imagining of the
series, and it was much darker and edgier...I
thought a lot of people were a little bit curious to
see where it would go. But immediately after reading
it, I knew it was going to be something great, and
when I shot the pilot; when I was the old man at the
very beginning of the pilot, you just knew. You
could just tell by the energy. Michael Rymer, who
directed the miniseries, he's such a talent, that
you got the idea pretty quickly that this had the
potential to be something pretty big.

Ryan
Robbins as the Armistice Officer in Battlestar
Galactica 2003, the Mini Series
As you said, in the beginning
of the Mini Series you play a young officer on the
Armistice Station, who gradually becomes older in
different sequences during the first scene of the
show. It looked like he'd been there every year
throughout most of his life without response from
the Cylons. As we all know, Six visits the station
and kills him. Do you know why they cut most of it
and only showed the last part with you as an old
man?
Yeah, they only used the last
part of it. The story was that he was there for
forty years, and you'd see him every decade or so
over forty years. In the final version, you only
actually see him in the end, which worked out great
for me because I was able to come back on the show.
But the other thing is that's funny is that we were
just talking about that guy, that character, the
Armistice Officer, is actually Boxey's father.
Yeah, I know.
So I almost got to play Boxey. I
got to play his father. (laughing)
That's true. In the original
series, Boxey's a well known character, but in the
new series he's almost cut in every scene. Do you
know why the father and the Boxey character were
never developed?
What I believe happened, is they
hired Connor Widdows to play Boxey in the Mini
Series, which was great, but...Connor's a fantastic
actor. He's a really, really, really talented actor,
and has been since he was very young. They took so
much time, from shooting the Mini Series to then
going and shooting Season 1. There was a lot of time
in between there to decide whether or not it was
going to go to series. Connor was at an age where he
grew like crazy. I mean he's like a young man now,
and I think that in that time in between the
miniseries and starting with Season 1, he grew so
much, and his voice changed, that he was no longer
that cute kid. Now he's like a teenager, and I don't
think that was going to work for the character, for
the show. I think they thought it was just better to
leave the Boxey storyline...that's what I think
happened.
Because they did shoot a lot
of scenes, if you look at the DVD set, they're in
the deleted scenes.
Yeah, I think because it was a
Mini Series, they shot a lot of stuff, and realized
for time, to get it to an appropriate length for a
miniseries, they had to lose a lot of scenes. I
think that that's something Michael Rymer, David
Eick, and Ron Moore would know more than I do, but
that seems to happen a lot, you know. In a lot of
projects I've done, you shoot some scenes, you know
they're amazing, but you know they've just gone a
little bit long, and unless you want everything to
be super long films, or super long miniseries with
these epic scenes, then they've got to be cut from
time to time, and it's unfortunate, but...
I mean he was actually in the
Series, in Season 1. He was in the first few
episodes of Season 1, and they cut all the scenes
that he was in.
Oh, he was in the first few
episodes of Season 1! Oh, wow! Maybe that's why they
cut them because he was so much older, because
Season 1 was supposed to pick up right after the
miniseries left off, and if everybody looks the
same, and suddenly this kid looks like he's so much
older than he did yesterday. You know what I mean?
It's supposed to start tomorrow, essentially, in the
whole scheme of things. It's like miniseries ends,
and then Season 1 is supposed to pick up,
essentially the next day or the next week. So if
Boxey suddenly looks like he's growing a moustache,
maybe that's going to be a bit awkward, I'm not
sure.
Actually, the Armistice
Officer was a great part for you , because it must
have been rough when Tricia Helfer kisses you and
asks you: "Are you alive?". I've also read you had
to do an awfully large amount of takes?
Yeah, lots and lots of takes.
Michael Rymer is notorious for getting lots of
variations. And yeah, we kissed a lot, we had to
kiss a lot. The only downside for me was that it was
not my face, I was in prosthetic. (laughing) Some of
the lips were mine, and that was about it.
(laughing) So much so that I got to a point where
when I came in for my makeup, really early in the
morning, because it was about six hours of makeup, I
got them to take a Polaroid of me and give it to
Tricia to say "See! See! I'm not so bad looking. I'm
not an old man. You're not kissing an old man.
You're kissing this guy." Plus not to mention the
stuff that got cut out, that they originally shot.
It was a little less PG, some of this stuff that we
originally shot.
Must have been horrible.
(laughing)
Yeah, horrible. Boy oh boy I tell
you. It's too bad Tricia Helfer's not hot or
anything. (laughing sarcastically) And you know
what? She's awesome. She's super sweet. She's
really, really nice. She's great, and we were both
equally nervous about the make out scene, and by the
end of it, we were fine. Everything was great. It
worked out just fine. And I have the dubious
distinction of being the first human to kiss Number
Six. Well at least on film anyway.
Also the first human killed.
That's right. Yeah, we started it
all.
Well on the other hand, you
were lucky, because you were completely
unrecognizable in the Mini Series, because you could
return as a different character later. Did they ask
you to return or did you yourself just read for a
new part again?
A little bit of both. We'd been
talking for quite awhile since the Mini Series of
trying to find a way to get me back on the show.
Michael Rymer has always been a great supporter of
mine since we met on the Mini Series, and me of him.
I think he's absolutely brilliant. And we've kept in
touch, and also because so many of my friends are on
the show. You know a lot of us were friends before
the show started, and a lot of us became friends
once the show started shooting. We'd always just
talk about it. We'd be out at barbeques, and
whatnot, and people would be "We've got to get you
back on the show, we've got to get you back on the
show." But every time a new character would surface
that I was right for, they were inevitably going to
get killed, and obviously no one wanted to do that.
No one wanted to get me back on the show just to
kill me again. So this character Charlie Connor
became available, and Michael Rymer requested me for
the role. He said you should come in, you should do
the role. Some of the others, for very good reasons
[were concerned about me reappearing]. I think David
Eick, and some of the others were concerned that I'd
be too recognizable as the old man, so I did have to
audition for the role, which I think was fair, and
it worked out. It worked out really well, and I
ended up getting the job. But the thing was, Charlie
Connor was a character who was created later, after
the original story lines were plotted out for Season
3. So there was really no journey for the character
after Episode 4. There really wasn't any plans for
him, and he wasn't dead, so we were trying to figure
out a way to keep old Charlie around. And then Joe
the bar popped up, and next thing you know I'm
getting a call that I'm the bartender. (laughing)

Ryan
Robbins as Charlie Connor in Battlestar Galactica
2003
Yeah, you're the new
bartender.
I'm the Woody Harrelson of
Battlestar Galactica all of a sudden. It's
funny, because we were joking about it. There's a
great scene where I'm actually serving a drink to AJ
(Alessandro Juliani) who plays Gaeta, and we were
laughing because ten episodes or eight episodes
previously, I punched him in the face, knocked him
out, and tried to throw him out of an airlock, and
now I'm serving him drinks. (both laughing) ...like
nothing happened! So those are kind of funny moments
as me being the bartender. And it's called "Joe's
Bar" but I think we only met Joe a couple of times
and now it's Connor's bar.
We also spoke to Leah Cairns
who's very happy with you... You know she plays
Magaret Edmondson, "Racetrack" in the series. And we
hear we have you to blame for calling her Marge for
the first time. She hates Marge!
Yeah! (laughing) She's never
going to let me live that down, because now
everybody calls her Marge. We were shooting a scene
in the bar and a lot of dialogue... Well, not a lot.
Some dialogue gets adlibbed from time to time,
during a take and because there was no... We were
going to have Connor play the bartender, and when I
went in there we started making stuff up for the
things to say. We're playing around during
rehearsal. There's one particular scene where
they're playing Pyramid and I just yell to
Racetrack: "Put it in the hole Marge!" (both
laughing) That became one of the most notorious
lines of the season and since then, which is really
funny, there's been some mild, underground, I think
fan idea of Racetrack and Connor hooking up.
Somebody asked me in an interview, that if I saw
myself in a relationship with anybody that I think
it would be [Racetrack] and Leah and I already
talked about it like: "That's kind of a funny
relationship with Connor and Racetrack." And
somebody else brought it up to me before, so I
thought: "Hey, that's kind of interesting. That
would be funny." She's the pilot, and she's in the
military, and then she'd be dating the bartender.
Sure. She's cute!
Yes, she's great and she's a good
friend of mine as well. So, it would be fun!
I think she'd then much rather
have you call her Maggie or something. (both
laughing)
No! Not a chance! (laughing)
Anytime I get the chance, she would be Marge.
(laughing)
Did you also try out for any
other parts, before you tried out for Connor?
No, I didn't. There was really
nothing available for me. You know, what had
happened was, when they were casting for the Mini
Series, the first round of casting, I had been out
of town. I was in Los Angeles. So, I came back and I
worked as the audition reader for a lot of actors
who would come in. I got to know [director] Michael
Rymer and that's how I was offered the part of the
Armistice Officer, because at that point there
wasn't anything left for me in the Mini Series. I
was reading with all the other actors to fill in the
other roles, and when that role came available they
offered it to me. I hadn't auditioned for anything,
but I was a big fan of the show. I still am. I love
the show. I mean it's one of my favorite shows and I
can't really say that about a lot of TV right now.
It's really nice to be a part of a show you're a fan
of.
At the time as a reader, did
you read with any of the actors that are now in the
main cast? Or any of the actors that now have a part
in the series?
Somebody else asked that [as
well] and I'm trying to remember. It's kind of all a
blur. I can't really remember to be honest, if I
did. I know... I'm not sure if I read with Aaron
[Douglas] or not. I don't think I did. I know that
Aaron Douglas had read for Apollo at one point, but
I don't know. To be honest, I don't know who I read
with.
I heard from Michael Trucco
that he also initially read for the part of Apollo.
Yeah, he did. He did read for the
part of Apollo.
...but not you?
Not me. I didn't read for the
part of Apollo. Like I said, I was out of the loop
at that time when it was all happening. I think at
that point in my career, I think... You know, it
was, those were the Mohawk days when that was being
cast. I had the Mohawk and nobody saw me as
potentially military. (both laughing) I was the edgy
guy. I was doing crazy roles, like on Kingdom
Hospital and playing punk-rock guys, killers,
drug addicts and quirky guys. I don't think anybody
thought of me as being sci-fi friendly or as a
military role. Having said that, I feel, whenever I
refer to Battlestar Galactica as a "sci-fi
show", I feel like that limits the...
...it's more like drama as
well.
It's really beyond that. It's
such a great show. It's like 24, The West Wing
in space. It is sci-fi in that respect, but it's so
much broader than that. I always make sure I explain
that.

Ryan
Robbins as Charlie Connor in Battlestar Galactica
2003
Yeah, I know! You could have
kept your Mohawk, because Charlie Connor is actually
one of Samuel Anders' resistance fighters. It's not
really military.
Yeah, Charlie is a resistance
fighter...
That's not really military,
you could have kept your Mohawk.
No, that's true, but at that
point the Mohawk was already long gone by Season 3.
I have been over the Mohawk for quite a while. Who
knows? I could always find an excuse to bring it
back!
So Charlie Connor loses his
seven year old son Kevin during the temple raids on
New Caprica. Being a father yourself it must have
been horrible to imagine losing a son like that? Did
you use the thought of losing your own daughter as a
technique to help you act in the scenes?
A little bit. You kind of go with
what you know in those situations. Yeah, it was a
horrible thought to lose a child. It wasn't
particularly difficult to access that emotion,
thinking about what that would feel like. As a
parent you have that concern pretty constantly that
you want to protect your child at all times. Just
the feeling of what it feels like to fail your
children is horrible on any level. I mean, whenever
you feel like you've somehow failed your child. It's
the worst feeling in the world. Never mind the guilt
of losing your child and how much you blame
yourself, and consequently blame others. Originally
we were going to try to keep it pretty guarded and
close. We did a bunch of takes where Charlie Connor
wasn't emoting. He played it right, and he tried to
kind of keep it in, and keep it together. Then
Michael came over to me, Michael Rymer, and
whispered that I should let it go and let it all
out. We shot that take where I had the weeping
grimace face. (both laughing) I think it worked for
the scene. The scene where I tried to be so tough
and strong in the hangar deck. You see that's he's
really hurting and I think that makes Connor a more
interesting character when you see a little bit more
of his vulnerability.
That's true, because back on
the Galactica he joins the tribunal that sentences
and executes collaborators. He ends up pulling the
trigger so to speak and throws Jammer out the
airlock. Do you think your character had any second
thoughts during this or remorse afterwards?
I think, he feels... I think the
feeling he feels is that it quite justified his
actions, but I think he's the kind of guy that will
always... That kind of behavior isn't natural for
him. I think he's a very passionate guy. He's a man
of principles. I wonder if he would do it again. I
think he probably would do it again, because he
really believes Jammer was guilty and responsible
for his son's death. But I think the whole Gaeta
scenario maybe rocked him a little bit. At least
that's the way I play it. Because it's hard to go
from transitioning... You transition from
collaborators to the fun loving bar tender. You have
to have a reason for that. You have to have a reason
why things are now okay. I think he's a guy who
struggles with the loss every day. He's basically
trying to make the best out of situations, and tries
to move on, and maybe closes himself off from
everything that had happened in the past.
Which was more intense to
play? Was it more intense to play losing a son or
throwing Jammer out of an airlock?
The son. I think it was more
important to play the son, that relationship and the
loss, because I think that there needed to be a
disconnect between Connor and Jammer. I think Jammer
needed to look to me like evil. He needed someone to
blame. I think that Connor's feelings were that if
you want to collaborate with the Cylons, if you want
to sympathize with the Cylons, then you'll be
treated like a Cylon. I refuse to believe that you
could actually have feelings, because how could you
do that to people? I think that's how he had to look
at Jammer and Gaeta.

Ryan
Robbins as Charlie Connor in Battlestar Galactica
2003
You've also known Brad
Dryborough who plays Lt. Hoshi on the Battlestar
Galactica series for quite a long time. Can you
tell us a bit about the work you two did together?
Yeah, I've known Brad for a long,
long time. Brad's one of my best friends in the
world. We started a long time ago when a friend of
ours, who's in film school, was making movies. Brad
and I were getting our start acting. We started
doing student films together, and from that we
created a community with a few of us that did short
films together. We have a long history of making
independent films together. Short films, feature
films... Each film got better and better and got
more and more critically acclaimed. So we eventually
won Best Short contest at the Toronto International
Film Festival with this film called Man Feel
Pain, and from that we were awarded... I mean,
that was a big deal for us, we were awarded a sum of
money and the opportunity to make a feature. Which
we did, we made a feature together called The
Cabin Movie. We still talk all the time. I was
talking to him today about another project. I think
that's a relationship that will last a long, long
time, hopefully until we're long gone. I think we'll
constantly work together as much as possible. We
have a really great working relationship and a great
friendship, so I hope we can continue to do that.
You won a Leo for Man Feel
Pain. Can you tell us a bit about that role for
the people who don't know?
Sure, that role... First of all
that film was written by a writer called Kris
Elgstrand, who I'm sure Brad has talked to you
about, and who's written a lot of the projects we've
done together. I think he's absolutely brilliant.
He's one of the greatest writers out there, who will
continue to have more and more success. He wrote
this great part with Brad, I think a lot of it came
from some of Brad's ideas, about I guess the false
messiah concept. I play the role of a lovely tenant
of an apartment, who finds a guy in his own
apartment who had hammered his hand to a wall with a
nail, and my assumption is that he's going to be the
new messiah and save us all. Dark comedy ensues from
there. You try to tell a story like that, which is
not offensive, in a short period of time. It was a
lot of fun.

actor
Ryan Robbins and his mother at the Leo Awards
Okay.
It's worth seeing. I recommend
it. Good movie! (laughing)
You're married to actress
Rebecca Reichert. How did you two meet?
We met on a very short lived
television series called The Net. We were
friends for quite a while, and then a little time
later we finally ended up dating. I finally
convinced her to go out with me. (laughing) The rest
is history. We've been together and been married
just over five years. We have a beautiful daughter
Mila, she's three. Yeah, she's great. A lot of
people say that that kind of a relationship is tough
with two actors, but it's worked well for us. She
understands the process, and she understands what I
need to do, and the places I need to go. Yeah, she's
great. Those two, my wife and my daughter, are my
angels.
So you said you worked
together with her on The Net. Have you also worked
with her when you were in your relationship?
Yes! We worked on two other...
Two? No, three other independent projects. I can't
remember the names of them all. (both laughing)
Yeah, we worked together a couple of times. We also
have worked on... She writes, and she's also a great
sort of creative inspiration for me as well.
That's cool. Your three year
old daughter: does she ever watch mom and dad on
television?
Well, it's funny because I
haven't done a lot of work that she can watch. It's
all really heavy, or bloody, or action packed. It's
violent, or it's not something she needs to see her
daddy doing. She doesn't need to see her daddy
pretending being strung out on heroin. (both
laughing)
No.
I did do a television series
called Alice, I think. That was a comedy and
more geared towards the family audience. I did that
largely so my daughter had something that she could
watch and see me on. She sees me on TV from time to
time if there's a show on. She's with my mom, and my
mom is watching TV, and there's daddy, and she's
says: "There's daddy!" She knows dad is on
television, and she sees pictures of me around in
the newspaper or magazines. On the internet
sometimes if she's in the office, and I'm on the
internet, and there's a picture of me for something.
There's a great website that this girl Michelle did
for me, it's
RyanRobbinsFans.com and its awesome. Every
so often I go on there to check what I'm doing.
She's got more stuff on there than I have. She has
clips of shows that I haven't even seen. So I go
check those out from time to time. So when it's just
a clip from a show, I can show my daughter, I can go
online. If I know what clip it is, and I know it's
not violent or too scary for her. Then I can let her
watch it on the computer. That website has been
fantastic for me. It's great. I don't know how she
does it. She gets stuff, so I can just refer people:
"Oh yeah, if you haven't seen that show you should
go to that website to check it out!"
So how's the fandom thing
going for you?
It's been great! It's really
nice. I did my first convention back I think it was
in February.
Pegasus Two?
The Wolf Convention Pegasus Two.
To be honest, I was really surprised. I didn't know
I had that many fans. It was very flattering. It's
been fantastic. The guys... Some of the fans came
over to Vancouver for an event recently and so I
went out and met a whole bunch of people with Dan
Payne, my friend [writer] Damian Kindler, who I'm
doing a series called Sanctuary with. We went
and met a bunch of the fans and had dinner. They've
been wonderful, supportive. The biggest sort of
debate is whether or not I should have short hair or
long hair. That's about as harsh as anyone gets at
me. It's pretty lovely.
I heard at the Pegasus Two you
kept pacing up and down the stage and they jokingly
taped your feet to the floor.
Yeah, and you know what's funny?
I'm pacing right now while I'm talking to you.
Okay (laughing)
I'm a pacer when I talk. I don't
know what that is. I can't stand still. Yeah, I
paced. They asked me not to pace, so that they could
take pictures. I guess I kept pacing and eventually
two very lovely people came up and taped my feet to
the floor. That was really funny. Yeah... I'm
working on it. I'm new to the whole convention
thing. Standing up on the stage and talking to
hundreds of people, can make you a little bit
nervous and you never want to run out of things to
say, so I pace. (both laughing)
So would you like to do more
conventions?
Yeah, I'd do more conventions.
For sure. If people are interested in seeing me. I
don't really pursue them. If I get a call, I'd love
to go. To be honest I'm not really sure what the
process is or how to go about and do them, but I
occasionally get told about them, and asked if I'd
like to come. Yeah, I would love to do more
conventions, because they're really... I appreciate
the fans. I wouldn't have a job if they weren't
watching and they weren't supportive. They also,
more often than not, have really great, valid
opinions of your work on the show. They ask
questions that as an actor are very valuable,
because they are questions that I might not ask
myself that are really useful as far as performance,
or character, or plotline goes. They really care
about the shows and pay attention. They'll come up
with a question that I might not have the answer to,
and rather than tell them to go and ask the writers
- which sometimes I have to do - I'll actually
think about it and go home and try to figure out
that question, if I think it's a question that my
character should be able to answer. And it's fun.
It's just fun, man! It's so much fun to go to those
things and hang out. Everybody is just so happy and
so excited. It's a big party and you never need much
of an excuse to go to a fun party. (laughing)
That's true. So I want to talk
to you about some new projects. You star as Henry
Foss in the new web-based series Sanctuary.
I've visited the website (SanctuaryForAll.com)
and it looks like a whole new concept: film, game,
and internet combined in one. Can you tell us a bit
about the project and your part in it?
Well, you hit the nail on the
head there with the project, that's exactly what it
is. I play Henry Foss who is the technician, weapons
builder, basically go-to-guy of the Sanctuary. I'm
sort of the right or left hand to Helen Magnus
played by Amanda Tapping. My character's great-great
grandfather was her original weapons designer and my
character essentially grew up in the Sanctuary.
There's a lot of mystery surrounding ol' Henry Foss,
which is great. I really like that guy. You'll see
Henry in the second half... I think you'll first
meet me in the second half of the pilot episode,
hour two, which would make it webisode five maybe?
Four or five, I think.

Ryan
Robbins as Henry Foss in Sanctuary
They made six now I believe?
There's eight!
Okay.
There's eight 15 minutes, well
roughly 15 minute webisodes. They start going up on
the 14th of May and it's great. It's a great group
of people, the cast is exceptional. I've created a
great relationship with everyone at Stage 3 Media.
Damian Kindler, the show's creator, and I have
become good friends. We're actually developing
another project together that hopefully will follow
on the heels of Sanctuary. That's all I can
say. I wish I could tell you more. It's going to be
awesome.
So, any new project you can
talk about?
I have a film coming out, I think
at the end of the year, called Passengers
with... Oh, who's in it? David Morse is in it. It's
a vehicle for Anne Hathaway, so it's Anne's movie
and it's directed by Rodrigo Garcia, who's an
unbelievable director. He made this great film,
called Nine Lives, which I think everybody
should see, if you're a fan of movies. It's
absolutely brilliant. He directed a lot of episodes
of Six Feet Under, Carnivale... Clea DuVall
is in this movie and she's awesome. She's so great.
Love her! Patrick Wilson is in the movie as well, so
it's a really good cast. Chelah Horsdal, I don't
know if you know Chelah from Season 3 of
Battlestar Galactica (ed. note: Chelah Horsdal
starred as Didi Cassidy in the double episode
"Crossroads")?
Yeah.
She's in the film as well. She's
a good friend of mine. It's fun. We did it...
Battlestar Galactica we never worked in
together, but we did Alien vs. Predator 2
together, and we did this Passengers movie,
which was kind of fun. We just kind have had a run
of projects together this year. She was in AvP2
(Alien vs. Predator 2) a lot more than I was. I
just kind of had a cameo in it for a little while
which was super fun.
Can you tell me about the
connection between Passengers and Snakes
On A Plane?
(laughing) Yeah, they played a
little practical joke on me and we were... How did
you know about that? (both laughing) We were
shooting and there was a plane crash sequence, and
it was a close-up on me, and the oxygen mask come
crashing down, and I'm freaking out. The plane is
going to crash, and I reach over to grab an oxygen
mask, and there's a rubber snake hanging from the
ceiling with the oxygen masks. I grab the snake and
look at it and we're filming. I'm very confused and
I believe my words were something like: "What the
hell is a snake doing on a plane? Ah.... HaHa, I get
it! Snakes On A Plane. You guys are funny." I
haven't seen the movie Snakes On A Plane.
Obviously I got the joke, but if I had seen the
movie and probably would have thought about it and
have quoted Sam Jackson and it would have made a
funnier outtake. (laughing) I was so focused on
acting, that I was really confused. I couldn't
figure out what the hell the snake was doing on this
damn plane, but it was really... It was a joke, and
they got me, and it was really funny. It's always
flattering when you get played with on a film set
like that. It was meant to happen during a rehearsal
and they forgot. They said: "Do you want to rehearse
or just shoot?" and I was in the acting zone so I
just said: "Let's just shoot. Let's do it. Let's do
it." "Great, let's just shoot. Everyone is focused."
They had forgotten that they had planted the snake,
so it kind of threw everybody off when the snake
appeared. It was a good joke, and I still have to
get Rodrigo [Garcia] back for that. It's coming!
He's going to get it!
You also did another project,
called We're So Screwed. Can you tell us a
bit about that?
Yeah, that was a short film I did
with Lori Ann Triolo and Christine Lippa. With the
girls Sabrina [Karine] and Jessica [Brajoux]. I'd
like to call them the Frenchies. They are these
great filmmakers I met when I was doing a feature
film called Taming Tammie and they were
working on that film. They're actually fans of mine.
They're fans of Battlestar Galactica, Stargate
Atlantis, and they approached me and gave me the
script, asked if I'd be interested to be in this
short film. I said absolutely! It was really funny
and a really great idea, so we did that film
together. Now we're going to do another film that
we'll start shooting soon, called Smile of April.
It's a feature film. You can actually check it out,
it's on
SmileOfApril.com, I believe. They've got an
exceptional cast for that movie and it's a great
script, and it's a great story, so... Yeah, we'll be
doing a feature together, coming up pretty soon.

Ryan
Robbins as Jack in Smile of April
So what's your part in that?
I play the role of Jack, who is
sort of a... I think he's sort of misguided. He's
maybe a bit of a loner individual. There's a
relationship story between myself and a young girl.
I think we sort of end up helping each other,
discovering things about ourselves. I don't want to
say too much about the movie, because I think people
should just see it. It's going to be a really nice
movie to watch.
Ok. Coming back to Aaron
Douglas. I heard you lost out to Aaron Douglas at
the Bodog Celebrity Poker Event in December?
Oh man, he's just never going to
let that go, is he? (both laughing) Yeah, we played
the celebrity tournament and the top two finishers,
first and second place, qualified and are flown down
to Las Vegas and play at the World Series of Poker
2007. First place went to Jamie Gould, who was the
2006 World Series of Poker winner, so that kind of a
given that he was going to kick our butts. The
battle for second place was between myself and Aaron
and it got... The blinds were super high, and I kind
of got forced all-in by Jamie Gould. I had him beat!
I had him beat! He got a pair on the river that beat
me. So the last possible card he could have had to
beat me, he got. That put me out and put me in third
place and put Aaron Douglas in second place and on a
trip to Vegas to the World Series of Poker. But I'm
going! I'm going anyway. I'm going to go down to
support him and see how well he can do down there.
But I did win a really kick ass poker table...
...and a poker set, yes.
...and a bunch of swag, so... We
have poker parties at my house from time to time.
Yes, because I was going to
ask you... After Aaron won he said he would actually
take you with him and I was going to ask you if he's
going to keep his promise? He actually will then?
Well, that what he says. I keep
pointing out, that it's actually all on film, him
saying that he's taking me with him. I think what
that's become is a big group of us are going to go
down to Las Vegas for the World Series of Poker.
Just to support him, so it won't be just me. It will
be a whole bunch of us. That's the plan. We're going
to make a big party out of it and go down. We like
Vegas. We go to Vegas from time to time. Aaron and I
have been to Vegas a few times and it's been fun. I
think Brad Dryborough was going to come down with us
as well, because he'll be celebrating a birthday
down there. Dan Bacon will come. It will be fun.
We'll drag Michael Trucco down. It will be a good
time. We'll see if we can get Jamie Bamber to come
out. (both laughing)
He's got two daughters. He's
got twins now, so...
He's got three kids. Our
daughters are pretty close in age. His oldest
daughter is a little bit older than my daughter, and
his twins are just a little bit younger, so... When
they're in town, we try to get together as much as
we can and have the girls play together. We go to
birthday parties. Same with James Callis as well.
His kids are close in age to our kids, so... It's
kind of nice to have people that you work with that
you can have friendships with, and spend some family
time and do all those things together. Those guys
are great. I miss James and Jamie when they're not
in town. They're good friends.
Ok. So your wife is an
actress, you're an actor. What if your daughter
decides to become an actress as well? What would you
say?
Dear God! (both laughing) I think
it would be entirely up to her and I would never
push her into it. There's a lot of rejection in this
business. You really have to learn how to not take
things personally. I think that if she wants to be
an actor when she's older, I think that's great. If
she decides at a young age that she wants to pursue
it, I would be fine with that as long as she's
keeping her grades up and is still focussing on
getting an education in case she decides one day
that she doesn't want to do it anymore. I saw an
interview with Eddie Murphy once when I was really
young and he said... They asked him: "What was your
fallback plan? What would you do if comedy and
acting didn't work out?" and he said: "I didn't have
a fall back plan, because I felt that that would
give me something to fall back on." I thought:
"Brilliant! No fall back plan! That's what I'm going
to do!" (both laughing) Then I spent two or three
months living in my car in the middle of winter,
cursing Eddie Murphy with my frozen breath. "Damn
you, Eddie Murphy and your no fall back plan! This
sucks, I don't have a home!" So I never want my
daughter to go through that.
You ended up in a band then. I
hear you're still playing?
I play with different bands from
time to time. I try to stay creative as much as I
can and music is an important part of my life, so...
I have a little studio behind my house that I go and
jam in from time to time. Actually Brad [Dryborough]
and I write music together. I play with a fantastic
band called The Town Pants. They're a great sort of
Celtic inspired, drinking music band. I played on a
couple of their albums, and I play with them live
whenever I can. They're good friends of mine.
Chances are if there's a The Town Pants gig in your
area. You should definitely go see them. It quite
possible that Aaron Douglas might be there because
he's a great supporter of the band as well. We're
all good friends.
Okay, great! Because
actually...
You should check them out at
TheTownPants.com!
Yeah, okay, we will. Because
the other day I also spoke to Michael Trucco. He's
also a guitar player. He's a lead guitar player in a
band called Simpleworld. Do you know that?
I do. I do. I have the album!
Super talented.
Ok. I asked him if there were
actually cast members that were playing or in a band
or doing some music between takes or something. And
he said: "Actually, I don't know anybody that plays
an instrument." But actually you do...
I do. Yeah, well we've talked
about music and... I'm not in a band at the moment.
I'm not pursuing it, and I'm a horrible guitar
player. I'm a singer, mostly. So he's right in the
respect that no one else plays instruments. Although
I got a feeling that there are a few people that
play instruments, but I don't think that there's
anybody that actually has got a band happening right
now and recording. So, he's not entirely wrong. I'll
have to get a band together, just to compete with
Trucco. (both laughing) Actually, his band is
awesome. I listened to the album and I really like
those guys.
I've been trying to get him to
put some songs on his website, but it's not working.
Oh, no? He's a musician. He may
not be all that internet savvy.
No, he's got someone who's
doing that for him. He said he had a new album,
which was a lot better and I said: "I don't know,
because I never heard it!" and he said: "Yes, it is
better!" and I said: "You keep telling us it's
better, but you never put up the songs from that".
He's still promised to put up the songs, but it's
been a couple of months now and they're still not up
yet. We're waiting for those.
That's no good. I'll have to give
him a hard time. I'm going to phone him as soon as
I hang up. (both laughing)
Okay great. I'd like to thank
you for doing the interview.
Oh, thank you so much and I look
forward to reading it.