Kelso Grad Connor
Trinneer on Board for 'Star Trek' Prequel's Maiden Moyage
Article By Leslie Slape
The Daily News
After 35 years,
nine movies and four different television series, "Star Trek" has
embarked on a new journey --- and a Kelso High graduate is along for the ride.
Connor Trinneer plays the role of
Commander Charles "Trip" Tucker III on the UPN television series
"Enterprise," which premiered last night on cable Channel 12.
"He's a good ol' boy smart-ass,"
Trinneer said of his character, the chief engineer on the first ship to reach
Warp 5. "He's the one who'll call a spade a spade."
Set in the 22nd century,
"Enterprise" takes Tucker and his shipmates on humanity's first
journey into deep space, a century before the timeline of the original
"Star Trek" series.
"It's an awesome experience as an
actor, to be able to learn and create at the same time," Trinneer said.
"It's all new, we're a prequel, nothing to base it off of but our own human
experience."
In the first episode, a Klingon
crash-lands on Earth and must be returned to his home world before he dies. To
honor his request, Starfleet decides to launch the Enterprise several weeks
ahead of schedule, against the advice of the Vulcans.
Trinneer, who saw the premiere earlier
this week, said it's a good show.
"I think people will like this,"
he said. "I'm extremely critical of myself and what I see, and I like it a
lot. It's fun, it's irreverent. It's nice to be able to see that what I thought
was going on in my head and what I was trying to achieve, it worked out."
Trinneer's parents, Michael and Judith
Trinneer of Longview, watched Wednesday's premiere at the Kelso Theater Pub
because they don't have cable television.
Michael Trinneer said he's very proud of
his son, who has worked steadily as an actor but never landed a prime-time
series until now.
"He's put in years of hard work. He
went every day to auditions, pounding the pavement all the time," the elder
Trinneer said. "He was ecstatic when he got the job. He called me and said,
'Guess what, Dad,' with this little-boy chuckle in his voice. 'I'm in my trailer
and in my bathrobe and I'm going to go to work really soon.' "
The hiring came after five auditions and 3
1/2 weeks of waiting in what Trinneer called "the most grueling process
I've been through."
"They had never met me before,"
he said. "Once they saw me, they wanted to make damn sure they'd got the
right guy. In a word, it was a bitch."
But everything since the audition earlier
this year has been fun, he said, and his cast mates are "great."
"We're working together all the time,
every day," he said. "You get to know each other and you get to be
around each other all the time. We've begun to develop relationships. That's
great. How often do you get to know somebody really well, the good and the bad
--- how often does that happen?"
The cast shot the pilot in mid-May and are
shooting episode 10 this week at Paramount Studios in Hollywood.
The episode that he's getting the most
questions about is the one that takes Trinneer's character where no man has gone
before: He will be impregnated by an alien.
"All I can tell you is, I really
think it's going to be a lot of fun to watch because it's just funny," he
said. "No issues to deal with. The pregnancy thing happens --- all I can
say is it's quite amusing. I really went for 'You're a woman, you're pregnant,
and you're emotional.' "
It's scheduled to air Oct. 17.
While growing up in Kelso, Trinneer was an
athlete, not an actor.
As a wide receiver for the Kelso Hilanders,
Trinneer led the Scots in receptions and interceptions during the 1986 season,
when Kelso made the AAA semifinals. The only theater exposure he had at Kelso
High was a classroom reading of "Our Town."
After graduating in 1987, he attended
Pacific Lutheran University on a football scholarship. He came to realize he
didn't want to continue playing football, but didn't know what he was going to
do instead.
In his junior year, a friend suggested he
audition for "A Doll's House."
"I don't know what it was, but
something happened," he said of the sensation that came over him at the
audition. "I walked out of there and screamed --- I knew what I was going
to do for the rest of my life! And I didn't know what the hell I was
doing."
Trinneer did as many plays as he could at
PLU before graduating in 1992. He then earned a master's of fine arts degree in
acting and directing from the University of Missouri at Kansas City in 1995.
"Then I went to New York, did a lot
of theater and commercials and did a soap there," he said. He performed
off-Broadway, in the Utah Shakespeare Festival and in Boston. He appeared in
"Far East" at Lincoln Center and reprised his stage role in a PBS film
adaptation.
Trinneer now lives in Los Angeles, where
he became active in the Circle X Theater Company and guest-starred in several
television series. But that Holy Grail of actors --- a steady job in a
prime-time series --- eluded him until now.
"It's what you shoot for," he
said. "There's a gazillion of us out here. It's thrilling to get a show,
and on top of that getting a show that has some kind of guarantee of getting on
the air."
The original "Star Trek"
series ran three years and the three spinoffs ran seven years each.
"Enterprise" cast members hope their show runs seven years as well.
"If it works out that way, I have no
problem with it," Trinneer said.
Before getting the job, "I was
comfortable with the knowledge that I may never own a house as an actor,"
he said. "Financial stability may never be part of my life. I was fine with
that. That's different now."
But despite the thrill, he keeps himself
grounded.
"All I'm really doing is a job. I'm
an actor," he said. "I got a fantastic gig with the great fortune of
having the opportunity to do it day in and day out as opposed to a commercial
that goes for 11 days. I get the opportunity and the luxury to open up my
toolbox and pull out some of the tools that I've learned."
One of those tools might be directing, he
hopes. Several members of other "Trek" casts have directed episodes of
their own series and others.
"Oh god yeah, to have the opportunity
to have that put in front of you and work with people that you know --- they're
very open to that," he said.
Unfortunately one of the tradeoffs
of success --- especially in a "Trek" franchise --- is loss of
anonymity. Trinneer said he recently typed his name in an Internet search engine
and got 800 hits. He said there's no way he can feel ready for the fan
onslaught.
"Of course not, there's no way to get
my mind around it," he said. "I don't know what to expect. I'm a
really private person. I don't want to lose my private time completely. I will
keep ahold of that. Everything in moderation. There's going to be a balance to
this, and things will start to settle."
And have veterans of the other shows
offered advice?
"They've basically said, 'You know
what? Enjoy the ride,' " he said. "So I'm just enjoying the
ride."
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