These days she
is married to Jack Ryan, an investment banker from Chicago (sorry guys)
and they have a son named Alex who will be four in '98. Her
husband doesn't want to move to Los Angeles since all of his clients are
in the Windy City, so she flies back home when she can and has her mother
bring Alex to the set as often as possible.
Although an accomplished actress, Ryan considers her greatest role to be
that of mother to Alex. "As a mom, I'm more patient and feel more complete,"
she says. "Nobody could have convinced me while I was pregnant of how magical
it would be to be a mother." A world-class commuter, Ryan usually spends
weekends flying from her home in Los Angeles' San Fernando Valley back
to Wilmette to reunite with her husband which she has done for about eight
years. In her spare time, she enjoys snow skiing as well as cooking and
baking, "I make some mean pies!" Ryan states proudly.
Jeri is naturally 5' 8" and at 6' in her Borg-heels, she is more than statuesque.
TV Guide referred to her "whiplash-inducing presence." Syndicated columnist
Ron Miller said, "One gets the impression she's going to shiver the timbers
of the Voyager males."
Her character's name is Seven of Nine which
is short for Seven of Nine Tertiary Adjunct of Unimatrix Zero-One, or something
like that," says Ryan. "We've streamlined it to Seven, which isn't so bad."
Voyager executive producer Rick Berman described Seven as "a sensual creature
neither fully Borg nor fully human." She's dressed to look
like an extraterrestrial version of Catwoman, encased in an ultratight
catsuit, bearing a few remaining Borg markings on her face and hands. Co-star
Ethan Phillips says those tight costumes make working with Ryan a little
"complicated." Ryan says, "For the first costume, if I would
do anything other than have my head straight ahead, it cut off my carotid
artery. It was so tight that I passed out four times," says Ryan, interviewed
on the Voyager set in a new costume that she says is looser but still takes
an hour to climb into.
The old suit forced her to lie down between scenes to regain her composure. But she didn't complain. "That was my nice Midwestern girl upbringing," she says. "They would bring nurses to the set with oxygen, and I wouldn't say anything. But after the fourth time passing out, I spoke up." Producers quickly refitted the suit.
But the new costume (pictured at right) has problems of its own. "Forget
vanity,
throw vanity to the wind! And you can forget
anything about privacy, because it ain't
gonna happen. Anytime I have to go to the
bathroom, everybody has to know about it.
It's announced over the P.A. system, because
production stops for a half-hour. 'We
can't roll a shot. Jeri's not here.' 'Why
not, where's Jeri?' 'Jeri has to go 10-100.' It's just
a whole procedure."
And now to confuse matters even more there is a third costume which
premiered in "The Raven." This latest encarnation of the catsuit seems
to be
around for awhile.
Prior to Trek, she's appeared in episodes of "Melrose Place," "The
Flash," "Time Trax," "Matlock," and "Murder,
She Wrote" as well as several TV movies and the unreleased independent
feature, "The Last Man." " 'The Last Man' is about the last three people
on Earth, and I'm the last woman," says Ryan. "I know it sounds
like sci-fi, but it's really not. I hope they get the film released. It's
a small, but very
good film."
She was also in the final seven episodes of "Dark Skies." Looking
back
on "Dark Skies," Ryan notes that she liked the people and the premise,
but that
NBC had given up on the series by the time she arrived on the scene.
" 'Dark
Skies' had a lot of potential," Ryan says. "The show was just finding its
footing
when it got canceled. "I did a complete 180," says Jeri Ryan, "I was fighting
the collective, the (alien) Hive on 'Dark Skies.' Now I'm part of the collective,
the Borg. It's very funny." On those shows, she was billed as Jeri Lynn
Ryan. A new manager hired before her Voyager job convinced her to drop
the "Lynn." "He didn't think it would sound like a name that
would grow with me," Ryan says. "He didn't see me at 44 years old as Jeri
Lynn. "Personally, I miss the Lynn. I've been Jeri Lynn all my life, and
my husband always calls me Lynn, which causes confusion around the set."
To help Ryan achieve Borg perfection, the makeup department made a plaster cast of her face, a 45-minute process that involved breathing through two straws pushed up into her nose. That was followed by a four-hour cast of her entire body. "You have to suffer for art," she quips. But she has no problem with being sold as the new sex symbol of Voyager. "There are worse things you could be called than 'whiplash-inducing,' " she says. "But as long as the character is intelligently written and gets challenging stories for me to play, I'm fine with it . . . as long as I can breathe."