Don S. Davis: Difference between revisions
Line 67: | Line 67: | ||
*** [[Colonel]] [[George Hammond (There But For the Grace of God reality)|George Hammond]] ([[SG1]]: {{ep|There But For the Grace of God}}) | *** [[Colonel]] [[George Hammond (There But For the Grace of God reality)|George Hammond]] ([[SG1]]: {{ep|There But For the Grace of God}}) | ||
*** [[George Hammond (Point of View reality)|George Hammond]] (SG1: {{ep|Point of View}}) | *** [[George Hammond (Point of View reality)|George Hammond]] (SG1: {{ep|Point of View}}) | ||
** Major General [[George Hammond (The Road Not Taken reality)|George Hammond]] (SG1: {{ep|The Road Not Taken}}) | *** Major General [[George Hammond (The Road Not Taken reality)|George Hammond]] (SG1: {{ep|The Road Not Taken}}) | ||
** [[Alternate timeline]]s: | ** [[Alternate timeline]]s: | ||
*** [[Brigadier General]] [[George Hammond (Moebius reality)|George Hammond]] (SG1: {{ep|Moebius, Part 1}}, {{ep|Moebius, Part 2}}) | *** [[Brigadier General]] [[George Hammond (Moebius reality)|George Hammond]] (SG1: {{ep|Moebius, Part 1}}, {{ep|Moebius, Part 2}}) |
Revision as of 10:13, 17 April 2016
Don S. Davis | |
---|---|
Biographical information | |
Birth date |
Aurora, Missouri, USA | August 4, 1942
Death date |
June 29, 2008 Gibson, British Columbia, Canada | (aged 65)
Gender | |
Nationality | American |
Professional information | |
Years active | 1982—2008 |
Stargate-related information | |
Related series |
Stargate SG-1, Stargate Atlantis, Stargate: Continuum |
Occupation | Actor |
Character | George Hammond |
Don S. Davis, PhD (August 4, 1942 – June 29, 2008)[1][2] was an American character actor[3][4] best known for playing General George Hammond in the television series Stargate SG-1 (1997–2007),[1] and earlier for playing Major Garland Briggs on the television series Twin Peaks (1990–1991). He was also a theater professor,[1] painter[1][4] and United States Army captain.[2]
Biography
Davis was born and raised in Aurora, Missouri.[5] He earned a B.Sc. degree in theater and art from Southwest Missouri State College.[5] He said that "during the Viet Nam era" he "was with the 7th Infantry in Korea" and at another point was "a personnel and administration officer; I ran records branches."[6] He was a captain at Fort Leonard Wood by the time he left the U.S. Army, "and worked with General Officers, so I've been able to use that in Hammond and other characters."[6]
In 1970 he received a Master's Degree in Theatre from the Southern Illinois University Carbondale with a thesis entitled Design and Construction of Stage Settings for Black Comedy and The Two Executioners. He taught for several years before returning to SIU to complete a Ph.D. in Theatre, with a dissertation entitled The Evolution of Scenography in the Western Theater. He began working in the film industry in the 1980s, while teaching at the University of British Columbia.[1] In 1987 he stopped teaching in order to pursue acting full-time.[1]
He got the role of Major Briggs, he said, when "I was living in Vancouver and doing local work. But because of my accent in the '80s I couldn't play a Canadian in commercials. So someone suggested that I get an agent in Seattle. I did and was able to get commercial work and acting jobs there. I had a good resume. So when they were casting the Twin Peaks pilot my agent sent me out of the audition. I met [series creator] David [Lynch] and didn't actually read for him — we just visited. ... David liked me and started writing for me. He liked the chemistry I had with other players. I did three days on the pilot and then went on to the series. That was the luckiest break I could have had. There are at least a dozen people from that show who are lifelong friends because of that show. It was a life-changing experience."[6]
In the TV show MacGyver, Davis was the stunt/photography double for Dana Elcar. He was often mistaken for Elcar, and vice-versa. Davis did appear in two episodes of MacGyver, as a different character each time. His first appearance was as a cement truck driver in the episode "Blow Out", and his second appearance was as the poacher Wyatt Porter in "The Endangered". He also played Dana Scully's father in the series The X-Files. Canadian audiences may also be familiar with Davis thanks to his appearance in one of the famous Heritage Minutes, in which he played an arrogant American gold prospector who pulls a gun on Mountie Sam Steele.[7] He also played the role of the Racine Belles' manager in the movie A League of Their Own. He also had a guest-starring role in the pilot episode of the comedy-drama television series Psych, playing the character of Mr. McCallum.
Davis, who was living in Gibsons, Canada, died on June 29, 2008, of a heart attack.[1][2] The writers of Stargate Atlantis paid him homage by mentioning the death of his character in the same manner, and naming a starship after him, in the final episode of Stargate: Atlantis, which aired on January 9, 2009. He was again honored in October 2009, with the appearance of the starship Hammond in the pilot episode of Stargate Universe. Coincidentally, in episode 16 of season 4 of SG-1, "2010" (an episode set in the future which originally aired in January 2001), it is stated that Gen. Hammond had died of a heart attack. His ashes were scattered into the Pacific Ocean.
Involvement in the Stargate universe
- Actor
- Major General/Lieutenant General George Hammond (Stargate SG-1, see the list of appearances)
- Alternate realities:
- Colonel George Hammond (SG1: "There But For the Grace of God")
- George Hammond (SG1: "Point of View")
- Major General George Hammond (SG1: "The Road Not Taken")
- Alternate timelines:
- Brigadier General George Hammond (SG1: "Moebius", Part 1, "Moebius", Part 2)
- Lieutenant General George Hammond (Stargate: Continuum)
- Hallucination:
- Major General George Hammond, an hallucination from energy beings from M5S-224 (SGA: "Home")
Filmography
Click on the right "Expand" button to see all the filmography. To hide it, click on the right "Collapse" button.
Film and Television | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Title | Function | Role | Notes |
Notes
- Following his death, Stargate Atlantis writers named the last Daedalus-class ship, intially named Phoenix, after him as an hommage. This 304 is seen in Stargate Universe, commanded by Colonel Samantha Carter.
External links
- Don S. Davis at the Internet Movie Database
- Don S. Davis on Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Skelton, Chad (2008-06-30). "Actor Don S. Davis dies in Gibsons". The Vancouver Sun. Archived from the original on July 3, 2008.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 "Don S. Davis: 1942–2008". GateWorld. 2008-06-30.
- ↑ "Don S. Davis Profile". IGN.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 "Don S. Davis - 1948–2008". Zap2it. 2008-07-04.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Don Davis Biography
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 "Don S. Davis". (chat transcript), Sci Fi Channel. October 10, 2002. Archived from the original on August 11, 2003.
- ↑ "Heritage Minute featuring Don S. Davis". youtube.com.
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Don S. Davis . The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Semantic Stargate Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0). |