I have no specific ideas in mind of what I will or won't do; it's all about the roles.
I get to pretend I'm flying into space, and hang out with my friends. That's what I do for a living.
I have a lot of fun with guns, especially the M-16, but my favourite is my little .22. It fits nicely in the palm of your hand. I do limit myself to blanks.
I started by looking everything up in a Star Trek dictionary so I knew what I was talking about, but you can't do that because they talk in circles, and half of it doesn't make sense, so you'll just end up driving yourself more insane.
I was always a fan of horror films as a kid.
I was raised all over. Kansas, Hawaii, Georgia, Texas and Kentucky, by the time I was 11.
I would defy people to find a more beautifully developed character than Seven of Nine.
I had never seen much of Star Trek, or any other science fiction, before I was cast. But Seven's wonderful.
I think the more stressful our times get, the more we look for fantasy escapes.
My background has been very helpful for this experience. But everyone was so accommodating because they knew it's not the most comfortable position to be the new kid.
This was truly guerilla filmmaking. We shot out in the middle of nowhere in a place called Delta Flats, where basically every day was some new minor catastrophe.
They said that Seven was a former Borg who had been human and had been assimilated. She was regaining her humanity. I had no interest in this character.
There is a very large chunk of our population who firmly believe in extraterrestrials.
The whole sex symbol or babe thing doesn't bother me.
The costume that I wear on the show is a little snug and doesn't leave a whole lot to the imagination. I don't have a problem with it because of the way this character's been written.