An image of Jupiter flickered onto the cinema screen. A few seconds later, came a voice, solemn yet reassuringly familiar. “Will we leave our home on Earth for other worlds?” asked the voice. “The distances are vast. The voyage hazardous...”
Sitting in the audience at the IMAX in Los Angeles was office temp and struggling writer David Howard. It was 1994, and Howard was in attendance to see a short film about the African Serengeti as research for a play he was working on. But it was the trailer for Americans in Space, a documentary about the US Space Program, that caught his attention. “I said to myself, ‘I know that voice...’ and tried to place it,” Howard recalls. “Then I realized, ‘Oh, it’s Leonard Nimoy.’ It made me think about how hopelessly typecast actors like that can be. Even when they don’t appear on camera! It struck me as kind of funny and tragic in a way. I just started exploring what it must be like to be trapped in that sort of situation.”
After mulling the idea over for a few days, Howard sat down to begin a script for a movie. The script was Captain Starshine. Five years later, it had undergone a metamorphosis to become Galaxy Quest.
Strange New WorldsLike many Americans, Howard had grown up watching Star Trek in syndication as a kid in Tucson, Arizona. “It was on dinnertime every night, and my sister and I would watch it over and over again,” he remembers. “I loved the show, though I like to describe myself as a Trekkie-once-removed because there are others – like my sister – who were into it more than I was.”
When Howard was 16, Gene Roddenberry came to speak at a local science fiction convention. “I remember Roddenberry telling us how much the situation had changed since Star Trek had been cancelled. He had gone back to Paramount a number of times to try and get something new happening for several years, and was always shut down. But by the time he spoke to us, the shoe was on the other foot. Paramount was coming to him to develop new Star Trek programming. What was most exciting was the feeling that Star Trek was far from dead, and there were many more strange new worlds yet to explore. Thinking back, that was the beginning right there of this devotion to the world.”
Howard’s memories of Star Trek – and the show’s cast – fed into his Captain Starshine script. “It was about a guy hopelessly mired in the role of being this sci-fi hero,” he says. “The main character wanted to be a serious actor, and the script began with him doing a reading for Mark Antony in Julius Caesar. It cut to the director and stage manager watching him. The stage manager goes, ‘He’s really good.’ And the director says, ‘He is. Are we going to cast him?’ The stage manager replies, ‘Are you kidding? He’s Captain Starshine.’”
Howard’s initial notion centered on a TV star, Richard Skylar, who gradually begins to embrace a role he has long viewed as a millstone around his neck. There was plenty of potential for a quirky character piece. Yet it became something far more high-concept when Howard hit upon the idea of aliens showing up at a convention that Captain Starshine is attending and beaming him into space – without him even realizing what’s happening. “From there, it kindof wrote itself,” Howard says.
Over the next eight months, Howard hammered out the first draft of his script, furiously writing while waiting for the phone to ring in his various temp positions. While the concept of Captain Starshine would carry over into Galaxy Quest, there were some fundamental differences in Howard’s draft – not least in its antagonist. “The ‘second banana’ guy in my script – the equivalent to Spock or the Alexander Dane character – has his own little sci-fi franchise, a little like Walter Koenig does. He’s written all these novels and made a lot of money out of it, which he has poured into trying to find a way to connect with other dimensions. He opens up a rift and goes through to this other planet. But he’s like this snake in the Garden of Eden. Everyone is wide-eyed and innocent on this planet, and he becomes a Ming the Merciless-type usurper who takes over. Then these spies hear about how he hates this Captain Starshine character, which is why they go and find him. My script felt a little more Flash Gordon. But as a friend of mine said, ‘Your story is really different. But it’s also really the same.’”
Copyright © 2021 by TM Paramount Pictures. © 2021 DW Studios, LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.