Jonathan Frakes
Jonathan Frakes | |
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Frakes at HawaiiCon, September 18, 2016 | |
Born |
Jonathan Scott Frakes August 19, 1952 Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Occupation | Actor, author, director |
Years active | 1978–present |
Known for | William T. Riker |
Spouse(s) | Genie Francis (m. 1988) |
Children | 2 |
Jonathan Scott Frakes (born August 19, 1952) is an American actor, author, and director. Frakes is best known for his portrayal of Commander William T. Riker in the television series Star Trek: The Next Generation and subsequent films. Frakes also hosted the television series Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction, challenging viewers to discern his stories of fact-based phenomena and fabricated tales. In June 2011, Frakes narrated the History Channel documentary Lee and Grant. He was also the voice actor of David Xanatos in the Disney television series Gargoyles.
Frakes directed and also starred in Star Trek: First Contact as well as Star Trek: Insurrection. He is also the author of a novel called The Abductors: Conspiracy.[1]
Frakes married actress Genie Francis, who portrayed Laura Spencer on General Hospital, in 1988.
Personal life
Frakes was born in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, the son of Doris J. (née Yingling) and Dr. James R. Frakes. He is of mostly German, and some English, descent.[2] He grew up in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. A 1970 graduate of Bethlehem's Liberty High School, he ran track and played with the Liberty High School Grenadier Band.[3] Frakes received a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theater Arts at Penn State University in the early 1970s, where he was a member of the Thespians.
His father was a critic for the New York Times Book Review, a book editor, and professor of English literature at Lehigh University from 1958–2001, where he was the Edmund W. Fairchild Professor in American Studies. James R. Frakes died in early 2002.[4] Frakes had a younger brother, Daniel, who died in 1997 from pancreatic cancer.[5]
Frakes first met actress Genie Francis on the set of the television soap opera Bare Essence, and again while filming the mini-series North and South. They began dating in 1985, became engaged in 1986, and married on May 28, 1988. They have two children.
Career
For a time in the 1970s, Frakes worked for Marvel Comics, appearing at conventions in costume as Captain America.[6] Frakes moved to New York City and became a member of the Impossible Ragtime Theater. In that company, Frakes did his first off-Broadway acting in Eugene O'Neill's The Hairy Ape directed by George Ferencz. His first Broadway appearance was in Shenandoah. At the same time, he landed a role in the NBC soap opera The Doctors.[7] When his character was dismissed from the soap, Frakes moved to Los Angeles, California and played guest spots in many of the top television series of the 1970s and 1980s, including The Waltons, Eight Is Enough, The Dukes of Hazzard, Matlock and Steven Bochco's Hill Street Blues.
He played the part of Charles Lindbergh in a 1983 episode of Voyagers! titled "An Arrow Pointing East". In 1983, he had a role in the short-lived NBC prime time soap opera Bare Essence (which also starred his future wife Genie Francis), and a supporting role in the equally short-lived primetime soap Paper Dolls in 1984.[7] He also had recurring roles in Falcon Crest[7] and the miniseries North and South before signing for the role of Commander William T. Riker on Star Trek: The Next Generation.[8] Frakes appeared in the 1986 miniseries Dream West.
He has done animation voice acting, most notably voicing the recurring role of David Xanatos in the animated series Gargoyles, and he provided the voice of his own head in a jar in the Futurama episode "Where No Fan Has Gone Before". He had a small, uncredited role in the 1994 movie Camp Nowhere. He also reprised his role of Riker for a Next Generation cutaway on an episode of Family Guy that also featured his co-stars Patrick Stewart and Michael Dorn as their respective roles of Picard and Worf. Later, he again played himself on another Family Guy episode, where all seven main TNG actors (plus Denise Crosby and Wil Wheaton) made voice appearances. He is also one of six Star Trek actors (the other actors being Kate Mulgrew, Michael Dorn, George Takei, Avery Brooks and Majel Barrett) to lend their voices to the video game Star Trek: Captain's Chair, reprising his role as Commander William T. Riker when users visit the Enterprise-D bridge featured in the game.
Frakes is one of only two Star Trek regulars to appear on four different Star Trek series (Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Star Trek: Voyager and Star Trek: Enterprise). (The only other regular to match or exceed that number is Majel Barrett-Roddenberry who appeared in all five television series.) He has also directed episodes in three of them (TNG, DS9 and VOY) and was a popular and innovative director on the Star Trek set, often finding completely new ways to shoot the show's familiar sets. His directing career has included the films Star Trek: First Contact and Star Trek: Insurrection. Additionally, Frakes was an executive producer for the WB series Roswell, directed several episodes, and guest-starred in three episodes. His relationship with Star Trek is made light of in the episode "Secrets and Lies", in which the alien character Max auditions for a guest role as an alien for Star Trek: Enterprise.
Frakes appeared on the 1994 Phish album Hoist, playing trombone on the track titled "Riker's Mailbox". Frakes would occasionally perform on the trombone during his tenure as Commander Riker, drawing on his college marching band experience. He was also a member of "The Sunspots", a vocal backup group of Star Trek cast members that appeared on Brent Spiner's 1991 album Ol' Yellow Eyes Is Back.
Frakes hosted The Paranormal Borderline, a television series on UPN, which dealt with the paranormal and mysterious happenings and creatures. In one episode, Frakes presented an interview of reporter Yolanda Gaskins with veteran astronaut Gordon Cooper, where they discussed the possibility of aliens having visited the Earth in the past.[9][10] Overall, the show was criticized and pulled off the air after it was discovered that footage showing a yeti from the Himalayas was purposely faked by the show and its producers. The "Snowwalker" footage, as it is known, purportedly shows a yeti crossing through a valley in the Himalayas, walking in front of a Belgian couple who are traversing the area on skis. The network finally admitted the hoax, and Frakes distanced himself from the show. He hosted Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction, which also dealt with the paranormal world.
Frakes and Francis appeared together in Lois & Clark in the episode "Don't Tug on Superman's Cape" as a creepily too-good-to-be-true couple. He narrated the History Channel's That's Impossible.
Frakes has directed episodes of Roswell, Leverage,[11] Castle, NCIS: Los Angeles, Burn Notice, Falling Skies and most recently Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., Switched at Birth, Hit the Floor, and The Librarians.
Frakes works with the Workshops, the Waterfall Arts Center, and the Saltwater Film Society, all located in Maine, where he teaches classes on film direction. He and Francis owned a home furnishings store in Belfast, Maine, called The Cherished Home, which closed in August 2012 due to Francis being too busy with her acting to spend adequate time at the store.[12]
Frakes was also the voice of Finn the Human's adult version in the episodes "Puhoy" and "Dungeon Train" on Adventure Time.
Selected acting filmography
Film | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
1994 | Camp Nowhere | Bob Spiegel | |
1994 | Star Trek Generations | Commander William T. Riker | |
1996 | Star Trek: First Contact | Commander William T. Riker | Nominated-Blockbuster Entertainment Award for Best Supporting Actor Nominated-Saturn Award for Best Director |
1998 | Star Trek: Insurrection | Commander William T. Riker | |
2002 | Star Trek: Nemesis | Captain/Commander William T. Riker | |
2002 | Clockstoppers | Janitor | uncredited |
2004 | Thunderbirds | Policeman | uncredited |
2011 | The Captains | Himself/Commander William T. Riker | |
Television | |||
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
1978 | Charlie's Angels | Brad | Episode: "Angel on My Miind" |
1978 | Fantasy Island | Kirk Wendover | Episode: "The War Games/Queen of the Boston Bruisers" |
1979 | The Waltons | Ashley Longworth Jr. | Episode: "The Lost Sheep" and "The Legacy" |
Eight Is Enough | Chapper | Episode: "Separate Ways" | |
The White Shadow | uncredited as Basketball Player | Episode: "One of the Boys" | |
1980 | Beulah Land | Adam Davis | |
The Night the City Screamed | Richard Hawkins | ||
1981 | The Dukes of Hazzard | Jamie Lee Hogg | Episode: "Mrs. Daisy Hogg" in a 4th Season episode entitled |
Harper Valley | Clutch Breath | Episode: "Low Noon" | |
1982 | Hart to Hart | Adam Blake | Episode: "Harts and Palms" |
Hill Street Blues | Drug dealer | Episode: "Of Mouse and Man" | |
Quincy, M.E. | Leon Bohannon | Episode: "The Face of Fear" | |
Quincy, M.E. | Surgeon | Episode: "Ghost of a Chance" | |
Voyagers! | Charles Lindbergh | Episode: "An Arrow Pointing East" | |
1983 | Bare Essence | Marcus Marshall | Several episodes. |
1984 | Highway to Heaven | Arthur Krock, Jr. | Episode: "A Devine Madness" |
Five Mile Creek | Adam Scott | Episode: "Gold Fever" | |
The Fall Guy | Connors | Episode: "Always Say Always" | |
1985 | The New Twilight Zone | Single Guy | Episode: "But Can She Type?" |
North and South | Stanley Hazard | ||
1986 | Matlock | D.A. Park | Episode: "The Angel" |
1987–1994 | Star Trek: The Next Generation | Commander William T. Riker/Lt. Thomas Riker | |
1988 | Reading Rainbow | Himself | Episode: "The Bionic Bunny Show" |
1994 | Wings | Gavin Rutledge | Episode: "All's Fare" |
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine | Lt. Thomas Riker | Episode: "Defiant" | |
1994–1996 | Gargoyles | David Xanatos, Coyote (voice) | |
1995 | Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman | Tim Lake | Episode: "Don't Tug on Superman's Cape" |
Cybill | Episode: "Starting on the Wrong Foot" | ||
1996 | Star Trek: Voyager | Commander William T. Riker | Episode: "Death Wish" |
1998–2002 | Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction? | Himself (presenter) | 45 episodes |
1999 | Roswell | Himself | Episode: "The Convention" |
2000 | 3rd Rock from the Sun | Larry McMichael | Episode: "Gwen, Larry, Dick and Mary" |
2000 | Ghosts: Caught on Tape | Himself (narrator) | |
2002 | Futurama | Himself (voice) | Episode: Where No Fan Has Gone Before |
2005 | Star Trek: Enterprise | Commander William T. Riker | Episode: "These Are the Voyages..." |
Family Guy | Commander William T. Riker (voice) | Episode: Peter's Got Woods | |
2009 | Family Guy | Himself (voice) | Episode: Not All Dogs Go to Heaven |
2009 | Leverage | uncredited as patient in neck brace in season one episode | Episode: The Snow Job |
2010 | Criminal Minds | Dr. Arthur Malcolm | Episode: "The Uncanny Valley" |
NCIS: Los Angeles | Navy Commander Dr. Stanfill | Episode: "Disorder" | |
2011 | The Super Hero Squad Show | High Evolutionary (voice only) | Episode: The Devil Dinosaur You Say! |
2012 | Leverage | Uncredited man in background at Consumer Products Safety Commission | Episode: "The Toy Job" |
2013 | Adventure Time | Adult Finn | Episode: "Puhoy" and "Dungeon Train" |
2014 | Hit The Floor | ||
2016 | Guardians of the Galaxy | J'Son | |
2016 | Future-Worm! | Steak Starbolt |
Directing filmography
Feature films
- Star Trek: Klingon (1996) – interactive movie
- Star Trek: First Contact (1996)
- Star Trek: Insurrection (1998)
- Clockstoppers (2002)
- Thunderbirds (2004)
- The Librarian: Return to King Solomon's Mines (2006)
- The Librarian: Curse of the Judas Chalice (2008)
Television
- Star Trek: The Next Generation
- 3.16 - The Offspring (1990)
- 4.07 - Reunion (1990)
- 4.21 - The Drumhead (1991)
- 5.18 - Cause and Effect (1992)
- 6.09 - The Quality of Life (1992)
- 6.20 - The Chase (1993)
- 7.08 - Attached (1993)
- 7.14 - Sub Rosa (1994)
- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
- 3.02 - The Search, Part II (1994)
- 3.08 - Meridian (1994)
- 3.13 - Past Tense, Part II (1995)
- Star Trek: Voyager
- 2.03 - Projections (1995)
- 2.07 - Parturition (1995)
- 2.13 - Prototype (1996)
- Diagnosis Murder
- 3.18 - Left-Handed Murder (1996)
- Roswell
- 1.07 - River Dog (1999)
- 1.19 - Four Square (2000)
- 1.21 - The White Room (2000)
- 3.04 - Secrets and Lies (2001)
- 3.08 - Behind the Music (2001)
- The Twilight Zone
- The Lineman (2002)
- Masters of Science Fiction
- The Discarded (2007)
- Leverage
- 1.07 - The Wedding Job (2009)
- 1.11 - The Juror #6 Job (2009)
- 2.04 - The Fairy Godparents Job (2009)
- 2.11 - The Bottle Job (2010)
- 3.02 - The Reunion Job (2010)
- 3.06 - The Studio Job (2010)
- 3.13 - The Morning After Job (2010)
- 4.09 - The Queen's Gambit Job (2011)
- 4.12 - The Office Job (2011)
- 4.15 - The Lonely Hearts Job (2011)
- 5.03 - The First Contact Job (2012)
- 5.05 - The Gimme a K Street Job (2012)
- Dollhouse
- 2.04 - Belonging (2009)
- Castle
- 2.08 - Kill the Messenger (2009)
- 5.06 - The Final Frontier (2012)
- 5.20 - The Fast and the Furriest (2013)
- NCIS: Los Angeles
- 1.14 - LD50 (2010)
- 2.11 - Disorder (2010)
- 3.16 - Blye, K. (2012)
- 4.10 - Free Ride (2012)
- 5.02 - Impact (2013)
- V
- 1.07 - John May (2010)
- Persons Unknown
- 1.05 - Incoming (2010)
- 1.10 - Seven Sacrifices (2010)
- 1.11 - And Then There Was One (2010)
- The Good Guys
- 1.09 - Don't Taze Me, Bro (2010)
- 1.16 - Silence of the Dan (2010)
- The Glades
- 1.08 - Marriage Is Murder (2010)
- 2.04 - Moonlighting (2011)
- 4.02 - Shot Girls (2013)
- Burn Notice
- 4.14 - Hot Property (2010)
- 5.06 - Enemy Of My Enemy (2011)
- 5.17 - Acceptable Loss (2011)
- 6.09 - Official Business (2012)
- 7.06 - All or Nothing (2013)
- Bar Karma
- 1.09 - Three Times a Lady (2011)
- Falling Skies
- 3.09 - Journey to Xilbalba (2013)
- 4.06 - Door Number Three (2014)
- 5.06 - Respite (2015)
- King & Maxwell
- 1.08 - Job Security (2013)
- Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
- 1.08 - The Well (2013)
- Switched at Birth
- 3.06 - The Scream (2014)
- 4.08 - Art Like Love is Dedication (2015)
- Hit the Floor
- 2.03 - Behind the Back (2014)
- 2.04 - Full-Court Press (2014)
- The Librarians
- 1.04 - And Santa's Midnight Run (2014)
- 1.06 - And the Fables of Doom (2015)
- 1.10 - And the Loom of Fate (2015)
References
- ↑ Jonathan Frakes; Dean Wesley Smith (1996). The Abductors: Conspiracy. New York: Tor. ISBN 978-0-312-86208-4.
- ↑ "1". Freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved October 10, 2012.
- ↑ Sylvia Lawler (September 25, 1988). "Jonathan Frakes's career beams up Bethlehem actor scores as 'Star Trek' commander". Allentown, PA: The Morning Call. pp. T.01.
- ↑ "James R. Frakes". Allentown, Pennsylvania: The Morning Call. March 15, 2002. pp. B.10.
- ↑ "Daniel M. Frakes". Allentown, Pennsylvania: The Morning Call. May 19, 1997. p. A09.
- ↑ Brian Cronin (2006-07-04). "Comic Book Urban Legends Revealed #58". Comics Should Be Good!.
- 1 2 3 Nemecek, Larry (1992). "Rebirth". In Stern, Dave. The Star Trek The Next Generation Companion. 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020: Pocket Books. p. 18. ISBN 0-671-79460-4.
- ↑ Sylvia Lawler (May 5, 1986). "Making history: "North and South's" Jonathan Frakes is crafting his future– History yields a good part for Jonathan Frakes". Allentown, PA: The Morning Call. pp. D.01.
- ↑ Video on YouTube
- ↑ http://www.qtm.net/~geibdan/coop.html UFO Folklore Center – Transcript of Interview
- ↑ Turner Network. "Leverage Season 3 Episode Synopses" (Microsoft Word document). Turner Network. Retrieved May 7, 2010.
- ↑ "The Cherished Home Facebook post announcing the store's closure"
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jonathan Frakes. |
- Jonathan Frakes at the Internet Movie Database
- Jonathan Frakes at the TCM Movie Database
- Jonathan Frakes at AllMovie
- Jonathan Frakes on Twitter
- Jonathan Frakes profile at NNDB
- Jonathan Frakes in-depth interview at The SCI FI Channel Australia Blog