‘Babylon 5′ creator explains the sad story behind Michael O’Hare’s departure

Not trying to be insensitive, but this is an unfortunate pairing in this context.

Isn’t that Mira Furlan and Claudia Christian? Or is that Tallman’s cleavage behind them? :stuck_out_tongue:

John C Flinn III (found in comments and kinda verified by looking him up on imdb and comparing the photos:)
Director of Photography
Also further down in the comments from Claudia…he’s her ex.

Oops, grabbed the wrong photo. Try this.

JMS has always been protective of O’Hare, and always said there’s more to the story. Now we know what it is. Thanks for posting that, Foggy.

I always liked O’Hare as Commander.

I thought he was a little wooden, but I thought that was just part of the common problems with a first season. (Characters still need to be fleshed out, and the actors need to grow into the role, as well as figure out their characters inner motivations.)

I know a fair number of military [both officers and enlisted - comes with being a military brat then spouse] and some officers are pretty wooden in ‘officer work mode’ so I figured he was playing him like that he did relax in his few off work moments in the show somewhat, so it fits.

And as to being attracted to the malefolks, I always liked Garibaldi, Londo and G’kar more or less in that order. Londo always struck me as a great tragic figure -in The War Prayer the reason he helps the 2 kids:

Thanks for the info. I also liked Sinclair.

Remember also that Boxleitner came in as a handshaking, backslapping, grinning not-quite-boob… so that he could grow into the hardass commander role. We don’t know that JMS might have had a reason to let MOH be so stiff in the early days.

I view B5 as Londo’s story. Even if he’s not in the picture, events tend to swirl around him and the Centauri. He even has the bookend narrative - right from frame one: “I was there… at the beginning.”

Ah… G-man. Let me count the ways… :smiley: Where is the G-man these days anyway???

On a more serious note, I was blown away by this revelation about O’Hare. Completely clueless. I always like him in the part and I was a devoted B5ver back in the day. I had no idea he’d died, let alone was so ill for so long.

‘Fair winds and following seas,’ Commander. :frowning:

He ran for office as a fairly hard R, and had/has a radio show with a devoted not-as-insane-as-Limbaugh following.

His day job when he got the role was executive jet pilot. Maybe he went back to that.

According to the Talk Radio Network, he still has his radio gig.

Remember when Marcus sacrificed himself for Ivanova, and she was crying, saying “I should have boffed him at least once!”, Dr. Franklin?

If I could have “boffed” anyone on that show it would have been Garibaldi.

A friend of mine who listens to his show says Doyle once characterized O’Hare as a “tool”.

Here is what Jerry Doyle said about him. It was quite famous when said it:

I should point out that I have no idea if Doyle knew about O’Hare’s mental illness.

Plus his character had survived The Line after deciding to go out in a blaze of glory and getting his brain run through a wringer by the Mimbari. Having him be a quiet, low-key commander always struck me as appropriate.

Wow… that quote from Doyle is… sad, considering. I doubt Doyle knew anything. Very sad.

According to JMS, the 4th season was originally going to end around the point of “Intersections In Real Time”, with the war against Earth having started, but not completed. The Shadow War was always going to end in the 4th season. Well, by the time they were that far into the series anyway - the original plan was for the bulk of the Shadow War to take place in the potential sequel/spin-off series, Babylon Prime.

Huh? She was an actress (and then later a stunt performer, but first an actress.)

Apparently he did not - no-one did except JMS himself, and he promised to keep it that way. O’Hare gave JMS permission to tell the story after he had died.

Doyle apparently refused to work with O’Hare any more by the end of the 1st season, which is why “War Without End” is pretty carefully structured to have no scenes between Sinclair and Garibaldi.