'MacGyver' Star
hockey booster
As MacGyver Richard Dean Anderson uses science and everyday objects, not
violence, to escape danger in the ABC television series of the same name.
Yet the handsome, rugged actor who portrays the pacifist hero has a passion for a sport
anything but peaceful: hockey.
The Minnesota native aspired to be a professional hockey player until age 16--when he
broke both arms in the space of three weeks--ending his dreams of a career on the ice.
Today, his hockey pursuits include scrimmaging for charity as right wing for the Celebrity
All-Star Hockey Team, which counts Michael J. Fox, Michael Keaton and Alan Thicke as
members, and serving as honorary captain of America's 1988 Olympic ice hockey team, Team
USA.
He'll be there--possibly clad in his red, white, and blue jersey emblazoned with
"88" (for the 1988 Olympics). "MacGyver" and
"anderson"--when Team USA faces the Russians at Markey Square Arena at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday.
"It'll probably be some of the most awesome hockey you'll ever see," said
Anderson, 37, dropping one of his favorite adjectives during a telephone call last week
from location shooting for MacGyver in British Columbia.
"The Russians are fielding just about the same team they had in the Canadian Cup
competition," he said, referring to the win that Team Canada barely sqeaked out of
the Russians' mitts in the last game. "So they're pretty strong. I've only seen out
team in practice, but they look good. You always hold out that glimmer of hope, too."
Anderson will join Team USA in Detroit Saturday and accompany them on their games with the
Soviet team in Detroit, Indianapolis, and Lake Placid, N.Y. (The American hockey stars
will shoot part of a MacGyver episode while in Lake Placid.)
Anderson's function is to draw media attention to the team, and independently funded
operation, and to promote hockey. He does the latter eloquently.
"So many people think of violence and fights and ignore the positive things about
hockey," Anderson said. "They ignore the camaraderie, the grace, the dance-like
movements of the sport, all perfomed on a slab of ice. It's a sport that combines both
teamwork and individual prowess and finesse."
"I'll acknowledge it's an aggressive contact sport. There's no getting around that.
All it takes is one act of obvious violence and unneccessary physical attack to wipe out
the things I'm trying to do for hockey."
Anderson claimed the average person can't understand why fights break out so frequently:
"There's really no way you can understand unless you play the game or are close
enough to know the frustrations, the things that are said out there on the ice, the little
tricks of the trade."
As a young player himself, back in Minnesota "where you learn to skate and swim
before you know how to walk." Anderson carried his aggressiveness from the ice into
the rest of his life.
His left arm was broken in a game. Three weeks later, he tripped during practice and,
trying to protect his left arm, twisted and caught his right arm under his body. It
snapped at the elbow and "looked like pick-up sticks," he recalled.
"It put me in the hospital in traction for three months. It dashed the aggressive
edge I knew I'd have to have if I played professionally. I'd really put my family through
a lot of torture."
His father is a jazz musician, his mother an artist. Benefitting the product of such
unconventional parents. Anderson opted for the offbeat for the next few years.
He hopped freight trains, hitchhiked and took 6,000-mile bicycle trek across Canada,
riding alone for 33 days. When he initially moved to Los Angeles, he worked as a street
mime and juggler and as a jester-singer at a 16th centruy-style cabaret.
"I grew up in a humanities environment," Anderson said. "So even though I
was a jock, acting seemed to be a natural notion, the one thing that would allow me to
make a living, misbehave, play a spy . . . or hockey player."
His first break in L.A. was a role in a play, Superman in the Bones. That followed by five
years as Dr. Jeff Webber on ABC's daytime drama, General Hospital and roles in the series
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers and Emerald Point, N.A.S.
Then came MacGyver, Anderson is in his third season on the show, which now films in Canada
for financial reasons and fresh locations.
Although he's disgruntled with ABC's apparent lack of support--the network, for example,
often pre-empts MacGyver because of Monday Night Football-- he's otherwise happy with the
series.
"I love the whole approach of having a TV hero with a specific aura, a non-gun toting
good guy," he said, "ABC has us in the wrong time slot, but our numbers are
coming up."
The members of Team USA are impressed, anyway.
"They're awed by the mystique of Hollywood, while there kids--I mean, they're half my
age--are my idols because of their prowess on the ice," Anderson said. "It's
very weird."
Tickets for the Team USA-Russian game--if still available--are $20 at the MSA box office.
Steve Hall, Indianapolis Star, 18 Dec. 1987. |