164 lines
8.8 KiB
Plaintext
164 lines
8.8 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
THE "QUANTUM LEAP" PRIMER
|
|
Created by: Sally Smith (sallylb@netcom.com)
|
|
Updated by: Deb Brown (dmb@world.std.com)
|
|
Further updated by: Sally Smith
|
|
|
|
Copyright 1992 by Sally Smith and Deb Brown.
|
|
|
|
You may freely copy and distribute this guide for personal use
|
|
provided that it is distributed in its entirety, with all original
|
|
author and copyright information intact. Any sales of this document
|
|
are expressly forbidden, without the specific consent of the authors.
|
|
|
|
Revision date: 10/29/92
|
|
|
|
Note that this contains internal contradictions as well as not agreeing
|
|
with earlier versions, but hey...take it up with Bellisario, not me!
|
|
|
|
PROJECT QUANTUM LEAP: This top secret project is located in a cavern
|
|
in New Mexico in 1995 (at the time of the pilot episode; it's now
|
|
sometime in 1999). By ~ fall 1996, it's cost $43 billion of our tax
|
|
dollars, with $2.4 billion a year operating funds. However, it started
|
|
out with just Sam and Al "raising the funding, poring over the
|
|
blueprints late at night", and listening to the score of "Man of La
|
|
Mancha". :-)
|
|
|
|
SAM (Dr. Samuel Beckett, no relation to the playwright. Social
|
|
Security number 563-86-9801, Department of Defense Umbra top-secret
|
|
clearance 004-002-02-016): Born August 8, 1953 and grew up on his
|
|
family's dairy farm in Elk Ridge, Indiana. As a child, he had two
|
|
cats, named Donner and Blitzen, but never had a dog. He could read at
|
|
age 2, do advanced calculus in his head at 5, went to MIT at age 15
|
|
(or maybe 17), graduating 2 years later, and has 6 (maybe 7)
|
|
doctorates including music, medicine, quantum physics, and ancient
|
|
languages, but NOT psychiatry or law.
|
|
|
|
He speaks 7 modern languages including English, Japanese, French,
|
|
Spanish and German, but not Italian or Hebrew and 4 dead ones (he can
|
|
read Egyptian hieroglyphics). He has a Nobel Prize, field
|
|
unspecified, but probably for physics. For this, "Time" magazine
|
|
called him "the next Einstein".
|
|
|
|
He played the piano at Carnegie Hall at 19, plays guitar, is a good
|
|
dancer, and sings tenor (his favorite song is John Lennon's
|
|
"Imagine"). He has a photographic memory, can cook, and likes dry or
|
|
light beer and microwave popcorn. Sam also knows several kinds of
|
|
martial arts and has been afraid of heights since he was 9 years old.
|
|
He was originally engaged once, but was stood up at the altar. An
|
|
accident occurred during a leap in the middle of a lightning storm
|
|
which caused Sam and Al to temporarily change places. At this time,
|
|
he discovered he was NOT stood up at the altar and that he was in fact
|
|
married to his greatest love, Dr. Donna Alessi. This was no doubt due
|
|
to events in a prior leap where he was able to alter her life in such
|
|
a way that she was able to commit to marriage with him.
|
|
|
|
Sam's older brother Tom, a good athlete, All-State basketball player,
|
|
Annapolis grad and Navy SEAL (who convinced Sam to go to MIT) died in
|
|
Vietnam, on April 8, 1970. However, Sam managed to save him on one
|
|
leap. Sam's dad, John Samuel Beckett, died in 1974 (or maybe 1972, or
|
|
maybe 1973) of a heart attack. He has one sister named Katie
|
|
(Katherine), born during a flood in 1957, whose first husband was an
|
|
abusive alcoholic named Chuck (Unless maybe Sam convinced her not to
|
|
marry him. Who knows?). Now she's married to a Navy officer, Lt. Jim
|
|
Bonnick, and lives in Hawaii with their mom, Thelma Louise Beckett.
|
|
|
|
AL (Rear Admiral Albert Calavicci, born June 15, 1934): When Al was a
|
|
child, his part Russian mom ran off with an encyclopedia salesman.
|
|
Al's dad was from Abruzzi, Italy, so he speaks fluent Italian. His
|
|
father was a construction worker, so when dad went to the Middle East,
|
|
Al was sent to an orphanage, and his retarded sister Trudy to an
|
|
institution. Later, his dad and his dad's girlfriend used to sneak
|
|
him out of the orphanage. Kept running away, once to join the circus
|
|
and once he spent several months traveling with a pool wizard. He had
|
|
a pet cockroach named Kevin (in the orphanage) and a dog named Chester
|
|
(who he lost custody of to his third wife). While in the orphanage,
|
|
Al took up acting and also fought Golden Gloves. When he was old
|
|
enough, he went to get his sister but she'd died of pneumonia in the
|
|
institution (in 1953, aged 16).
|
|
|
|
Later, Al went to Annapolis, joined the Navy, and became a pilot. From
|
|
1968-1973 (or maybe 1975), he was a prisoner of the Viet Cong; during
|
|
this time, his first wife Beth, a Navy nurse, lost hope, had him
|
|
declared dead and married a lawyer. Somewhere along the line, he also
|
|
attended MIT and went on civil rights marches in the '60's. Later, he
|
|
became an astronaut and is now a rear admiral ("highly respected and
|
|
decorated"). He likes sports cars and classic cars and collects them.
|
|
Al likes to watch sports, gambles a little (trips to Las Vegas,
|
|
betting on horse races), and in the past, he had a tendency to drink
|
|
to excess. Al met Sam on the Starbright Project (we don't know what
|
|
that was); when they first met, Al was drunk beating up on a vending
|
|
machine with a hammer. It was Sam's influence that prevented Al from
|
|
being removed from the project because of his drinking. It was
|
|
possibly his association with Sam that helped sober him up.
|
|
|
|
This is, however, all secondary to Al's main interest, which is women!
|
|
He's been married 5 times, spending his 1st, 3rd, and 5th honeymoons
|
|
on the train to Niagara Falls. Wife #2 (no name given yet) was
|
|
Hungarian, wife #3 Ruthie was Jewish, #4 was Sharon ("she wore pink
|
|
babydolls"), #5, named Maxine ("she didn't wear anything at all--she
|
|
used to flavor her toes with mint leaves") he met in a tattoo parlor.
|
|
Al's currently semi-regularly dating a blonde woman named Tina (they
|
|
met in Vegas), who is a Pulse Communication Technician on Project
|
|
Quantum Leap, has a pet crocodile and a tattoo in a "super-private
|
|
part of her anatomy". Although Al firmly believes in the "double
|
|
standard", he really does respect women as individuals and gets very
|
|
angry when they're mistreated. Al dresses flashy, smokes a lot of
|
|
cigars, is somewhat superstitious, has a serious aversion to dead
|
|
bodies, and knows a great recipe for chitlins.
|
|
|
|
MORE ON THE PROJECT: We don't know what it was supposed to do, other
|
|
than allow Sam to time-travel within his own lifetime; we do know that
|
|
Sam leaped too soon (before everything was ready; they were
|
|
threatening to cut funding), and apparently God [or Fate or Time or
|
|
some other unfathomable force--like maybe Don Bellisario? :-) it's
|
|
never been directly said] decided to use Sam to "put things right that
|
|
once went wrong". The Project is built around Sam and Al's brain
|
|
waves. When he leaps, Sam actually physically replaces the leapee in
|
|
the past, (they're in the future, to keep things even), the leapee's
|
|
aura (and Sam's in the "future") is what the people around him see; he
|
|
only knows who he's leaped into when he looks in the mirror, and is
|
|
forever having to figure out who he's replaced and what good deed he's
|
|
there to do. Sam's the only guy who can figure out how to get himself
|
|
back home, but the first leap completely Swiss-cheesed his memory
|
|
(Al's term is 'magnafluxed'). Under normal conditions, Sam's the only
|
|
person who can see and hear Al, although animals, people on the verge
|
|
of death, the "mentally absent" and children under 5 always can (they
|
|
also see Sam as himself). Al appears to Sam through a "neurological
|
|
hologram" process: "agitated carbon quarks tuned to the optic and otic
|
|
neurons". Al sees Sam as the leapee, but always knows who he is.
|
|
|
|
GOOSHIE (played by Dennis Wolfberg) is Ziggy's programmer/operator and
|
|
operates the imaging chamber that projects Al's image back to Sam.
|
|
He's the one Al sometimes talks to. He's a "short guy with bad breath"
|
|
and a mustache, and Tina once went to Vegas for a weekend with him
|
|
just to make Al jealous. It worked. Ziggy says he's having an affair
|
|
with Tina [So does Dennis Wolfberg ;-)]. Gooshie has appeared in
|
|
several episodes, and once took over Al's hologram duty thanks to an
|
|
emergency jury-rigging by Ziggy.
|
|
|
|
ZIGGY: The project's "parallel hybrid computer", created by Sam.
|
|
Ziggy has a definite personality; he has a big ego, crashes a lot,
|
|
hates to be wrong, and frequently sulks! He freaks out sometimes,
|
|
too--once he turned off the climate control, once he wouldn't output
|
|
in anything but Japanese, and once he stuck an extra zero on the end
|
|
of everyone's paycheck, leaving Al to report "half the staff took off
|
|
on vacation!"
|
|
|
|
Well, that's what we thought until Sept. 1991. Then--
|
|
|
|
We saw Ziggy in the fourth season opener, in which he was discovered
|
|
to be a she. The possibility exists that the influence of Sam's wife
|
|
Dr. Donna Alessi may have given Ziggy a female identity. A perfect
|
|
example of Sam's changes catching up with them. Ziggy responds to
|
|
queries with a female voice (co-executive producer Deborah Pratt's)
|
|
and therefore may be the narrator of the saga cell that opens the show
|
|
each week. She still has a big ego, though.
|
|
|
|
SUBJECT TO CHANGE W/O NOTICE AS THE WRITERS GET MORE BRIGHT IDEAS
|
|
Oh BOY is this subject to change.... ;-)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Keep Leaping...
|
|
|