Patricia J. Tallman (born 4 September 1957; age 67), also known as Pat Tallman, is an actress and former stuntwoman who appeared in several episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, and Star Trek: Voyager and Star Trek Generations. For most of her Trek appearances, she received no credit.
Outside the Star Trek universe she is best known for her role as telepath Lyta Alexander on Babylon 5 where she became romantically involved with future Star Trek voice actor Robin Atkin Downes and for her starring role as Barbara in Night of the Living Dead (1990, with Tony Todd).
Early life and career[]
Tallman, the eldest of four, she grew up with two younger sisters and a younger brother. Together with her family she moved several times around Illinois, including Pontiac, Peoria, Wheaton and Glen Ellyn. At the early age of two she appeared with her father in a radio show, singing "Bicycle Built for Two", beside playing Dark Shadows and Star Trek with her cousin Susan and their Barbie dolls. Her father was working all the time and mother, who was seriously ill with cancer, died when Tallman was twenty-three. Tallman's sisters are also working in the business today, Judie as a hair and makeup artist and Mary as a script supervisor. Her brother Jonathan became a doctor.
Tallman attended the Glenbard West High School in Glen Ellyn, Illinois and graduated in 1975. During her time in high school she joined the cast of several musicals and stage plays and performed at The Red Barn Theatre at the age of fifteen in Saugatuck, Michigan. One year later, at the age of sixteen, she got her first paid acting job in dinner theater. After her graduation she knew she wanted to be an actress beside her dreams working with animals or for the law enforcement and she enrolled at the Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, studying for a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Theater Arts. She worked in musical theater at the Pittsburgh Civic Light Opera, where she performed in over eighteen musicals. At Carnegie Mellon University she was given an award for Outstanding Achievement in Acting in her senior year at the same weekend when she was Homecoming Queen.
After graduation in 1979, Tallman moved to New York where she continued her stage career, winning lead roles in musicals and Broadway plays including the award-winning "Big, Bad Burlesque" show, appearing as Rosalind in the Riverside Shakespeare Company production "As You Like It", and becoming a member of J. Allen Suddeth's show fight group "Fights'R'us" after Suddeth taught her in period sword techniques. Tallman took several jobs to survive. On day she worked as model and on night she waited tables, worked in a bakery and later also at the little girl's department at Macy's.
Acting and stunts[]
Tallman was cast in a recurring role on the soap opera Guiding Light, followed by several appearances in series such as Texas. One day the stunt coordinator for the daytime series All My Children, J. Allen Suddeth, needed a stuntwoman, 5'9" with red hair, to double an actress for a stair fall and wearing only lingerie and cast Tallman, who earned $1200 for this job. She auditioned for a role in Knightriders (1981). Tallman landed the featured part of Julie and was soon cast in other productions by Romero and Tom Savini, who also graduated from the Carnegie Mellon University, taught a makeup class there, and performed in Knightriders. Knightriders also featured her first nude appearance on screen. Other 1980s projects include the comedy Stuck on You! (1983, with Richard Rothenberg), as stunt double for Savini actress Roberta Weiss in the Tales from the Darkside episode Inside the Closet (1984, with guest star Fritz Weaver), and for Romero actress Page Hannah in the Creepshow 2 segment The Raft (1987), as well as the Tales from the Darkside episode Family Reunion (1988, with Stephen McHattie and Marilyn Rockafellow) and Monkey Shines (1988, with Kate McNeil, Stephen Root, and Eric Stuart).
In the late 1980s, Tallman decided to move to Los Angeles, California and stayed with friends before she was introduced to her future (and first L.A.) roommate Iona Morris who herself would later guest star on Star Trek: Voyager. Following a few engagements in soap operas, including the roles as underwear model Billie and undercover cop Christy Russell in the daily soap Generations and theater, Tallman was cast for her first L.A.-based feature film, the action drama Road House (1989, with Kevin Tighe and Anthony De Longis). One day before she filmed her stunt scene as the redhead bandstand babe, Tallman injured her knee in a softball match but stunt coordinator Charles Picerni changed the stunt choreography and she was able to film her scene.
Tallman then auditioned for the part of Red Sonja for the Universal Studios "Conan" live stunt show and was cast alongside Conan actor Ron Clark. One of her castmates was Jodi Laine who also worked as Red Sonja on this show. Together with Laine, Tallman later started the business company "Quelles Tomates!" in 1990, a special events entertainment group. She continued her stunt work in films such as Shocker (1989, with John Tesh, Dendrie Taylor, Stephen R. Hudis, Brent Spiner, and stunts by Charlie Brewer, Tony Cecere, Dennis Madalone, Dennis Scott, and Tim Trella), and Another 48 Hrs. (1990).
In 1990, Tallman learned that Tom Savini was working on a remake of Romero's Night of the Living Dead from 1968 and auditioned for the part of Barbara. She was cast and worked with many people from her time in Pittsburgh and from Carnegie Mellon on this project. It was also this film which was important being considered for her part in Babylon 5 two years later. On Night of the Living Dead she worked with fellow Trek alumni Tony Todd, Tom Towles, and Stacie Foster.
Star Trek[]
It was on the set of Shocker that Tallman first worked with Dennis Madalone, and in 1991, Madalone brought her onto Star Trek: The Next Generation for the episode "Power Play", where she played a security officer. She filmed her scenes for this episode along fellow stuntmen Lincoln Simonds and Rusty McClennon on Tuesday 3 December 1991, Thursday 5 December 1991, and Monday 9 December 1991 on Paramount Stage 8 and 9. This single appearance was followed by a long-term relationship with Star Trek, as Tallman became part of the core stunt group. Because of her height and resemblance she doubled lead actresses Gates McFadden, Nana Visitor, and Terry Farrell as well as several guest actresses for the next eight years and played stunt acting parts as a Romulan, Bajoran, and several other aliens.
For her second Star Trek episode "The Outcast", Tallman filmed her scene as stunt double for guest actress Melinda Culea on Friday 21 February 1992 on Paramount Stage 9 during second unit filming. About her makeup and appearance in the J'naii costume, Tallman remarked "Okay, I hated this little alien. What the hell? Not cool, scary or weird. Just ugly." ("Pleasure Thresholds", p. 120) Madalone, his wife Linda, and fellow Trek stuntman Spiro Razatos were among Tallman's guests on her birthday/Babylon 5 wrap party on 4 September 1992.
Tallman described her look as Kiros in the episode "Starship Mine" as having a "glued vagina on my face and my hair looked like Bozo, the Clown." She also remembered being on two sets during these days: Filming her scenes for "Starship Mine" and being the stunt double for Joan Cusack in Addams Family Values on Paramount Stage 12. TNG was filmed on Paramount Stage 8 and 9 and DS9 on Paramount Stage 18, the street including these stages is named Avenue P. Tallman also remembered goofing around with Marie Marshall and Tim de Zarn on set and Patrick Stewart's "great butt" while filming the corridor scenes with him. ("Pleasure Thresholds", pp. 113-117) About her look as Romulan in the episode "Timescape", Tallman said "I looked like Liza Minnelli with jaundice." She also remembers Brent Spiner being a total funny guy and how she broke the set with her head because she was trying not to laugh and was up to do her fall right. ("Pleasure Thresholds", pp. 115-116) Her appearance from "Timescape" was later used for the card "Jera" in the 1994 CCG: Premiere Edition.
About her work on the DS9 first season episode "Battle Lines", Tallman remembered "We had a battle with these huge spear things. I had on armor, but my fight partner's [Tom Morga] spear got past my guard and sliced my ribs. I had a scar for years. Later, he picked me up and banged my head so hard on the shuttle, it made this huge boom. I had a wig and headwrap so it didn't hurt that much, but the director was so impressed with the noise they gave me an extra $100 bucks. Made up for the rib slice." ("Pleasure Thresholds", p. 123) This episode is still among Tallman's favorite episodes of Star Trek. (Star Trek Monthly issue 52, p. 31)
Tallman said about Nana Visitor that she was very good in fight scenes because of her extensive dance background. Sometimes, Tallman was just sitting behind the scenes and waiting to jump in for Visitor while she did most of her stunts on her own. But Visitor knew, that Tallman wouldn't get any residuals if she was not filmed so she made sure that Tallman always was filmed and won't be edited out. About the fight scene between Tallman and guest star Tim Russ in the DS9 second season episode "Invasive Procedures", she remembered "When the camera was on Nana's back and Tim's face, I stepped in and Nana took a cigarette break. Tim was supposed to throw a punch to my face in the fight. We had worked out the distance between us so he could safely swing a ferocious punch at my face and I would react as if it connected. He did this beautifully in rehearsal. When the director called "Action", Tim took a step into the space between us and punched me full on in the face. Everyone gasped because you could hear it clear as a bell. Tim was horrified and the director called, "Cut!" I yelled, "Don't cut! Keep going!" and we did. I didn't want to waste the take. I'd rather finish the fight, then go put ice on my face, than stop and have to do it again! I earned my pay that day because Nana had a photo shoot for TV Guide that afternoon. An egg on her face from a Klingon fist wouldn't have gone over well." ("Pleasure Thresholds", pp. 142-143)
While filming her scenes as stunt double for Bertila Damas on the Deep Space Nine episode "The Maquis, Part I", Tallman was visited by her father Jerry and his second wife Arlene. She also remembered about Deep Space Nine that they shot eighteen hour days, normally overtime, and that a crew member died in an accident on the way home because he fell asleep at the wheel after weeks of grueling schedule. ("Pleasure Thresholds", pp. 118-119) About her time on DS9, Tallman remarked that she was filming Babylon 5 one day and scenes as stunt double for Terry Farrell on DS9 the next day. While she was dressed as double for Farrell one of the DS9 producers approached her and told her "I really like Babylon 5'".
Tallman had her wardrobe fitting as bridge officer and stunt double for B'Etor actress Gwynyth Walsh in May 1994. She then learned about her pregnancy but was determined to work on this film. Her baby bump was showing when she wrapped Generations. She already had to pull out several sets of falsies off her costume while filming the sequences where she was hit by Malcolm McDowell into the face and during the scenes aboard the Klingon Bird-of-Prey. A fun fact Tallman mentioned in her book "Pleasure Thresholds" (p. 87) is that she was on both bridges during the fight. As a Starfleet officer aboard the Enterprise-D and as stunt double for Walsh aboard the Klingon Bird-of-Prey. During the filming of the Enterprise-D crash sequence, Tallman also filled in as stunt coordinator for Bud Davis. Tallman had already filmed her scenes as stunt double for Gates McFadden in this film aboard the sailing ship Lady Washington in Marina del Rey for a few days in April 1994. Her Starfleet uniform was later sold off on the It's A Wrap! sale and auction on eBay [1](X) as well as her costume as double for Gates McFadden aboard the sailing ship. [2](X) Her costume as double for Gwynyth Walsh cost $10.000. ("Pleasure Thresholds", p. 87)
Tallman doubled Terry Farrell during the fourth and fifth season again. Several times in a fight sequence with Worf stunt double Brennan Dyson. She also coordinated fight sequences and remembered "We'd create moves that made sense with the weapons and develop a fighting style. Then, we would teach our actors as much as they could learn." ("Pleasure Thresholds", p. 122) Her costume for one of the fight sequences was later sold off on the It's A Wrap! sale and auction on eBay. [3](X) Her work as double for Farrell in the fourth season episode "To the Death" also included some fight scenes along with fellow stunt performers Leslie Hoffman, Scott Leva, Tom Morga, Ken Lesco, and Chuck Borden. However, in the final episode no scene involving Tallman appeared. Her costume doubling Louise Fletcher in the final Deep Space Nine episode "What You Leave Behind" was also sold off on eBay. [4](X)
For her stunt work as double for Marjorie Monaghan in the Voyager first season episode "Heroes and Demons", Tallman filmed her scenes on Tuesday 14 February 1995 on Paramount Stage 11 along with John Nowak and Tom Morga. Her next stunt work on Voyager was in the second season episode "Persistence of Vision" in which she doubled guest actress Carolyn Seymour. She filmed her stunt with Kate Mulgrew on Tuesday 15 August 1995 on Paramount Stage 8 and her costume was later sold off on the It's A Wrap! sale and auction on eBay. [5](X) For her stunt part in the second season episode "Basics, Part I", Tallman worked with Tom Morga, Spiro Razatos and Dennis Madalone on Friday 1 March 1996 on Paramount Stage 8.
Tallman worked with fellow stuntman Brett Jones as stunt double for guest actress Sarah Silverman on the third season episode "Future's End, Part II". She filmed her scenes on second unit on Wednesday 4 September 1996, her 39th birthday, and Thursday 5 September 1996 on location in Lancaster. For the episode "Favorite Son", Tallman is listed as "Stunt Sister #1" on the call sheet for Tuesday 7 January 1997. She filmed this stunt along with Elle Alexander and Al Goto on Paramount Stage 16 and her costume was also sold off on eBay. [6](X)
Most recently, Tallman was interviewed about her work on Star Trek for the third episode of the second season of A Captain's Log which premiered on 17 March 2022. [7]
Babylon 5, J. Michael Straczynski, and Studio JMS[]
In 2011, Straczynski wrote the foreword titled "1,800 Non-Libelous Words About Patricia Tallman" for Tallman's autobiography "Pleasure Thresholds – Patricia Tallman's Babylon 5 Memoir". He described himself as fan of scary movies and zombie films and saw Tallman for the first time in the 1990 horror remake Night of the Living Dead. He became fascinated by her performance and specifically wrote the part of Leonora Holt in the Murder, She Wrote 1992 episode "Incident in Lot 7" for her but was told by the casting department that Tallman was unavailable and the role was cast with actress Paula Prentiss. The same year, Straczynski again wrote a part specifically for Tallman, the role of the Psi Corps telepath Lyta Alexander in "The Gathering", the pilot episode of Babylon 5.
At the day of the audition for "The Gathering" Straczynski stepped into the waiting area and told Tallman that he wrote the part specifically for her. After Tallman auditioned for him and casting director Mary Jo Slater, who previously worked on Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, she was called back and brought in for a table read for the producers at Warner Bros. Tallman read her scene with G'Kar actor Andreas Katsulas whose work she knew and with director Richard Compton. One week later she received a call from her agent and was cast. Tallman filmed her last scene for "The Gathering" on her birthday in 1992 and threw the wrap party at a friend's house. She then worked close with the production company promoting the project at several conventions.
After the experience being written out at the studio's decision when the series went into production, she joined an acting class and was guided by mentor and coach Charles Nelson Reilly. But Straczynski liked her performance and was ecstatic when he found the chance to bring Tallman back aboard Babylon 5 in March 1995 in the second season, this time as a guest actress in the episode "Divided Loyalties", followed by two more appearances in the third season after her "replacement", actress Andrea Thompson, decided to leave the series. With the beginning of the fourth season, Tallman joined the cast as a regular again and remained until the end of the series in 1998, appearing in 21 episodes alongside Walter Koenig, John Vickery, Harlan Ellison, Marjorie Monaghan, Musetta Vander, Tracy Scoggins, Caitlin Brown, Carolyn Seymour, Bill Mumy, Star Trek stunt partner Tom Morga, and director Adam Nimoy. Tallman also appeared in the Babylon 5 television movie Thirdspace, with Clyde Kusatsu and stunts by Steve Rizzo and Jimmy Ortega. Spice Williams, her former DS9 stunt partner, was among the stunt doubles for Tallman on this series and doubled her in the scene where Kosh exploded. Joni Avery, Tallman's stunt partner from Generations was also on set that day.
Tallman had a second meeting with director Adam Nimoy on set of the Babylon 5 episode "Passing Through Gethsemane" after he directed her in the TNG episode "Timescape". She remembered "When it came time to shoot it, however, Adam Nimoy, who was directing this ep, shot it all in profile. He made it clear he didn't trust or like me very much as an actor. I think it was because he had worked with me as a stunt person on Star Trek and couldn't accept that people can have skills in different disciplines." ("Pleasure Thresholds", p. 133) Tallman also regrets that she had no screen time with actor Brad Dourif who guest starred in this episode. On the set of Babylon 5, Tallman met co-star Jeffrey Willerth, who played the Vorlon Kosh, was Bruce Boxleitner's stand-in as well as PA and assistant to John Copeland, and married him on 28 August 1999. The marriage was held by fellow B5 star Peter Jurasik. They divorced on 12 March 2008.
One of Tallman's memories about the series was the use of the black contact lenses for her portrayal of Lyta in later seasons. She remembered "They had to hire a lens technician who would put the lenses in. He would hold my eyelids open and maneuver them in, while I clenched the chair in terror. The lenses were huge; they were full circles that would be big enough to cover the inner and outer corners of my eyes." ("Pleasure Thresholds", p. 146) One of her co-stars from Babylon 5, Caitlin Brown, is also working with Tallman in the more recent years. Brown is working as booking agent for fellow actors and is booking convention gigs also for Tallman.
Throughout the following years Straczynski and Tallman only met occasionally at the funerals of fellow B5 cast members Andreas Katsulas, Richard Biggs, Johnny Sekka, and Jeff Conaway. In 2010 they reconnected and became friends again. That also led into working together. In 2012, Straczynski launched his own production company Studio JMS and Tallman became CEO and Executive Producer of the company, bringing in her business skills and experiences with "Talent to Go".
As part of Studio JMS, Tallman worked on Phase Two of the MTV.com series The Adventures of Apocalypse Al as follow up of the online comic strip web series, which still has no release date. [8] They also produced the science fiction series Sense8, distributed by Netflix, and filmed between 2015 and 2018. [9] as well as the drama The Flickering Light, which was abandoned as of 2022. [10]
Tallman left the company in 2013 and also separated from J. Michael Straczynski with whom she was engaged for several years.
Life and career[]
1993 – 2008[]
Following her work on "The Gathering", Tallman played a lead part in Star Runners, a science fiction pilot by Foundation Imaging which ultimately did not go into production. She doubled Elizabeth McGovern in the 1993 drama Me and Veronica, Joan Severance in Lake Consequence (1993), Laura Dern's skeleton fall and car stunt work in Jurassic Park (1993), Joan Cusack's car crash in Addams Family Values (1993, with Christopher Lloyd, Carel Struycken, Andreana Weiner, Ian Abercrombie, Camille Saviola, and stunts by Joni Avery and Pat Romano), Daryl Hannah's falls in Attack of the 50 Ft. Woman (1993), and played the evil witch in Sam Raimi's fantasy film Army of Darkness (1992). About her work for Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park, Tallman remembered her stunt scenes in the end of the movie when she fell off the dinosaur skeletons. She wasn't able to use pads because of the short pants Dern's character was wearing in these scenes. She went home and was shocked by the bruises and hematomas. On the next day at the makeup trailer she asked for someone to cover these hematomas for her scenes and from the P.A. to the assistant directors, even the special effects guys came to see them. "They had to call in a specialty makeup person who used paints on my body, then airbrushed my legs back to flesh colored. Thank god. It worked". ("Pleasure Thresholds", pp. 155-157)
In 1993, Tallman met Andrea Rogantini, an executive chef at Prego Beverly Hills, and the two fell in love. Following work as a regular stunt double on the series Melrose Place she doubled actress Lolita Davidovich on the sport drama Cobb in 1994. While being in makeup her makeup artist told her about her own pregnancy she just found out. Tallman also bought a test and learned that she was pregnant, too. At the same time she was doubling Davidovich being dragged down the hallway and thrown onto a bed by Tommy Lee Jones. Being in her seventh month, Tallman worked with fellow Trek stuntman Bernie Pock on his drama The Biker Poet on which she played Amber Tamblyn's mother. Rogantini's and Tallman's son Julian Jon was born on 12 November 1994, two weeks after Tallman finished Charles Nelson Reilly's play "The Wives".
Other projects she participated in are Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult (1994), The Stand (1994, with Matt Frewer, Ray Walston, and Miguel Ferrer), Speed (1994), and Independence Day (1996). She doubled Geena Davis' cliff fall in The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996), played the beaten Electric Psychedelic Pussycat club waitress in Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (1997), and a flying waitress in Godzilla (1998). About her time on The Long Kiss Goodnight, Tallman remembered "I was often looking right into the camera, rather than turning away like stunt folks usually do. The stunts were extreme – falling into camera from sixty-plus feet on a wire – and I couldn't hide my face. That meant I was wearing a silicon "Geena" mask, which was new to me. This required about five extra hours to get into and out of make up." Tallman was requested after Davis' first stunt double got injured on set and couldn't finish her work. She flew to Toronto, Canada where the scenes were filmed and described this stunt as one of the most dangerous stunts she did in her career. ("Pleasure Thresholds", pp. 160-161)
Tallman earned a certification from the British Society of Fight Directors, studying with B.H. Barry and tested by Patrick Crean. She continued to perform stunts in productions such as a Talk Show Stunt Guest in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999), as a stunt double in the crime drama The General's Daughter (1999, with James Cromwell and Clarence Williams III), as stunt double for Hudson Leick in the action film The Chill Factor (1999), and for Katie Finneran in the 2005 remake of Bewitched. She was the evil mistress Caroline Dula in the Sheena episode The Darkness (2001), Alisa Fox in the drama For Pete's Wake (2004), appeared in the stage play "Waiting" (2004) directed by Chip Chalmers, and reprised her role as Lyta Alexander in the two animated Babylon Park spoofs "Frightspace" and "Grudgematch". She voiced the lead character of Lt. Richmond in the audio plays "Lives of the Cat" and "Anne Manx" and narrated the Better Sex video series from the Sinclair Intimacy Institute. Tallman was interviewed or had pictorials in every major science fiction magazine, including Starlog, SFX, Cinefantastique, and Celebrity Sleuth.
Her connection to Dennis Madalone gave her the chance to appear as Ms. Peters in the horror short Jennifer is Dead (2002, with Tom Morga, Lynn Salvatori, and stunt coordinator Madalone), as a mother at a cemetery in Madalone's music video "America We Stand as One" in 2001, as stunt double for Angela Lansbury in the television movie Murder She Wrote: The Celtic Riddle (2003, with Fionnula Flanagan, Cyril O'Reilly, W. Morgan Sheppard, her "Starship Mine" co-star Tim de Zarn, and Justin Sundquist), as stunt double for Laura Prepon in the thriller Karla (2006, with George Colucci), and in at least three episodes of the television series Without a Trace (2004, 2006, and 2007, under stunt coordinator Madalone, starring Enrique Murciano). The stunt work on Karla was Tallman's last "full stunt work" in television and film. She remembered that the stair fall on this film caused a serious injury of her leg and knee and she was treated in hospital. Her leg has never been the same again. ("Pleasure Thresholds", p. 142)
Among her more recent projects are the role of Dr. Klein in InAlienable (2008), written by and starring Walter Koenig, and with Courtney Peldon, Erick Avari, Marina Sirtis, Andrew Koenig, Judy Levitt, Alan Ruck, Richard Herd, Gary Graham, J.G. Hertzler, Lisa LoCicero, Jeff Rector, and stunt coordinator Justin Sundquist, the starring role as Lucy in Corbin Bernsen's Dead Air (2008, stunt coordinated by Tom Morga), and a guest role as lawyer Liz in the Valentine episode "Act Naturally" (2008, alongside Autumn Reeser and directed by John Putch).
2010 – today[]
Outside of her acting career, she co-founded and is heading, along with fellow actress Judy Kain, the company Talent To Go, a marketing and auditioning service for actors in Los Angeles. Tallman is also a leading fundraiser for Penny Lane for over twenty years, a center for abused children in California. She was brought in by fellow stuntwoman Spice Williams-Crosby and is mainly working with the North Hills campus of teens from twelve to eighteen. [11] For over twenty years she is also part of Penny Lane's "Be a Santa" event. [12]
In 2010 Tallman finished the short drama Waitin', written and directed by Victor Warren. She portrayed Sally, one of the people in the hospital waiting room and her son Julian had a part in the film. Fellow Star Trek performers Brad Blaisdell and Jay Caputo also have roles in this short film. [13] Tallman appeared as Eric's wife in the short drama Thoughts of Suicide on an Otherwise Lovely Day (2010), written, produced, and starring Caitlin Brown. Her sister Judie Tallman worked as makeup and hair stylist on this film and Trek actress and earlier L.A. roommate Iona Morris had a supporting role.
Tallman can be seen as the female murder victim Vivian Marchand in the second episode of the third season of Castle, titled "He's Dead, She's Dead" (2010) on which Dennis Madalone worked as stunt coordinator and Rob Bowman as producer. [14]
Tallman worked on a book titled "Pleasure Thresholds – Patricia Tallman's Babylon 5 Memoir", a personal collection of behind the scenes pictures and stories during her time on Babylon 5 as well as from other projects and her way into the business. This scrapbook was released in September 2011. [15]
More recently she reunited with director John Putch and worked for him on the science fiction mystery drama Atlas Shrugged II: The Strike (2012) on which fellow Trek performers Patrick Fabian, Kim Rhodes, John Rubinstein, Robert Picardo, Ray Wise, Diedrich Bader, Jeff Yagher, Stephen Macht, and Dana Sparks also appeared. In addition, she appeared as Casey in the My Gimpy Life episode "The Commercial" (2012).
Tallman appeared as Captain Margot Nolan in the Criminal Minds episode "A Thousand Suns", the third episode of the tenth season, originally airing on 15 October 2014. [16]
Set for a 2016 release but ultimately abandoned, Tallman was in talks for a role in The Survivors, an action/horror film "about a multi-generational group of strong female survivors who decide to get revenge as they ban to together and turn the tables on legendary murderer who, during their youth pursued them all. After the killer resurfaces, the women make a pack to track him down and end his twenty-five year killing spree." Heather Langenkamp and Lisa Wilcox were also up to star in this film. [17]
Tallman became a part of the Sci-Fi-Festival in Los Angeles when she appeared in the Ray Bradbury play "Kaleidoscope" in May 2014 along with Faran Tahir. [18] As of November 2014, Tallman is currently working on her second book with a Mastermind Group in Bali.
Her last known acting appearance was the 2018 short comedy Rose Is a Rose Is a Rose in which she portrayed Just Rose. This short project won a Silver Eddy Award in the category Best Professional Short at the Cedar Rapids Independent Film Festival in 2019. [19]
For several years, Tallman has been engaged to actor Glenn Morrissey with whom she worked on the short Rose Is a Rose Is a Rose. [20] In 2020, she founded the online platform B5 Events. At B5 Events guest actors do virtual conventions, talks, and autograph session and several unique items are up for sale. Among the guest actors are Nana Visitor, Alexander Siddig, Claudia Christian, Bill Mumy, Tim Russ, and Armin Shimerman.
Star Trek appearances[]
Stunt double appearances[]
Other appearances with Star Trek connections[]
- Monsignore (1982)
- with Genevieve Bujold
- The Pool (1987) – stunt double for Tina Louise
- Shakedown (1988) – stunts
- with Jude Ciccolella, Anthony Crivello, Marie Marshall, and stunts by Monty Cox, Gary Epper, Matt McColm, Noon Orsatti, Spike Silver, and Tom Wright
- Last Rites (1988) – stunts
- with Paul Dooley and stunts by John Cade, Doug Coleman, and Diamond Farnsworth
- One Life to Live (1988) – stunt double for Jill Larson
- After Midnight (1989) – stunt actress
- with Pamela Segall and stunts by Sandy Berumen-Justus, Simone Boisseree, Linda Fetters, Paula Moody, Pat Romano, and Dennis Scott
- The Runestone (1990) – stunts
- with Tim Ryan, Lawrence Tierney, Donald Hotton, William Utay, and stunts by Maria Kelly, Eddie Mathews, and Tim Trella
- Peacemaker (1990) – stunts
- with Hilary Shepard Turner, Bert Remsen, Robby Robinson, Sharon Schaffer, Irving Lewis, Chuck Courtney, Jerry Spicer, and stunts by Ed Anders, Christine Anne Baur, Gary Baxley, Chuck Borden, Jeff Bornstein, Eddie Braun, Mike Cassidy, John Cade, George Colucci, Chuck Courtney, B.J. Davis, Chris Doyle, Linda Fetters, Eddie Hice, Joy Hooper, Ken Lesco, Kurt D. Lott, Dennis Madalone, Alan Marcus, Rusty McClennon, Eric Norris, Alan Oliney, Monty Rex Perlin, Don Pulford, Tim Trella, Merritt Yohnka, and Lane Leavitt
- Another 48 Hrs. (1990) – stunts
- with Kevin Tighe, Ed O'Ross, David Anthony Marshall, Bernie Casey, Page Leong, Allan Graf, Biff Yeager, Rex Pierson, Nanci Rogers, Benjamin W.S. Lum , Victor Brandt, Shauna O'Brien, and stunts by John Alden, Ken Bates, Charlie Brewer, Phil Chong, Linda Fetters, Allan Graf, Robert Herron, Steve Kelso, Don Pulford, Pat Romano, and Kim Washington
- Wedlock (1991) – stunt double for Mimi Rogers
- with Basil Wallace, Richard Gilbert-Hill, Tina Lifford, and stunts by Phil Adams, Hal Burton, Tony Cecere, Bud Davis, Randy Hall, Michael Haynes, Chuck Hicks, Maria Kelly, Robert King, Rex Pierson, Bernie Pock, Don Pulford, J. Suzanne Rampe, Pat Romano, Lynn Salvatori, and Dennis Scott
- The Nutt House (1992) – stunts
- with Constance Towers and stunts by Chuck Borden, Eddie Braun, Chris Doyle, B.J. Davis, George Colucci, Linda Fetters, Maria Kelly, Kim Koscki, Lane Leavitt, Gene LeBell, Scott Leva, Dyanna Lynn, Dennis Madalone, Rex Pierson, J. Suzanne Rampe, Rick Sawaya, and Tim Trella
- Red Shoe Diaries episode "Double or Nothing" (1992) – stunts
- Desire (1993) – stunts
- with Don Fischer and stunts by Rick Avery and Eurlyne Epper-Woldman
- Me and Veronica (1993) – stunt double for Elizabeth McGovern
- with Mike Starr and stunts by Edward Conna
- Lake Consequence (1993) – stunt double for Joan Severance
- with Allan Graf and stunts by Chris Durand, Maria Kelly, and Spiro Razatos
- Jurassic Park (1993) – stunt double for Laura Dern
- with Cameron Thor, Jophery C. Brown, Richard Kiley, Cynthia Madvig, and stunts by Gary Epper, Pat Romano, and R.A. Rondell
- Kalifornia (1993) – stunts
- with Michelle Forbes, Sierra Pecheur, Tom Hand, and stunts by Richard L. Blackwell, Scott Cook, Maria Kelly, and J. Suzanne Rampe)
- Attack of the 50 Ft. Woman (1993) – stunt double for Daryl Hannah
- with William Windom, Hamilton Camp, Stephen Rowe, Hilary Shepard Turner, and stunts by Richard L. Blackwell, Chris Doyle, Maria Kelly, and Tabby Hanson
- Criminal Passion (1994) – stunts
- with Henry Darrow, Carlos Palomino, Tom Nibley, and stunts by Cole McKay
- Forrest Gump (1994) – stunts
- with Sam Anderson, Don Fischer, Michael McFall, Michael Jace, Geoffrey Blake, Timothy McNeil, Steve DeRelian, Jim Boeke, and stunts by Keith Campbell, Jay Caputo, Bud Davis, Kim Robert Koscki, Denise Lynne Roberts, Erik Stabenau, Joey Anaya, Joey Box, Denney Pierce, and Allen Robinson
- The Flintstones (1994) – stunt double for Elizabeth Perkins
- with Alex Zimmerman, Lita Stevens, Lena Banks, Buzz Barbee, Uriah Carr, Andrew DePalma, Elliot Durant III, Bruce Dobos, Brennan Dyson, Star Halm, Donald R. Jankiewicz, Patrick Jankiewicz, Dan Lambirth, Gene LeBell, Bill Thomas Miller, Michael Stanhope, Catherine Wong, S. Reed, Rabia Louis Haynes, and Grace Harrell, and stunts by Rosine "Ace" Hatem, Jeffrey S. Jensen, Pat Romano, and Kim Robert Koscki
- Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult (1994) – stunt double for Raquel Welch
- with Raye Birk, Matt Roe, Earl Boen, Rosalind Allen, Marc Alaimo, Marcy Goldman, Bill Erwin, Bill Zuckert, Joycelyn Robinson, Kevin Grevioux, Symba Smith, and stunts by Phil Adams, Chris Antonucci, Ed Anders, Jane Austin, LaFaye Baker, Richard L. Blackwell, Simone Boisseree, Dave Cadiente, Eugene Collier, John Dixon, Andy Gill, Al Goto, Chuck Hicks, Jeff Imada, Maria Kelly, Hubie Kerns, Jr., Wayne King, Jr., Gene LeBell, Bob McGovern, Pat McGroarty, Mary Peters, Charles Picerni, Jr., Peewee Piemonte, Don Pulford, Denise Lynne Roberts, Sharon Schaffer, Paul E. Short, Jerry Spicer, Mike Washlake, Gary Wayton, and Brian J. Williams
- The Stand (1994) – stunts
- with Miguel Ferrer, Matt Frewer, Ray Walston, Patrick Kilpatrick, Sam Anderson, Steven Anderson, Sherman Howard, Ken Jenkins, Richard Lineback, Jordan Lund, William Newman, and stunts by Charlie Brewer, Doug Coleman, Eddie Mathews, Gene LeBell, and Denney Pierce
- Speed (1994) – stunts
- with Alan Ruck, Richard Lineback, Carlos Carrasco, Jordan Lund, Patrick Fischler, Bruce Wright, Robin McKee, and stunts by Scott Wilder, Eddie Yansick, Janet Brady, Jophery C. Brown, Gilbert Combs, Gary Epper, Tommy J. Huff, Jeffrey S. Jensen, Eddie Mathews, Pat Romano, Ronald R. Rondell, Brian Stewart, John Cade, Frankie Garbutt, Chuck Hicks, John Hugh McKnight, and Jimmy Ortega
- Ice (1994) – stunts
- with Zach Galligan, Michael Bailey Smith, and stunts by Chino Binamo, Chuck Borden, Nick Dimitri, Vincent Mazzella, Jr., Joe Murphy, Mark Riccardi, Paul E. Short, Warren A. Stevens, and Chester E. Tripp III
- CIA II: Target Alexa (1994) – stunts
- with John Savage, Branscombe Richmond, Anthony De Longis, and stunts by Chuck Borden, George Colucci, Chris Doyle, Kim Koscki, Lane Leavitt, Gene LeBell, Vincent J. Mazella, Joe Murphy, Rick New, Chester E. Tripp III, Spice Williams-Crosby, and Jennifer Watson
- Cobb (1994) – stunts
- with Scott Burkholder, William Utay, George Wilbur, Tom Todoroff, and stunts by Tom Morga and Jeff Smolek
- Direct Hit (1994) – stunts
- with Peter Slutsker and stunts by Chino Binamo, Chuck Borden, George Colucci, Nick Dimitri, Sonia McDancer, Lane Leavitt, Dennis Madalone, Chuck Madalone, Joe Murphy, Mark Riccardi, Rick New, Scott Rogers, and Chester E. Tripp III
- The Secretary (1995) – stunts
- with Grainger Hines, Richard Herd, John Hostetter, and stunts by J. Suzanne Rampe, Lynn Salvatori, and Denney Pierce
- Larger Than Life (1996) – stunts
- with Harve Presnell, Earl Billings, Tracey Walter, Joseph Palmas, Christopher Darga, Mark Chadwick, Clark Tucker, Jennifer Caputo, Darlene Williams, and stunts by Bud Davis, Michael Haynes, Buck McDancer, Noon Orsatti, Bernie Pock, Robby Robinson, Lynn Salvatori, and Dennis Scott
- The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996) – stunt double for Geena Davis
- with stunts by Kiante Elam, Dana Hee, Tommy J. Huff, and Tim Trella
- Independence Day (1996) – stunt actress: Leaving pedestrian
- with Brent Spiner, Bill Smitrovich, Frank Novak, Leland Orser, Mirron E. Willis, Raphael Sbarge, Carlos LaCamara, Tim Kelleher, Jana Marie Hupp, Robert Pine, Derek Webster, Anthony Crivello, Randy Oglesby, Frank Welker, Erick Avari, Tracey Walter, and stunts by Doug Coleman, Eliza Coleman, Allan Graf, Dana Hee, Gilbert Combs, Lane Leavitt, Frank Lloyd, Eddie Mathews, Tom Morga, Mary Peters, Scott Rogers, Rick Avery, Chuck Borden, Jennifer Caputo, Mark Donaldson, John Escobar, Christian Fletcher, Andy Gill, Hubie Kerns, Jr., Kim Koscki, Gene LeBell, Lynn Salvatori, Michael J. Sarna, and Mike Smith
- High Tide episode "A Stitch in Time"(1997) – stunt double for Tracy Scoggins
- with David Graf, James Horan, and Tracy Scoggins
- Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (1997) – stunt actress: waitress
- with Charles Napier, Clint Howard, Brian George, Robin Gammell, Christian Slater, Cynthia Madvig, and stunts by Jay Caputo, Bud Davis, Anita Hart, Edward Conna, Gary Guercio, Kim Koscki, and Michael Owen
- Godzilla (1998) – stunt actress: waitress
- with Lloyd Kino, Clyde Kusatsu, Glenn Morshower, Derek Webster, Jamison Yang, Nathan Anderson, James Black, Stoney Westmoreland, Frank Welker, and stunts by Phil Chong, Steve M. Davison, Eddy Donno, Kenny Endoso, Al Goto, Jim Halty, Tom Harper, Tommy J. Huff, Kurt D. Lott, Johnny Martin, Dustin Meier, Johnny C. Meier, Alan Oliney, Charles Picerni, Jr., Steve Picerni, Mic Rodgers, Danny Rogers, Pat Romano, Gregg Sargeant, Paul Sklar, and Scott Workman
- Chill Factor (1999) – stunt double for Hudson Leick
- with Daniel Hugh Kelly and stunts by Jophery C. Brown, David Burton, Tommy J. Huff, Rich Minga, and Hugh Aodh O'Brien
- Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999) – stunt actress: Talk show guest
- with Clint Howard, Jack Kehler, Jeanette Miller, Charles Napier, Tony Jay, and stunts by Joey Box, Jay Caputo, Jennifer Caputo, Bud Davis, Al Goto, Michael Haynes, Lisa Hoyle, Terry James, Craig Jensen, Kim Koscki, Dan Plum, Lynn Salvatori, Dennis Scott, Monica Staggs, and Pat Romano
- The General's Daughter (1999) – stunt double
- with James Cromwell, Clarence Williams III, and stunts by Joey Box, George Colucci, Edward Conna, Ken Lesco, Irving Lewis, Dennis Madalone, Mark Riccardi, Bob McGovern, Denney Pierce, Chester E. Tripp III, Lynn Salvatori, and Mickey Giacomazzi
- Bowfinger (1999) – stunts
- with Nathan Anderson, Kevin Grevioux, and stunts by Bud Davis, Tabby Hanson, Michael Haynes, Alan Oliney, Lynn Salvatori, Dennis Scott, Jay Caputo, Edward Conna, Danny Downey, Kim Koscki, Michael Owen, and Mike Washlake
- Bewitched (2005) – stunt double for Katie Finneran
- with Scott Alan Smith, Pete Henderson, Fran Severini, Andrew MacBeth, and stunts by Doug Coleman, Eliza Coleman, Max Daniels, Michael Hugghins, Chris Palermo, Pete Turner, Thom Williams, Joni Avery, Gary Guercio, and Harry Wowchuk
Further reading[]
- "Bloody Double", Pat Jankiewicz, Starlog Issue 209, December 1994
- "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun", Sharon Gosling, SFX Issue 38, pp. 80-84, May 1998
- "Patricia Tallman: Babylon 5 Babe", Desire Gonzalez, Femme Fatales Vol. 7, Issue 1, pp. 46-51, June 1998
- "Meeting of Minds", Joe Nazzaro, Sci-Fi TV Issue 1, October 1998
- "Pat's Tricks", David Bassom, Star Trek Monthly issue 52, p. 31, May 1999
- "Patricia Tallman", David Bassom, Cinefantastique Vol. 31, Issue 12, pp. 78-79, June 2000
- "Secrets Of The Soul", David Bassom, Starburst Special Issue 40, June 2000
- Babylon 5 Season 4 DVD – Audio Commentary on the episode "Falling Toward Apotheosis"
- Babylon 5 Season 5 DVD – Audio Commentary on the episode "Movements of Fire and Shadows"
- Babylon 5 Season 5 DVD – special feature "Beyond Babylon 5", interviewed in 2003
- Babylon 5 The Movies Box Set DVD – Audio Commentary on Thirdspace
- "Pleasure Thresholds – Patricia Tallman's Babylon 5 Memoir", Publishing 180, 2011
External links[]
- B5 Events.com – official site
- Patricia Tallman at the Internet Movie Database
- Patricia Tallman at Instagram
- Patricia Tallman at Facebook
- Patricia Tallman at X (formerly Twitter)
- Patricia Tallman at the Babylon 5 wiki
- Patricia Tallman interview at TheIntellexual.com
- Patricia Tallman at Wikipedia
Original featured revision (855632) • Diff to current • Last featured revision (1619704) • Diff to current • Blurb