Most Recent Role: on W.I.T.C.H.
Alias Name(s): Andy Robinson, Andrew J. Robinson, Andy Robinson
Gender: Male
Birthplace: New York City, NY, USA
Birthday: 2-14-1942
Birth Name: Andrew Jordt Robinson
Alias Name(s): Andy Robinson, Andrew J. Robinson, Andy Robinson
Gender: Male
Birthplace: New York City, NY, USA
Birthday: 2-14-1942
Birth Name: Andrew Jordt Robinson
Robinson was born in New York City and attended the University of New Hampshire. He later received his B.A. in English from the New School for Social Research in NYC. After graduation, he spent a year in England at the London Academy for Music and Dramatic Arts on a Fulbright Scholarship.
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Robinson landed bits parts in a wide variety of theater, movie and...
Most Recent Appearance
X is for Xanadu
Saturday 9 December 2006 on Toon Disney
While Meridian threatens to be turned into a hellish nightmare, Hay Lin struggles against artist’s block when trying to find her own paradisiacal vision of Xanadu .
Robinson directed his daughter in an episode of 'Judging Amy' called "The Long Run". This was the last episode he directed.
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Robinson auditioned for the role of Commander Will Decker in 'Star Trek: The Motion Picture' (1979).
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Robinson played Larry Cotton in the 1987 horror film 'Hellraiser'.
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In 2006, Robinson headed up the new Acting MFA program at the University of Southern California.
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Robinson is the godfather of 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine's' co-stars Nana Visitor and Alexander Siddig's son, Django El Tahir El Siddig.
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Andrew Robinson: (on how his novel about 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine' 'A Stitch in Time' came about)
A diary I started keeping, as if Garak were keeping a diary – it's all in the first person. And it happened because when I started going to conventions, I thought I wanted to do more than just answer questions about how long it takes to put on the makeup, and so forth. And so I started reading entries from the diary. The people at the conventions really enjoyed it, and this one guy, once, at a convention, David George, who co-wrote a book with Armin Shimerman about Quark (I think The 34th Rule or something like that). And David very kindly suggested, "You know, you should gather this material, contact the people at Pocket Books, and see if they'd be interested in turning this into a book? So I did, and they were very enthusiastic about it. (edit) Andrew Robinson: (on his favourite episode of 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine')
There's one episode called "The Wire" where Garak is — being an operative, a secret agent within the Obsidian Order — has this mechanism that they call a wire placed in his brain. Basically, what it is simply is that if he's ever caught, and if he's tortured, this wire would then trip off the endorphins that would transmute the pain of the torture into pleasure. Well, Garak then gets addicted to this, the way any addict would become addicted to a drug, and basically Bashir saves his life and sees him through a cold-turkey process. But in that process, Garak is emotionally at the edge, and is spewing forth all these variations of stories and so forth. No one knows the truth, which story is true, but that's Garak. No one ever knows. It was a fabulous episode, and it was beautifully written by this guy, Robert Hewitt Wolfe, who wrote for several years for the show. The other episodes that I really liked a lot — there was a two-parter, where Odo and Garak set out to find Enabran Tain, who was the head of the Obsidian Order, and who eventually turns out to be Garak's father. "Improbable Cause" and ... I can't remember the name of the other one. It's a two-parter I really liked a lot. The "Doctor Bashir, I Presume," the James Bond spoof that we did, that was a lot of fun. It was hellacious to film, because I probably spent more hours in that makeup on that show than any other show. The show was a bear. They really were trying to make a James Bond movie, but it was an enormous amount of fun. And I thought that Winrich Kolbe, the director, did a wonderful job on it. Unfortunately, we ran afoul of the James Bond people, and we were going to do a lot of those, but that was the one and only. (edit) Andrew Robinson: (on his impressions of Cardassians on 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine')
[They're] reptilian. Using the human model, the brain model, Cardassians really work from their reptilian brain. I'm not making a value judgment about that. We all have that. Human beings have what is called a tripartite brain. There are 3 parts to our brain; the oldest part of our brain is the reptilian brain. So don't cast any aspersions about a 1/3 of my brain and I'm a great defender of Cardassians so there's a lot to be said about the reptilian brain. Reptilian brain knows what boundaries are. Reptilian brain knows how to take care of itself so that the species survive. Now having said that, there are downsides to the Reptilian brain knows what boundaries are. The reptilian brain knows how to take care of itself in order that the species survive. Now, having said that, there are downsides to the reptilian brain. And the Cardassians, it's true, have a lot of that. You know, the militarism, and the brutality, which the occupation of Bajor is on a level with anything that the Germans did with World War II. (edit) Andrew Robinson: (on Garak's character development on 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine')
The beautiful thing about doing Garak was how the writers increasingly fell in love with the character and they told me that every time there was an episode that included Garak that sort of quickened their juices and they wrote beautifully for me. They also picked up on business that I would come up with, behavior, and amplifying that and in the next script I would see a piece of business or behavior that I had pulled out in the previous episode. (edit) Andrew Robinson: (on wearing makeup in order to play Garak on 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine')
I'm claustrophobic and the makeup consists of 7 prosthetic pieces plus a paint job that would make Earl Schieb envious plus the costume that is built on the material that you make upholstery. Ah – so it doesn't breathe. Nothing breathes. In a sense it's like putting you in a mobile coffin. They put it on me and I really had an attack. I thought ... I'm not going to be able to do this. I don't know how I can get out of this. I was really going to call my agent and say, "Listen you gotta get me out of this because this is psychically not possible. I looked in the mirror and I saw this creature staring back at me and I thought this is extraordinary. I have never seen anything like this. This is an actor's dream to be able to do a character the inside of a character that looks like this. The claustrophobia went away. I never really had another attack for the 7 years though there were a couple of long days ... you know one of the 16-18 hour Star Trek days that occasionally happen where it got pretty old. (edit)
A diary I started keeping, as if Garak were keeping a diary – it's all in the first person. And it happened because when I started going to conventions, I thought I wanted to do more than just answer questions about how long it takes to put on the makeup, and so forth. And so I started reading entries from the diary. The people at the conventions really enjoyed it, and this one guy, once, at a convention, David George, who co-wrote a book with Armin Shimerman about Quark (I think The 34th Rule or something like that). And David very kindly suggested, "You know, you should gather this material, contact the people at Pocket Books, and see if they'd be interested in turning this into a book? So I did, and they were very enthusiastic about it. (edit) Andrew Robinson: (on his favourite episode of 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine')
There's one episode called "The Wire" where Garak is — being an operative, a secret agent within the Obsidian Order — has this mechanism that they call a wire placed in his brain. Basically, what it is simply is that if he's ever caught, and if he's tortured, this wire would then trip off the endorphins that would transmute the pain of the torture into pleasure. Well, Garak then gets addicted to this, the way any addict would become addicted to a drug, and basically Bashir saves his life and sees him through a cold-turkey process. But in that process, Garak is emotionally at the edge, and is spewing forth all these variations of stories and so forth. No one knows the truth, which story is true, but that's Garak. No one ever knows. It was a fabulous episode, and it was beautifully written by this guy, Robert Hewitt Wolfe, who wrote for several years for the show. The other episodes that I really liked a lot — there was a two-parter, where Odo and Garak set out to find Enabran Tain, who was the head of the Obsidian Order, and who eventually turns out to be Garak's father. "Improbable Cause" and ... I can't remember the name of the other one. It's a two-parter I really liked a lot. The "Doctor Bashir, I Presume," the James Bond spoof that we did, that was a lot of fun. It was hellacious to film, because I probably spent more hours in that makeup on that show than any other show. The show was a bear. They really were trying to make a James Bond movie, but it was an enormous amount of fun. And I thought that Winrich Kolbe, the director, did a wonderful job on it. Unfortunately, we ran afoul of the James Bond people, and we were going to do a lot of those, but that was the one and only. (edit) Andrew Robinson: (on his impressions of Cardassians on 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine')
[They're] reptilian. Using the human model, the brain model, Cardassians really work from their reptilian brain. I'm not making a value judgment about that. We all have that. Human beings have what is called a tripartite brain. There are 3 parts to our brain; the oldest part of our brain is the reptilian brain. So don't cast any aspersions about a 1/3 of my brain and I'm a great defender of Cardassians so there's a lot to be said about the reptilian brain. Reptilian brain knows what boundaries are. Reptilian brain knows how to take care of itself so that the species survive. Now having said that, there are downsides to the Reptilian brain knows what boundaries are. The reptilian brain knows how to take care of itself in order that the species survive. Now, having said that, there are downsides to the reptilian brain. And the Cardassians, it's true, have a lot of that. You know, the militarism, and the brutality, which the occupation of Bajor is on a level with anything that the Germans did with World War II. (edit) Andrew Robinson: (on Garak's character development on 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine')
The beautiful thing about doing Garak was how the writers increasingly fell in love with the character and they told me that every time there was an episode that included Garak that sort of quickened their juices and they wrote beautifully for me. They also picked up on business that I would come up with, behavior, and amplifying that and in the next script I would see a piece of business or behavior that I had pulled out in the previous episode. (edit) Andrew Robinson: (on wearing makeup in order to play Garak on 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine')
I'm claustrophobic and the makeup consists of 7 prosthetic pieces plus a paint job that would make Earl Schieb envious plus the costume that is built on the material that you make upholstery. Ah – so it doesn't breathe. Nothing breathes. In a sense it's like putting you in a mobile coffin. They put it on me and I really had an attack. I thought ... I'm not going to be able to do this. I don't know how I can get out of this. I was really going to call my agent and say, "Listen you gotta get me out of this because this is psychically not possible. I looked in the mirror and I saw this creature staring back at me and I thought this is extraordinary. I have never seen anything like this. This is an actor's dream to be able to do a character the inside of a character that looks like this. The claustrophobia went away. I never really had another attack for the 7 years though there were a couple of long days ... you know one of the 16-18 hour Star Trek days that occasionally happen where it got pretty old. (edit)
Other Appearances
| Star | |
|---|---|
|
240-Robert
Wilson |
Ryan's Hope
Frances "Frank" Ryan #2 (1976-1977) |
| Recurring Role |
|---|
|
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
Garak |
| Guest Star | |
|---|---|
|
Barnaby Jones
Echo of a Distant Battle (Part 2) Robert Curtis |
Barnaby Jones
Band of Evil Sonny Holland |
|
Barnaby Jones
Echo of a Distant Battle (Part 1) Robert Curtis |
Barnaby Jones
Murder in the Key of C Phil Devine |
|
Bonanza
Forever (1) John Harper |
Bonanza
Forever (2) John Harper |
| Other |
|---|
|
Dragon Tales
One Big Wish / Breaking Up Is Hard to Do Story |
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Stars In
240-Robert
The short-lived "240-Robert" presented the exploits of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office "Emergency Services Detail." The ESD were two deputies (John Bennett Perry and a young Mark Harmon)... more Ryan's Hope
Ryan's Hope was a soap opera which aired on ABC from 1975 through 1989. It focused on the Ryans, a Irish Catholic fnamily in New York City who owned a taver. The serial was about their... more
The short-lived "240-Robert" presented the exploits of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office "Emergency Services Detail." The ESD were two deputies (John Bennett Perry and a young Mark Harmon)... more Ryan's Hope
Ryan's Hope was a soap opera which aired on ABC from 1975 through 1989. It focused on the Ryans, a Irish Catholic fnamily in New York City who owned a taver. The serial was about their... more


