Al Calavicci
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Albert Calavicci | |
---|---|
Rear Admiral Al Calavicci (left) with Dr. Sam Beckett |
|
First appearance | March 26, 1989 “Genesis” |
Last appearance | May 5, 1993 “Mirror Image” |
Created by | Donald P. Bellisario |
Portrayed by | Dean Stockwell |
Information | |
Nickname(s) | Al |
Gender | Male |
Age | 61 (at the beginning of the series) |
Date of birth | June 15, 1934 |
Occupation | Pilot Companion/Assistant to Dr. Sam Beckett |
Title | Rear admiral |
Family | unnamed father (deceased), unnamed mother, Trudy Calavicci (sister; deceased) |
Spouse(s) | Beth Calavicci |
Children | Four daughters |
Rear Admiral Albert “Al” Calavicci is a fictional character on the science fiction drama Quantum Leap, created by Donald P. Bellisario and played by Dean Stockwell.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Al was born June 15, 1934. His father, who worked in construction, immigrated from Abruzzi, Itally and his mother was a Russian immigrant. Al had a younger sister, Theresa “Trudy” Calavicci, who had Downs syndrome. During his childhood, Al’s mother left the family and married another man. His father tried to keep the family together, but when his work required him to move to the Middle East, he was forced to put Al into an orphanage and Trudy into a mental institution, which was common practice for the mentally retarded in the 1940s. A few years later, Al’s father returned and the family was reunited until Al’s father developed a serious case of cancer. After the death of their father, Al and Trudy were once again sent to the orphanage and the institution, respectively.
Al was a troubled, but by no means dangerous, youth. To keep himself out of trouble, he explored many hobbies, including acting and boxing. At one point, Al ran away from the orphanage and lived on the road with a pool shark, but after his mentor and friend was arrested, Al was returned to the orphanage. When Al was 19, he went to the mental institution so he could be reunited with his sister, but discovered that she had contracted pneumonia and died, likely due to the institution’s negligence.
As a young man, Al joined the United States Navy and became a pilot. It was there that he met his first wife, Beth. Al and Beth were married, though due to various duty assignments, they spent little time together. It was during these years that Al would be involved in the Apollo Program and was a member of the command crew of Apollo 8. Sometime between this and his first marriage, Al had a brief relationship with a Navy trauma nurse, Lt. Lisa Sherman. It was during this time that Al was accused of raping and murdering his commanding officer’s wife (he was found innocent after another pilot confessed; the death was accidental).
In the late 1960s, Al began a series of tours in Vietnam, and the distance between him and Beth started to put a strain on his marriage. In early 1969, Al was captured by the Việt Cộng and would be a prisoner of war until 1973. By the time of his release, the Navy had declared Al as missing in action and probably killed in action; after a period of mourning, Beth re-married. A heartbroken Al, after returning to the United States, had a subsequent series of failed marriages; a running gag in the series was Al remembering something about one of his ex-wives, but he could not remember which one. Thus, Beth was always the great love of Al’s life. In the series’ final episode “Mirror Image,” Sam Beckett changes history so that Beth is now aware that Al is still alive and a prisoner of war, and consequently does not remarry; Beth and Al, in the new timeline, have been married for decades and have four daughters.
In the years that followed, Al would rise through the naval ranks, eventually becoming a Rear Admiral. Over the years, he would marry four more times, each marriage ending in divorce, as he sought to fill the gap left behind by his first love, Beth. As his personal life started deteriorating, Al started to abuse alcohol. While working on the Starbright Project, Al first met Dr. Sam Beckett when, in a drunken rage, Al was beating up a vending machine. The two became fast friends, and Sam started to help Al turn his life around.
After the Starbright Project, Sam and Al worked together on Project Quantum Leap, a time travel experiment based on Sam’s own theories about time and space. When Sam prematurely activated his time machine and was propelled into the past, it was Al’s duty to remain in contact with him through holographic projections tuned into their brainwaves. Over the next few years, Al worked with Sam, providing him with information from their historical database and lending Sam advice and moral support. During Sam’s journey, Al tried to get Sam to change the fate of his marriage to Beth, but to no avail. At one point, Al and Sam’s positions were switched, and Al leaped back in time to 1945. During this mission, Al was injured and placed in imminent danger, but Sam saved him by exchanging places with him again.
Though separated by decades, Sam and Al continued to work closely together until the people at Project Quantum Leap lost contact with Sam. In the end, Sam imparted to Al’s first wife that her missing husband was alive and would someday return home. This event changed Al’s past as he and Beth would remain together and have four daughters. How the change affected his friendship with Sam, or if Sam and Al ever met remains unclear.
Also, in the final episode, Al reveals that he had an uncle named Stawpah, who worked as a coal miner. Stawpah had spent so much time loading coal that he was permanently stooped over because of injuries. Sam had met Stawpah during the episode, but does not learn of the connection until the end when Stawpah, having saved two other miners from a cave-in, leaps out and disappears. (As Al pointed out, his uncle had been dead for some time by now. One of the other miners also asks Sam how he could have known Stawpah.)
[edit] Al the Hologram
Al primarily appears through the series as a hologram that only Sam can see and hear. He stands in a holographic chamber that projects the image of Sam and everything around him around Al. Any thing or person that Al is touching becomes visible to Sam, though with people, only the image comes in; Sam cannot hear their voice, nor can they hear Sam. Though only intended to be in contact with Sam, there were people that, for various reasons, were able to see and/or hear Al.
- Teresa Brookner (“Another Mother”), Christy Cole (“Maybe Baby”), Jessica Elroy (“A Tale of Two Sweeties”), a little girl named Maria (“Last Dance Before an Execution”), and a whole children’s choir (“Justice”)—all children aged five and under can see and hear Al, due to their natural ability to see the truth of things. (They could also see Sam for who he really was.)
- Melny Trafford (“The Color of Truth”) briefly heard Al in an instant-from-death experience, but believed him to be the ghost of her deceased husband.
- Troian Claridge and Jimmy Giovanni (“A Portrait for Troian”) could hear Al’s voice through Dr. Mintz’s EM-tracking equipment.
- Sybil, a Gypsy fortune teller (“Leaping in Without a Net”), and Tamlyn Matsuda (“Temptation Eyes”)—psychics who could sense Al’s presence.
- Maggie Dawson (“The Leap Home, Part II—Vietnam”) saw Al as she was dying.
- Michael Blake (“A Little Miracle”) could see and hear Al due to neurons and mesons on a frequency similar to Sam’s; a slight retuning of the hologram system prevented this, but they subsequently set it back to show Blake his future.
- Tibido Johnson and several fellow patients at Havenwell Hospital (“Shock Theater”) could see and hear Al due to mental handicap.
Al was also visible and audible to all animals as well as a ghost (“A Portrait for Troian”), an angel (“It’s a Wonderful Leap”), and the devil himself (“The Boogieman”) (although the true nature of these last three characters are deliberately unconfirmed, only hinted at).
[edit] Alternate Project Quantum Leap
In one episode, Sam leaps into Al himself at an earlier period, when Al is on trial for the rape and murder of a commander’s wife. Although in the original history, Al was acquitted, Sam’s actions cause the case to begin turning against Al when he prevents a key witness from testifying because he believes he is there to stop her ruining her life (since Al was spending time with his younger self, he failed to inform Sam that it didn’t matter what the witness did as she was later killed in a car crash after testifying). Partway through the episode, when Ziggy projects that the odds are 100% that Al will be convicted and executed, Al disappears mid-sentence and is replaced by a man named Edward St. John (with only Sam remembering that Al was the Observer), implying that Al was executed from the murder.
In this new continuity, the staff at Project Quantum Leap appeared less emotionally involved with Sam’s various hosts—it is implied that they are never even allowed out of the Waiting Room and have little to no contact with the rest of the staff), and Sam and Edward have no apparent connection beyond a professional relationship; Edward even calls Sam “Samuel,” a name that Sam hasn’t been called since he last saw his great-aunt. Other differences include Ziggy now being known as “Alpha”—and being referred to as male rather than female—and Tina and Gushie being married. Fortunately, as soon as the odds jump back to 80% in favor of Al surviving—after Sam discovers a cigar in the car where the murder was committed; Al didn’t smoke at this point, so he couldn’t have left the cigar there—Al is restored, with only Sam remembering that Edward St. John was ever even there. This confirms that PQL would still exist without Al, though it would be radically different from the project as we know it.
[edit] Trivia
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (February 2008) |
Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- Al speaks fluent Italian and Russian, and is comprehensive in Hebrew.
- Al’s trademark cigars were Dean Stockwell’s idea. Said Stockwell: “It was a good way to get free cigars for five years.”
- Al appeared in a variety of loud or exotic outfits throughout the series. Why the character dresses like this is never explained, though Al says in “Future Boy” that the sober suit his lawyer was forcing him to wear to court was “boring.” In terms of the series’ production, it could be assumed that this was to reflect the show’s projection of the near-future fashions of the mid-to-late 1990s, or possibly to allow casual viewers to immediately differentiate between Al (who is not actually “there”) and other characters. The idea to have Al appear like this came from Donald P. Bellisario, the show’s creator, as mentioned on the series 1 DVD documentary A Kiss with History: Remembering Quantum Leap.
- After Beth, Al had unsuccessful marriages to an unnamed Hungarian (“Leaping In Without a Net”), a Jewish woman named Ruthie (“Thou Shalt Not...”), a woman named Sharon who occasionally sues him for more alimony (“Future Boy”), and Maxine, with whom Al honeymooned at Niagara Falls—as he did with Beth and Ruthie (“Honeymoon Express”). Al frequently teaches Sam about certain things it would be unlikely for Al to know about, claiming that he got the knowledge from one of his wives.
- Al was active in the civil rights movement in the 1950s, demonstrating against racial segregation (“The Color of Truth”).
- In the episode “Deliver Us from Evil,” Al says he does not eat meat.
- Al appears to be a strong environmentalist, outraged at ships dumping garbage into the ocean (“Sea Bride”). This rage almost distracted him from helping Sam, whom a gangster had thrown in amongst the trash of the Queen Mary at the time.
- Al is deeply superstitious, believing strongly in the supernatural and paranormal such as the devil (“M.I.A.”), Egyptian curses (“The Curse of Ptah-Hotep”), and vampires (“Blood Moon”). However, he remains skeptical about the existence of UFOs (“Star Light, Star Bright”), and claimed that the psychic powers of Tamlyn Matsuda (“Temptation Eyes”) amounted to coincidence.
- Al, unlike Sam, loved the disco atmosphere of the 1970s (“Disco Inferno,” “Private Dancer”), and even had a manbag.