Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

FAQ for the television series "Quantum Leap"

72 views
Skip to first unread message

Cheryl A. Bellucci

unread,
Aug 23, 1994, 9:06:20 AM8/23/94
to

The Quantum Leap Frequently Asked Questions List

Created by: Quantum Buc (b...@world.std.com) and
Debbie Brown (dmb...@ultb.isc.rit.edu)

With assistance from: Vicky Sailer (ad...@mrmarx.uu.net)
Lisa (Vicky's officemate)
Sally Smith (sal...@netcom.com)
Audrey Urling (a...@dukee.egr.duke.edu)
and many other members of the QL/usenet community.
Occasional references from _Harry and Wally's
Favorite TV Shows_, H. Castleman & W. J. Podrazik,
Prentice Hall Press, New York, 1989

Updated by: Tracy Finifter (fini...@gandalf.rutgers.edu)
and Cheryl Bellucci (ac...@dayton.wright.edu)
Revision Date: August 17, 1994

This is a reference file that is meant to answer those questions most
frequently asked about the US television program, Quantum Leap. It also
attempts to catalog the information viewers have been able to glean from
individual stories and other, official and non-official sources. Permission
is granted to distribute this file UNMODIFIED to other networks and BBSs.
Rights to modifications to this file is reserved by the updater(s).

Note: you may freely copy and distribute this guide for personal use
provided that it be distributed in its entirety, with all original
author and copyright information intact. Any sales of this document
or use of it in a for-profit project are expressly forbidden,
without the specific consent of the authors.

Table of Contents:
1. Who controls the leaps?
2. When Al looks at Sam, what does he see?
3. Who is in the "Waiting room"?
4. When Sam looks at himself, what does he see?
5. Can anyone else at the project go into the imaging chamber and see Sam?
6. There is no number 6.
7. Can Sam die during a leap?
8. Why could Sam see when he "replaced" a blind man? Would he be able to
hear as a deaf person?
9. What does the leapee remember about his experience after he returns?
10. Can anyone see Sam as Sam, rather than as the leapee? Can anyone
other than Sam see Al?
11. Why can't Sam leap back beyond his own lifetime? (or, why can't he leap
into the far past)?
12. What would happen if Sam failed to do what he was there to do?
13. How does Ziggy know so much about peoples' lives in the past?
14. When is Al's "present"? Or rather, what year did Sam start leaping?
15. How is it that when Sam leaps into a leapee who is shorter/smaller
than he is, people around him don't notice a difference in size?
16. What is the Imaging Chamber?
17. Who is this Sally Smith person and why does she know so much about the
behind the scenes goings-on of Belisarius Productions? Why is she called
"Lucky Bitch"?
18. What about other inconsistencies that I've noticed in QL?
19. Who is this "Gooshie" that Al keeps talking to?
20. What are "Leapheads"?
21. So what's the story with that episode titled "The B**giem*n" and why do
Leapers refuse to mention it by name?
22. Is Scott Bakula really as nice as he seems to be?
23. I remember watching a time travel show in the 60's, Time Tunnel. Anyone
else remember it?
24. Isn't Quantum Leap just like that other time travel show, Voyagers?
25. What's with that show, "Time Trax"?
26. If Al is a hologram, why does he cast shadows?
27. Has Sam leapt outside the United States? Into a foreign national?
28. Where did Alia and Zoey come from?
29. Does Scott Bakula do his own singing on the show?
30. What are these abbreviations you people keep using?
31. How come cars pass through Al, but he can also ride in them?
32. Why couldn't Sam leap into the future (post-90's)?
33. What happened in the last episode? Did Sam ever come home?
34. Wasn't the guy who played Al the Bartender in the last episode the same
guy who played Weird Ernie in the first episode?
35. Who do I write to to get a Quantum Leap movie? How can I write to the
cast and crew now?
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
1. Who controls the leaps?

Nobody knows. Sam and Al know that it's not Ziggy or anyone at Project
Quantum Leap. Al told Sam in the pilot that Sam's leaps were out of the
project's control, so Sam and Al hypothetize that it's Him <eyes heaven-ward>
who is controlling things.

In the last episode, "Mirror Image", Sam met a mysterious bartender (named Al,
BTW) who told Sam that it was Sam who was controlling his leaps. Just who
this bartender was (Sam and Don Bellisario both thought it was God) and
whether he was telling the truth remains a mystery.

2. When Al looks at Sam, what does he see?

Depends on the episode. In the episode entitled "What Price, Gloria", Al was
out of control at seeing Sam as the gorgeous secretary. Al probably
recognizes Sam because they are linked through their brainwave trans-missions,
which is what is used by the project to locate Sam in time. However, in other
episodes (such as "Nowhere to Run,") Al indicated (although not conclusively)
that he could see Sam as Sam.

3. Who is in the "waiting room"? What does it look like?

The leapee, the term given to the person who Sam has replaced in time. As
with the previous question, we're not exactly sure who Al sees. In "Genesis,"
Al states that the leapee looks like Sam to them, but on other occasions, he
has given descriptions of who he saw in the Waiting Room to Sam. The waiting
room has been described by Don Bellisario as being a sterile, hospital-like
room where the leapee is examined by the Project's medical staff. We've seen
it a few times in the fourth and fifth seasons and it's big and blue. Once we
got to see (and HEAR) the leapee when she entered the imaging chamber with Al,
and she looked to us like the image Sam saw in the mirror. This is probably
due to the same mechanism that allows us to see Sam as Sam [Bellisario's rules
:)].

4. When Sam looks at himself, what does he see?

He sees himself, Sam Beckett - unless he looks into a mirror. Then he sees
the leapee.

5. Can anyone else at the project go into the imaging chamber and see Sam?

Depends. In one episode, (Star-Crossed), several committee members entered
the chamber with Al, but for them, they were in an empty room with Al talking
to thin air. The committe members were not visible to Sam (or us). Only when
Al is touching an object will it be visible to Sam (and us). In more than one
episode, Al brought an object into the waiting room for Sam to see (this is
beyond Al's clothing, cigar and handlink). Skin to skin contact must be
needed for another person to be seen in the Imaging Chamber. Dr. Beeks, by
holding Al's hand appeared to be able to see Sam and in turn was seen, but not
heard, by him [and us :)]. In one other episode (Killin' Time), a quick jury-
rigging job by Ziggy enabled Gooshie (see question 19) to contact Sam via the
hologram/brain-wave process, but the image was unstable.

6. There is no number 6.

[This is a net.Leapers "in joke" that started on Monty Python's Flying
Circus.]

7. Can Sam die during a leap?

According to Don Bellisario, YES he can.

8. Why could Sam see when he "replaced" a blind man? Would he be able to
hear as a deaf person?

Sam is physically leaping through time, his mass being exchanged with that of
the leapee. Sam, not sharing the handicap, will not exhibit it. Sam's entire
body and soul trades places with the leapee, although the physical aura stays
around.

To quote The Source Himself (Don Bellisario):

"...when Sam leaps in and bounces somebody out, I like to think of it this
way: ... if that person was hit by a car and they broke their leg and hit the
street and _then_ Sam leaped in, Sam would not have a broken leg. But if Sam
leaped in and was crossing the street and was hit by the car, then Sam would
have the broken leg."

In other words:

He does not share handicaps or injuries suffered by the leapee before his leap
in, but will sustain injuries suffered while he is there. So yes, he could
hear if he leapt into a deaf person, just as he could walk when he leapt into
a double amputee ("Nowhere to Run").

9. What does the leapee remember about his experience after he returns?

This is also not known. The only time we've seen this occur was in the
episode "Double Identity," where Sam leaped to replace another body and the
original host returned. He APPEARED to have no memory of anything after he
was leaped into. It has been stated that the leapee, while in Sam's body back
in the Waiting Room, has a 'swiss-cheesed' memory, much like Sam received upon
his initial leap. Because of the ultramodern hospital-like atmosphere of the
waiting room, many of the leapees believe they have been abducted by aliens.
Deborah Pratt says that as the leapees return, they pick up some of Sam's
memories of what happened, but they believe the events happened to them. Don
Bellisario believes a lot of these people ended up writing books about UFOs.
:-)

10. Can anyone see Sam as Sam, rather than as the leapee? Can anyone
other than Sam see Al?

Small children, the "mentally absent", animals, and people near death can see
him [And pretty blondes with very low IQs, if Dean Stockwell got his way
:-)]. Al has explained that children and animals see things as they really
are because they exist in a natural alpha state. Also, if a person's
brainwaves were sufficiently in tune with Sam's, that person would be able to
see and hear Al too until they could "tune him out" ("A Little Miracle"),
although that person would still see as Sam as the leapee.

11. Why can't Sam leap back beyond his own lifetime? (or, why can't he leap
into the far past)?

This is all part of Sam Beckett's String Theory. A person's lifetime
is like a string - one end of the string is one's birth, the other end,
one's death. Tie the ends together and ball up the string, and all
the days of one's life touch all the other days of one's life. If one
can loose one's self from the string, one can Quantum Leap from one
day to the any other. On one occasion, Sam was able to leap
back to a time before the date of his birth due to an accident that
occurred during a leap out in the middle of a thunderstorm. Al and
Sam leaped together and wound up trading places, Al in the past, Sam
in the future. This "simo-leap" caused an exchange of subatomic matter
between Al and Sam allowing Sam to leap back into Al in the year 1945.
On another occassion, Sam was able, through some explanation concerning
genetics, to leap into his own great-grandfather in 1862.

12. What would happen if Sam failed to do what he was there to do?

Again, nobody knows. One theory that we have was that he would be
trapped in the past forever, replacing the host. This, however, is
doubtful. Another theory that we have had was that he would leap into
another's life to attempt again to fix "that which has gone wrong".
In "Double Identity", Sam was pulled from the leapee without resolving
the problem he was there to fix. He leaped immediately to replace
another body in the same room and in that SECOND body completed his
mission.

13. How does Ziggy know so much about peoples' lives in the past?

Ziggy is hooked up to every major database of the late '90s. It's
amazing, when you think about it, just how much is REALLY known about
you that is stored on computers.

14. When is Al's "present"? Or rather, in what year did Sam start leaping?

Through various little hints and clues, the date of Sam's first leap has been
determined to be 1995 (seven years after our present, since Quantum Leap
premiered in the fall of 1988). Al's "present" tended to jump around a bit in
during the course of the series. Through either arithmetic or direct
statements, it was 1997 in the third season finale, then 1999 for the fourth
season opener. Then in the fifth season opener, the date was given as seven
months *before* the fourth season opener, with references to events from the
fourth season opener.

15. How is it that when Sam leaps into a leapee who is shorter/smaller
than he is, people around him don't notice a difference in size?

I belive it is a question of topology. I'm not very good at it, but
consider the following argument. The QL maps everything from a different
time into a frame of reference relative to Sam. (And vice versa for the
host.) Sam doesn't see what really happens, but rather what happens
relative to his host. [Doug van der Veen]

It's all a matter of relativity. Consider a spaceship 10 meters long.
Send it off at 99.4% of the speed of light and it will seem to be only
1 meter long to anyone still on earth, while still seeming like 10 to
those on board. Gravity can do the same sort of thing; put an object
deep into a gravity well and it will seem shorter. The point is the
ship is in a different 'reference frame' than the earth, and the
object in the well is in a different frame then the observer floating
outside it, and things like length (also duration) are not the same
across reference frames. [Larne Pekowsky]

So here's the theory: when Sam leaps his whole body leaps (explaining
things like "Blind Faith"), but it is mapped into a different
reference frame. If you look through a warped piece of glass, things
seem to be a different size and shape. The same thing happens with a
warped region of space (cf. "Gravitational Lenses.") When Sam leaps
the space containing him is warped in such a way that not just length,
but all physical properties are altered. And, of course, the only
person in Sam's reference frame is Sam, so when he looks at himself he
sees what he has always seen, but when he looks in a mirror the
photons have passed between frames, and so he sees the leapee.
[Pekowsky]

To answer the original question, when Sam, 6ft, has leaped into
someone 5ft7 and is talking to someone, they look at the leapee's eyes,
he sees them looking at his eyes, and likewise he looks down, but the
person he's talking to sees the leapee looking straight. Which is
really right? Neither, or both! It's the same as asking 'how long
is the spaceship really.' The answer is completely dependent on what
frame you're in because certain physical properties have no absolute
existence. [Pekowsky]

As for how this ties into superstrings - current thought is that strings
don't just define particles, but also in some sense define space and time
themselves (ref: "Superstrings: A Theory of Everything?" edited by PCW
Davies). When Sam leaps he takes the strings comprising his body and
'soul,' into a region of space made up of the strings of the person he's
replacing. [Pekowsky]

16. What is the Imaging Chamber?

This is the only place where Al can go to talk to Sam. Its construction
allows a holographic image of Al to be generated for transmission into
Sam's optic and otic neurons in the past, and for Sam and his surrounding
images to be projected onto Al's neurons. Speculation (and a quote from Don)
has it that this is a very large and cavernous room judging from the amount
of walking Al can do without bumping into walls and the sound of the door
as it slides open and closed.

17. Who is this Sally Smith person and why does she know so much about
the behind the scenes goings-on of Belisarius Productions? Why is she
called "Lucky Bitch"?

Hey, that's TWO questions! Sally Smith is our own "Set Elf", otherwise
known to the less fortunate of us as the "Lucky Bitch" who resides somewhere
in the Bay Area of California. Through some kind of divine providence, she
has been granted the blessing of frequent visits to the set of Quantum Leap
where she communes with the shining lights of Leapdom and imparts her
learnings unto the less fortunate of us on the net (this is where the "Lucky
Bitch" comes from). This blessing comes with a price however, in the form of
air fare, gasoline and phone bills that when combined, resemble the national
debt. This price she pays gladly so that she may share her visits and info
with us both on the net and in her mailing list. To enroll in the list, send
e-mail to her at "lea...@netcom.com". Unfortunately for all of us, the
frequency of her visits have been greatly reduced due to a new studio policy
that restricts visits to the sets in their domain. [!@#$%^& legal nozzles.
Sally Smith]

18. What about other inconsistencies that I've noticed in QL?

"Don't investigate this too closely." --Don Bellisario, 3/17/90

19. Who is this "Gooshie" that Al keeps talking to?

Gooshie is Ziggy's programmer, a little guy with bad breath. We used to see
him very briefly in profile wearing a headset in the opening title sequence as
Sam is leaping out and in the pilot and the episodes "The Leap Back", "Killin'
Time", "Lee Harvey Oswald", and "Mirror Image". He's played by commedian
Dennis Wolfberg.

20. What are "Leapheads"?

There is no such creature as a Leaphead. This is a word coined by a NBC
employee referring to a Leaper, which is a Quantum Leap fan. "Leaper" is
the preferred term, used by the fans themselves and the cast and crew of
Quantum Leap when speaking about the fans. The prevailing attitude is,
"if 'Leaper' is good enough for Don Bellisario and company, it's good
enough for us".

21. So what's the story with that episode titled "The B**giem*n" and why
do Leapers refuse to mention it by name?

[Episode title edited for net.safety] This episode first aired near
Halloween 1990, and from the first time it aired, weird events have been
associated with this episode. As an example, this episode seems to have
the highest incidence of VCR/cable/local station failure than any other
episode aired. There have been numerous reports of VCRs cutting out during
the taping of this episode, local stations and cable companies dropping
their signal. Even mentioning it by name is hazardous, as one net.Leaper
can attest. This hapless individual (who knew better) was bandying about
the name of this episode. He lost his job AND his net.access. Its mention
has been known to cause power failures and auto breakdowns, so it's best to
just refer to it as "The Halloween Episode". Leapers everywhere will know
of what you speak. By the way, cameras and recording equipment also tend
to act strangely around Chris Ruppenthal, the writer of this episode.
Since it aired, his nickname has been "Ruppenboogie". He _is_ kind
enough not to say the title of the episode around the fans, though
director Joe Napolitano does. Mention of all this merely causes Chris
to laugh evilly.

As long as we're on the subject of Chris, Joe, and weirdness, let's note
that the episode "The Curse of Pt*h-H*tep" appears to cause earthquakes
in Southern California -- the large quakes of Apr. and June 1992 coincided
with the two showings of this episode. Pretty scary, huh, kids?

22. Is Scott Bakula really as nice as he seems to be?

Yes, yes, a thousand times yes. A perfect example of just how nice, patient,
hardworking and DECENT this man is is his appearance at the QL screening
for the fans in LA back on February 25, 1991. He had put in a hard day on
the set working on the episode "Last Dance Before an Execution", a very
emotionally intense, exhausting episode when he had to appear at the
screening to answer questions (with the BGU, Deborah Pratt and Dean) and
to meet the fans. He was pleasant and open with the fans, even joking
with people and accepting small gifts and hugs with aplomb. Afterward,
he was mobbed by (literally!) hundreds of mostly female fans who requested
his autograph and their picture taken with him. He spoke to each person
and smiled for the cameras. He is truly a sweet, gracious person, traits
which are shared by the rest of the people associated with this production.

Any further elaborations can be filled in by FAQ # 17, the LB herself. :)

[Why, thank you, Debbie...] Another example is the UCLA screening of
11/25/90. Scott had been to New York City and back that weekend
(appearing in the Macy's parade), had put in a long day at work and
was in a great deal of pain from an injured ankle. But he walked out
on stage and answered questions like he hadn't a care in the world and
afterwards signed autographs until co-executive producer Michael
Zinberg literally picked him up off the floor and took him away,
telling him he had to go to work the next day. Then there was the
convention...well, you get the idea. [Sally Smith]

23. I remember watching a time travel show in the 60's, "Time Tunnel".
Anyone else remember it?

Ah yes, Irwin Allen's Time Tunnel. This was a show about a secret government
funded time travel experiment in which a young researcher sends himself back
in time in an effort to prevent the project's funding from being cut. This,
the two men travelling through time, and the efforts to retrieve them are the
only things this show has in common with Quantum Leap (which only has ONE man
travelling through time, his companion is firmly rooted in the future, but I
digress). In the Time Tunnel, time travellers Anthony Newman and Doug
Phillips unfailingly arrived at historical events and desperately tried to
influence events based on their knowledge of the outcome. They always failed.

This is a show where the time travellers would find themselves at the Roman
coliseum one week, and in Napoleon's army the next, THEN tripping to the
bombing of Pearl Harbor. It is drastic time changes like this that Don
Bellisario wanted to avoid when he imposed the 'within his own lifetime' rule.

He felt the huge differences in time settings were distracting and
unrealistic. :-)

24. Isn't Quantum Leap just like that other time travel show, "Voyagers"?

Phineas Bogg with the assistance of companion Jeffrey Jones are time
travellers who find themselves trying to fix history, or to 'put
things right' when 'people become displaced in time and find themselves
a half-step away from a totally different destiny' [Harry and Wally].
In one episode, Franklin D. Roosevelt became a movie director and it
was up to Phineas and Jeffrey to set him on the right course to the
presidency of the United States. This is another show that would find
its heroes travelling to far-flung places and times, a plot device
that Don Bellisario wanted to avoid.

25. What's with that show, "Time Trax"?

In "Time Trax", a cop from the future comes back to the twentieth century to
apprehend criminals from his own time. He's assisted by a computer from his
own time who appears to him in the form of a hologram (sound familiar,
folks?)

(I have to get some more info on this show, considering I've never been able
to sit through an entire episode. :-)

26. If Al is a hologram, why does he cast shadows?

The shadows are holograms, too, and are generated and projected by Ziggy as
part of the process, of course. [Sally Smith]

Seriously, while Al may not cast shadows, _Dean_ certainly does
(especially since-- as QL's director of photography Michael Watkins, ASC
once put it-- "Dean likes to talk with his hands so much that he's a
pretty active shadow anyway."). It's simply physically impossible to
eliminate them all. Also, there are times when having Al not cast a
shadow would actually make him look fake--like a pasted-on cut out
effect instead of a real person. See question # 17. [Sally Smith]

27. Has Sam leapt outside the United States? Into foreign nationals?

Sam has leapt outside the United States a total of 7 times:

"The Leap Home II - Vietnam": As the name implies, Sam leapt into Vietnam as
an American soldier in his brother's Navy SEAL squad.

"The Curse of Ptah Hotep": Sam leapt into an American archaeologist on a dig
in Egypt.

"Ghost Ship": Sam is a charter plane's co-pilot flying through the Bermuda
triangle on its way to the island of Bermuda.

"Lee Harvey Oswald": As the title character, Sam leapt to Japan and Moscow.

"The Leaping of the Shrew": Sam lands into a Greek national somewhere in the
Aegean Sea.

"Blood Moon": Sam leaps into England, and he may or may not be a vampire.

28. Where did Alia and Zoey come from?

We don't know. What we do know is that Alia is an Evil Leaper and Zoey is her
hologram, Sam and Al's evil counterparts. (Although according to Carolyn
Seymour who plays Zoey, Zoey is the evil one, not Alia.) In any case, all
that we know about their project is that it's controlled by a computer called
Lothos and is committed to projects such as murder and homewrecking. There's
been a lot of discussion on the net regarding this topic, and it is some
people's opinion that PEQL (Project Evil Quantum Leap) is run by Satan
himself.

29. Does Scott Bakula do his own singing on the show?

You betcha. Scott is an accomplished singer (1988 Tony nomination for
"Romance/Romance"), pianist (see "Blind Faith"), songwriter (he wrote
the lyrics to the song "Somewhere in the Night" from "Piano Man"),
dancer, and all-around athlete. Let's put it this way -- if you think
Scott's doing it (and it's not wildly dangerous) -- it's him.

30. What are these abbreviations you people keep using?

Whoops, sorry! GTF means "God, Time, or Fate" -- whatever "unknown
force" is leaping Sam around. BGU (coined by Warren J. Madden) stands
for "Big Guy Upstairs", and depending on context, that either means
GTF or Don Bellisario. A variation of that is TBEU, or The Big Entity
Upstairs (to be politically correct).

31. Since Al is a hologram, we always see the neat effects of cars
driving right through him, etc, so how can he sit in the car and
travel within it too?

Well, when Al appears to be riding in the car, what's actually
happening is that he's merely placed his image within the car and
set it (his image) to track along with Sam's traveling. This same
technique also allows him to track alongside the outside of moving
vehicles as well. I'd assume that he's standing the entire time
he's "riding," which also accounts for why he often seems to be
facing a different direction than one normally would while riding
in a vehicle (i.e. straight ahead). [Robin C. Kwong]

32. I read the QL primer and I understand the concept of time strings
with the parts of the string touching other times, and how the rule is
that Sam can only leap to times that occur during his own life-time.
My question is, why can't Sam leap into the future? By the future, I
mean that period of time between the first leap, and Sam's death.

Sam's leaping into post-'90s time would seem to fit within the
definition of "his own lifetime," since one's birth as well as death
would consititute one's entire lifetime. This was stated as much in
"Genesis" ("One end of this string represents your birth; the other
end, your death. You tie the ends together, and your life is a loop.
Ball the loop...and the days of your life touch each other out of
sequence. Therefore, leaping from one point in the string to another
--" "Would move you back and forth within your own lifetime.").

With this in mind, then, "future" leaps would seem to be possible.
However, since now the m.o. of the Project has changed slightly due to
the interference of GTFWhoever, it just might not be practical. That
is, Sam leaps in order to right some wrong, often using his knowledge
of the future to solve the problem -- or at the very least, the fact
that he's from the future enables him to recognize the fact that there
*exists* a problem at all (preventing something from happening that
the original host didn't see coming up the first time around). In a
"future" leap, Ziggy would be useless in terms of obtaining data, Al
would be reduced to being only able to offer moral support or an extra
pair of eyes, and Sam would be just as clueless about the situation as
the original leapee was (and probably even more so). The sheer
impracticality of these conditions would then cut down quite a bit the
probability of a "future" leap.

Then again, if Sam does do a "future" leap, would that give away
the fact that he's not going to die in any other leap before the
Project's "real time" reaches that date? [Robin C. Kwong]

33. What happened in the last episode? Did Sam ever come home?

According to the last frame of the last episode ("Mirror Image"),
"Dr. Beckett never returned home." BUT, "never" is a very transient
thing when it comes to time travel, and, according to Don Bellisario,
just because he didn't come home now, doesn't mean he won't come home
later.

34. Wasn't the guy who played Al the Bartender in the last episode
the same guy who played Weird Ernie in the first episode?

Yes, that was indeed Bruce McGill who played both parts. It is
interesting that his part in "Genesis" was not alluded to in "Mirror
Image" as were many of the other recurring characters. Bruce McGill
also appeared in several episodes of another Bellisario production,
"Tales of the Gold Monkey".

35. Who do I write to to get a Quantum Leap movie? And how can I write to
the cast and crew now?

That's two questions again, but they're good ones. :-)

For "Quantum Leap: The Movie", write to:

Mr. Sid Sheinberg
MCA/Universal
100 Universal City Plaza
Universal City, CA 91608

Don Bellisario is working at Paramount Pictures now. His address there is:

Don Bellisario
Paramount Pictures
5555 Melrose Ave.
Los Angeles, CA 90038

As for Scott, his address is:

Scott Bakula
c/o Jay D. Schwartz
Sutton, Saltxman, and Schwartz
8967 Sunset Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90069

--
*Cheryl A. Bellucci | "Don't know why I go walking at night but now *
* bell...@fsp.fsp.com | I'm tired and I don't wanna walk anymore. Hope *
* ac...@dayton.wright.edu| it doesn't take the rest of my life 'til I find *
* cher...@aol.com | what it is I've been looking for." -- BJ, "RoD" *

0 new messages