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Anonymous writes...

Just want to say you have a really great show. What I want to know is if 1) what happened to King Arthur 2) what is the Illuminatti's agenda with the gargoyles and3) wil aliens ever invade? Thanks

Greg responds...

1) What happened when?
2) Control. Mostly. Plus they know some things.
3) Ever? Sure.
Hey, Luke, I don't mean to single you out, but it's time to point out again, that vague questions demand vague answers. Also, if you ask me a question so large that my only choices are to answer coyly or to write a novel- length response, you're going to get coy almost every time. Sorry.


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Anonymous writes...

(1) Hi Mr. Weisman, I am sure you have been asked this question a million times but maybe if I ask again you will give us an answer. So here goes, What did Titania wisper in Fox's ear???!!! (2) Oh, and did Oberon and his children create the Gargoyle race or was it someone else? If so, who was it? Thanks.

Greg responds...

1. Something that made her smile. :)
2. Gargoyles, fae, humans, plants, animals. It's the same deal. The gargoyle race was "created" by the same thing that created the human race and most everything else. What was that, you ask? God? Evolution?
Both? I'll leave that to everyone's personal belief system.
But don't give Oberon the credit. For purposes of this discussion, he's just one of the created. Hardly the creator.


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Anonymous writes...

(1) Okay, could you clear up a sort of dilemna our comment room has been having? What we want to know is: when the Three Sisters were helping out the Archmage in "Avalon", was it out of petty revenge on the Avalon clan for getting past them 1000 years before, or was what they did in that episode part of some "master plan" with the Archmage as some sort of "cannon fodder"? (Personally, I think it's the former.) (2) For that matter, did the Archmage die at the end of Avalon, or was he for some reason "automatically" sucked into the Pheonix Gate to some time and place we don't know about? (3) One other thing I'm curious about: about how old, in "gargoyle years" was Demona in 994? I would have thought she was in the equvalent of her twenties at the time, but she has grey hair only twenty "gargoyle years" later, which would make her in the equivalent of her late thirties or fourties in 994. (4) And finally, what is the average lifespan of a gargoyle anyways?

Greg responds...

1. I've answered the Weird Sister thing. Check the ASK GREG FAQ archives.
2. The Archmage is dead. Of course, so was Hakon.
3. In 994, Demona and Goliath were both 56 years old chronologically (twenty- eight biologically, i.e. in human terms.) In 1020, Demona was 82 (or 41) and aging prematurely because of the extremely difficult life she was leading. In 1040, Demona was 102 (51) until she recieved Macbeth's youth in magical trade. He was 35 (35) so she became 102 (35). He became 35 (51).
They've been stuck at those (biological) ages ever since.
4. It's hard to say. Gargoyles have always led lives of such intense conflict that it is extremely rare for a gargoyle to die of old age.
In fact, it's rare for them to get very old at all. Hudson, thankfully, is a marvelous exception. On the other hand, their daily healing is a big plus, so I'm figuring they'd wind up on the high end of what a human can accomplish. I tend to believe that a gargoyle maxes out at 180 to 200 years old (or 90 to 100 biologically) assuming they escape a violent end or a magical reprieve. Same for a Gargoyle Beast.


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Anonymous writes...

First off, I know you've heard this a thousand times but,I just have to say Thank you, both for creating the show and for coming here to Station 8 to answer our questions. My question is : Is there any relationship between Oberon's Children and the New Olympians? The reason I ask is because in "The Gathering" there are some fae in the background who look like characters from Greek mythology (specifically Pegasus, a centaur, and a figure that looks more like Medusa than the one in "The New Olympians"). Were these two groups related at some point in the distant past (like when the Greek civilization was begiining to rise)? And if so, why did they split?

Greg responds...

Keep in mind, that most of the fae can take on any form that strikes their fancy. Appearances can be deceiving.
But yes, there is a relationship. With a few exceptions, the current New Olympians are descendants of a group of very mortal "gods and monsters" who chose to retire from humanity and set up shop on New Olympus. These original Olympians were the mortal children of human-fae liasons. (There's more to it than that, but that's the short answer.) Fox and Alexander are basically New Olympians. Sort of. Not really. But you get the idea.
Among the exceptions that I mentioned are the New Olympian Gargoyles, who have full New Olympian citizenship, but are descended from gargoyles, not from humans or fae. Another obvious exception is the robot Talos, who was built centuries ago and has been rebuilt and upgraded more times than anyone has bothered to count.
[Now what's fascinating to me is that I actually answered that question and didn't get cute or evasive. All of the above is info that I hadn't planned on revealing, but, hey, catch me at the right moment and I might even tell you that Brooklyn's kids are named NASHVILLE and TACHI. Doh!]


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Anonymous writes...

Hi Greg! I'm just wondering. What inspired you to create the Weird Sisters? Is there any mythology you based them on? And what is the significance of naming them after Moon Goddesses?(Luna, Phobe, Selene) What would you have done with them had the series continued? What would you have done with the clones had you continued the series?

Greg responds...

Well, the immediate inspiration for the Sisters was obviously Shakespeare's Weird Sisters from MACBETH. But a surprising number of cultures have myths of a triple goddess, generally associated with fate and/or the phases of the moon. As I recall, Seline (or Selene) was the name of the Greek goddess of the moon. Luna was a roman name occasionally used for the same goddess.
Phoebe means "bright" (in its feminine form). It was a epithet occasionally used almost as an adjective to describe Artemis (or Diana), the goddess of the hunt, who was also often associated with the moon, just as her twin brother Phoebus Apollo was often associated or confused with Phoebus Helios the god of the Sun. In fact, I had a wealth of names to chose from.
So I finally just picked three that seemed to work well together.
I had many plans for the clones and the Sisters. Too much to relate in this Q&A format.


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Anonymous writes...

How many current episodes have been released of Gargoyles? And how many different shows are there

Greg responds...

Uh, if I understand your question...
We made 65 episodes of GARGOYLES. Thirteen in the first season. Fifty-two in the second.
Thirteen episodes of GARGOYLES: THE GOLIATH CHRONICLES were made. I only worked on the first one.
That totals to 78 episodes, 66 of which I was involved in.


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Anonymous writes...

Sorry to ask another question so quickly after the first, but did you have a definite villian planned for Timedancer? If Brooklyn was able to jump through time it seems difficult to have a villian keep pestering him, which is why I'm asking.

Greg responds...

From Brooklyn's point-of-view he was gone for forty years. Sometimes he'd bounce into a time period for a few seconds, sometimes he'd be there for years. That being the case, I had a lot of villains planned. Some you know already and some new ones as well. If you're asking whether there would have been one villain who appeared in literally every episode, the answer is no.
But I did have plans for a couple of different antagonists who he'd have faced in more than one era.


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Anonymous writes...

On Enter Macbeth, Brooklyn suggests that they read the book Macbeth. Also that shakespeare was a new writer in the 990's, but Macbeth wasn't writen until 1605. How is that possible ?

Greg responds...

You're mistaken. Brooklyn asks Lex who Macbeth is. Lex remembers Goliath talking about a play called "Macbeth" by "some new writer named Shakespeare." To them, Shakespeare was new because he was born centuries AFTER the 990s.


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Anonymous writes...

In the episode "Avalon Part 2", the Archmage traveled back in time and saved himseld from dying. How could this have been possible? If the Archmage originally died, how could his older self come back in time and save him?

Greg responds...

A third sigh. Time travel. A working paradox. The Archmage never did die.
Goliath, Hudson and Demona thought he had died, because they saw him fall down into the pit. But before he actually died his "future" self appeared and rescued him. Later, his future self made sure that the rescued self knew how and when to go back in time to rescue the original self, thus completing the perfect circle. The working paradox.


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Anonymous writes...

Is there any chance that the gargoyles show will be brought back onto the air? I know that the ratings for the Goliath Chronicles was less than satisfactory but that was mostly due to bad animation, lack of story continuity and bad sound FX. I am sure that if you brought things back up to the level it was in the first two seasons the ratings will return to their normal spectacular level.

Greg responds...

I hate to say this, particularly since I've said it before, but the ratings on GARGOYLES were never spectacular. NEVER. They were better than GOLIATH CHRONICLES (relatively), and good enough to chalk the show up as a hit. But it was a single. Not a home run. Not even a double. We regularly got trounced by Power Rangers.
Again, the best shot for new episodes for the show is the live-action feature film currently in development at Touchstone. If that movie gets made it might reawaken interest in the show, particularly if fandom has kept the flame alive.



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