I think it was more Rosalind Chao’s performance than anything in the writing. Which is weird, because she basically played the opposite character in MAS*H. But she and Colm Meany just didn’t seem to have any chemistry. Maybe they didn’t actually like each other?
Comment on The perfect marriage
I_Has_A_Hat@startrek.website 11 months ago
So what’s the deal with Keiko? Was she intentionally written to be an awful wife? She frequently holds double standards, is lukewarm to O’Brian at the best of times, and constantly acts like she’s just in a marriage of convenience. I honestly can’t recall a single time she ever showed genuine affection for O’Brian. It’s like she expected him to die long ago to get Starfleet’s widow benefits, and every day he’s still alive she resents him for it.
FlyingSquid@lemmy.world 11 months ago
turkalino@lemmy.yachts 11 months ago
As an engineer, I always thought they were going for that stereotype of “smart engineers mess up on the simplest social skills”, but I never really felt like Mile’s relationship mistakes were that bad at all, and they DEFINITELY didn’t call for the kinds of reactions that Keiko had.
VindictiveJudge@startrek.website 11 months ago
They couldn’t get Chao or Meaney quite as frequently as everyone else because of their film careers. I know with Meaney they really wanted to show off his acting skills when they had him and determined that he portrayed suffering really well, so O’Brien suffered a lot. I think Keiko’s problem was that she was only in a couple episodes per season and the focus was typically on whatever horror was happening to Miles that week. She’s not so much a bad wife as a barely present side character.
Anticorp@lemmy.world 11 months ago
She just doesn’t seem to be a particularly talented actor to me, so she can’t act like she loves him.
FlyingSquid@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Honestly, she’s fine in other roles. There was just something about Keiko that didn’t work and I do think it had something to do with her interpretation of Keiko. But she’s been in lots of other shows (she got a lot of notice for her performance in M*A*S*H) and she did a perfectly good job in them. She would be very unlikely to have 139 acting credits to her name on the IMDB if she was not a talented actor.
So I just can’t say what went wrong there. It wasn’t the writing, because totally different writers were handling her on DS9 than they were on TNG, but the problem existed on both shows (although certainly TNG to a lesser extent). It wasn’t that she isn’t a good actress, because (at least IMO) she is a good actress. So that leaves two options that I can think of, feel free to come up with your own:
1- She interpreted the character all wrong and by the time they really developed her, it was too late.
2- Rick Berman fucked around behind the scenes as usual.
I don’t think either one of those is implausible.
mosiacmango@lemm.ee 11 months ago
I think both charectors are supposed to be workaholics, people that lose themselves in their job and basically spurn family dynamics. Miles has engineering and Keiko was a botanist.
I think the writers wanted there to be that “we are both focused on our work and not each other” dynamic to their relationship, and wanted Keiko to be frustrated as a workaholic denied, being pushed into both the family role by their daughter and having no plant life to study on DS9.
The “become a teacher” was a sublimation that worked for a while for her, but that of course fell apart.
The other hand of it to is that theirs is one of the few relationships where you can feel the strain of competing needs on trek. Most relationship issues are pretty low stakes, even the ones played up like worf/jadeza wedding. Like, it is all going to be wrapped in a tidy bow and we know it.
Miles and Kieko were both driven people, and Kieko was being stalled out and was frustrated by it. There was no easy answer, just like the real world. Sometimes relationships, even otherwise healthy ones, have issues. Both actors were able to show them well, so they leaned into it. Unfortunately, it makes for unlikely people at times.