Robert Picardo 'Thought It Was a Mistake' When He Was Asked to Return to

Robert Picardo reprises his Star Trek: Voyager role as The Doctor in the new live-action Starfleet Academy series

People Robert Picardo in 'Star Trek: Voyager'Credit: Paramount+

NEED TO KNOW

  • The new series is set 1,000 years after the actor was last part of the franchise

  • Picardo tells PEOPLE that returning to the Star Trek universe was "very unexpected"

Robert Picardo admits that, 25 years after he last played the holographic Doctor onStar Trek: Voyager, he was stunned when he got the call to return to the beloved sci-fi franchise for the new series,Star Trek: Starfleet Academy.

"I would say [it was] very unexpected — I thought it was a mistake!" Picardo tells PEOPLE exclusively.

The 72-year-old reveals that after he reprised his role as The Doctor — in voice only — for a 2024 episode of the animated, kid-skewing seriesStar Trek: Prodigy, his animation agent got word that a different set of producers in the franchise wanted to meet with him. Picardo assumed it was for another voice role or cameo until he learned more about the gig in a follow-up call.

"They called back and said, 'No, it's live-action,'" he recalls. "And then I wasreallyconfused! And then my agent, my theatrical agent, [said], 'Yeah, they want to talk to you about being in the newStar Trekseries.' "

"Those first three or four weeks waiting for that meeting were really the strangest, that part of knowing they're interested but not knowing what it was," he says. "And then they laid out the idea they had for the character and how he would fit in and what he would be doing in the future: teaching cadets at a newly reopened Starfleet Academy."

Robert Picardo in 'Star Trek: Starfleet Academy'Credit: Paramount+

Picardo had originally played the fan-favorite character — an increasingly self-aware, independent and somewhat egotistical Emergency Medical Hologram who provided a fresh lens on both humanity and technology while snarkily treating the crew of the starshipVoyager— for seven seasons between 1995 and 2001. However, with the new role, he wouldn't just be picking up The Doctor a quarter-century later; he was also thrown an unexpected acting challenge as the 2026 series was set nearly 1,000 years in the future.

"It's mind-blowing," he confesses. "I said to them, 'Wait a minute, you mean I have 800 years of digital memory — perfect clarity — so that an event that happened 792 years and 112 days and this many hours and minutes, that moment was not only recorded in here, but it was as clear as something that happened yesterday?' [They said], 'Yep, that's what it means.' I said, 'Alright, I'll start trying to wrap my mind around that now!' "

What struck him most about taking a quantum leap forward in time was how it would affect The Doctor's worldview. "Working side by side with 32 generations of organic colleagues growing old and dying around you, how does that influence your desire to form personal relationships?" he questions.

"I thought that on the surface, he would seem the same, at the same pace, the same attitude, the same snarkiness when he didn't feel he was being respected, the same 'I like feeling that I'm the smartest intelligence in the room,' all of those things," Picardo tells PEOPLE. "But that, when push came to shove, he wasn't very interested in going deeper with any individual. I wasn't excited to be your pal, you know what I mean? Because what's the end game for me?"

"So there was this kind of push-pull between being like The Doctor once he had grown more human-like, but with the sort of careful delineation of how far he wanted to go beyond cordiality in his relationships," he adds.

Robert Picardo in 'Star Trek: Voyager'Credit: Paramount+

That emotional distance has been challenged on the new Paramount+ series by young SAM (Kerrice Brooks), another photonic being enrolled in Starfleet Academy, who longs for mentorship from The Doctor, who finally lowers his defenses.

"The Doctor, I think, likes feeling unique, but also a protege who is giving him more attention and interest that he clearly wants to return," Picardo explains. "He's both intrigued and annoyed by her."

AsStarfleet Academyhas been streaming new episodes each week, Picardo has been enjoying watching the always-passionate fanbase debate the various merits of the show — a phenomenon he's been long accustomed to.

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"It takes every newStar Trekshow two years or so to kind of hit its stride," he says. "And until then, people complain about what kind of female Captain Janeway should be. 'Do we really need a female captain in the mid-90s?' I mean, we were 25 years ahead ofDoctor Who,having the first female doctor! 25 years! And of course, Kate [Mulgrew] really won over all of the initial critics to the idea of taking this traditionally male role. And since then, of course, we've had Captain Michael Burnham, we've had Michelle Yeoh's character, [Captain Georgiou] and now Holly Hunter."

"I've been really lucky to be in shows that are led by women —China Beach,even before that, the Vietnam drama I was in where the point of view character was an Army nurse played by Dana Delaney," he adds. "So I feel like I've had this special luck to be on shows where women, female characters, really carried the show or were the dynamos behind the show."

Robert Picardo in 'Star Trek: Voyager'Credit: Paramount+

Playing the holographic character has also given Picardo a unique perspective on a current, much-buzzed-about topic: AI.

"Obviously, we were ahead of the game onStar Trekwhen we did all of those episodes about core fears of artificial intelligence, when The Doctor's program was hijacked by another entity and his core programming of serving and being a healer was taken over so that he could now be threatening and even lethal," he says. "All of those things that have been very much in the public imagination the last three years, we were dealing with 30 years ago."

Picardo recalls once receiving a call from someone getting a PhD at Harvard, specializing in researching medical applications for AI, wanting to interview him for a book. "I said, 'You know, I'm only an actor,'" he recalls.

But the physician explained that, as a young viewer ofVoyager, he was captivated by the concept of an Emergency Medical Hologram programmed with the entirety of medical knowledge.

"But then he said, 'Watching your journey on the show, I came to realize that the knowledge is not enough. You need the human interface, you need the bedside manner. You need to mediate the information to a patient in order to have that bond and give them, so they have trust in you,'" Picardo says. "It is interesting for me as a bystander, as an actor who played this artificial intelligence physician, to now see so many of these concerns play out now and feel like, if only because of my role, I've been thinking about them for decades."

Robert Picardo in 'Star Trek: Starfleet Academy'Credit: Miller Mobley/Paramount+

He's also been keenly aware of the rate at which technology advances. "Star Trekhas always been in the game of dreaming up something and then science tries to catch up with that dream because of all the young minds that were watching it at the time and because it just seemed impossibly cool if we could do that," he says. "I remember my little computer on my desk in Sickbay when we premiered seemed so impossibly small. And then, within a year and a half of our premiere, it was too big! PowerBooks came out and suddenly it was like, 'No, this looks like a joke.' "

"Star Trekis a great predictor, I think, of technologies, and it also encourages us to want to develop the science and engineering to accomplish them," he says.

As a result, inspired by the originalTrekseries' actress Nichelle Nichols' recruitment of women and minorities into the space program in the '70s and '80s, Picardo has "tried to take on that mantle with my relationship with the Planetary Society for more than 25 years," supporting funding for NASA's space science budget and sitting on its executive board.

It's just one aspect of the way being a part ofStar Trekhas impacted him, he says. "It changes your life in so many other ways through the people you meet who likeStar Trekor have been inspired byStar Trekas young people and grown into these amazing people that you meet and they giveyousome credit!" he tells PEOPLE.

"I mean, to sit on stage with five men who walked on the moon, just to be up there with them because, at least to the audience, we were connected somehow," he marvels. "So that connection between imagining what our future in space is and actually encouraging the work to be done now in order to get there is something that I have treasured in my life."

Read the original article onPeople

Robert Picardo 'Thought It Was a Mistake' When He Was Asked to Return to “Star Trek” Universe“ ”25 Years Later (Exclusive)

Robert Picardo reprises his Star Trek: Voyager role as The Doctor in the new live-action Starfleet Academy series ...
Trump announces attack on Iran, says US will 'destroy' its missiles

WASHINGTON − PresidentDonald Trumpannounced "major combat operations" in Iranaimed at wiping outTehran's ballistic missile program and debilitating Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's regime.

USA TODAY

TheU.S. began carrying out strikes on Iranin coordination with Israel in the early morning of Saturday, Feb. 28, after nuclear negotiations failed to produce a deal that satisfied all of the Trump administration's concerns, including an end to its missile program.

"A short time ago, the United States military began major combat operations in Iran. Our objective is to defend the American people by eliminating imminent threats from the Iranian regime, a vicious group of very hard terrible people," Trump said in a video statement, which he delivered from his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.

Latest updates:US launches 'massive and ongoing' strikes on Iran, Trump says

<p style=The U.S. and Israel launched military strikes against Iran on Feb. 28. President Trump confirmed the operation in a televised address to the nation.

Pictured above, a plume of smoke rises following a reported explosion in Tehran on February 28, 2026. Two loud blasts were heard in Tehran on February 28 morning by AFP journalists, and two plumes of thick smoke were seen over the centre and east of the Iranian capital.

Israel's defence ministry announced it had launched a "preemptive strike" on Iran as sirens sounded in Jerusalem and people across the country received phone alerts about an "extremely serious" threat.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> A plume of smoke rises after an explosion on February 28, 2026 in Tehran, Iran. After explosions were seen in the Iranian capital, the office of the Israeli Defense Minister issued a statement saying it had launched a preemptive strike against the country. People run for cover following an explosion, after Israel said it launched a pre-emptive attack against Iran, in Tehran, Iran February 28, 2026. A graffiti on a wall reads <p style=Smoke rises following an explosion after the U.S. and Israel reportedly launched an attack against Iran, in Tehran, Iran, February 28, 2026, in this screen grab taken from video.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=U.S. President Donald Trump pumps his fist after disembarking Air Force One at Palm Beach International Airport in West Palm Beach, Florida, U.S., February 27, 2026. Hours later, Trump made live comments about the military strikes he launched against Iran.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> A woman runs for cover following an explosion, after Israel said it launched a pre-emptive attack against Iran, in Tehran, Iran February 28, 2026. A plume of smoke rises over Tehran after a reported explosion on February 28, 2026, after Israel said it carried out a A plume of smoke rises following a reported explosion in Tehran on February 28, 2026. Two loud blasts were heard in Tehran on February 28 morning by AFP journalists, and two plumes of thick smoke were seen over the centre and east of the Iranian capital. Israel's defence ministry announced it had launched a Iranians try to clear a street amid heavy traffic in Tehran, Iran, on February 28, 2026, as explosions are heard following a reported strike and Israel announced it had launched a Smoke rises following an explosion, after Israel's Defence Minister Israel Katz said Israel had launched a pre-emptive attack against Iran, in Tehran, Iran February 28, 2026 in this screen grab taken from video. People run for cover following an explosion, after Israel said it launched a pre-emptive attack against Iran, in Tehran, Iran February 28, 2026. Smoke rises from the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted the southern Lebanese area of al-Qatrani on February 28, 2026. Lebanon's foreign minister said on February 24 his country feared its infrastructure could be hit by Israeli strikes if the situation with Iran escalates, after Israel intensified its attacks on Tehran-backed Hezbollah Anti-riot police stand in front of state building that is covered with a giant anti-U.S. billboard depicting the destruction of a US aircraft carrier in downtown Tehran on a main street in Tehran on February 21, 2026 in Tehran, Iran. In recent weeks, the United States had moved vast numbers of military vessels and aircraft to Europe and the Middle East. The US and Israel proceeded to launched strikes on Iran on February 28, 2026,

Military strikes underway by US and Israel against Iran. See photos

The U.S. and Israellaunched military strikes against Iranon Feb. 28. President Trump confirmed the operation in a televised address to the nation.Pictured above, a plume of smoke rises following a reported explosion in Tehran on February 28, 2026. Two loud blasts were heard in Tehran on February 28 morning by AFP journalists, and two plumes of thick smoke were seen over the centre and east of the Iranian capital.Israel's defence ministry announced it had launched a "preemptive strike" on Iran as sirens sounded in Jerusalem and people across the country received phone alerts about an "extremely serious" threat.

The Trump administration has for weeks held negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program while also building up its military presence in the region. Tehran refused to abandon its nuclear ambitions, the U.S. president said, prompting the overnight airstrikes, which sent smoke plumes over Iran.

"They just wanted to practice evil," Trump saidin the videoposted on social media. "And we can't take it anymore."

In laying out his justification for the strikes, Trump said in his Feb. 28 address that Iran was seeking to rebuild its nuclear program.

Maps and graphics:US forces launch 'major combat operations' against Iran

The U.S.bombed Tehran's nuclear facilitieslast June. Trump said then that all three sites the U.S. hit had been obliterated, howevera U.S. intelligence assessmentfound that only one of the locations had been destroyed.

Trump said after the latest round of strikes that Iran was developing long-range missiles that threaten America's allies, U.S. troops stationed overseas and "could soon reach the American homeland." The latter assertion, which Trump also made in his State of the Union address, has been disputed by experts.

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US President Donald Trump gestures as he arrives at Palm Beach International Airport in West Palm Beach, Florida on February 27, 2026.

He reviewed decades of antagonism from Iranian regime and its proxy forces and said they had been conducting a "mass terror" campaign against American forces in the region and international shippers.

"And we're not going to put up with it any longer," Trump said.

'American heroes may be lost'

Trump said the U.S. would "destroy" Iran's missiles, "annihilate" its navy and ensure proxy groups such as Hezbollah and Hamas are no longer able to destabilize the region. "And we will ensure that Iran does not obtain a nuclear weapon," Trump said.

"This regime will soon learn that no one should challenge the strength and might of the United States armed forces," Trump said.

Smoke rises following an explosion, after Israel and the U.S. launched strikes on Iran, in Tehran, Iran, February 28, 2026.

It was not immediately clear when the video that was posted to Trump's social media account was taped. Trump wore a white "USA" hat in the video statement, while standing at a lectern bearing the presidential seal and two flags.

"The lives of courageous American heroes may be lost, and we may have casualties. That often happens in war. But we're doing this not for now, we're doing this for the future, and it is a noble mission," Trump said.

Trump urges Iranians to overthrow government

Trump urged the Iranian armed forces and police to lay down their weapons "and have complete immunity, or in the alternative, face certain death." He addressed protesters in Iran, who've face brutal oppression by the government, that the "hour of your freedom" is close at hand but they should shelter inside their homes while bombs are dropping.

"When we are finished, take over your government, it will be yours to take. This will be, probably, your only chance for generations," Trump said.

Trump told the Iranian people to seize control of their government while they can.

"No president was willing to do what I am willing to do tonight. Now you have a president who is giving you what you want, so let's see how you respond," Trump said. "This is the moment for action. Do not let it pass."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump announces attack on Iran, says US will 'destroy' missiles

Trump announces attack on Iran, says US will 'destroy' its missiles

WASHINGTON − PresidentDonald Trumpannounced "major combat operations" in Iranaimed at wiping outTehran's b...
Russia weighs halt to peace talks unless Ukraine cedes territory, Bloomberg News reports

Feb 28 (Reuters) - Russian officials increasingly see ‌little reason to ‌continue U.S.-led peace talks ​with Ukraine unless Kyiv signals it is prepared to ‌give up ⁠territory as part of a ⁠settlement, Bloomberg News reported on Saturday, ​citing people ​familiar ​with the ‌matter.

Reuters

Talks scheduled for next week will be critical to determining whether the sides ‌can move ​towards an ​agreement ​to end ‌the war, the report ​said.

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Reuters ​could not immediately verify the report.

(Reporting ​by ‌Mihika Sharma in ​Bengaluru; Editing by ​Kate Mayberry)

Russia weighs halt to peace talks unless Ukraine cedes territory, Bloomberg News reports

Feb 28 (Reuters) - Russian officials increasingly see ‌little reason to ‌continue U.S.-led peace talks ​with Ukraine unl...
Adisson Rae

Addison Raeconsistently pushes the boundaries of fashion with her style, and her latest look in a structural micro minidress truly defies imagination. Embracing a bold, body-conscious silhouette, she donned an avant-garde creation that felt more like a wearable sculpture than a conventional dress. The official Instagram page for Perfect Magazine posted a snap of her look as the cover of a carousel posted on February 26.

Addison Rae stuns in structural Jean Paul Gaultier micro minidress for Perfect Magazine shoot

Addison Rae donned a micro minidress for her Perfect Magazine photoshoot. The dress played with proportion, balance, and negative space. Rendered in red-and-white horizontal stripes, the look nodded subtly to nautical influences, a long-standing Gaultier signature. The cropped, sculptural upper portion framed the body with dramatic curves and cutouts, creating an almost gravity-defying effect. Rather than draping traditionally, the fabric held its shape, forming bold contours that extended away from the torso.

The skirt mirrored the exaggerated structure, curving away from the hips in a rounded, three-dimensional silhouette. The rigid, inflated appearance challenged expectations of how fabric should move and sit on the body, transforming the dress into a statement about form as much as fashion. Despite its experimental design, the piece remained strikingly balanced. It highlighted Rae's figure while maintaining a sense of playful artistry. The dress is Look 16 fromJean Paul Gaultier's Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear collection.

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The "Diet Pepsi" singer kept her accessories minimal to avoid distracting from the dress. The dramatic torso cutout spotlighted her belly button piercing. She wore her red hair in soft, tousled waves with a side part. She posed with one hand on her waist and another behind her head. Her makeup was simple, with defined eyebrows, rosy blush, and a muted, dusty lipshade.

In the second photo of the carousel, the songstress wore theChloe Ruched Rose-Print Bodysuit. It is a look from the brand's Summer 2026 Ready-to-Wear collection. The neckline features a panel of water-resistant lace as well as a bow detail. The piece is currently retailing for $950.

Originally reported by Ankita Shaw onThe Fashion Spot

The postAddison Rae's Structural Jean Paul Gaultier Micro Minidress Is a Masterpieceappeared first onReality Tea.

Addison Rae’s Structural Jean Paul Gaultier Micro Minidress Is a Masterpiece

Addison Raeconsistently pushes the boundaries of fashion with her style, and her latest look in a structural micro minidress truly defies ...
Deaths on a boat off Cuba spotlight Florida anti-government groups

MIAMI (AP) — Astolen boat, with 10 people aboard, loaded with weapons, departs the Florida Keys but gunfire erupts before reaching Cuba. The explanation, according to the Cuban government, is the men aboard were terrorists who wanted to infiltrate the country.

Associated Press The dock where a 1981 Pro Line boat was reported stolen from the Florida Keys Friday, Feb. 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Marta Lavandier) Cuba's Deputy Foreign Minister Carlos Fernandez de Cossio walks to give a declaration about a deadly boating shooting in Cuba waters, in Havana, Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)

Cuba Boat Shooting

The fatal shooting broke out Wednesday amid heightened tensions between the U.S. and Cuba. The ouster of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has led the Trump administration to take a more aggressive stance toward the country's longstanding ideological nemesis in Latin America. It shines fresh attention on the deep-rooted freedom movement among Cuban exiles in south Florida, including some fringe elements who have long sought a violent overthrow of the island's communist leadership.

Armed raids, provocative publicity stunts and protests blurring the lines of legality stretch back decades in the Florida straits. Many of them are led by hard-liner exiles, some who fought in Fidel Castro's guerrilla army that took power in 1959 before breaking ranks when the popular leader converted Cuba into a Soviet satellite.

But such confrontational tactics have faded since the Cold War, leaving many in Miami to speculate the armed incursion was a fabrication of Cuba's intelligence agencies.

"Cuban Americans today are, whether on the left or on the right, really focused on trying to influence U.S. policy rather than thinking that somehow paramilitary action by small groups are gonna overthrow the Cuban government," said William LeoGrande, an American University government professor who specializes in Cuba.

The shooting left four dead and many questions. Cuba's government said most of the people on the boat were violent criminals. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who rose to prominence surrounded by the Cuban exile politics of Miami, was quick to cast doubt on the Cuban account, saying that the U.S. would investigate what he described as a "highly unusual" sea shootout.

Late Friday, top officials with Cuba's Ministry of the Interior unveiled theitems they said were aboard the boat, including a dozen high-powered weapons and more than 12,800 pieces of ammunition.

Anti-Cuban government groups ebb and flow

The counter-revolutionary groups — with names like Alpha 66 and Omega 7 — were always small in number but were at their strongest in the 1970s and '80s. Their influence receded as the Reagan administration arrested their leaders for violent attacks on U.S. soil, like an assassination plot targeting Castro during his 1979 visit to the United Nations and the shooting death a year later of a Cuban diplomat in New York.

Antonio Tang joined Alpha 66 shortly after fleeing Cuba and going into exile in Canada in 1981.

He trained in weapons and guerrilla tactics with the volunteer group at a camp in the Everglades called Rumbo Sur — Direction South. Many of its actions were over before they started, he said.

"We were kind of amateurs — and no match for the Cuban military and interior ministry," said Tang. "They always knew in advance what we were doing. Many folks ended up in jail."

Ernesto Díaz, deputy secretary general of Alpha 66, described the 10 men as martyrs.

"It is an act of compassion for a Cuban people who are suffering," Diaz, 86, said. "It was a sacrifice that has demonstrated the nobility and sensitivity towards freedom in Cuba."

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Cuban attempts to co-opt groups

Former Cuban intelligence officer Enrique Garcia said a well-funded Cuban intelligence department — called Q-2 — spent decades co-opting armed resistance groups. In some cases, Cuban agents would fund weapon purchases and drive unsuspecting exiles into plots.

Agents infiltrated Brothers to the Rescue, which lost four members in 1996 when Cuban fighter jets shot down their airplanes in the Florida straits.

"This strategy —seemingly still in place— sought to portray the Cuban exile community as extremist and link the U.S. government and agencies to such activities," said Garcia, who defected to the U.S. in 1989. "The U.S. intelligence community is aware and must have documented in its archives that this was a permanent modus operandi of the Cuban intelligence service."

Garcia said he can't remember any covert act of the sort Cuba has denounced in at least three decades.

He also finds the timing of the attack suspicious. The Trump administration has asserted almost unprecedented pressure on Havana to open its economy and relinquish almost seven decades of single-party rule.

Families give an incomplete picture

Marina Luz Padron, whose ex-husband, Hector Cruz Correa, was among those reported killed, appealed for privacy as the family mourns. She described her ex-husband as an excellent father to their 4-year-old child, who still hasn't been told about his fate.

"If he went to Cuba it was because he wanted freedom for his country," Padron told The Associated Press in a brief interview.

Other family members spoke to Spanish language influencers in Miami describing their loved ones as peaceful and far removed from what Cuban officials denounced as a "terrorist" incursion.

Ibrahim Bosch, president of the Republican Party of Cuba, another exile group, said that Michel Ortega Casanova, one of those killed, was the leader of his party in Tampa for a while until he requested to be replaced so he could spend more time to with his family.

"He was an excellent person, very hardworking, very dedicated to his family," Bosch said. "He always had the hope of freedom for Cuba."

But Florida resident Misael Ortega Casanova said his brother — an American citizen who has lived in the U.S. for more than 20 years and still agonizes over the suffering that Cubans endure — was on an "obsessive and diabolical" quest for Cuba's freedom.

"They became so obsessed that they didn't think about the consequences nor their own lives," Misael told The Associated Press.

Catalini reported from Morrisville, Pennsylvania.

Deaths on a boat off Cuba spotlight Florida anti-government groups

MIAMI (AP) — Astolen boat, with 10 people aboard, loaded with weapons, departs the Florida Keys but gunfire erupts befor...
The Genius Way Robin Williams Secured His Breakout Role on 'Happy Days'

Like every major star in Hollywood,Robin Williams' immensesuccessand popularity in the larger entertainment industry can be traced back to one key role. And in the case of the legendary late comedian, said role came with Williams' scene-stealing performance in the belovedsitcom,Happy Days.

Parade

Tapping into his famously zany comedic background, Williams' performance as the otherworldly alien Mork helped thrust the young actor into the public spotlight.

While it's hard to imagine anyone else inhabiting the role of the eccentric extraterrestrial visitor, one key moment early on in Williams' audition process ultimately helped land the actor his breakthrough role on the show.

When appearing on theFake Doctors, Real Friends with Zach and Donaldpodcast,Happy DaysHenry Winkler shared his memories of initially interacting with Robin Williams on the set of the show, as well as his experience witnessing the late actor audition for the role (viaPeoplemagazine).

"A young, very shy, very quiet man comes with the casting director," Winkler said. "And then this human being picked up the script. When he opened his mouth, it was like a volcano went off on stage 19 at Paramount."

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"And I knew, get out of his way, know my lines, and don't try to stand toe to toe with this genius that is now standing in front of me," the actor went on to say.

Of course, one notable improvised moment helped impress Happy Day's cast and crew above all else. As series creator Garry Marshall remembered in 1989, Winkler wound up standing on his head the minute he began his audition, taking Marshall and his fellow backstage staff by surprise.

"He did the whole audition standing on his head," Marshall said. "He was a whole different fresh view of a guy doing an outer-space alien."

"When Robin Williams came on as a Martian, he was all over the place and was improvising some, and they gave him room," Marshall similarly recalled. "At the end of the episode, 300 people in the audience stood up and applauded, which is not usually done. It didn't take a genius to know he could do his own show, and we made one for him,Mork & Mindy."

This story was originally published byParadeon Feb 27, 2026, where it first appeared in theNewssection. Add Parade as aPreferred Source by clicking here.

The Genius Way Robin Williams Secured His Breakout Role on 'Happy Days'

Like every major star in Hollywood,Robin Williams' immensesuccessand popularity in the larger entertainment industry...

Adrianne Curry, the first winner ofAmerica's Next Top Model, has opened up about feeling "more validated" than she ever has before as resurfaced footage of producer-hostTyra Banksrecirculates online amid the fallout from allegations made by former contestants and judges in Netflix's bombshell docuseriesReality Check: Inside America's Next Top Model.

Entertainment Weekly Adrianne Curry; Tyra BanksCredit: Donald Bowers/Getty; Sylvain Gaboury/FilmMagic

In anInstagramvideo shared Friday, Curry, who won 2003's cycle 1, spoke out on the alleged "gaslighting thatTop Modelfans and the show put me through" following her victory. ShetoldEntertainment Weeklyin a 2023 interviewthat shewas disappointed by the prize package she receivedand the lack of mentorship from Banks.

"I know she did it for [cycle 3 winner] Eva [Marcille], and Eva is very successful, and I'm proud of her. And I think that's great. That's also why Eva never talks bad about the show," Curry claimed. Marcille — who went on to become a primary cast member onThe Real Housewives of Atlanta— didrecently speak out about being "amazingly horrified" by allegations made against the show, amid backlash to Banksstemming fromReality Check. (A representative for Marcille did not immediately respond to EW's request for comment.)

'ANTM' cycle 3 winner Eva MarcilleCredit: CBS; Annette Brown/Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty

Curry maintained, "I wouldn't either. I'd be like, I got mine." She then alleged, "I was gaslit so much by fans and by the show, that I was just ungrateful and all this stuff. I was promised the world, and then it was dubbed over on the show, and I was never delivered it. Today, I felt very much like I was validated for the first time in over two decades."

The former reality TV star and current Avon sales rep said she experienced that validation upon viewing an oldEntertainment Tonightclip from 2003 (below), in which Banks told the program she was excited to launchANTMcycle 1 as her "first executive producership," and that she took the job "very seriously" — almost to the point of micromanaging various elements, from clothing choices to lighting.

"I'm very involved. I'm actually going to be managing the winner, along with IMG Models. I'm going to be their manager," Banks claimed in the footage, though Curry disputed that Banks did that for her.

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

Curry replied in the comments section underneathET's video, writing, "After being gaslighted by Tyra, [producer] Ken [Mok] and fans... told im just bitter...told it expected more than what was promised...I cried watching this. Ive never felt more validated in my LIFE," later adding in a separate comment, "Im so glad tge [sic] gaslighting fans did to me for being upset I didnt get what was promised STOPS now...straight from her mouth....I didnt get managed. I didnt get a Revlon contract."

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In her 2023 EW interview, Curry opened up aboutbeing assaulted by a stranger on the streets of Parisduring filming (which was partially captured on camera) in addition to alleging that she never received the full prize package.

"What I won was to go to Revlon corporate, sit in a back room, have a makeup artist put makeup on my face for a team of about seven people watching me. Who the f--- would fight as hard as we fought for that?" Curry told us at the time, adding that she felt "f---ing humiliated" by the experience — though, she said she was paid about $15,000 to do it. Yet, that was a far cry, she alleged, from the "huge Revlon models" Banks and the judges indicated contestants would become during production. (A representative for Banks declined to comment on Curry's allegations at the time.)

In her 2026 Instagram video, Curry again touched on those claims, saying, "I was locked in house, being told I was going to be the next Giselle [Bündchen] or Tyra Banks if I won, that Tyra would manage my career," she said. "I won, and then none of it happened. None of it."

Reality Check— featuring new interviews with Banks and Mok — covers multiple controversies surrounding the show, including shoots that tasked models with wearing dark makeup to portray women of different races,cycle 6 winner Dani Evans reacting to Banks pressuring herto undergo a dental procedure during production in the hopes of fixing a gap in her teeth, and more.

Angelea Preston, Tyra Banks, Adrianne Curry, and Shandi Sullivan on 'America's Next Top Model'

"I've actually apologized for the issue with Dani and what happened. That was between a rock and a hard place for me," Banks, 52, said on the series.

"There were agents that would tell me she will not work with those teeth, it's just not going to happen," Banks continued. "That's what they told me. I could've just been quiet and let them handle it. Hindsight is 20/20 for all of us. It just so happens that a lot of the things that are 20/20 for me happened in front of the world."

Representatives for Banks and Mok have not responded to EW's repeated recent requests for comment onANTMand theReality Checkdocuseries.

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“ANTM” star Adrianne Curry calls out fellow winner: 'Never talks bad about the show'

Adrianne Curry, the first winner ofAmerica's Next Top Model, has opened up about feeling "more validated" ...

 

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