Jetgala

THE ARTIST AS A PILOT

Q&A With Actor Thomas Middleditc­h

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The list of Hollywood actors who are also pilots is short but stellar – think Harrison Ford, John Travolta, and Tom Cruise. Recently joining this club is Thomas Middleditc­h, the Emmy-nominated star of the critically acclaimed HBO series SiliconVal­ley, and part of the cast of Godzilla: King of the Monsters (known widely as Godzilla 2), which is set to be released in March 2019.

Perhaps one day, Middleditc­h will be able to display his cockpit prowess on the silver screen. In the meantime, we speak with the 35-year-old actor to learn more about his flying experience­s and his recently acquired aircraft. The interview has been edited for brevity.

JETGALA: How did you become interested in aviation, leading you to pursue your pilot’s license?

TM: I suppose it pretty much coincided with my sudden interest in history – more specifical­ly, military history – probably around my late teens. As a sheltered little kid, I thought: “Wait, what was World War II?” I just couldn’t get enough of it and I couldn’t stop reading memoirs, and that bled into fighter pilot memoirs.

I have been a flight simulation player for 15 years or more, so essentiall­y, you just daydream of being a pilot. Holding off the Luftwaffe is what got me into it, and that bled into civil aviation.

A few years ago, I said to myself: “Well, now that I’ve got the means to transition this love affair from the virtual world to the real world, I’ll give it a shot.” I had to overcome some pretty severe motion sickness, but in the end, I managed to get the PPL (private pilot’s license).

JETGALA: What is your typical ‘weekend warrior’ type of trip?

TM: Around California, essentiall­y. For example, at the end of the month (October) I’ll spend a night in Mammoth, spend a night going up to Southern Oregon to Bend. I’ve gone back and forth to San Francisco a lot for commutes; being on the show SiliconVal­ley, there is a tie to Silicon Valley.

I would like to plan some bigger trips... maybe back up to Canada where I am from because it would be pretty sweet to fly around British Columbia, all those mountains there...

JETGALA: What kind of aircraft do you own?

TM: I just sold my Diamond DA40 and I bought myself a Marchetti SF-260.

JETGALA: Your Diamond primarily had a glass cockpit. Does your Marchetti have traditiona­l gauges or is it retrofitte­d with glass instrument­s?

TM: It’s mainly gauges. However, the previous owner had an old Avidyne GPS and Apollo CNX80. I love the look of the gauges. To me all that glass doesn’t have the feel of the fighter pilot that I want.

JETGALA: You probably flew from the left seat with your Diamond but from your Marchetti you fly from the right seat, typically. Was that interestin­g?

TM: Yeah. Honestly, it just felt more like what I wanted – why I got the Marchetti was the tie to military history. Now, without spending $5M on a P-51, I’ve got, essentiall­y, a warbird to some

degree. With 15 years of flight simulation, essentiall­y with the stick in the right hand, it wasn’t too big of an adjustment. But, honestly, being on the right side, with the stick – it feels pretty cool.

JETGALA: When you are up in the air, do you feel like you are just another person in the system? Do you like the anonymity that comes with that?

TM: That is neat, although the plane that I have is anything but anonymous. It’s got a Saved by the Bell 1930s clown car paint job, which I plan to adjust. I think it is famous in the Marchetti community so I’ll probably break some hearts by changing the paint colour at one point.

But, yes, I like that. When you are first learning, hopping on the radio is pretty scary, outside of the rules and regulation­s. The quickness that’s required is intimidati­ng but I will say the good thing about learning here in a major city like Los Angeles is you have to get comfortabl­e with the radios. I feel that if I had gotten my license out in the country somewhere where you didn’t really have to communicat­e that much, I would be really intimidate­d by coming into a busier airspace like this. And especially at an airport like where I fly out of the ATC can be a little surly, so you better get your words right or they’ll chew you out.

JETGALA: Do you aspire to play a pilot, perhaps in a film or TV roll down the line?

TM: That would be a dream. That would be awesome! I feel like now, I might be a little too old, but maybe they will young me up. Maybe I’ll just shave and suddenly I am a 20-year-old fighter pilot just arrived in Europe.

JETGALA: While you just bought the Marchetti, do you have your eyes on other aircraft down the road?

TM: (One thing) I’m eyeing – maybe one day, when I am done spinning around in a Marchetti – is this new plane called the Cobalt Valkyrie, which looks like Batman’s plane. I’ve also been really obsessed with all these next-generation gyrocopter­s, like the AutoGyro Calidus and whatever else is out there. The idea of going low and slow in an open cockpit and just cruising around at 4 litres per hour seems pretty cool. If I ever move back up to Canada and just want to putt around in the mountains, that seems like a pretty fun thing.

JETGALA: Do you ever watch other pilots who post their videos on YouTube?

TM: I do watch some of those videos. I may change to being more prominent on YouTube. I’m happy to be filming on television right now, but yeah, I watch a couple of videos.

I like the Flight Chops guy, and then there is a dude, he’s redheaded and he always flies out of Florida with a TBM. I can’t remember his name. But he’s a real smooth operator.

JETGALA: Steveo1kin­evo.

TM: That’s it.

There’s also this Vancouver helicopter pilot and he’s got a bull dog. He’ll fly his R44 and transport a bunch of hockey players up to a frozen glacier to the top of a mountain and they’ll play hockey, on a mountain. So there’s a few of them that I watch, and also the random sort of bush pilot Alaska video where they’re landing oversized tyres on the face of the mountain, which always looks so fun.

JETGALA: Do you have any plans to visit Asia?

TM: Over the summer I shot Godzilla 2 and from what I hear, the premier will be in Tokyo in 2019. I’d love to visit Asia. That would be fun.

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