![]() |
Please check out the Watcher's new and improved TV blog here, the long version of the new URL is this: http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com/entertainment_tv/.
Stop on by any time, and thanks!
By the way, the full Watcher archives live on at this site; scroll to the bottom of the page for the month-by-month archives.
Chicago narrowly missed out on being the home of Meredith Grey.
Shonda Rhimes, creator of the ABC hit "Grey's Anatomy," thought about setting the medical drama in her hometown, the Windy City, but eventually nixed the idea because of a "certain medical drama" that is already set in Chicago (could she be referring to "ER"?).
"My best friend lives there; I come back there all the time," says Rhimes, a former resident of University Park and a 1987 graduate of Marian Catholic High School in Chicago Heights (also my alma mater; our time there overlapped for one year, but we didn't know each other.).
Chicago's loss was a gain for Seattle, where Grey (Ellen Pompeo) and four other interns are struggling through a grueling internship at the fictional Seattle Grace Hospital.
Though the show has its soapy elements - Grey is in a tangled relationship with one of her superiors, Dr. Derek Shepherd (Patrick Dempsey) - "Grey's Anatomy" is actually a refreshing oasis of intriguing, nuanced characters.
In particular, "Grey's" offers a compelling range of female characters in a TV season in which many of the women on hour-long dramas are lawyers, crime fighters of some kind or crime victims. Then again, "Grey's Anatomy" is one of the few network dramas created and written by a woman.
"I think there are men who can write fantastically for women," Rhimes said, "but a lot of times, women have been modulated to be fantasies, not necessarily in a sexual way, but they're written to be what men would like a woman to be like, not what women are really like."
In the first episode of the new season, intern Cristina Yang (Emmy nominee Sandra Oh) talked with her friend and fellow intern, Grey, about Yang's unexpected pregnancy. "Cristina says, said, `Surgery is my life. I'm too talented [to quit],' Rhimes notes. "People were surprised at that line, but it's only because it was a woman saying it."
Grey has her own personal struggles to deal with. Her mother, a renowned surgeon in her own right, has Alzheimer's disease, and Rhimes says Grey's family problems will come to the fore in the next few episodes of the show.
Rhimes "can understand how people think and feel and also understands the difficulty of how you protect yourself in the world," says "Grey's" executive producer Betsy Beers, who laughingly characterizes Rhimes' worldview for "Grey's" as "not too much hugging, not too much crying. No whiners."
The women of "Grey's" "absolutely screw up sometimes, and they have great days too," Rhimes noted. "They enjoy the competition of the job.
"I wanted these characters to be characters who liked what they did and were unapologetic about it. It's not `Oh, she's powerful, but she's deeply hurt inside,'-" Rhimes says. "And I like the fact that Cristina and Meredith have this friendship, and Cristina is a person who is very competitive - but she's not incapable of having a friendship with another woman. That was really important to me."
More from Shonda Rhimes:
Will Meredith's mother come to the fore in upcoming episodes? "Yes, she will have a much larger role coming up. We originally shot 13 episodes [and not all of those episodes have aired yet], and some of those were going to finish off that [13-episode] season. So four of the first five episodes of this season will be from last season, and we'll be seeing Meredith's mother fairly soon."
On the diversity of the cast: "It's a diverse world. I wanted this hospital to look like the world I live in and work in."
On the medical situations on the show: "It's not a medical solution of the week. We don't do the medical mystery show. It's not about how we solve the problem. I always say, it's not about the patients or how the patients feel about their issues, it's about how the doctors feel about how the patients feel about their issues." [Still, the show has an extensive medical staff and experts on call to help with the medical information and procedures on the show].
Do you have a long-term concept or story for the show? "Yes. I feel like I know what the last scene in the last episode of the show will be. We just have to get there first."
Have you thought about having to add new characters yet? "Not really. Not all interns survive, not all of them make it through these kinds of programs. But we've got such a large group of people already, why would we add anyone yet?"
On casting the leads, Ellen Pompeo [Dr. Meredith Grey] and Patrick Dempsey [Dr. Derek Shepard, a.k.a. Dr. McDreamy]: "I kept saying we need a girl like that girl from 'Moonlight Mile,' and after a while, they were like, 'We think we can get that girl from 'Moonlight Mile.' I spent time with her and got to know her, and then we started casting for the men.
"We brought in a lot of guys [for Shepard]. Ellen wasn't an easy role to cast, but Derek was really not an easy role to cast either. You had to believe he was intelligent, so you can believe he's a brain surgeon. And while you're watching, you'd be like, 'I wish my boyfriend looked like that.' [laughs] But he had to be rugged, not pretty. Handsome, sexy, but not in an obvious way, sexy in a smart way.
"He had to be able to pull off being really witty and you had to believe he'd care about people too. This was not easy to find! Patrick came in and he was just perfect. It was one of those moments when you're like, 'This is why I'm a writer.' There was just great chemistry, they were fun and flirty and it was just right."
The cast as a whole really seems to gel well. "They really do. For me the fun is to put different combinations together and discover things. For instance in the premiere episode for this season, it was the first time we had George and the chief of surgery together. And they had such great comic timing together. Later in the season, Izzie and Dr. Burke have their first real [work together] and their interaction is really dynamic. It's fun to discover that chemistry."
People online are pairing up various combinations of interns and supervising doctors, interns with other interns: "There is this consistent and intense need to pair people up."
Will Izzie and Alex get together, as has been hinted? "I don't like to say. They could get together, it's not something I've planned out or written out. Sometimes it's a matter of seeing how the journey progresses, how it progresses. The relationship between Dr. Burke and Christina came about from watching these two actors and their great banter together back and forth. [With those two characters] there's great humor and pain and pathos watching these two people who don't know how to communicate try to communicate.
I think one thing that may be a factor in the show's success, and its appeal to women, is that it's a show largely about women written by a woman. Not that a man can't write for a woman and vice versa, but so much of the show rings true for me, and that's a factor for a lot of women I talk to. "I hope it's a factor, in a way. I really wanted this show not only to be something other people would watch, but something I would watch. The way women talk, my friends and I, the conversations we have with my best friend or my sister on the phone or my friends out here [in Los Angeles], I want to hear that conversation, in which women aren't victims or afraid to be strong.
"In the episode that just aired, Cristina was talking about what to do about her baby [she's pregnant], and she says, 'Surgery is my life. I'm too talented [to quit].' People were surprised at that line, but it's only because it was a woman saying it. It's how women speak now.
"I think there are men who can write fantastically for women, but a lot of times, women have been modulated to be fantasies, not necessarily in a sexual way, but they're written to be what men would like a woman to be like, not what women are really like. Women can be flawed, nasty, strong, good. The definition of female is as broad as the definition of male. What's revolutionary is that we're letting ourselves be women, not having to represent anything. They're just women trying to make it through the day at work.
"They absolutely screw up sometimes, they have great days too. They enjoy the competition of the job. I wanted these characters to be characters who liked what they did and were unapologetic about it. It's not 'Oh, she's powerful, but she's deeply hurt inside.' I like the fact that Cristina and Meredith have this friendship and Cristina is a person who is very competitive, but she's not incapable of having a friendship with another woman. That was really important to me."
You're from Chicago, right? "Yes, I went to Marian Catholic, I graduated in 1987. I was in the band, I lived in Park Forest South, now it's called University Park. My best friend still lives [in Chicago], I come back there all the time. It was where I wanted to set the show, but there is that certain other medical show that films there."
Rhimes on the show's music, which just came out on a "Grey's Anatomy" soundtrack CD: "I love the music. What Alex [Alexandra Patsavas, who is also the music supervisor for 'The O.C.'] does for us is give us a great pool of music to choose from. Placing the music in the episodes is one of my favorite things to do. It's really fun. Alex introduces us to all these amazing bands. I'm not a music aficionado, but Alex puts us in touch with this great world of music."
Executive producer Betsy Beers on the show's music: "We were incredibly happy to get Alex on the show. She's been with us since the pilot. Very very early on, we knew that the music would be incredibly important. We try to find songs that have not been heard too much and really seem to get into the spirit of the show, songs that sort of say, 'I may be hurt but I don't wear my heart on my sleeve.' The tone of this show is very different from 'The O.C.,' and Alex really got the spirit of it. These are people working at hard jobs and are determined not to let anyone see their pain. The music can underscore the frustration, the emotion, the humor."
CHANGE AHEAD FOR 'EVERWOOD': This fall, the annual shuffling of the TV schedule put fear in the heart of hard-core "Everwood" fans. The WB moved the acclaimed family drama, which just began its fourth season, to Thursdays, where it's up against "CSI" and "The Apprentice" as well as highly touted newbies such as "Reunion" and "Night Stalker."
"We didn't expect [the move] at all, because everyone was so happy with our Monday nighttime slot. It kind of threw us a bit;, we were all a little nervous," said "Everwood's" Emily VanCamp (Amy Abbott), who was in Chicago on Thursday promoting the show. Still, she noted that "we have a pretty strong core audience who have been pretty faithful to the show."
Her co-star, Chris Pratt, who plays her TV brother, Bright Abbott, saw a bit of a silver lining in the move. "Thursday night, that's the night for all the big advertisers, for all the [commercials for] movies for the weekends. That's the spot where the networks bring out the big guns," Pratt said. "So to be considered the big gun could be looked at as a compliment." More from Emily VanCamp and Chris Pratt:
Do you think the show is changing at all this year?
Chris: "When you have the first season of Everwood, the pilot was just awesome, just perfect. There was this 30 episode arc in his head that was his vision. If you see the first couple season on DVD, you can really see how awesome that was. The show totally had its stride, and it's like passing the baton to someone and keep that stride, it's difficult. Because a lot of the stories that kept the show so compelling, you have to stop telling after a while. Ephram and Amy only works as long as it takes to get them together, then its like, 'Now what?' it's like [trying to create] part two of 'Romeo and Juliet.' The [strength] of the show [has been] that it's something that's it's a little atypical of the WB, which is why we have fans outside the typical demographic recognize us. I don't know, I think we're becoming a little more close to what their core audience is used to, and that's definitely a change from what it was in the beginning.
Emily: "There's less John Beasley, for instance, who I think is one of the most amazing characters on the show. I love watching him, I love working with him. And Debra Mooney."
Chris: "The voiceover."
Emily: "The voiceover. We're certainly lacking things that I loved as if I was watching as a viewer. But then we have new characters that are wonderful as well. I think that that's one thing I'd like to see more of, John. … I have every bit of faith, though, that the people behind the show and the passion that all of us actors have, that if we do go off track, we'll get back on. It'll always work out.
"Amy's entering this whole new world of college, and that experience is a frightening, and Ephram's realizing all these things. They're trying to maintain a friendship, which I think happens a lot in relationships that don't turn out particularly well, you try the friendship thing and that can be tough, but it's realistic."
Chris: "Bright will try to become more self aware and try to become a better person."
Emily: "And there's the whole Nina-Jake-Dr. Brown triangle, which is fun. And Tom [Amandes, Dr. Abbott], who's just Tom, who can just be his own storyline and still be the most interesting thing about the show. He doesn't really need anything to play off of, he can just walk around."
Chris: "He's so great."
And there's the fact that your characters' mother has cancer. It's funny, there has been all this tragic stuff on "Everwood," yet it never feels exploitative about the bad things that happen.
Emily: "I was on '[Late Night with] David Letterman' and he summed up the show in this extravagant, funny way. He hit all the key dramatic points and that's how he summed up the show, and it was so funny because it sounded completely melodramatic. If you watch the show though, they do those things very nicely and thoughtfully. You can't just have someone's mother have cancer and not approach that with grace and delicacy, because so many people know someone who's had it or who has experienced it."
Chris: "The day we filmed the episode on Rose's surgery, Tom's own mother went into surgery for cancer, that same day."
Emily: "It's amazing how close to home those things can be, you have to be careful."
But other shows aren't. People on other shows get cancer and get over it in two weeks.
Emily: "They do, yeah, on other shows. There's an integrity that we all really try to maintain on the show. That's something that's really important to us. [To Chris] Would you agree?"
Chris: "Yes, totally."
Emily: "Sarah [Drew] and I are constantly fighting to not take our clothes off. It's like this ongoing battle. Obviously, that stuff sells."
Chris: "Especially on the WB."
Is that coming from the network? The producers?
Emily: "I don't know who that really comes from."
Chris: "It wasn't like that always, was it?"
Emily:"No, it wasn't always like that, but it's just, you know, there are moments, that all the young women [encounter]. Thankfully they brought in someone like Sarah who is just as adamant about that stuff as I am."
Chris: "I'm always fighting to take my clothes off [laughs]."
Emily: "It's all bout maintaining that integrity, that's what holds it all together, I think."
What do you think will happen with Bright and Hannah - are they too different?
Chris: "I've been so lucky to work with Sarah, she's classically trained, she's been on Broadway, she's 25, which you would never know, playing a 16 year old. [As far as Bright and Hannah], it's one of those situations where Bright is the kind of guy who does best when there's someone who's proud of him. Now he's got Hannah, and he wants to make her proud. He wants to do things that would make him character, and himself happy too. He was existing in this world where it was okay for him to do whatever he was doing because he was Bright, 'Oh, that's just Bright, he's funny,' you know? But he was really saved by Hannah, I think."
Where would you like Bright to end up?
Chris: "I bet college wouldn't be right for him, but I'd like to see him do something like become a hero of Everwood again somehow, become a firefighter or EMT, and [have] the community be proud of him somehow. Helping people, but … I don't know if he saw blood, he might be queasy. There's been a lot of stuff written [that implies Bright might not deal well with the sight of blood]."
It looks like Amy has a new love interest in Bright's new roommate, the medical student.
Emily: "Yeah, that's Justin Baldoni, he plays the new love interest. It's kind of interesting at first, there's a misunderstanding and she thinks he's gay. She finds out that he's not, and that turns into something, but Ephram ends up moving in with those two boys, so it's like this weird thing where Ephram sees us and we're together and there's this whole triangle thing.
"I think that politically, Amy starts to get involved with her university, I'm not certain if that's going to happen, but I really hope that that happens. There's conflict with Hannah and Amy, there's all sorts of conflict all the time on 'Everwood.' [laughs]"
Do you have input into your characters?
Emily: "Not particularly, that's what's scary [laughs]."
Chris: "We'll get little tidbits."
Emily: "You never quite know what they're going to throw at you until you get the script. But we have this great executive producer, Mickey Liddell, he's just awesome and easy to talk to and takes everything into consideration. It's really nice to have someone like that you can go to, [someone] who's involved and knows what's going on. And we also talk amongst each other, we're a pretty tight family. I'll talk to Tom [Amandes] about concerns and he'll give me dad-like advice."
Chris: "And we'll stick together. There's something that just recently came up in a script, where Sarah [Drew] was concerned about something, they were going to have us almost being naked together … And then it just turns out that all we had to do was have a conversation with everbody and they totally made everything work out to make her happy."
But isn't the character of Hannah not into premarital sex?
Emily: "I know, that's why we didn't get it. I don't know. Sometimes they forget we're not like a mountainous 'O.C.'- [laughs] 'No wait, this is just actually just 'Everwood.'"
What would be your ultimate wishes for your characters, just your own personal wishes?
Chris: "I wish for Bright to marry Hannah. Marry her, then he can finally get down [laughs]. No, no. Marry her, hang around Everwood and be a fixture of the community, open a sporting-goods store, coach the football team."
Emily: "I think Amy needs to spread her wings and get out of Everwood and see some of the world, put things into perspective. And then come home, and I bet her and Ephram will end up together and have a happy family."
Emily and Chris then told me what happens regarding Rose Abbott's bout with cancer, but I promised not to tell and I won't.
Some random TV quotes and observations:
This week, however, Matchstick team member Chuck was bounced with "I wish you good luck and goodbye." So did Stewart change her mind about her firing phrase, which had been criticized for being too catty? Hmmm.
When asked about the disappearance of "You just don't fit in," a spokesman for "The Apprentice: Martha Stewart" said, "Who is to say that is the catchphrase?"
By the way, if you've written off the show, don't. If you're a reality fan, you might just get a kick out of the operatic obnoxiousness of Matchstick's non-stop talker Jim, who has kicked into such high gear that the motormouth contestant can barely speak already.
MARTHA'S STRANGE MOMENTS: It was hard to decide which Martha Stewart performance last week was more puzzling.
Given all her television experience, the fact that the low-rated Wednesday premiere of "The Apprentice: Martha Stewart" felt so flat and stilted was strange. Then again, Stewart's always been best suited to the 15-minute chat-show cooking demonstration, so maybe it'll take her some time to ease into the role of starring in an hour-long reality show.
One odd omission from Martha's first "Apprentice" outing was any real explanation of her recent stint in jail. In the opening moments of the NBC program, a brief news clip showing Stewart presumably leaving the courthouse was shown, and in a voice-over, she alluded to "challenges" and "difficult times."
Perhaps a more overt mention of Stewart's conviction was nixed by the media magnate herself, because, as she told David Letterman on Monday, she "doesn't feel guilty."
What a jaw-dropping statement that was. At first, Stewart herself tried to avoid Letterman's pointed question about her trial and conviction. At one point this savvy business titan hinted that she couldn't quite remember what her conviction was for.
"Why did you go to jail -- what were you convicted of?" Letterman asked.
"I don't know," she said with a shrug. "I don't have a long memory for bad things, so I'm trying very hard to put it out of my mind and get on with the future."
Later she confirmed that she was not convicted of insider trading: "It was about, I think, obstruction of justice."
She thinks?
Letterman appeared mystified by Stewart's repeated insistence that she had put the whole thing behind her and never felt "down" or "depressed" about her conviction or prison time.
"But how can you not let yourself get depressed? What do you do? It's a chemical reaction that kicks in," Letterman said.
"But I have other good chemicals too," Stewart chirped.
Letterman didn't give up.
"Your composure and presentation here this evening … seems to be happy, unflappable, cheerful, positive, and you said that the worst part of this was that you were horrified and concerned not so much for yourself but your family and everyone else. … Is that the worst it got for you in all this?"
"Yeah, because, you know, you're worried about the people you're taking care of," Stewart answered.
"What about concerns for your well-being, physically and mentally? This is, you know, not a day in traffic court," Letterman said.
"I'm really strong, Dave. And I can take care of myself," Stewart answered.
Perhaps what got her through those experiences is the fact that, as she told Letterman and his audience a minute later, she "doesn't feel guilty."
Though she whispered the word "guilty," it was obvious what Stewart said. Not only was her lack of remorse off-putting, you'd have to think it made her lawyers cringe.
As she told Letterman, her conviction is currently under appeal, and one has to wonder at the wisdom of saying that she felt she "had an unfair trial" -- on national television, no less - before that appeals process concludes.
"I can feel good," she stated as her appearance on Letterman came to a close.
Well, at least she can.
Link to the above item.
The medical show's season opener attracted almost 16 million viewers, and on Tuesday, the Fox network announced it had ordered two more episodes of the program, bringing the second-season grand total to 24.
Oh, and "House" won an Emmy for best drama writing on Sept. 18 too.
"It was surreal," says "House" creator and executive producer David Shore of his win for the stellar first-season episode, "Three Stories." "There were [winners] up on the stage who were like, `Oh, it's just another day.' Tony Shalhoub, God bless him, for him standing up there, it was just like he was talking to a buddy. For me it was completely bizarre" - in a good way, Shore notes.
Still, the "House" staff was disappointed that Hugh Laurie didn't win as best actor.
"I think the show would not be on the air if we did not have Hugh Laurie in this role. It's a tough character to play and play well," Shore says. "To have turned that character into one of the sexiest characters on TV, that is not something I foresaw when I was writing this," he notes with a laugh.
So sexy that House now has not one but two potential love interests. We grilled Shore about the love stuff and more:
House's relationship with Sela Ward's character, his ex-girlfriend Stacy, will be explored and resolved in the first half of the season. "Obviously, anyone can relate to certain things about love - the thing you love [about someone else] is the same thing you hate. If you take that and apply it to a guy like Dr. House, it's going to be pretty extreme, if you had to live with him," Shore noted. But wait, don't get any ideas - "She's not moving in with him, though!"
What about House's flirtation with a junior doctor on his staff, Dr. Allison Cameron (Chicago native Jennifer Morrison)? "As for Dr. Cameron, it would be disingenuous to ignore that [attraction]. She has feelings for him, she can't just turn that off. And he has feelings for her too, in a much more subtle way. It'll probably always be there."
Expect to see more of Robert Sean Leonard's character, oncologist James Wilson, especially now that the show has revealed that the offices of the two doctors have a connecting balcony. Should viewers assume the balcony was always there? "Yes," Shore said with a sheepish laugh.
Don't expect House to get all mushy and nice. "TV is a tricky medium," Shore says. "People want the lead character to develop, but they also love him the way he is. They're watching him because of who he is now. You walk that line - you have to answer a question while asking two others. We're not going to turn him into a good guy."
So House is not going to get a puppy or adopt a cute orphan? "Call me back in five years, if we're still on the air. But then again, if we're still on the air in five years, I don't care [what happens]. No, seriously, the character is what made the show a success. We'd be idiots to change it."
Will we see more of Dr. Wilson this season? It seems like he's been around a bit more this year. "Really, the second half of last year, we've found our sweet spot with him. It does go up and down, but we've learned how to handle getting him into scenes with House. He relates to House so well, and those scenes are so much fun for them. But those scenes tend to be less about the medical [developments], so sometimes there is not as much room for them.
Is the balcony a new thing? "Yes."
Were we supposed to assume it was always there? "Yes [laughs]."
It has been great to see Fox promoting the show and standing behind it. "I want to say, Fox has been really good to us. They've never once said, 'He seems too mean.' I'm not sure any other network, aside from HBO, I don't think any broadcast network would really embrace that. And they announced from the start of the show that they were going to put us on after 'Idol,' and they stuck with that. We were not setting ratings records at first, but they stuck to their game plan.
Was there some nervousness about coming back without "American Idol" as a lead in? "There was a bit of nervousness about coming back this season, but I try not to worry about that. The network was sweating a bit, but we always just try to make a good show."
On where will House go as a character: "TV is a tricky medium. People want the lead character to develop, but they also love him the way he is. They're watching him because of who he is now. You walk that line -- you have to answer a question while asking two others. We're not going to turn him into a good guy."
So no flowers and puppies? He's not going to adopt a cute orphan? "[laughing] Call me back in five years, if we're still on the air. But then again, if we're still on the air in five years, I don't care. No, seriously, the character is what made the show a success. We'd be idiots to change it."
What's happening with House's personal life? Will there be romance with Dr. Cameron? Dr. Cuddy? His old girlfriend Stacy (Sela Ward)? "Well, we've got one leading man on the show, a guy who's been on all these 'sexiest men on TV' lists, and there are three female characters, so there is going to be speculation about all of that.
"The first half of the season, we're going to deal with and ultimately resolve, in what we hope is an interesting and fun and satisfying way, his relationship with Sela Ward's character. Obviously, anyone can relate to certain things about love -- the thing you love [about someone else] is the same thing you hate. If you take that and apply it to a guy like Dr. House, it's going to be pretty extreme, if you had to live with him. She's not moving in with him, though!
"But to him, she's incredibly smart and still very significant. [Sela Ward] is a dominant presence on TV and in real life. It's a really interesting relationship. [Stacy's] married. I think it'd be the easy route if Stacy were to fall for House again because there are problems [in her marriage], but it's much more interesting to say -- she loves her husband, and there may be problems, there are in any relationship, but she loves him. But there's still this attraction to a very significant person, and how does she deal with that?
"As for Dr. Cameron, it would be disingenuous to ignore that [attraction]. She has feelings for him, she can't just turn that off. And he has feelings for her too, in a much more subtle way. It'll probably always be there."
How did the Emmy-winning episode "Three Stories" come together? "A lot of stuff just came together nicely in that episode. Right from the start, I wanted an episode with House lecturing. He's the type of guy who spouts off anyway, why not put him in a situation where that's all he's doing? That's what's happening anyway, in those episodes [with the three young doctors], he's shaping their skills with lectures and discussion. So let's put him on a stage and let him talk.
"Then we had this notion of introducing a person from his past, it seemed like a nice fit with that idea. I had that lecture story at the back of my mind, and we knew we wanted to do several stories all at once. [Doing three stories at once] freed us up, on TV you want stories that start small and grow bigger, or start big and grow bigger, and we had these different stories [that had been developed but not yet used], so we thought why not use them all together? Then we thought, why not have one of the stories be his own?"
What was great about that episode is that you really had to pay attention, it was a great character piece but you had to really watch closely. "I don't like to write down to people. It was a puzzle. You had to pay attention. Nothing was as it seemed. The crew loved it, there was stuff for wardrobe, for lighting, for everyone to do to differentiate the three stories. Paris Barclay directed it and he did an amazing job. And Carmen Electra was so sweet, coming in and playing herself."
On Laurie not winning an Emmy: "We were sad here, it definitely would have been an unbelievable night. It was very disappointing. I think the show would not be on the air if we did not have Hugh Laurie in this role. It's a tough character to play and play well. To have turned that character into one of the sexiest characters on TV, that is not something I foresaw when I was writing this [laughs]. This guy can barely walk, he's hateful, but I found him really interesting. Hugh has taken it and just gone with it.
"It annoys me and it annoys him too when people write about him and say, 'He's crusty but with a heart of gold.' No, he does not have a heart of gold! [laughs]. He's way more complicated than that."
How did the casting of Laurie come about? "When his name came up, he was older than Fox would have wanted. They were pushing [that House be] a traditional, studly TV star in his early 30s. We knew this had to be somebody who understands pain. So Hugh put himself on tape, he was making a movie in Africa.
"His agent sent him the [script pages] and Hugh tells the story that he thought House was the second banana -- he thought the show was about Dr. Wilson. He didn't think the show could possibly be about House. So he puts himself on this tape.
"And I'm a huge fan of his comedy, but it literally wouldn't have occurred to me that he would be so good in a role like this. Like everyone else, I was aware of his English twit roles and then we saw this tape, this bad tape from Africa, and we had to bring him in. Fox was not resisting him directly, but there was resistance to the idea of someone in their mid-40s in this part. After the audition, there was no resistance. There were no discussions. That was it."
I read a great New York Times piece in which a doctor said what House and his team do is a fantasy of what doctors wish they could do, with all the money and time in the world. "In the reality of TV, a guy filling out a requisition form for an MRI is just not dramatic. But that's what we set out to create -- a character who only deals with bizarre cases and one case at a time. He's so brilliant that he can do that."
Hugh Laurie has talked about how freeing it is to play House, a character who doesn't care what others think of him. "He just doesn't care. He doesn't say things to make people like him, not to make them hate him, but he just says what he's thinking. He has an objective, but that objective is not to make people be nice to him.
"I have a general rule about humanity in general: We like what we do more than the people we work with. It's the person in the cubicle beside you, the supervisor who annoys you, the client who calls you to complain that you have to deal with for an hour. You just want to do your job, and there are all these people stopping you. He's just saying to all those people what we wish we could say."
What "House" really is, to me, is about moral questions and human nature, the choices people make in their lives and why they do the things they do -- it's not about the disease of the week. "Thank you for saying that. The medical mysteries have to be good, but to me, this is not a medical show. That is not what is driving it. We need to hang the stories on that, if we didn't have a good medical mystery, we would not have that life and death tension.
"But what we really have is Dr. House talking to us about ethical issues. It's about how people behave in irrational ways, how people act in order to achieve something and fail miserably in doing so, why people deceive themselves. Almost every time they [solve the medical problem] not by spotting a rash but from learning something deeper.
That sounds like what the best mystery novels do - examining "why" is much more important than figuring out "how." "You can do that much more readily in a murder mystery. They're less about methods than motives."
So is Stephen Fry, Hugh Laurie's frequent acting and writing partner, coming on the show? "We have thought about it, we just have to find the right thing."
Link to the above item.
She was stuck up on some balcony with bland E! personality Guiliana Depandi -- Griffin wasn't even shown much of the time, you'd just hear her off-camera -- and Depandi looked stricken when Griffin would do something normal like comment on how scarily skinny the Desperate Housewives are.
Please, someone just let Kathy do her very own red-carpet show, on the actual red carpet, or -- here's an idea for Bravo executives: Put a camera in Griffin's living room as she dishes on the arrivals with the deliciously catty friends we saw on her recent Bravo reality show.
SHORE THING: All is well in the house of "House."
More from David Shore:
TAKE A MEMO: Some recommendations and ruminations, based on recent TV viewing:
Link to the above items.
September 21, 2005 6:45 AM CDT: Marty rocks on: Chicago's Casey not INXS' pick
In the end, Chicagoan Marty Casey was not right for INXS.
Swivel-hipped belter J.D. Fortune was chosen by the Australian rock band to be their lead singer on the Tuesday season finale of "Rock Star: INXS."
Casey, who grew up in Hickory Hills, did get a consolation prize: The band invited Casey and his band the Lovehammers to open for them on INXS' upcoming world tour.
"I can't say I wasn't disappointed not to get the gig, it's what I came here to do, but it seemed like it was meant to be," Casey said in a phone interview after taping of the "Rock Star" finale ended Tuesday evening. "I'm still part of the INXS family, but with a different twist."
During the run of the CBS show, which saw its ratings increase markedly in the key 18-49 demographic, Casey debuted an original song, "Trees," which became a fan favorite, but in truth, didn't have much in common with INXS' pop-funk.
"My concern going into this was that my music is a little different than their music. J.D. seems like he's in the same style," Casey said, who competed against Fortune and Australian Mig Ayesa in the finale. "I totally respect INXS' decision, it is their band and they've given me so much."
For Casey, the next few weeks will be about reconnecting with friends and family and trying to get a record deal for his band.
"I'm being told how much this has changed my life, but I haven't stepped outside into the civilian world for weeks," said Casey, who spent Tuesday evening with family members who flew out to Los Angeles for the finale. "My family doesn't treat me any different, but a lot of people ask me for autographs. That is completely different for me, but I'm a lead singer, I love attention."
So what's it like hanging out with INXS?
"It's like hanging out with your buddies. There's so much youthful energy with those guys, they're so upbeat. They're so positive, they're about, 'Let's work really hard, and then let's party really hard.' They have a good time, but they get the job done first. Get the job done, there's no celebration until then. They're hardworking Australian dudes, that's why they are so successful. They were not overnight successes, they developed over 12 albums. They worked their [butts] off."
Do you think part of the reason the show's ratings grew was because it was not about ripping people apart?
"I 100 percent agree with that. It wasn't the same old, same old. It was 15 extremely talented people getting a once in a lifetime chance with INXS and Dave Navarro, who were trying to make you better, not taking shots at you. It wasn't about unneeded drama, it was about getting the best out of each singer.
"You can see that in the monumental songs we got to do, 'Wish You Were Here' was never done on TV except for a benefit after 9/11. That shows you how much artists respected the show, what we were allowed to cover -- it was not about drama, it was about singers trying to give great performances."
Did you ever get any feedback from bands whose songs you covered?
"I heard Pink Floyd liked my version of 'Wish You Were Here.' That was enough for me. I mean, Roger Waters saying he liked it... it doesn't get any better than that."
So you think the competition turned out for the best in the end?
"If you would have told me that 24 hours ago, I would have told you you're crazy. Still, there's a silver lining in this tour with INXS. I get to tour with INXS in a different way, I get to open for them. It really worked out to be perfect for me, I get to be part of the INXS family but with a different twist.
"I can't say I wasn't disappointed not to get the gig, it's what I came here to do, but it seemed like it was meant to be."
I actually wondered if your songwriting style would fit in with what INXS wanted to do.
"My concern going into this was that my music is a little different than their music. J.D. seems like he's in the same style. I totally respect INXS' decision, it is their band and they've given me so much. It is their band. I have grown so much, they are so wise. I can't complain about my experience here, it's been amazing. Even though J.D. is going to be the lead singer of INXS, they're still helping me out."
When does the tour start?
"I think New Year's Eve."
How long have you been with Lovehammers?
"Half my life, since we were about 15 years old. [Casey is 31]. We had no idea what we were doing when we started. [Going on `Rock Star'] was me coming to a point where I thought I had to step outside that fold a little bit and see what I had going on on my own.
"Lovehammers' version of `Trees' is apparently on some chart somewhere, it's crazy. It was in a drawer somewhere [in a band member's house]. Now the band is blown away, they can't even keep up with the amount of sales they're getting."
How did you feel when it was announced that J.D. Fortune would be the winner?
"I just threw my shoulders back and took the bad news. I didn't want to be the sad guy in the corner. I put a smile on my face, because it was his moment. It was nothing to do with me. I give props to him, he did what he came here to do."
It seemed like the singers had their ups and downs but were pretty tight, is that really the case?
"That's the honest truth, we were tight. People have their ups and downs, artists tend to be hot or cold and creative people tend to be kind of moody. We had our moments, we had some arguments, but we were really trying to help each other too."
What's next?
"What's happening for me now is that I want to take a bit of time and step back and see what the big picture looks like without being in it. I don't even know what happened at this point in my life, it's all been a big tornado [the last few weeks]. I've got to figure out what's happening. I've got that Midwestern backbone, I'm hardworking. I want to figure out how to parlay this into a record deal for the Lovehammers. I'm not really one to slow down, so I'm just going to go with the momentum.
"It's been such a positive experience, there are minute things I would change here and there, but really, it's been amazing. I lost, but it's okay."
Link to the above item.
To order a reprint of this article, please click here.