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Major Crimes Season 3 Press Round Up
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A few more Major Crimes Season 3 interviews were released over the last few days, and we’ve gathered them together in this post for you:
Mary McDonnell talks Major Crimes on the Fox4 Morning Blend
Mary McDonnell and Tony Denison talk about the season with CinemaSource from the set of Major Crimes:
Mary McDonnell talks about Major Crimes on the Pop Culture Podcast:
Mary McDonnell talks Major Crimes during the premiere press tour:
Major Crimes cast attends the season premiere screening and Q&A at Raleigh Studios
Mary McDonnell talks family, career and Major Crimes in Closer Magazine (click thumbnails for viewable version)
Mary McDonnell on Career, Family, and Major Crimes
In a great new interview with Women of Upstate New York magazine, Mary McDonnell discusses her early career, what’s ahead for Sharon Raydor this year on Major Crimes, and why, when it comes to the glass ceiling, she’s not worried. ‘No, that’s not the ceiling, I can’t see the ceiling yet. I don’t even know where the ceiling is.”
Mary McDonnell is one of Hollywood’s most recognizable leading ladies. Nominated for two Oscars — one in 1991 for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for Dances With Wolves, she was again a nominee in 1993 for Best Actress in a Leading Role for Passion Fish. She has also been nominated for two Primetime Emmy awards — both for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series for her performances as Dr. Carter’s mother on ER (2002) and as Capt. Sharon Raydor in The Closer (2011).
“In my freshman year, I started to be introduced to the theatre. I auditioned for and did my first play called The Crucible,” Mary said. “That’s when I realized, ‘Oh, that is what I am supposed to do.’” Eventually she developed her talents as an actress, moving from off-Broadway productions to Broadway, television and film.
“There were many years in NY, that I was pursuing it as something I love to do, but I was paying to be able to do it,” Mary said. “I was waitressing or doing this or doing that, while I worked for free. It wasn’t as if I had a career path in front of me that I kept trying to pursue or create. I was on an artistic path and knew that this was the way I would express myself and I knew that there was a world of commerce associated with it. So I knew eventually I wanted to make a living doing it.”
“The biggest thing that changed my life was Dances with Wolves. Part of it was getting a role that was extraordinary and that I could use my talent in a way that was extreme. But the movie itself was… so desperately needed by our culture, so it became iconic…. the respect and opportunity that came from that moment in my life is the gift that keeps on giving.”
Now, at age 62, McDonnell
stars as Los Angeles Police Captain Sharon Raydor in TNT’s hit television series Major Crimes, where she “heads up a special squad within the LAPD that deals with high-profile or particularly sensitive crimes.” The series is a spin-off of ‘The Closer’ (starring Kyra Sedgwick).
“When you represent a character, your job is to represent an authentic human being and your job is to champion whatever character you are asked to play,” Mary said.
McDonnell is conscious of her own influence on her portrayal and how much of herself she brings to the characters she plays on screen.
“I think you bring a lot of yourself,” Mary said. “You may be more visible or not depending on the character. Whether or not you use your particular personality, you are still using yourself in the role. It’s your energy. It’s your emotional background. It’s your imagination. It’s your brain, your pattern. You change them. You alter them. But you do use the self in your work. It’s very dangerous being an actor to listen to yourself every time. You have to find a way to use it without it costing you.”
In Season 3, fans can expect to see a more personal side of Sharon Raydor. McDonnell said she has learned more in the first six episodes about the private life of her character than she did in the first two seasons of Major Crimes. Perhaps most inspiring about her character is that she is a strong woman in a leadership role.
“It is the perfect time for Sharon Raydor. Because this is the moment in time when women of a certain age are expanding even more, as opposed to retreating into retirement, or disappearing or having never broken the glass ceiling to begin with,” Mary said. “I don’t think it is a glass ceiling, it’s a lot more subtle. It’s like a vapor. How do you push it out? How do you keep pushing it? There are so many women of my generation who are expanding the vapor. They’re just saying, ‘No, that’s not the ceiling, I can’t see the ceiling yet. I don’t even know where the ceiling is.’”
“Not only can we continue to shine, but if you really look at the world, and what women are doing now, they are essential. Women and their years of wisdom, putting it out into the world, and using the wise woman as an archetype in the world in a major way, whether it’s business, politics, entertainment, whatever it is, is essential to the balance of things. Because we’ve been in trouble for a long time. And we are starting to see that women in those positions are actually creating balance, creating money, creating healing, creating a lot of very interesting things. The whole idea that women couldn’t handle all of that, that’s just gone,” Mary said.
Read the complete article here
Ratings: Major Crimes Returns With a BOOM as #1 Scripted Series Premiere of the Year
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Major Crimes returned with a bang (or perhaps more appropriately, #BOOM), bringing in a whopping 6.7 million total viewers in season 3 premiere and encore last night, easily making it basic cable’s #1 scripted series premiere of the year!
Major Crimes scored 5.2 million total viewers for its 9pm showing, up sharply from the Season 2 and 2.5 premiere numbers (5.02 and 3.65, respectively), and remained steady with its season 2.5 finale, itself a record high (5.43).
In the demo Major Crimes also performed very strongly, bringing in 1.6 million adults 18-49, and 2 million adults 25-54, a 3% and 6% increase in over last summer’s season 2 premiere, respectively, and easily besting its new Monday night partner, the heavily promoted Murder in the First.
The Hollywood Reporter has called Major Crimes “TNT’s crown jewel” in its lineup, and Michael Wright, president and head of programming for TNT, had this to say: “Major Crimes is a true mega-hit as it enters its third season, with an ensemble cast that’s second to none.”
Congrats to the cast and crew on what is sure to be a record-breaking season!
Updated 6/16/14
In time-shifted viewing, Major Crimes rose sharply again, increasing to 6.8 million viewers in Live+3, a 32% increase over its Live+Same Day numbers. Likewise in the key demos Major Crimes also saw huge gains in Live+3, with a whopping 31% increase in the all-important 18-49 demo to 1.6 million, and a 35% increase in viewers 25-54 (2.1 million).
Souce: TVbytheNumbers
302- “Personal Day”
“Personal Day” – Monday, June 16, at 9 p.m. (ET/PT)
Shorty after being released from prison, a man who proclaimed his innocence is found murdered. The victim’s case is reopened and the squad works hard to solve a seventeen-year old murder. To the surprise of Raydor, Rusty confesses the reason behind his recent suspicious activity. Kathe Mazur and Ransford Doherty guest star.
Directed by Rick Wallace
Written by Duppy Demetrius
Created by James Duff
James Duff Talks Major Crimes Season 3
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In a new interview with TVGuide.com Major Crimes creator James Duff teases a little of what we can expect in Major Crime season 3, including a difficult reunion for Rusty, a secret that may come back to bite Flynn and a possible romance for one of the team members.
“The theme of our first 10 episodes this season is expectations,” creator James Duff tells TVGuide.com. “We have an expectation of a lot of things in our lives that it turns out that we have no right to expect. Family is not a given. Family is something you are sometimes obligated to create for yourself and that you embark upon with other people.”
Indeed, over the first two seasons, Capt. Sharon Raydor (Mary McDonnell) has built a new family dynamic with Rusty (Graham Patrick Martin), an orphan whom she originally took into her home while he prepared to testify as a witness in a murder case. But just when it seems like Sharon might be ready to make their arrangement more permanent, Rusty gets a surprise: His mother (Ever Carradine) returns to his life.
“We begin our first episode with a different Rusty,” Duff says. “He has changed quite a bit. The experience of testifying on his own and having his say in the courtroom, reduced the whining, reduced the teenage angst. He’s sort of moving beyond and looking into his own heart and how he can make things better. Then, out of the blue, he’s knocked off stride by the reappearance of [his mother] who he had thought he was separated from for good.”
And Rusty has no plans of sharing the surprise with Sharon — at least not right away. “You get close to someone, but that doesn’t mean that on certain intimate issues you are inflexibly honest,” Duff says. “Sometimes we like to sort out our own feelings about circumstances before we involve the people who are closest to us, and that doesn’t mean there’s a loss of love or a loss of respect. It means there’s fear and anxiety. The anxiety he has about his mother will reveal itself, and he [does] introduce his mother to Sharon,” Duff says. “His mother has a very different take on where he is in life than Sharon does.”
But Rusty’s dilemma is only half of the story. His mother’s return comes just as Sharon begins to consider making her arrangement more permanent by legally adopting him. That will raise the eyebrows of Sharon’s “real” family, including her husband Jack (Tom Berenger) and her yet-to-be-cast son Ricky. “As she moves forward to adopt Rusty — or as the questions appear: ‘Should I? Do I want to be [his mother]?’ — her already established family weighs in in different ways,” Duff says. “How do you include other people? What does the word family mean? Do you have any right to expect that your family will always be exactly what it is?”
Of course, the Major Crimes work family dynamic will also be explored. “There will be more personal life stuff,” Duff says. “Sykes [Kearran Giovanni ] gets flowers [in the premiere]. Who did they come from? Is she dating somebody? Flynn [Tony Denison] keeps talking about his daughter. His daughter is going to show up, and he keeps pretending to his family that he and Sharon are closer than they are. How long is he going to get away with that?”
Read the entire interview here
306- “Jane Doe #38″
“Jane Doe #38″ – Monday, July 14, at 9 p.m. (ET/PT) – TV-14-DLSV
After finding a young runaway murdered and thrown in a trashcan, the Major Crimes unit is led on a long, puzzling hunt to find the deceased girl’s killer and her identity. Meanwhile Raydor consults her husband (guest star Tom Berenger) about a big proposition she has for Rusty.
Directed by Steve Robin
Written by Michael Alaimo & Kendall Sherwood
Created by James Duff
Episode Stills
Episode Promo
305- “Do Not Disturb”
“Do Not Disturb” – Monday, July 7, at 9 p.m.
When a foreigner is found murdered inside his hotel room, the squad must work quickly to find the killer while avoiding any international repercussions when a U.S. diplomat becomes involved in the case. While everyone is busy with the case, Rusty tries to figure out how to share a big secret with the squad.
Directed by Sheelin Choksey
Written by Ralph Gifford & Carson Moore
Created by James Duff
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