MCTV Exclusive: Tony Denison Talks Flynn’s Recovery, “Shandy” and Major Crimes Biggest Season Ever

By M. Sharpe


417 - flynn raydor lrThis winter season of Major Crimes has been a rough one for Andy Flynn. We spoke to his portrayer, Tony Denison to get the scoop on Flynn’s health (everyone breathe a sigh of relief: he’s going to be OK!), his evolving relationship with Captain Raydor, and what it’s been like filming the biggest season of Major Crimes yet (Hint: Tony is ready for more!)

MCTV: Flynn has had a rough go of it this winter season, with being injured and then the complications from that, and recovering from surgery. Fans have been very worried about him! How is his recovery going? Are there more setbacks on the horizon for him?

Tony Denison: I think he’s on the road to recovery. But like anything else, as human beings when  something that happens to you, you develop an attitude about it. It’s like people who have had heart attacks or strokes, they suddenly become more aware about what they need to change in their lives. So when such an event happens in a person’s life they have two choices, they can either be keenly aware of it, or ignore it and wind up maybe having to deal with it again.414-86-flynn

I think that Flynn, if he was in his 30s when this happened, I think that he would probably ignore it and insist that he’ll be alright, but the fact that he’s not, and it means that he’s going to be a little bit more sensitive to it. And the other thing that is really cool about this story, and this is where relationships start to have a very interesting or profound meaning in the person’s life, is that your partner-to-be, the person that you’re involved with, suddenly turns around and says, hey, you want to take it easy over there? Which is great, everybody needs someone in their life to say that to them.  That’s what relationships are about, and as (Flynn and Raydor’s) relationship builds, I suppose we’ll see more of that, but I can’t say for sure. All I know is what we’ve done, I don’t know what the plans are, or how the relationship moves along, if it moves a little bit more quickly or more slowly, I really don’t know. I’ll be happy with whatever they decide.

415-81-flynn rustyMCTV: Speaking of the relationship between Sharon and Andy, we’ve seen a lot of development this winter. How has that been for you?

Tony: I’m not just trying to be polite, but it’s been great, it’s been absolutely fantastic. I love working with Mary McDonnell.  I love working on the show period, I have a long standing relationship with G.W. (Bailey) and great relationships with the rest of the cast, but I’ve always been a fan of Mary McDonnell.  I think I’ve seen almost everything that she’s done. So when she worked on The Closer and she was basically just reoccurring, it was great to have some scenes with her. I didn’t really have that many, but I still looked forward to them. And then when Major Crimes happened, and when James Duff noticed that there might be something brewing between Sharon and Andy, that meant for me that I would have the opportunity to work even more with her.

The writers have been putting together some really good storylines and making this romance believable because they’re not going to be impetuous, they’re very responsible people, they’re very responsible adults. She’s the Captain of a squad involved in saving lives and in charge of all of us, and we’re all these responsible police officers, and plus, we’re not kids anymore. There’s a certain amount of decorum that we experience, it doesn’t make our feelings for each other any less, it just means that we behave a little differently. The feelings are the same, they’re the same way that they would be if we were in our 20’s, just a little less impetuous.

MCTV: We’ve seen a lot of people 418- flynn raydor rusty lrtalk about how that’s one of the reasons they’ve enjoyed watching the relationship between Flynn and Raydor develop – seeing these more mature characters explore a relationship, and how that plays out with their responsibilities in life has really resonated with the viewers.

Tony: Yes, I agree with that. It’s been wonderful to explore.

MCTV: You’ve also had a chance to really explore some evolving relationships with some other people in Flynn’s life this season, from Patrice as Provenza’s significant other to Flynn working to forge a relationship with Rusty. How has that been?

415-52-flynn patriceTony: James Duff was very much interested in really building that a lot and I’m sure that there will be more of that as the new season approaches. It will be great for Flynn and Rusty especially because of the relationship that they each have with Sharon. And of course the other relationships that Flynn has with Provenza and now with Patrice, well you can just see down the road that that’s going to be a lot of fun, especially as it relates to Flynn and Provenza, I just see a virtual goldmine of fun.

MCTV:  This has not only been a standout season for Flynn, but also a standout one for Major Crimes as a whole, with having the season extended twice. How has that been going?

Tony: It’s been great! They gave us an additional 5 episodes to do, so we’re doing 23 this season which is unusual for a cable show, very unusual. We’re tearing up the tracks again; we’ve had some stiff competition this winter against three different shows: The Voice, Dancing with the Stars, and Monday Night Football. Despite that we’ve managed to maintain a certain rating – now it wasn’t our usual summer rating however our DVR ratings were tremendous and the minute those other shows finished, our ratings went up by 48% in actual live viewings. There is a definite audience out there for us and we have very loyal fans which, I am sure that I speak for the whole cast and crew, which we so tremendously appreciate. It’s great to have a power base like that and fan’s support and that means that we’ll run, certainly for a while longer. And as an actor I know that I’m looking forward to our 5th year, and beyond.

MCTV: You are in the final stretch of MAJOR CRIMES (TNT)production right now, filming the final five episodes of the season that are scheduled to air in February. Is there a big difference as an actor between filming 10-15 episodes like in season 1 and 2, to now 23 episodes in Season 4?

Tony: Well it’s more than usual which I say, yeah, okay, and that’s a problem why? I mean nobody’s complaining. If they said, you’re doing 33, I’d be like, okay! It’s just a different kind of discipline that you have to prepare yourself for, that’s all. I mean we get certain hiatuses and some time away from the show. Most of those hiatuses are really to benefit the writers and the crew, because those people are really working very hard all the time. And yes, while actors expend a lot of emotional energy, the writers and the crew, they’re going non-stop. I wouldn’t care if I worked on 33 episodes a year, it wouldn’t matter to me at all.

This season has been great. I decided a long time ago that, I’ve always been one who enjoys the surprise, and as an actor you try to the best of your ability to do a scene and not know, not play the results. If you read the script and you know that you’re in jeopardy in one scene and because you’ve read the script you know that you’re going to come out of the jeopardy – the key as an actor is to play that jeopardy as if you don’t know what is going to happen. So overall, I don’t talk to James other than to say, thanks for a really good episode, I don’t call to ask what’s going to happen to my character. And they keep me definitely surprised. The stuff that I am doing now with Mary and the injury, and how that all continues to work out, it’s just been grand.


Major Crimes winter season continues through next week, then returns February 15th, 2016 for the final 5episodes of the season. Season 5 of Major Crimes will premiere in Summer 2016.

MCTV Exclusive: James Duff Talks Season 4 and “The Courage to Live an Everyday Life”

By M. Sharpe


duff btsMajor Crimes series creator and Executive Producer James Duff recently took the time to chat with MajorCrimesTV.net about tonight’s exciting season premiere, and preview what lies ahead for the team as they enter their fourth season. 

When we caught up with James Duff last week, he was in the midst of filming episode 406 of the season, prepping episode 407, and editing episodes 402-404. Despite the manic pace that is the production schedule of a television series, Duff was happy to take a few moments from his tremendously busy schedule to let us know how excited he is about this upcoming season of Major Crimes, and specifically how the theme of “courage” will play into the stories of this season. “I’m looking forward to exploring and dramatizing the courage it takes to live an everyday life.  We have some unique elements with which to dramatize that particular theme.”

While courage will be a theme that we’ll see in all the characters’ journeys, Duff says that this theme will resonate particularly strongly within the relationship between Sharon and Rusty. “Every parent who sees their child stepping into adulthood has tremendous fears, as they lose their authority and as the child gains autonomy; fear ensues. Have you prepared the child? Have you given the child good judgment that they need to make the right decisions in this complicated world? And we dramatize 401- provenza raydor rusty taylor lr - Copythat dilemma that all parents face by having Philip Stroh escape; he becomes an existential threat in how do you deal with these existential threats and how do you live your life in the face of something like that kind of fear?” He stresses that Sharon, like so many parents before her, is struggling with having to relinquish her control over Rusty’s safety.

Tonight’s episode takes place several months after the events of the season three finale, and find Rusty as a full-time college student on the cusp of taking on a new endeavor as an aspiring journalist for his college newspaper. Those aspirations will intersect with the team through an arc that finds him researching the story of Alice Herrera (first introduced in the season 3 episode “Jane Doe #38”), a young murder victim who, through the course of the investigation, was discovered to have lied about her name, and was never able to be truly identified.  Duff explains that this season, “Rusty is going to be following that story, trying to identify her for the first ten episodes.”

401- rusty2 lrRusty’s newly-discovered passion will also bring something new to the show, in the form of short video-blogs that will will be posted across the official Major Crimes social media pages (and Rusty’s own YouTube channel, which will be launched concurrently with the blogs). They will follow Rusty’s journey to try and identify Alice over a 10-episode arch. Duff reveals that these vlogs will take place in some familiar settings around the murder room, but will feature a fresh perspective on them in the form of Rusty, and that other familiar faces from the show also turn up within them.

Rusty is not the only person who viewers will see entering the Murder Room with a renewed sense of purpose. As we enter this season, Detective Sanchez returns after the suspension caused by his excessive force allegations last year. Explains Duff, “Sanchez has his own challenge to face. I think it requires tremendous bravery to come back after a public suspension and to try and resume your place. And not everyone is that wild about having him come back.” Duff goes on to promise that the writers will deal with Julio’s anger management issues early on in this season. “We are going to answer where the rage comes from; we’re going to deal with the temper issue and we’re going to see him struggle and we’re going to see change.” Duff states, “It is a tribute to Raymond Cruz, to his talent; that he makes the character transition look like the simplest thing on Earth and yet it is an amazingly emotional scene.”

401- tao4 lrOther members of the Major Crimes team will also have to call on their courage in situations that will test them beyond their limits this season. Duff elaborates, “Tao has to face the consequences of using his weapon. And how that affects him, and how it spurs him on beyond finishing the case.” Additionally, Det. Sykes is faced with an impossible situation when, “[She] has an opportunity to protect a witness and this opportunity comes with great challenges because this witness could possibly solve a murder that they have not solved, and yet the witness’ identity cannot be given out.” Duff explains that, “The law does not make exceptions for the judgment of a police officer in this case, so she is standing up to the legal system as well as to a very deadly street gang.”

Despite the serious nature of many of the storylines, Duff assures us that season four isn’t all gloom and doom, with many treats in store for viewers. Buzz, the team’s reliable, rule-abiding sidekick will step into a more pronounced role this season as he completes his Reserve Officer training and joins Flynn and Provenza on his very first ride along. Though, in typical Flynn and Provenza fashion, the three of them find themselves in a significantly more complicated position than anticipated when a domestic disturbance call at a local hotel turns into a homicide investigation, threatening to spoil the entire Major Crimes division’s July 4th plans to attend a Dodgers game together.

401- raydor 1 lr - CopyDuff also reveals how the theme of courage will resonate with one of the most anticipated storylines this season, as the deepening relationship between Sharon Raydor and Lt. Flynn is continues to be explored. Duff shares that Sharon will need to search for a certain kind of courage herself this season, in order to allow her heart to welcome this potential romance. “There are a lot of pluses and minuses involved in dating someone with whom you work with and especially when the stakes are life and death sometimes. But one of the things that is not necessarily a con is how the LAPD looks at these relationships, all you have to do is inform your immediate superior that the relationship, is in fact, going on and you’re in the clear. But, informing your superior that the relationship is going on means admitting that relationship is going on. So, saying it out loud has a lot of power, and I think that probably is one of the most courageous things that [Sharon] is going to have to do.”

Progression in a possible romance with Lt. Flynn will also have consequences for her relationship with her newly adopted son, and perhaps bring some of the trauma from his past back to the surface. “Adding an older male into his living dynamic has never worked out for Rusty [in the past], and as much as he is okay with Sharon going out and spending time with Andy and dating him, the idea that it might move into something more is not met with rapturous joy. And, so he is going to have to deal with that as well, and so is she.”

401- provenza4 lr - CopyWith Flynn getting closer to Sharon this season, that leaves Provenza the time that he needs to evaluate his relationship with Patrice, who was introduced as his own love interest last season. “We love Dawnn Lewis, she is an amazing actor, and a lot of fun. She loves coming to play with us and we love having her.” Duff says this relationship is where Provenza will need to call on his own courage, “I think it takes enormous courage to start a new relationship at Provenza’s age with a woman who is closer to being a peer than the last woman he dated, who was ridiculously young.”

Overall, as Major Crimes enters this fourth season, Duff says fans will watch as the team faces a more heightened sense of danger than ever before. “What you’re going to see is that people are going to rise above that risk because it is a choice of living in fear or living in a much more hopeful environment. Admitting that you are dealing with something that is out of your control and that is dangerous, but that you must live anyway is difficult. and it is a way of living your life in a hopeful place while going through some dark times, and choosing hope over the anxiety. And that is a brave choice. It is how we are setting up the circumstances and we’re allowing the cast to rise above their problems.”

Duff hopes that this season’s theme and the way that it touches each character will resonate as strongly with fans as it has for him and the rest of the Major Crimes cast and crew. “The choice between living your life in fear or living your life with hope, choosing to live with hope, that takes courage. Moving into a defensive crouch, that seems normal and it seems practical. Ignoring that defensive crouch and choosing to live your life out in the open, to act as if you will survive life’s onslaughts – that takes courage.”


The season premiere of Major Crimes airs tonight at 9pm/8c on TNT.

MCTV Exclusive: Hope for the Holidays – James Duff Previews the ‘Major Crimes’ Winter Return

By M. Sharpe



Major Crimes Executive Producer and Co-Creator James Duff. Photo Credit: Mark Hill, Courtesy TNT

Major Crimes Executive Producer and Co-Creator James Duff. Photo Credit: Mark Hill, Courtesy TNT

With the holidays fast approaching, it seems fitting that the theme for the winter season of Major Crimes is “hope”, and the role it plays in our lives. Executive producer and co-creator James Duff took time out of his busy schedule to talk to MajorCrimesTV.net about how hope can come in so many forms, and how that plays out in the winter run of the show, premiering tonight on TNT.

A mid-season shift in focus to the theme of hope is a natural progression from the theme of “expectations” that characterized the beginning of the season, says Duff. “Our summer episodes were all about expectation and the role that expectation plays in our lives and how the ability to project what happens around the curve is part of what separates us from the animal kingdom. But when that fails, when expectations don’t work out or when you have to fall back on something else, you’re left with hope. And that’s what our last nine episodes are about, and with the holiday season it seems appropriate.”

311- raydor rusty lr

Photo Credit: Patrick Wymore, Courtesy TNT

Duff says in keeping with the formula of previous seasons, the upcoming winter episodes will focus more deeply on the personal lives of the squad, while, as always, exploring crimes that often reflect the struggles of the team. First up are Captain Sharon Raydor and Rusty, who, according to Duff, start the winter season off with a big decision – whether or not he will be adopted by Sharon. “He has a mother, he has a mother who is in prison and he has a mother who is difficult and a little complicated and has another mother who just loves him. And so he has a choice to make and hope is a double-edged sword. It is hard to hold onto and it is hard to put down and when it’s all you’ve got, it’s really hard to put down. And we dramatize that in our first episode quite a bit.”   Continue reading

MCTV Exclusive: Tony Denison Previews What’s Next For Flynn, “Shandy” and More

By A. Cascone and M. Sharpe



MAJOR CRIMES (TNT)

Photo credit: Justin Stephens. Courtesy TNT, used with permission

Since TNT’s hit drama Major Crimes debuted, audiences have been delighted to see a whole other side of resident tough-guy Lt. Andy Flynn revealed as Flynn has confronted both family and personal health conflicts, adjusted to new additions to the Major Crimes squad, and, most excitingly, has begun to step toward a potential new romance. Recently, we caught up with Tony Denison on the set of Hollywood Today Live, where he took the time out of his hiatus schedule to update us on Flynn’s journey so far, as well as speculate with us as to what might be next for the smart-alec Lieutenant.

MCTV: Firstly, thank you so much for taking the time to speak with us again. You are halfway through your third season right now, what’s your experience been like so far and what can we look forward to in the second half?

Tony Denison: This season has been so great that somebody said to me one day, ‘How much longer do you think you can play this character?’ And I am telling you, without exaggeration, that I could go ten more years; I am having so much fun. And it’s ten years into it [playing Lt. Flynn] and I am not even remotely bored. I love every episode and whatever I get to do and I love to work with G.W. Bailey; he’s a friend and he’s a wonderful actor. I also love all of the stuff that I get to do with Mary McDonnell, as well as the other guys in the cast too, like Kearran Giovanni and Raymond Cruz and Michael Paul Chan; they’re all just great.

MCTV: Congratulations on rising to TNT’s “BOOM” rebranding challenge! Major Crimes has been delivering consistent, record-breaking ratings this season. You and the rest of the cast and crew must be incredibly proud of that accomplishment.

TD: We are poised again to be TNT’s number one show. I joked with James Duff one day and I said, ‘if you write it, they will watch.’ And I was right!

MCTV: Last season audiences got to see glimpses of how Flynn’s family life has affected him, but we didn’t actually get the chance to meet any of his family members. If we do get the pleasure of meeting his children this season, what do you think Flynn’s relationship with them will be like?

TD: Well, I know through dealing with a lot of cops that I’ve spoken with over the year that it’s probably a very tough relationship. When you work a profession where when you go out the door in the morning and your family doesn’t know if you’re going to return alive that night, where you’re carrying a gun, it’s got to be a strain on everybody in the family. Whether people openly admit it or not, there’s got to be some kind of like stress and I am sure that it affects everybody in the family to some degree; maybe a lot, maybe a little, but it’s got to be there. So I would guess that Flynn’s character has experienced what a lot of detectives go through when it comes to their families. Continue reading

MCTV Exclusive- The Doctor Is In: Bill Brochtrup Talks LA Theatre, Dr. Joe, and Major Crimes

By A. Cascone & M. Sharpe


Brochtrup_Bill_190Bill Brochtrup has had a successful film, stage, and television career spanning over 20 years. For the past two seasons he has graced our screens on Major Crimes as Rusty’s witty, intelligent, and unorthodox therapist, Dr. Joe, and his character has fast become a fan favorite.  Recently Bill took time out of his busy schedule to chat with MajorCrimesTV.net about his television career, his love for the theatre, and his role as Major Crimes’ Dr. Joe.

MajorCrimesTV: The Doctor is in! Thank you for taking the time to speak with us today. Dr. Joe struck a chord with fans as soon as he was introduced, how exactly did this role come about for you?

Bill Brochtrup: I’ve known James Duff for years, he’s an old friend of mine. I was in a play he wrote and he’s an outstanding writer. I totally knew the show, I had watched like every episode of The Closer and knew every episode of Major Crimes up until I started filming.

I think James was, for a long time, looking for something that might work for me on The Closer but we never really found anything that worked schedule wise or that was the right fit so when he had this idea, I was thrilled and I just jumped at it. I think this part is so good, I love Dr. Joe. Plus I love working with Graham Patrick Martin [Rusty Beck].

MCTV: So you were very familiar with the world of Major Crimes?

BB: Oh, very much so. Hollywood can be kind of a small town. I’ve known Tony Denison [Andy Flynn] for many years.  I’ve known Phillip P. Keene [Buzz Watson] as long as I’ve known James, he’s a very good friend. Jonathan Del Arco [Dr. Morales] and I did a play together in the 90s, and I did a play with Kathe Mazur’s [Andrea Hobbs] husband back in 2004.

Coming into Major Crimes, on my first day I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is old home week!’ Also that first episode I did, Esai Morales was a guest star, and we worked together on NYPD Blue for many years, so it really was almost surreal. It was like, ‘Wow, I know everybody here’ and there’s just such a warm feeling in the room.

And that is really created by James. At the table read each week he introduces everybody, he kind of runs the whole thing. The table read is where the cast comes together to read the script before we start filming. And James sets a tone that is unlike any place that I’ve ever worked before; it’s like you’re at a party at his house and when they say “guest” star you really are like a guest in their place. You’re treated like a true guest would be, as if you’re spending the weekend at their house or something. It’s an unusual and very, very nice feeling.’

Continue reading

Video: 10 Years of Major Crimes and The Closer – Conversation With Mary McDonnell, Tony Denison and GW Bailey


Graham Patrick Martin on Rusty’s Coming Out and Creating “One of the Best Gay Characters on TV”


s3 GPM galleryIn a fantastic new interview with Advocate, Graham Patrick Martin discusses how he prepared to play the role of Rusty Beck on Major Crimes, how the LGBT community has reacted to the character, and how, in the words of the article, how he and James Duff have “created one of the best gay characters on TV.”

“Graham Patrick Martin’s Rusty was one of the most important characters bridging the The Closer finale to the Major Crimes premier. Since then he’s created one of the most complex, fleshed out, confusing, maddening, hopeful, and loving gay characters we’ve ever seen on cable TV. The upcoming episode on July 9 lets Martin showcase his acting chops as Rusty comes to terms with his mother, his past, his new family, and himself.

You’ve had a great storyline, going back to last year, on Major Crimes. Did you have any concerns about taking the role?
I think my concerns are the same as every actor. Can I find this character and make it come to life properly? And, at first, it was just a one-off guest- starring role on The Closer finale. I almost didn’t even audition! I was asleep when I got a the call saying I had a same-day audition in three hours, and I thought, “If I read this part, and it’s not good, I’m not going.” And I remember being irritated because I liked it. And I decided I really wanted to play it. So I got up and really worked on it and then, while we were shooting it, I began to like the character so much I didn’t want to leave him behind. So I was very happy when James Duff and Mike Robin asked me to stay around for Major Crimes.

Crime dramas aren’t usually known for portraying fully-fleshed out gay characters, but Major Crimes seems to be doing just that. What do you attribute as the reason the show has gotten it right with this character?
I think part of the reason my role is more authentic than a lot of other gay parts you see on television is that I’m not there just for laughs. Also the trauma of having been on the streets as a hustler because I was abandoned by my mother, gives me something of a unique journey in the basic cable-network television universe.

I know this is a story that was really important to executive producer James Duff. What has he told you about the role, the story arc?
Of course, you’d have to ask James this question, but I know he’s told me the part’s based a little on him, and that he wasn’t very popular in his late teens. He didn’t have a lot of friends his own age. And he ran away from home when he was 17 and finished high school on his own. I haven’t discussed this aspect of the role with him very much because I’m playing it how I see it and how I feel it. He can say it’s him, but it’s me.

You came on the scene as a homeless teen turning tricks to survive. Were you able to talk to other homeless LGBT teens before or during the role?
I did not talk to any homeless LGBT teens in preparation for this role. I didn’t think it would feel good to talk to a homeless teen for the benefit of my performance, then turn around and collect my series regular paycheck. Just didn’t seem right to me. I also played a character with a similar background in a film called Somewhere Slow. For both roles I instead decided to read as many blogs and testimonials as I could by people who had experienced this world and gotten out of it. Look, it’s pretty dark, really, when you sit down and think about it, Rusty’s life. I try to keep that darkness nearby without playing it. Because Rusty is, essentially, a hopeful character. But people need hope for a reason, don’t they?

There was a tough episode in which a 13-year-old trans girl named Michelle is murdered and her family are suspects. That’s every trans kids worst nightmare. How does filming a tough story like that affect the actors?
Everyone has there own process. A lot of times, Rusty doesn’t really have much to do with the crime; he’s more the personal side of things. And so the intense elements of the procedural in “Boys Will Be Boys” didn’t involve me. But the guy who was bullying the transgender kid is brought in and calls me a “faggot.” And that felt really horrible. There wasn’t much acting going on in that moment, because it was just so [pausing] well, rude does’t exactly cover it. I don’t understand the whole name-calling thing.

Your character’s storyline for me is resonant, not because of issues of identity or orientation, but because I’m the child of an addict. What part of Rusty’s life resonates with you the most?
I think the part of Rusty I find most interesting is that he doesn’t ever accept the role of victim. He is not always out there doing the right thing, either. He makes mistakes. And then he tries to rebound. And he actively wants to take responsibility for his own life. Sometimes he doesn’t succeed, but he tries. Which is why his mother and her addictions drive him crazy. His determination not to get dragged back into her madness is a sign of growth. But he doesn’t fully let go of her either. I think that’s how it works. You turn your back on the addiction, not the person. But it’s hard, because they look alike.

Do you hear from other people who connect with what you’re going through on the show?
All the time. It’s wild to be visiting New York and crossing the street and having someone yell out at me, “Hey, Rusty!” Or to be recognized when I go out as “the kid on Major Crimes.” And I think people relate to the journey he’s going on because finding out who you are is something every young person has to do. It’s part of becoming an adult. Plus, everyone has to come to terms with the role sex plays in their lives. Rusty dramatizes that. And, I think, the LGBT community relates because Rusty doesn’t really have many of the old cliches attached to gay characters on television. He doesn’t sing show tunes. He doesn’t get all excited about figure skating during the Olympics. I think he’s probably more interested in sex than he lets on. And that might be pushing his crisis a little.

I remember watching you on The Bill Engvall Show. Jennifer Lawrence was also unknown as your sister. Did you have any idea you two were destined to be where you are?
I loved doing that show and I loved working with Jennifer. I like to tell a story about when Engvall first premiered, I believe we scored 3.5 million viewers. Upon hearing the news, she sent me a text saying, “Oh my gosh we’re rock stars.” I love telling that story because of how excited she was at the modest viewership our show gained. Having no clue that she would be nominated for an Oscar three years later. Such a kind and humble girl, and she was great at comedy. Really great. You can say she’s gifted, because I think that’s true, but she has done remarkable things with her gift. As for me, I have a way to go before I catch up with Jennifer. And I don’t know where my future will take me. But we had fun with Bill. And I remember that early part of my professional career happily. I have no dirt. This is probably a terrible interview. I’ve been lucky not to have had bad experiences.

On the Engvall Show and Two and a Half Men, you’re comic relief, which is so different than Major Crimes. What have you learned the most in this role?
It’s hard to say what you learn acting a part. You find bits and pieces of yourself that are inside the character you play. You locate the relatable aspects of that character to your own life. So, in a way, every part you play forces you to discover things about yourself you might not have learned otherwise. I have never been a homeless gay kid on the streets of Los Angeles, but because of Rusty, I have thought a lot about what that must be like — and how important a home and a family were to me growing up. Sometimes I drive by these kids on the street and now I know what’s going on, and I didn’t before. It’s sad. For some reason, as a society, we don’t care about these children very much. They’re thrown away. We treat our pets better.

Your character gives Major Crimes a chance to deal with LGBT youth, sex work for survival (or surrogate parents), foster care systems, mentoring, fear of violence, cycles of neglect, and also, you know, solve a crime each week. What’s left for Rusty? Is happiness and stability in his future?
It’s great to be able to deal with adult issues, and the crisis of neglect and abuse in our culture, and to show a kid fighting to survive that, and make something of his life. He didn’t start out believing he had much of a future. In the second episode of Major Crimes, he tells Sharon, “People like me don’t go to college.” And I think that’s largely true. But I also think it’s great to see a character who’s reaching for something that others don’t believe he can grab — and to show him not giving up. When he’s cornered, Rusty finds a way to fight back. I’d like to see him do some of that when he’s not cornered. He has it in him.

At one point Sharon says, “Rusty, what you are is who I love. And all of you is coming home.” Can you imagine what the world would be like if every kid got to hear that?
Rusty handed Sharon his soul in that moment. And she just loved him. Period. She didn’t push him to explain himself. She didn’t demand explanations he didn’t know how to make. She just loved him. Is it obvious to say that most children do better when they’re loved? Do you get mad at a kid for being left-handed? Do you make someone explain to you why they have brown eyes? In that moment, Rusty is actually very ambiguous, because he still doesn’t know how to say the words out loud. And Sharon tells him, it doesn’t matter. Yes, I think it would be a much better world if more children were treated that way.

Last year the entire cast shot a PSA about bullying for GLSEN, the Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network.
I was very proud to participate in the GLSEN PSA. Actually, every single member of our cast participated in it. It was just one of those no-brainers we decided to do while filming the story about the transgender kid. Don’t beat children. Again, it sounds like a pretty obvious thing to say. And not at all like a political statement. Don’t hit kids! Why do we have to be told this? But we do.

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MCTV Exclusive – G.W. Bailey Talks Major Crimes and The Sunshine Kids Foundation

By Mina Sharpe



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Photo Credit: Justin Stephens, courtesy TNT, used with permission

With a career spanning more than four decades and some very memorable projects, G.W. Bailey’s filmography reads like a who’s who of notable films and television series, including such smash hits as MASH and Police Academy. These days, Bailey is busier and in higher demand than ever. Alongside playing Lt. Louie Provenza for ten seasons and counting on The Closer and now Major Crimes, much of Bailey’s free time is taken up by another passion; his role as the Executive Director of the Sunshine Kids Foundation, a charity that supports children being treated for cancer, and their families.

We caught up with G.W. Bailey at the Turner Network Upfront Presentations in New York City this past May, and talked to him about what’s ahead for Lieutenant Provenza, his work with the Sunshine Kids Foundation, and why, despite TNT’s move towards focusing on the younger demographic with their ‘BOOM’ campaign, he’s pretty sure Major Crimes is here to stay.

MajorCrimesTV: This season marks the 10th season playing Lt. Provenza for you. How has the experience changed? Do you bring something new going into the season like this?  Is it new and fresh because the ideas have changed so much lately?

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Photo credit: TNT, used with permission

G.W. Bailey: “Well it’s interesting. Today, we were in the green room waiting for this to start and Stephen Kane [writer on The Closer and the first season of Major Crimes] who is the writer/producer for The Last Ship walked in. I was sitting at a table among all these people and I was working on a crossword puzzle, which I’ve done every morning on Major Crimes and The Closer, for years while they’re rehearsing. I sit at Provenza’s desk and work on my crossword puzzle. And he walked over and he said, ‘Boy, some things don’t change no matter where you are.’

So, in terms of habits, they don’t change. In terms of characters, they have to develop, they just have to; just like in life, events affect you. Now, they don’t affect your core particularly, but they can affect your behavior and how you handle life and how you handle things. Provenza is certainly still Provenza; he’s still not going to run, he’s still not going to break a big sweat, he’s still Provenza. But he has adapted and he has changed.“

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