Mary McDonnell: Why Sharon Raydor and Major Crimes Have ‘Hit a Nerve’ With Viewers


1.08 raydor lrIn a new interview with the Qatar Tribune, Mary McDonnell discusses her career, and the importance she finds in portraying a complicated, mature female character on TV.

“It’s such a revelation and so refreshing that she’s a female captain and a woman of power,’’ McDonnell says. “On The Closer she was an antagonist. We left the audience with all of these assumptions about Captain Raydor.

“When you police the police, your goal isn’t to make the police like you,’’ she continues. “As it turns out, she’s out there to protect the people and the police.’’ McDonnell thinks she knows why Raydor has hit such a nerve.

“This character celebrates smart women,’’ the actress says. “Like so many of us, she is very competent in her own skin, although there are dysfunctional things in her life. She also is having a good life and has a strong ethical code.

“There isn’t this crazy darkness that a lot of cops carry with them,’’ McDonnell continues. “This is a woman like many women I know. She gets the job done.’’ It isn’t easy to portray someone so competent, she adds.

“It’s a challenge,’’ McDonnell admits. “How do you write for someone who is just out there in a good way? It feels far more reckless than writing for someone who is bad. Bad is easier. It’s flashier. This is about playing strength.’’ The series, which premiered in 2012 on the heels of the final episode of The Closer, was a hit right out of the box.

“Without a doubt, it was such a success that we broke records,’’ McDonnell says. “The fans really backed the faith I had in this show. They gave us a strong start.’’ That came as a relief to McDonnell, who never before had been asked to carry a series – the closest she had come was playing President Laura Roslin in the ensemble cast of Battlestar Galactica (2004-2009) – and admits to having had some jitters.

“I had a lot of fears born from an actor wanting to do well,’’ she says. “I didn’t have any fears about the quality of the show, but I had the normal fears of success. Could I pull it off?’’ McDonnell believes that women past 40 have particularly embraced the show.

“At this point in my life, I organically understand this woman that I play,’’ she says. “There are a lot of women like her and me in the world. We’re women who have varying degrees of power, dealing with sophisticated situations. After 40, it’s about how do you get clear and practice living a great life?’’

McDonnell is only the latest in a series of big-screen actresses who have turned to cable television for strong roles as they age, following in the footsteps of Glenn Close, Laura Dern, Holly Hunter and, of course, Sedgwick.

“TV watching is becoming more important than ever as the Baby Boomers age,’’ she says. “The world is changing so freaky fast around us. There are very unsettling feelings attached to the times we live in. I like to be able to turn on the TV in my house and see adults approaching the next 30 years of their lives.’

Read the whole article here.

 

Mary McDonnell on Major Crimes: There’s More to Sharon Raydor


2.02- raydor rusty provenzaIn a new interview with Chicago Red Eye, Mary McDonnell talks about the different facets of Sharon Raydor viewers will see in season 2, as her tensions with the D.A,’s office grow more complicated, her guardianship of foster son Rusty (Graham Patrick Martin) comes into question, and her relationship with her long-estranged husband is explored.

‘How excited you are for the new season?
I’m very excited. We’re in the thick of it and I am extremely pleased with the revelations of character, of relationship, of dilemma. I feel like in this ensemble is moving into just a whole new level of work. And we do have a new show on our hands. And what’s beautiful about it is that there was never a moment where we had to fully abandon the old, which we haven’t. But the organic growing into a new form has been such a delight to witness. So we’re all feeling very excited. It feels very fresh and I love that.

How has the show evolved?
Well, it’s changed in many ways. One is that if we just look at the reason that Sharon Raydor by story was put in the position that she’s in now, which is running the Major Crimes Division, has to do with some of her gifts which has to do with her ability to comprehend the overall—the politics of the state, the politics of the justice system. And all of those things are influencing the way justice can be disseminated. And she has a gift for the overview.

As opposed to another detective who is like a bloodhound who might have a gift for getting caught on one idea and following that line all the way through. Sharon has a gift for keeping the overview. So they put her in that position because the state of California can’t afford justice as it has been acted out prior to now. We can’t afford the convictions anymore. We have to figure out a different way to solution because the cost of keeping a convicted death row criminal waiting for trial and the cost of having appeals is so overwhelming and the state simply doesn’t have the money.

So what’s fascinating is that all of these politics and this situation is part of why she’s there. And finding out in fact that she’s actually really good at reformation and she’s really good at figuring out how to change the way things run. And one of the things that I’m discovering that I really love about her is that she’s a great leader in that she absolutely wants to draw out the very best of those around her. And so that has shifted them a little bit away from some of the power struggles that were running Season 1. It doesn’t mean to say there won’t still be power struggles in personality, but I think we’re in a new world in terms of the way we’re going about things as a team. And I love how she’s influenced that.’

Read the whole article here.

 

Mary McDonnell and James Duff on the Complexities of Sharon Raydor



2.02-raydor3 lrIn a great new article by the LA Times, Mary McDonnell and Series Creator James Duff talk about the evolution of Sharon Raydor in Major Crimes, and what we can expect from her in season 2.

‘”She’s concerned with doing what’s right, not with what people think about her,” McDonnell said recently during a break in filming this season’s expanded order of 19 episodes. “It’s more of a male energy.”

So if Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg hadn’t written the bestseller “Lean In: Women, Work and the Will to Lead,” maybe Raydor would have? The unflappable cop will continue to thrive in a male-dominated world when “Major Crimes” returns Monday to TNT, where it planted its flag as the No. 1 new drama on cable last year with an average 7 million viewers.

James Duff, creator of “Major Crimes” and its predecessor, “The Closer,” said he wants viewers to respect and relate to Raydor, the politically savvy chief of detectives.

But like her? It wasn’t his goal, even as he took her from guest player on “The Closer” to the center of the “Major Crimes” ensemble. And that helps illustrate how far TV, especially cable, has come in its portrayals of women, he said.’

Read the rest of the article here.

Nadine Velazquez Talks About Rios’ Introduction to Major Crimes


2.02-raydor rios sanchez2 lrIn a new interview with TV Guide, new cast member Nadine Velazquez discusses her characters icy welcome to the squad, and how D.D.A. Rios’ “ambition” and drive to win the Phillip Stroh case will cause tensions to rise.

“They’re not gentle and they’re not holding my hand in any way,” Velazquez tells TVGuide.com of her character’s interaction with her new colleagues. “I’m a fish out of water, and they’re showing me what the environment is like. So I just get thrown into these situations, and I learn quickly — maybe the hard way.”

But there’s a reason Emma doesn’t exactly get off on the right foot with the unit: She has been assigned the Philip Stroh case and is dismayed to learn her chief witness, Rusty (Graham Patrick Martin), is living under Capt. Raydor’s roof. Emma believes she has a better chance of winning the case if Rusty is removed from Raydor’s home, but you can guess where Raydor comes down on that argument. “The Stroh case is the big one, and she wants to win,” Velazquez says. “Both [women] are ambitious, and that’s where it conflicts. Emma knows the law, but Sharon is the Captain [with the] authority. Captain Raydor is so collected and calm, but yet she’s firm. She never lets it throw her off, which is something Emma hopes it would do. But it doesn’t work with her.”

Read the entire interview here.

 

Audio: K104.7 Sits Down with the Stars of ‘Major Crimes’


Radio station K104.7 talked to G.W. Bailey, Tony Denison and Mary McDonnell this past weekend at TNT’s Armchair Detective Event in Los Angeles, and recorded this fantastic interview.

Listen now: major-crimes-edited-cbs radio

News Briefs: Flynn and Provenza Antics to Return, Episode 2.01 Reviews (Updated)



1.06-38-provenza flynn- TV Fanatic got a chance to talk to GW Bailey about the upcoming season of Major Crimes, and the veteran actor shed some light on whether or not those famous Flynn and Provenza-centric episodes are still on the horizon:

‘MAJOR CRIMES Were you worried that just because The Closer is over that the Provenza/Flynn fun wouldn’t move over to Major Crimes? Never fear because GW Bailey (Provenza) told me on the set last week that an upcoming episode will give the twosome some time together: “It’s not exclusively about the two of us but it’s a situation that we get into and it actually isn’t our fault. We actually do a favor for someone we’re not even fond of, Emma (new regular Nadine Velazquez, playing an ADA), and it ends up a disaster and a mess and we’re in the middle of it…whoever’s closest to the flame is the one who gets burned. It’s a good episode.”

Bailey is also excited to work with guest star Tom Berenger, who’ll appear later this season as the long-absent husband of Sharon Raydor (Mary McDonnell). “Tom is an old friend of mine,” said Bailey. “We did a movie together almost 30 years ago – 29 years ago – called Rustler’s Rhapsody…when we saw each other on this we promised that we’d work together every 30 years.”’

- Our friends over at RizzlesUnlimited attended an advance screening of the Major Crimes premiere last weekend, and they’ve posted a great review/recap of the episode here. Warning- there are some mild spoilers for the plot of the episode.

6/7/13, 2pm PST, ETA:

- Channel Guide Magazine Review:
“Summer is here and so is the art of the deal on Major Crimes. Don’t forget to tune in Monday, June 10 (and set your DVRs), when Capt. Sharon Raydor (Mary McDonnell) and one of television’s best ensemble casts returns for a second season.

Seven million viewers watched Major Crimes last year, ranking Major Crimes as basic cable’s No. 1 new series of 2012. As their second season opens, Lt. Provenza (GW Bailey) continues to drop hints about retiring while Lt. Flynn (Tony Denison) commits to 10,000 steps a day to help his health.

Rusty (Graham Patrick Martin) has settled in nicely with Capt. Raydor, and so has the squad with the leadership change, but a new Deputy District Attorney — Emma Rios (Nadine Velazquez) — who’d rather win in court than make deals threatens to derail the status quo of the department.”

- WhopperJaw Season 2 Review:

Major Crimes returns to TNT for its second season on June 10. We were huge fans of The Closer (until its last season when the world came crashing down on Deputy Chief Brenda Leigh Johnson (Kyra Sedgwick) and Interim Chief of Police Will Pope (J.K. Simmons) exited to do State Farm commercials.  While the quirks of hard-nosed by-the-book Captain Raydor (Mary McDonnell) are nowhere near as endearing or colorful as those of her predecessor, she’s proving to be a slow burn, gradually gaining our appreciation as she makes the rules work to her advantage.

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Whopperjaw got a preview of the first episode of the new season. In terms of structure, it’s clearly trying to parallel the more successful elements of the initial series. Raydor is the smart, driven central figure and Rusty, her witness/charge/”foster son” is a stand-in for her “real world” that is connected to, but not fully part of, her life fighting crime. (He’s fulfilling the role Fritzy and family played for Johnson in the original series.)  The show appears to be setting up the Deputy District Attorney Emma Rios (Nadine Velazquez) to assume Raydor’s former position as the hard-to-like, oft antagonist. However Valazquez (let us save you the time it took us to place her before we gave up and searched IMDB; among other roles she played the maid on My Name is Earl) has a difficult time pulling it off. She’s out-performed by virtually every member of the extensive cast.

Still, the story draws you in at the get-go, starting with the body of a film director’s wife being pulled from a Los Angeles pool while crusty Detective Lieutenant Provenza laments both the victim’s death and his status in life. And so, even though we’d take back Johnson and Pope in a heartbeat, with the regular cast of favorites—Provenza, Flynn, Tao, Sanchez, Taylor and Buzz—staying on the case, this spin-out  police procedural continues to beat most of the crime shows out there and retains its space on our DVR.

 

 

 

 

 

Mary McDonnell: Woman in Charge


2.02- raydor 1 lrIn a new interview with Celebrity Extra, Mary McDonnell talks about the excitement of the second season of Major Crimes, what the story is revealing to her about her character, and her feelings about the actors relationship to social media.

Celebrity Extra: First of all, a lot of new shows don’t even make it to a second season, so you all must be excited that you have indeed been renewed — and not just for the normal order of 13 episodes, but for a super-size season of 19 episodes.

Mary McDonnell: Yes, we’re really, really happy. We are about to finish shooting episode number five, so we already have a strong sense of at least the beginning of the season, and we’re pretty excited. It’s fantastic. And it’s new and it’s interesting and it’s complicated. It reveals more of all the characters and new characters. And it’s just really great. We’re very excited to premiere.

CE: I am not only excited to see how this new season picks up, I’m also eager to see what new cast member Tom Berenger will bring to the show. Are you excited to work with him?

MM: We’ve worked together before, so we know each other, and we knew that it would be awesome to work together again. He’s been on the set for the past couple of weeks, and it’s been absolutely great!

CE: He plays your character’s estranged husband, who we learn has a gambling problem. Are you glad to be able to explore more of Raydor’s personal side?

MM: It really is exciting, because any time you can start to fill in the gaps, start to have a larger container through which to view any character, it’s always refreshing and exciting and reassuring. The more I find out about the moment-to-moment experience of some of her past, the more I understand her present. And then you can start to share some of what you learned; it’s a wonderful, wonderful process to go forward and backward and forward. It’s really gratifying as a performer.

CE: What do we get to learn about her past?

MM: Well, we learn about her and how she deals with having him back in her life; whether or not it’s estranged. We learn a lot about her at work through the relationships there. We get to have a much more revealing picture of a woman. I don’t want to say too much about this because I certainly don’t want to give too much away. But let’s just say, there’s a lot to be learned, and it’s complex, and it’s been a tremendous amount of fun to shoot.

Read the rest of the interview here.