With James Duff at the Helm, Major Crimes Forges Its Own Identity

By M. Sharpe

Duff TC Finale

Major Crimes Creator/Executive Producer James Duff.
Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images

As the eve of the Season 2 premiere of Major Crimes approaches, Series Creator and Executive Producer James Duff can’t help but reminisce about the difference between when The Closer first premiered on TNT in 2005, and last year, when Major Crimes debuted directly after its series finale. “It’s a very different environment than when The Closer first started. Because there were only two shows on the air that season, and TNT was just beginning its thrust to original content. And now a new season has arrived and they have several one hour dramas on the air- almost a full network schedule.” Of promoting the series premiere of Major Crimes last year, he says it was problematic because, as the spin-off to The Closer, it relied on launching directly after that show’s final episode- and to say almost anything about the new show would give away the details of how The Closer would end. “It was a marketing nightmare, but we managed.”

They did more than just manage. Major Crimes set a new record as basic cable’s most-watched series launch ever and averaged 7 million viewers in its freshman season. Returning tonight for its second season, Duff is excited about the new storytelling opportunities that are being presented in Major Crimes, and while comparisons to The Closer are inevitable, he says that Major Crimes has truly developed into its own unique franchise. Continue reading

Major Crimes Intel: Mary McDonnell


mmd2In a new interview with TheTVAddict, Mary McDonnell talks about the challenges Sharon Raydor will be facing this year on Major Crimes, as her personal life begins to collide with her work.

‘Q: What can you tease about what fans can be expecting out of the second season of MAJOR CRIMES?

MARY:  What I can tease in terms of really new elements is the new D.A. that comes in to help out with the Philip Stroh (Billy Burke) case, which as we know Rusty is a material witness and that’s kind of how this beloved adoptive son situation came about. So the new D.A. presents so much potential and so much dilemma simultaneously for many of us in different ways.  There’s some very exciting issues that come up out of that and very human things that grow out of her presence — and Sharon Raydor is once again forced to try to understand her choices between what is right and what is right.  It’s always her dilemma.  It’s a very sophisticated line that she walks ‘cause she has a very strong moral and ethical code and she can see multiple choices.  She understands a lot this season about what has to happen, and she also understands another level that has to happen, and the fact she has to be able to choose between two right things is a very interesting dilemma.  I think that’s fun to watch.  And I think fans will be very excited about the new Tom Berenger visitation.  It’s very exciting.  He’s fantastic.  Their marriage [Sharon and Jackson’s] – I wouldn’t call it an odd marriage, but I’d call it a very understandable, interesting marriage with a lot of issues. Tom and I have worked together before and we have a lot of just innate history and chemistry, so playing it has been just a blast.  I think that’s going to be just so much fun.  Also because he comes into the home.  So it’s Sharon, it’s Rusty and it’s Jackson.  He gets to interact and sort of shake all of us in different ways.  That is so exciting and he is such a terrific actor. It’s going to be wonderful for the fans.

Q: Sounds like Sharon is going to have a lot going on the homefront this season between Rusty and Jackson!
MARY:  She certainly does!  Now all she needs is a male dog and she’ll be surrounded by a lot of boys.  (Laughs) It’s great actually.  It really is wonderful to watch.  I’ve learned a lot about Sharon and her life and her nature.  I’ve learned so much about her through having a husband around.  By the way, he’s not an ex, they have been literally separated for decades.  That adds an interesting element about it.  It is intriguing and raises many different questions.  I think Rusty goes, “What is it about you two? What happened?”  And it’s hard to explain.  So it’s one of those really complicated, wonderful, troubled and exciting relationships.  That’s how I would describe it.

Read the whole interview here!

 

Mary McDonnell- The Cool Head of Major Crimes


sharonMary McDonnell talks to Philly.com in this new interview about Season 2 of Major Crimes.

“One of the nice things about me,” Los Angeles Police Capt. Sharon Raydor (Mary McDonnell) tells a new assistant D.A. in tonight’s season premiere of TNT’s “Major Crimes,” “is that when I’m really unhappy about something, people never have to ask.”

The line’s delivered in the beautifully modulated but very specific tone I’ve come to think of as Raydor’s mom voice.

And it’s as much a part of McDonnell’s character as the Southern accent that Kyra Sedgwick adopted was to Raydor’s predecessor, Brenda Leigh Johnson, in “The Closer.”

That voice probably didn’t show up there by accident.

“I think part of it is the character and part of it is James [Duff, who created both shows] responding to having witnessed it in me,” said McDonnell, laughing, when I asked about it in a recent phone interview.

“I remember one time, very early on, we were having a discussion, about the character, about the writing,” she said, emphasizing “discussion” in exactly the way, I point out to her, that I’m talking about when I say “mom voice.”

“That’s exactly right. That’s my point. There is an element – and moms do use it a lot. A mother archetype has a way of expressing itself sometimes and it’s undeniable in any room. And I think that’s part of what James is fascinated by and interested in, and what I understand both as a woman and as an actress and as a mother – and in some other characters I’ve been asked to play,” said McDonnell, who has a daughter and a son with actor husband Randle Mell.

“I think I can almost tell you what the Hillary Clinton sound might be, you know what I mean? You can go around and look at women in the world who are mothers and in power positions in any corporation and you can probably, after talking to them for a day or two, know what that tone of voice would sound like when they decided that moment is at hand,” she said. “It’s really cool, because I think men really hear it.”

Good thing, too, since men continue to dominate the ensemble on “Major Crimes” (though Nadine Velazquez joins the cast this season as that new assistant D.A., Emma Rios).

A year out from the transition from “The Closer” to “Major Crimes,” it’s easier to see the differences between the shows, even if many of the faces are the same.

Brenda was all about the confessions, but her successor seems interested in those only as part of the overall art of the deal.

“I think ‘The Closer’ morphing into ‘Major Crimes’ is a kind of contemporary look at the economic political system that any particular justice system is run by, according to their state,” McDonnell said. “And right now, in California, the truth is, the state is not in a good place, economically, and we kind of can’t afford justice.

“So the idea of getting a conviction, the idea of Death Row, the death penalty, the idea of the cost of getting the conviction – it’s so overwhelming to the justice system and the economics of this state right now that California . . . [is] having to rethink the way we go about creating justice,” she said. “And that’s part of what I absolutely adore about ‘Major Crimes,’ is its relevancy to the time that it is living in. That is exactly where we are. So, in that sense, the change is a product of the truth of our times, from one show to the next.”

Read the original interview here.

 

Mary McDonnell on the Changing Dynamics of ‘Major Crimes’


1.10 groupend lrIn a new interview with TV Fanatic, Mary McDonnell talks about the transition between The Closer and Major Crimes, and how the success of the first season has allowed for greater freedom in storytelling going forward into season two.

‘TV Fanatic: I found Major Crimes Season 1 captivating. I look forward it more on a weekly basis than I did it’s predecessor. Congratulations on your success and Season 2.

Mary McDonnell: I’m very very happy that you have successfully transitioned into the new show. The plan was always to create a transition with integrity. We knew, James Duff Knew, I knew, we couldn’t really make a false move in there or we would lose a beloved fan group and we never wanted to…you don’t move forward into a new form without completely respecting the old and making sure that you maintain the story that was so iconic. All of those elements are so freaking interesting when you’re in the middle of it trying to figure out a moment to moment behavior of who a character is, inside that kind of container it becomes absolutely fascinating.

It was a really wonderful challenge to be as specific as that, so when it worked and people loved the new show, as well as held the predecessor as precious, we are beyond thrilled, do you know what I’m saying? It’s really exciting. Of course, the numbers speak for themselves and that part speaks for itself and I am just so thrilled and I think the fans are going to be so excited for the new season because with the confidence now of having morphed into a new form, this particular group, this particular major crimes division that operates differently now can dive back back into some very serious crimes. With all of these new politics influencing the way they can solve a crime or not and some the dynamics among us have changed and are still growing and changing, so it feels very fresh, and I’m excited about that.

I understand there is a new DDA who will ruffle some feathers, especially with regard to your relationship with Rusty. How is she going to affect that?

MM: And the many aunts and uncles! Which is so beautiful, isn’t it? That’s part of what I loved about how we ended the season with Rusty. The ending was the beginning of a new life for a child. To allow these cops to be at work together, touching upon their familial emotional heartstrings with this child is a really wonderful element to inject into a murder crimes division. The murder room has a new element to it and it’s beautiful and we have this kid. So that’s fabulous.

The new element that you brought up with the DA is also very exciting and it presents Sharon Raydor with philosophical dilemmas always because here is a young woman, a very ambitious DA coming in to help out with a cast that has to be dealt with. It’s why Rusty is with Sharon to begin with – he’s a material witness in the murder case with Philip Stroh. So this young DA comes in and on the one hand Sharon Raydor as a woman, who promotes young women in the world and their ambitions and as the foster mother of Rusty who wants the material witness part of his life to be over with, and as the cop who wants the Philip Stroh case to finally be dealt with and the person you became very supportive of on the other show, Brenda Leigh Johnson, on the other show. So there are all these areas that are coming together for her, and yet this person and her style becomes a bit of a dilemma, so it’s really interesting. Sharon’s always someone who is battling right decisions. On the on hand this is the right choice, on the other hand this is the right choice, how does she find the most powerful way through the right choices and pick the very rightest?

Essentially what is the most right for the moment.

MM: Yes. And that’s risky, that’s risky. It’s more sophisticated than right versus wrong.

Read the whole interview here.

 

 

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 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.