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Post by llyan on Jun 16, 2021 23:04:23 GMT
‘NCIS’ in Talks With Gary Cole for Major Season 19 Role (EXCLUSIVE)
By Joe Otterson Eric Jamison/Invision/AP Gary Cole is in talks for a major role in “NCIS” Season 19, Variety has learned exclusively from sources. Details on the character Cole would play are being kept under wraps. The long-running CBS procedural was renewed back in April, with series lead Mark Harmon’s return to the series also being confirmed at that time. It had previously been reported that Harmon was looking to leave the show but ultimately decided to return. It is not yet known how big a role Harmon will play in Season 19, with sources saying that Cole may not be the only new face to join the show’s main cast in the upcoming season.
Reps for CBS declined to comment.
Cole most recently starred in the ABC sitcom “Mixed-ish,” a prequel to the network’s hit comedy “Black-ish.” He has appeared in over a dozen episodes of the critically-acclaimed drama “The Good Fight,” reprising the role of Kurt McVeigh from “The Good Wife.” His other TV roles include “Veep,” “Suits,” “Entourage,” and “The West Wing.” He has also starred in films such as “Dodgeball,” “Office Space,” and the “Brady Bunch” films.
He is repped by Gersh and Envoy Entertainment.
The mothership series in the “NCIS” franchise also currently stars Sean Murray, Wilmer Valderrama, Brian Dietzen, and Diona Reasonover. Donald P. Bellisario created the series and executive produces along with Harmon, Frank Cardea, Steven D. Binder, Chas. Floyd Johnson, Mark Horowitz and Scott Williams.
The “NCIS” franchise remains a major cornerstone at CBS, with the original show still ranking among the broadcaster’s most-watched series. “NCIS” has also proven popular on streaming, consistently ranking in the top 10 of the Nielsen streaming ratings. Currently, CBS also airs “NCIS: Los Angeles” and recently ordered the new series “NCIS: Hawai’i.” “NCIS: New Orleans” recently wrapped up after seven seasons.
variety.com/2021/tv/news/ncis-season-19-gary-cole-mark-harmon-1234998450/
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Post by nas on Jun 17, 2021 5:19:47 GMT
hmmmm, very interesting!
I like Gary Cole... I think he could bring something good to the party - but in what capacity?
nas
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Post by luckysmom on Jun 17, 2021 10:39:55 GMT
I agree. I like Gary Cole but wonder how they will use him.
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Post by jessielee on Jun 17, 2021 12:09:00 GMT
I agree. I like Gary Cole but wonder how they will use him. That looks like they are trying to find a Mark Harmon replacement. He's probably replacing Mark Harmon for a while eg being the new Special Agent in Charge as long as Gibbs isn't reinstated - if he's reinstated. Depends on where the Gibbs storyline goes which depends on in how many episodes will MH be in. Otherwise I don't see a role with the team. He could be the lead on a new team that works with the MCRT as long as they short on members. He could be a new Deputy Director - similar to Granger on LA. And this gives CBS the possibility to test new candidates and if the fans like him.
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Post by kate06460 on Jun 17, 2021 12:34:01 GMT
I agree. I like Gary Cole but wonder how they will use him. That looks like they are trying to find a Mark Harmon replacement. He's probably replacing Mark Harmon for a while eg being the new Special Agent in Charge as long as Gibbs isn't reinstated - if he's reinstated. Depends on where the Gibbs storyline goes which depends on in how many episodes will MH be in. Otherwise I don't see a role with the team. He could be the lead on a new team that works with the MCRT as long as they short on members. He could be a new Deputy Director - similar to Granger on LA. And this gives CBS the possibility to test new candidates and if the fans like him. By the tone of one FB group its not gonna happen threats of not watching anymore or the show will die.
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Post by verdun on Jun 17, 2021 13:09:12 GMT
OH, good, another body to clutter up the cast. Having said that, I'm actually a Cole fan (but not hopeful for this program).
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Post by jessielee on Jun 17, 2021 13:58:43 GMT
By the tone of one FB group its not gonna happen threats of not watching anymore or the show will die. FB is all about drama and it usually involves CdP on some level. I no longer follow FB NCIS boards, some people are rabid over there. Granted, if Harmon stops completely playing Gibbs I'm done with the show as well. But that has to do with me not seeing Sean Murray as "leading man" material, he's supporting material. He can't carry the show. Cole maybe can, but actually I think Harmon's footprints are too big. And whomever you cast as replacement has the same problem! I'm all for canceling the show if Harmon's out. Give them all a perspective in the last episode that fans can live with without killing Gibbs (a happy ending for him would be nice). Update us, even without them being there what happened to Sloane, Bishop (and if you want to kill anyone, Odette makes a nice body); hell, even Tony and Ziva if you must. Harmon was always the star of the show despite it being an ensemble show and CBS wanting to cancel the show without him, shows exactly that. Weatherly may have had the chance to carry on if he stayed but with all the drama surrounding him (Dushku case) I don't want to see him back. Not to mention that he probably ruins the set atmosphere and creates the same toxic environment as on his own show.
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Post by nas on Jun 17, 2021 19:32:44 GMT
I agree, jessielee...
re Weatherly: I have never watched Bull because I never liked MW; there’s just something about him that creeps me out... frankly, I’m surprised that the show keeps getting renewed considering the behind the scenes “problems” they’ve experienced... (🤔 does he have pictures?)
side note: I just noticed that you completed another trip around the Sun, jessielee… soooo, 🎉 Happy 🎂 B’day!! 🎈
nas
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Post by Hari Seldon on Jun 18, 2021 13:01:08 GMT
OH, good, another body to clutter up the cast. Having said that, I'm actually a Cole fan (but not hopeful for this program). It probably wouldn't be best for the show if the team is in the middle of a case on their way out to check out some leads, then suddenly McGee is being told they aren't going anywhere until they are up to date with their TPS reports...
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Post by scotchrox on Jun 23, 2021 2:23:41 GMT
Hello McGee, what's happening? Ummm, I'm gonna need you to go ahead come in tomorrow. So if you could be here around 9 that would be great, mmmk... oh oh! and I almost forgot ahh, I'm also gonna need you to go ahead and come in on Sunday too, kay. We ahh lost some people this week and ah, we sorta need to play catch up.
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Post by llyan on Feb 28, 2022 23:51:01 GMT
Brian Dietzen on Getting to Write an Episode for ‘NCIS’ 19 Seasons In, and the Slow Evolution of Jimmy PalmerHe fulfilled his goal of coming up with an original episode after some nerves about pushing the prospect: "We have one of the most talented writing staffs on television, so I thought that might be seen as hubris." A stroke he suffered helped settle it.By Chris Willman If there’s always been an underdog on “NCIS” throughout its 19 seasons, it’s been the nervous, happy-go-lucky guy in glasses down in autopsy played since mid-season-1 by Brian Dietzen, who’s long done a lot with less screen time than some of the characters who aren’t lab-bound.
“People were sleeping on Jimmy Palmer, man,” says fellow cast member Diona Reasonover, who, as Kasie Hines, has considerable interaction with him on the top-rated series. “He’s kind of the undercover sniper of people’s favorite characters. When they’re listing their favorite characters, he always ends up in those top three, always.”
It’s not strictly about lovability: After initially arguably undervaluing the Palmer character. “NCIS” might have actually given him as big a character arc as anyone’s had on the show. Says executive producer and writer Scott Williams, “When I got onto the show on season 9, he was the comic foil who stuttered and stammered in front of Gibbs (the recently departed Mark Harmon), and this sort of naive, wide-eyed babe in the woods that was being, you know, administered to her ministered to by David McCallum. He could play that with his eyes closed, but after awhile, we needed to add some dimension to him, because Brian’s got chops for days. Now, his character has probably grown more than any other on the show, in terms of from where they started to where they are now.”
Dietzen has his own arc going for him, offscreen: With the Feb. 28 episode “The Helpers,” he becomes the first actor in the nearly two-decade history of the show to co-write an episode. Not that he’s the first to take on any extra duties on the show, but actors have tended to think they want to try their hand at directing more than writing. “Rocky Carroll directs a lot of episodes of our show,” points out Dietzen, “and he’s phenomenal. — one of our best directors that we’ve ever had. But it’s not as though there’s a signup sheet where it’s like, ‘I’d like to do this.'”
As someone who’d previously written a feature as well as some shorts, Dietzen built up some confidence about taking those skills back to his day job.
“The creative element of coming up with something and putting words in the mouth of these characters that I’ve known so intimately and so closely for so many years just seemed to make a lot of sense,” Dietzen says. But even after show-runner Steve Binder gave him the go-ahead to pursue ideas a few years ago, he was as bashful as, well, the younger Jimmy Palmer about pursuing it, “because we have one of the most talented and under-appreciated writing staffs on television, so I thought that might be seen as hubris and I didn’t want to overstep, to be honest.”
Then, not many months before the pandemic hit, he had a life-changing moment: “I had a dual embolic stroke in my cerebellum, and my hands were all curled up, and it was terrifying. I remember getting rushed to the hospital and thinking, ‘Well, I don’t have a career anymore. I guess I’m gonna have to focus on writing, because I can’t speak.’” After three and a half hours, the blood clot in his brain passed — but the realization that he needed to make good on his writing dreams didn’t.
Williams was a natural co-writing choice for the actor. Feeling Dietzen was under-utilized, Williams became Jimmy Palmer’s champion by writing a game-changing 2017 episode, “Keep Going,” in which the character digs into his personal grief in the process of talking a character off a ledge. Williams knew that Dietzen’s mother had recently died and that he’d be able to tap into those feelings at the time. It happened again recently when the character of Jimmy’s wife, who had existed only offscreen for several years, was revealed to have died of COVID in an especially emotional episode.
How did the comic relief become the show’s grief whisperer? Says Williams: “In my mind, there is no more tragic figure than someone that is very light lighthearted and whimsical, and always looking on the bright side of things. And then when they get struck with a tragedy, watching them deal with it is really something. Brian plays that stuff so beautifully — you know, it hits close to home for him, and he’s not afraid to bring it to his work.”
The “Helpers” episode — named for Mister Rogers’ famous “Find the helpers” admonition to children — doesn’t get quite as heavy as those aforementioned turning-point episodes. But it does land Jimmy and Kasie in some mortal danger as the two characters are exposed to a deadly biotoxin in the lab, coincidentally on the same that Palmer’s daughter is visiting the NCIS office, which leads to some father-daughter scenes through a closed door.
Of the way his character has grown over the years, Dietzen says, “Initially it was just the guy who says the wrong thing, but it’s hard to sustain that beat for 20 years,” he laughs. “There’s only so many times that Jimmy can say something out of turn and shirk away from Gibbs’ stare and be and like, ‘Oh my gosh, I can’t look at him. I’m so embarrassed.'” Not that he’s knocking it as the part of his origin story that made a swath of America fall for him. “That beat is great. It’s so fun. But if that note plays too often… how long can you listen to a song with one note?”
Or, to put it another way: “How do you make a character change, but retain the same DNA that people loved initially? You know, not changing so much he’s unrecognizable — but you have to become a different person; otherwise you’re a cartoon character. That’s why we love Homer Simpson, right? He’s still Homer from season 1 in season 35. But I can’t do that because I’m human.”
Now, though, Jimmy is an on-screen dispenser of what Dietzen calls occasional “sage wisdom” — even as the actor that plays him, with his new, post-stroke focus, is learning from the sages in the writers’ room.
The pendulum has swung almost the opposite direction in recent seasons — albeit with plenty of attention paid to not splicing the aforementioned DNA — and it didn’t hurt in that development that his on-screen boss, the beloved David McCallum, has shifted to a different role that only has him appearing on a few episodes per year, requiring his no-longer-tongue-tied underling to step up.
Jimmy has also gone through some shit that has been really hard,” Dietzen says. “He lost his wife last year and he has said goodbye to multiple close friends on the show who’ve left or in certain cases have passed away. And so being someone who works with life and death so much, especially after Ducky moved on to become the NCIS historian, Jimmy really was faced with a lot more questions about mortality and that sort of thing, and became someone that people can come talk to about big life choices and questions. And some of those big things like relationships and love of family is what I wanted to get into in my episode that I wrote alongside Scott, and so we get to kind of explore what Jimmy has been going through since the loss of his wife.”
The big question that’s been looming for more than a decade, and doesn’t look likely to be settled any time soon, as “NCIS” remains the top-rated scripted show on television, against all odds: When will there come a day when there’s finally a time to do an autopsy on “NCIS” itself?
But before we get to that, what episode are we on, anyway? “Gosh, I think we’re about 430?” Dietzen guesss. “Now you have me curious. I’m looking it up — let me see.” He checks his phone. “We are on 418 right now. … I remember that hundredth episode of ‘NCIS,’ and Michael Weatherly had this T-shirt on. And it had like a little television and the number 278 on it. It was for something else; I have no idea what it was related to. But he goes, ‘This is the number of shows we’re going to film of this show.’ And then he’d start laughing, as though 278 episodes was ridiculous. And we’ve blown way past that marker.
“But we’re in some really rare air, I think, here, and I don’t think it’s lost on any of us how blessed we are to keep doing this — and not only keep doing it, but to actually still enjoy it after this long. It’s pretty great.”
It lasted long enough for him to fulfill a dream he only allowed himself to acknowledge in the past couple years, even as he concentrated his writing efforts on outside projects and possibilities.
“I’ve always wanted to ask myself, ‘What would Torres say in the situation?,’ or Kasie or whomever. And now I get to do that. and not only do I get to do it, but I get to learn while doing it from a very close friend — and then also the entire writing staff, who I can count many of them is as long-term friends, because we’ve had the same crew for quite some time. We do have three new folks this year (in the writers’ room) who I’m getting to know now and have been great hires. And I’ve always had a deep respect for the people in my cast, but I think it got deeper by being able to write words for them, and to see how they come in and really hit hard and then swing for the fences.”
“You get these moments in your life where you just go, ‘Man, if I want to do this thing, I’ve just got to just stop waiting around for something to happen for me and just make something happen.’ I think a lot of people hit that during the pandemic, you know? Like you’re stuck in your house the whole time and going, wow, lots of people are getting very sick and a lot of people are dying, and what am I doing?'” Dietzen also had a close friend in the music industry die from brain cancer a few years ago, which heightened his sense of carpe diem before he had his own health scare.
And in case anyone is wondering, Dietzen’s health went back on the upswing after his stroke, but not without some major surgery.
“I’m going to say something that’s going to sound like an advertisement and it’s not, but the Apple Watch saved my life. I was on the floor of my bathroom, throwing up, and I pulled out my phone and I was like, ‘Oh shit, I can’t use my fingers.’ And so I said, ‘Hey, Siri, call Kelly,’ and called my wife and I said, ‘I need help.’ She said, ‘You sound like you have marbles in your mouth.'” He was able to use the voice command to call 911 next. In the MRI tube, he assessed his life: “‘I don’t think there’s much that I’ve left undone, because everyone that I love knows that I love them’ — that sort of thing. But then I was like, ‘Whoa, no, I can’t start thinking that way,’ and then I started trying to get my mind in the right place. And I could feel something happen in my brain, but all of a sudden I could move my hands and start moving my tongue. I started doing tongue twisters. They’re like, ‘Please stay still.’ But the clot in my brain cleared. And I was really blessed that I’d stayed really healthy and had a really healthy cardiovascular system.
“After all that happened, they’re like, ‘You’re very, very healthy, you’re in your early 40s; you shouldn’t be having a stroke.’ So we went to UCLA, and finally, I got a test that showed that I had this hole between my atrial chambers that needed to be closed.” He had the surgery right away, and reminded the doctors that it would be dangerous for him to take any knock-out drug, so Dietzen ended up watching the entire surgery to close up the hole in his heart on an overhead screen. He returned to work afterward — at his behest — just in time to get a few episodes in before production shut down due to the pandemic… and felt grateful that he was able to get it in just under the wire before surgeries became a rarer luxury in 2020.
“And then over the next six months as everyone was sitting at home, myself included, I started asking those questions of, how do I want to affect the world? And which stories do I want to tell?’ You go through all the scenarios — should I be on this show anymore? Should I move on, do something different? What’s going to make me happy? And I realized there’s no reason why I can’t tell really great stories and branch out and still do what I love on this thing, and be surrounded by these people that have supported me and that I support and love.”
Although Dietzen won’t be getting another writing credit in before at least the 20th season, Williams felt he was a storytelling natural — and just needed to learn some basic lessons about writing dialogue in a minimalist fashion. Says the EP, “I love our cast as a whole, but Brian’s always been a guy that’s the most collaborative and — without being dictatorial; without saying ‘I want it this way’ or the way — he’s always asking very good smart questions. He was so helpful and so collaborative in that episode [2017’s ‘Keep Going’] that I was like, ‘Oh, for sure, you’re going to be writing an episode before long. And when we did it, I really enjoyed the process with him. I would do it again in a heartbeat.”
The “NCIS” franchise is one that made the decision to acknowledge COVID on the show, with masks going off and on… and ultimately, in the case of the mothership, a death that was supposed to be wrenching, even if viewers hadn’t seen the wife character in a while
“I heard from a lot of people saying, ‘I’m so glad that you did that and you paid respect to those who passed during this time,'” says Dietzen. “I think that definitely deepened who Jimmy was and is — when you have a loss like that, it’s a demarcation line. ‘This is me before this happened and me after this happened.’ I felt that when my mom passed away about six years ago. It’s like when someone’s born, too — you have a life before kids and life after kids. And that stuff is addressed in this episode that I wrote with Scott as well. There’s a lot packed in there, and I’m really glad that not just our show runner but also the network hav been so supportive of telling those stories, because they’re important.”
variety.com/2022/tv/news/brian-dietzen-ncis-episode-written-jimmy-palmer-1235192086/
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