Posts Tagged ‘Big Bang Theory’

Galecki & Parsons talk THE BIG BANG THEORY

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

Your Progressive TV blogger Jim Halterman is taking a much needed break so here is his interview from March with BIG BANG THEORY’s Johnny Galecki and Jim Parsons.  With Emmy nominations coming out next week, don’t be surprised if this gem of a series (and Galecki and Parsons) aren’t part of the mix.  Jim will be back next week.

Every season, as some shows like ER are saying their final goodbyes, other shows are gaining momentum and look to be around for many years to come.  Case in point, CBS’s The Big Bang Theory, the sitcom about the lives and loves of brainiacs working at Caltech, was recently given a renewal for two more seasons.  Stars Johnny Galecki (who plays Leonard) and Jim Parsons (Sheldon) took some time out of rehearsals in Los Angeles last week to talk to me about why they think the show has grown in popularity, what they know about Sara Gilbert returning to the show and how theater plays a part in  their work.  (photo below:  from the episode “The Dead Hooker Juxtaposition, Valerie Azlynn, Galecki and Parsons)

Jim Halterman:  Congratulations for the two-season pick-up.  Does that take the pressure off knowing you’re going to be on the air for two more years?

Jim Parsons:  I guess it is pressure off.

Johnny Galecki:  It’s kind of both.  I was thinking about it this week.  It’s so rare for an actor at all to know that they have a job for that long.  So we’ve been doing a lot of celebrating but at the same time I’m so accustomed to looking at the chunk of the calendar and what that responsibility means.  With this, you can’t do that because it’s such a fantastically long span of time.  You just have to kind of learn to integrate it into your life.   Or integrate life into the job and the responsibility.  It’s a little daunting at the same time.Jim Parsons:  It’s a luxury that very rarely as an actor you get to experience the problems of that much consistent work but it’s not just hitting the water.  There’s a lot of responsibility that goes along with it but it’s that kind of responsibility that we all want.

Jim Halterman:  A good problem to have, right?

Jim Parsons:  A very good problem to have.

Jim Halterman:  What was it about this past year that saw the show really jump up in popularity.  Were you doing anything differently?

 Jim Parsons:  I’ll say first that I think the show is getting better all the time which one would hope when people who are good at their jobs get together and keep working together, one would hope would always happen.  On paper, it should be getting better.  That said, it doesn’t always happen.  We’re very fortunate to be in a place where I think it is getting tighter, cleaner but funnier.  But I think word of mouth, too.  I think a lot of people have been telling a lot of people.  I hear it all the time.  So-and-so told me to watch it.  My brother-in-law told me to watch it.  That’s really a verbatim thing that I’ve heard ten times or more in the past six months.

Johnny Galecki:  I hear that constantly.

Jim Halterman:  Jim, looking at your credits, it doesn’t look like you’ve done a lot of sitcom work.  How was it jumping in to the sitcom format?

Jim Parsons:  In hindsight, somewhat not that hard, to put it in really bad grammar construction.  It’s got so many seeds in the same ground as theater, which I had done a lot of and, specifically, I had done a lot of comedy, too.  I had been lucky enough to do camera work here and there leading up to this so nothing was completely unfamiliar to me when I got here as far as all that went.  And really the biggest part is the theater being the biggest part of my work and, frankly, this work is a live play that we film every week so I was comfortable in that aspect.  We’ve always had a solid group around us both as actors and crew and especially the writers so that’s solid ground to be in and it takes a lot of the fear away.

Jim Halterman:  Johnny, after being on Roseanne for so long, how do you think the TV business and sitcom has changed over the years?

Johnny Galecki:  I think the business has certainly changed.  Everyone has 900 channels to watch now.  I mean, just look at the numbers and the number one show pulls maybe 20 million where before it was 30 million only ten years ago so obviously the [landscape] has changed.  I don’t know that the sitcom has changed too much.  Obviously, there are more single cameras now but I don’t think the multi-camera format of sitcom has changed much.  Like Jim said, it has so many feet in the theater of even hundreds and hundreds of years ago and that’s basically what we’re doing is trying to put on mini-plays while single cameras are trying to put on mini-movies.  And there is a familiarity that the audience has with watching any kind of theater.  It’s kind of ingrained on a cellular and cultural level.  I think that some shows have tried to kind of reinvent the wheel and it just hasn’t worked.  I mean, its foundation is to a very, very traditional theatrical vein and those shows who have done that, for example, that have changed the cultural landscape like All In The Family, are on a character-based and story-based level but not with bells and whistles or special effects or technology or anything of that nature.

Jim Halterman:  I love all the pop culture references on the show whether it’s Summer Glau or Radiohead.  Do you offer any of those up or is that all the writers’ doing?

Jim Parsons:  I have nothing to do with those, I swear to God.  [to Johnny]  Do you offer anything up?

Johnny Galecki:  Not really but it’s hard to say and this was the case on Roseanne, too.  When writers and actors are working together and you get along, even the briefest of conversations can influence one another.  Whether it’s them telling me a story about what happened during a cup of coffee and I can integrate that into an idea performance-wise and vice versa.  Sometimes things end up in scripts that sound familiar from a conversation but it’s very, very casual and done in a way that we’re just rubbing elbows, not suggesting a Radiohead joke.

Jim Halterman:  What can you tell me about what’s coming up the rest of the season?  Anything you can tease our readers with?

Johnny Galecki:  I wish.  They kind of tease us if anything.  They keep all that information very much under wraps.

Jim Halterman:  I went back and watched the pilot and realized the whole dynamic between Leonard and Penny (Kelly Cuoco) has really settled into more of a friendship, at least for now.  Is there going to be any progression there?

Johnny Galecki:  I think that’s the progression in a lot of ways.  They’ve taken a few steps back, or they think they have, but I think that friendship is going to be the foundation for a much more significant relationship than they would have had otherwise where it was really just Leonard’s infatuation with her for so long.  And even in this friendship, even though she’ll give him advice on other women, there are tinges every once in awhile of jealousy on both of their parts.  That friendship does become uncomfortable when other people are involved once in awhile.  I certainly don’t know for a fact but I think she, without knowing, is molding him into the man that she wants and he’s slowly, blindly learning that.

Jim Halterman:  As Leslie Winkle, Sara Gilbert is great on the show.  Is she going to be coming back? 

Jim Parsons:  We know her fate about as well as we know the plots.  Until we get a script that has Leslie Winkle on it, we have no idea if we’ll ever see her again. I don’t mean that as cryptic as it just sounded.

Jim Halterman: What are your plans for your hiatus?

Jim Parsons:   The ideal would be to work although I have no set-in-stone plans at this point and then, other than that, if there’s an excessive amount of time off I won’t really look that gift horse in the mouth either. I’d love to visit my family in Texas and things like that and frankly just get to be for a little while.  It’s one of the greatest luxuries of this job.  I guess if I had my druthers, I’d go ahead and we’d do some work over the break, as well.

Johnny Galecki:  Me, too. I just want to work.  I’m a workhorse.  And if it’s not there, then I’ll travel around and wander aimlessly and tread water until I get to work again.  Very, very healthy.  [laughs]

Jim Halterman:  Going back in your careers, what would each of you call your first big break in the business?

Johnny Galecki:  That’s so tough.  Everything leads to something else, you know?  Work always begets work.

Jim Parsons:  I’ll tell you what, I did do a pilot for CBS and while this wasn’t the only thing that helped me along, it was a major help.  I did a pilot for CBS four years ago and the pilot didn’t get picked up but it was well-received and from that I did this kind-of holding deal with CBS where I just auditioned for their stuff, nothing else, for that pilot season.  I did some episodes of Judging Amy related to that and here I am on a CBS show, which I did not under that deal because that’s not how the world works.  But I think I would be remiss not to mention that there’s some sort of connection even though I don’t know all the ways that it helped and panned out.

Johnny Galecki:  For me it was certainly the Roseanne show.  It was such a good show at the time, such a great show, and I mean I figure in the industry it opened many more doors for me than any other jobs.  There have been other jobs that have led to other things but I guess I’ve learned more doing certain things on an internal level.  I’ve never, ever done a job in the last twenty-some years that I felt was a waste of time.

Jim Parsons:  Here-here.  Agreed.

Jim Halterman:  Best of luck with the show in the next few seasons.  I’ll be watching as a fan because I think you’re both great.

Jim Parsons:  Thank you.

Johnny Galecki:  Come by the set if you can.

Jim Halterman:  I’m in New York but if I get out to LA, I will.

Johnny Galecki:  Yeah, there are airplanes.  [laughs]

The Big Bang Theory airs every Monday night at 9:30/8:30c on CBS.  It’s third season premiere is slated for September 21st.

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Photos courtesy of CBS.

The No. 1 Progressive Television TV Guide

Monday, April 20th, 2009

Reminder that you have until midnight Thursday to enter the drawing for the first season DVD of IN PLAIN SIGHT, courtesy of the USA Network.  If you caught the 2nd season premiere on Sunday night, you’ll want to see the whole first season journey that Mary (Mary McCormack) went on with both her work and family life.  All you have to do is email jim@progressivepulse.com before midnight EST on Thursday April 23rd to be entered to win.  Could it be easier??

You’ve already joined the Progressive Television group page on Facebook, right?  And you’ve been getting the Progressive Pulse blog updates on Twitter so I don’t need to badger you about that either, right?  And, hey, while I’m at it, I have my own Twitter page.  Just do a search and you’ll find me.

Stephen Meade from the Bay Area wrote to me this past week and asked for suggestions on what he should/shouldn’t be spending his time watching currently on the tube.  Great idea for a blog, don’t you think?  So, here is a list of shows currently airing that you should be setting your DVR to catch or, if you still actually live your life by appointment viewing, then my hat is off to you!  I’ll do the same thing once summer programming has kicked off since there are many new shows coming down the pike.  And, don’t be shy, if I miss a show that you absolutely love, shoot me a comment or email at jim@progressivepulse.com and I’ll mention it in a future blog.

So, here’s the list with day/time/network so you can adjust your schedule (or DVR) accordingly and shows that you need to forever skip (in other words, these are the shows I loathe for one reason or a hundred).

Mondays: The week has just started and already there’s a battle for your viewing time but Monday rocks because there’s something for everyone.  My picks?  The comedy block of The Big Bang Theory and How I Met Your Mother (8-9pm, CBS) is the favorite though for my throwback to campy nighttime soaps, I also must have my Gossip Girl (8-9pm, CW) to see what Chuck Bass is flaring his nostrils at this week.  (Above: Leighten Meester & Ed Westwick) This season of 24 (9-10pm, Fox)  For something a little more highbrow, I hope you’re watching HBO’s intoxicating In Treatment (9-10:30).  No car chases or hot sex scenes-just great stories, dialogue and the forgotten art of acting all lead by Gabriel Byrne.  Skip Me: CSI: Miami.  If CBS would bump off Caruso, I’d give it a chance but, until then, this is a forever NO.

Above:  Neil Patrick Harris and Jason Segel from How I Met Your Mother

Tuesdays: A great catch-up day if Monday has blown you away.  The only must-see on Tuesdays is FX’s Rescue Me (10-11pm), which just came back for it’s new season and is showing 22 episodes week-after-week without interruption.  I’ve seen a big chunk of this new season and the show is in great form.  (and, if you missed them, check my past blogs for interviews with cast members Steven Pasquale and Michael Lombardi).  Skip Me: I had high hopes that 90210 (9-10, CW) may have improved throughout it’s first season but, watching the Tori Spelling episode last week made me see that the show is still languishing in mediocrity, poor writing and even worst acting.  I’m hoping the new Melrose Place will be more exciting, though can we start a petition already to kill of the character played by Ashlee Simpson Wentz?  PLEASE??

Wednesdays: CBS’s The New Adventures of Old Christine (8-8:30) is a long-time favorite of mine and this season has been one of its best.  The show is in a great stride right now so make sure to check out Emmy-winner Julia Louis-Dreyfus at her best.  ABC has a good one-two punch in Lost (9-10pm; above Daniel Dae Kim celebrates episode 100) and the new cop show The Unusuals (10-11pm).  Very different from each other but that’s actually what works.  You’ll notice that it’s hump day and I have yet to mention any reality so far.  While I’m not into Dancing With The Stars and I’m taking the year off from Idol but I am curious to see how The Cougar (10-11, TV Land) goes during its second week.  I was surprised that the show wasn’t as sleazy as it would have been on sister channel VH1 so I’m giving it at least one more week and see what happens.  Skip Me: American Idol —enough said.

Thursdays: Not sure what it says about a show when it’s been on for two weeks and the episodes are just sitting there on my DVR.  So, I’ll admit I have yet to check out Parks and Recreation (8:30-9, NBC).  I’ll get around to it but it’s just not a must-see yet.  However, the hour block of The Office and 30 Rock (9-10, NBC)still is.  Both shows have had uneven seasons with the lows being low and the highs being high but I’m hanging in there regardless because when they get it right, they are the best sitcoms on TV right now but watch the aforementioned Monday sitcoms over at CBS…they’re picking up steam, for sure.  And Grey’s Anatomy has gotten back on track since they bid the dead storyline (which was truly dead on arrival) but, oddly, I’m not rooting for Izzy (Katherine Heigl) to pull through and it’s truly painful to see the obviously unhappy T. R. Knight slumber through his one or two scenes a week.  At least give George a great storyline to go out on.  Shonda Rhimes owes her fans that, right?  Also, though the audiences dipped for both Southland and Harper’s Island (both 10-11, NBC and CBS, respectively), I’m sticking with Harper’s.  What other show on the air can decapitate a priest in the first half of the hour?  I’ll be checking out the online accompanying show Harper’s Globe (www.harpersglobe.com) for Wednesday’s blog so check back.

Skip Me Private Practice.  Never worked.  Never will.

Fridays/Saturday: Good catch-up nights for those DVRd shows that you haven’t gotten to yet.  But, if you’re somehow caught up (please, tell me how you get caught up!!), then you can catch the last episodes of Prison Break (8-9, Friday, FOX)as well as the ridiculously entertaining Ghost Whisperer (8-9, Friday, CBS). Also, if you have Starz, Head Cases (10-10:30, Friday) is zany, hilarious and you’ll love Alexandra Wentworth in the lead role as a whacked shrink to the stars, who appear as themselves.

Sundays:  The Amazing Race (8-9, CBS) has had a great season and continues to do what it does best – show us the world with a cast of characters we can love and hate.  And even though they probably blew the whole altercation between deaf Luke and the sisters up for the sake of marketing, no other reality show truly has you biting your nails as the teams fight their way to the finish line where Phil Keoghan and his arched eyebrow awaits.  Over at HBO, one of the most charming series to come along in ages, The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency (8-9pm HBO) continues to shine with the glorious Jill Scott smiling her way from one investigation to the next.  Desperate Housewives (9-10, ABC) has had a good season though I still wish Teri Hatcher had been the one to get the boot (I’ll miss you, Nicolette Sheridan), the show is still fun and, so far, isn’t showing its age.  Finally, DVR the two episodes of In Treatment (9-10, HBO) that air tonight and make Breaking Bad (10-11, AMC) your appointment viewing for the night.  The second season of the Vince Gilligan created series is as sharp as a series can get with the wonderful Bryan Cranston leading us deeper and deeper into the world of drugs and demons that Walt has carved out for himself.  Skip Me: Brothers & Sisters.  I tried to like you but it’s best we just part ways.

So, let me hear it if I left out your favorite show or slammed something you absolutely adore.  I can take it!  And, until next time….keep watching.

Photos courtesy of CBS and ABC.

NO.1 LADIES’ DETECTIVE AGENCY, CUPID and farewell to ER by Jim Halterman

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009
  • I don’t usually start out my Progressive Television page by jumping to next week but I’m excited about my exclusive one-on-one interview with Big Bang Theory’s Johnny Galecki and Jim Parsons that will be posted here next Tuesday.  The CBS sitcom has truly come into its own during its second season by becoming one of the best sitcoms on the air and the perfect companion to my other sitcom favorite, How I Met Your Mother.
  • Also next week I’ll be doing double duty as I cross over to the ARTS section of ProgressivePulse.com with my video interview with author Lisa Lutz.  Her third novel Revenge of the Spellmans is in stores now and, I have to tell you, sitting down with the San Francisco based Lutz at the McNally Jackson bookstore in New York City last week was truly a treat.  And, finally, to coincide with the release of another hilarious Spellman novel, I’ll be giving away the whole set of Spellman books to one lucky winner.­­­­
  • Who is Jill Scott?  She’s the Grammy-winning singer who is about to become a TV star with the debut this weekend of The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency on HBO.  Based on the international bestselling novels by Alexander McCall Smith, this new series is not the usual HBO fare of edgy, envelope-pushing dramas like The Wire and crude comedies like Eastbound and Down.  Instead, The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency is full of enough charm and colorful characters that it does not need to be edgy.
  • Scott plays Precious Ramotswe, who starts the only female-owned detective agency in Botswana and quickly becomes one of television’s most delightful independent women.  With her quirky and faithful assistant, Mma Makusti (Anika Noni Rose of Dreamgirls), Precious takes on cases ranging from money hungry imposters and cheating husbands to more serious crimes involving a missing child.  Though it all, Precious maintains her sensible, snappy demeanor along with obvious smarts for solving many a crime.  Rounding out the cast is JLB Matekoni (Lucian Msamati), who shares a romantic spark with Precious, and BK (Desmond Dube), a neighboring hairdresser who befriends Precious.
  • You’ll be hard pressed to find another series with a better balance of comedy, drama and intrigue than The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency.  The writing in the pilot (by Minghella and Curtis) is solid and moves briskly without feeling rushed but it is Scott who is at the center of the project and, while only appearing in a few films over the last two years, handles the job like a pro.  Precious is a bright light in the world and will easily keep viewers coming back for more.The pilot movie is notable for being one of the final directing efforts of the late Anthony Minghella as well as co-produced with the late Sydney Pollack, Richard Curtis and Harvey & Bob Weinstein.  Once the film was shot, six additional episodes were filmed as a co-production between HBO and the BBC, which is also airing the series beginning this month.
  • Eleven years ago I was working as an Executive Assistant at Sony Pictures Television (then called Columbia Tristar Television) where the original version of Cupid was developed with ABC.  Originally starring Jeremy Piven and Paula Marshall, the short-lived series is one of the series I always believed was cancelled too soon.  Not only were Piven and Marshall terrific, the series itself was full of wit, charm and just the right dose of romanticism.  Fast forward to 2009 and a lot has changed, Piven and Marshall are busy on other series (Entourage and Gary Unmarried, respectively), Thomas went on to create one of the buzz-worthiest shows in the last decade in Veronica Mars and I’m writing for and about television for a living.
  • The new version of Cupid returns to the air next Tuesday with Bobby Cannavale and Sarah Paulson in the Piven/Marshall roles of a possibly mentally unstable man named Trevor (Cannavale) and his guardian/therapist Claire (Paulson).  Trevor believes he is Cupid and his story is that he has been sent to Earth as a punishment and must bring 100 couples together to fall in love before he can return.  The viewer isn’t sure if Trevor is or isn’t Cupid but while Cupid may have new faces, the same wit, charm and romanticism is present and makes for another charming series.
  • The first episode, airing next Tuesday night at 10/9c, sets up the premise for the series and finds the effervescent Trevor gleefully up for the challenge of making love spark between the cynical inhabitants of New York City.  While Trevor embodies the hopeless romantic (even though his ambitions are only to get him back to Mt. Olympus), Claire is the ‘negative nancy’ who sees love as a process that only works when particular steps are followed and everything is kept in an orderly fashion.  As Claire warms to Trevor, the audience will, too.  Cupid isn’t the most mentally taxing show on the air but while I love shows like Lost and Breaking Bad  for pushing the envelope and challenging viewers, it’s a refreshing change to sit down with a series that is easy, enjoyable and refreshing.
  • ­
  • ER, the longest running American medical drama series closes its doors next week after 15 seasons on the air.  While some viewers have moved on to Grey’s Anatomy and other edgier dramas, I have stuck with the show pretty much through its entire run.  While bringing back original cast members could be seen as a last ditch effort to get back some ratings glory, ER has always been more sophisticated than that.  The way in which Anthony Edwards, Noah Wyle, George Clooney, Eriq LaSalle, Alex Kingston and Julianna Margulies have been woven into the current fabric of the series has been respectful to both past and current viewers.  A perfect example was how Clooney and Margulies didn’t even return to County General but, instead, were shown working at another hospital that was visited by Sam (Linda Cardellini) and Neela (Parminder Negra).  The fact that they were all working to find a liver for a donor that happened to be Dr. John Carter (Wyle), it was a smart choice to keep the schmaltz at a minimum and, instead, let viewers believe that their favorite ER characters continue to live on out there in TV Land.  ER will not be missed as much as remembered for many years of great acting, writing and an example of a series that maintained its quality for a decade and a half.
  • Until next week…keep watching.
  • Photos courtesy of CBS, HBO, ABC and NBC