LAW & DISORDER
AS CHRIS NOTH GETS DISMISSED,
LAW & ORDER CONTINUES CASTING OUT STARS-BUT PULL IN VIEWERS
by Dana Kennedy
Chris
Noth, in character as hunky Det. Mike Logan from NBC's Law & Order,
is sitting in the witness box at the Tweed Courthouse in downtown Manhattan
when the director suddenly yells, "Cut!" He smells smoke.
Turns out it's coming from a huge fire at the nearby Fulton Fish Market
by the Brooklyn Bridge.
Real detectives at One
Police Plaza across the street will later say that wiseguys, angry at
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's plan to clean up the allegedly Mob- controlled
market, deliberately set part of it on fire. It's the kind of ripped-from-the-headlines
story you'd ex-pect to find on Law & Order, the critically acclaimed
series shot in New York City.
And you probably will,
says executive producer Ed Sherin, when the fire makes front-page news
the next day. "We already have one coming up about the Russian
Mafia, and this one is a natural." * Since its debut in 1990, Law
& Order has stuck to a simple, compelling format: Cops make arrests
in the first half, and DAs attempt to nail the defendants in the second.
Unlike flashier, more
melodramatic hits such as NYPD Blue and ER, Law & Order focuses
exclusively on cases instead of delving into its characters' personal
lives. From the start, the formula has received critical raves, but
now it's also reaping ratings success: This season, the series earned
its best numbers yet-reaching as high as No. 17-and has been renewed
for two more years.
Behind the scenes, however,
the show is more like, well, a soap opera. Last month, the cast was
rocked by the announcement that Noth, 38, the last remaining original
cast member (Steven Hill, who plays DA Adam Schiff, did not appear in
the pilot), will be let go after this season to make way for a younger
detective.
Noth's departure is just
the latest cast shake-up. George Dzundza resigned after the first year;
Paul Sorvino, who replaced him, left soon after the second season; Dann
Florek and Richard Brooks were fired after the third season to bring
in the show's first two principal female characters; Michael Moriarty
left under a cloud of controversy last year and was replaced by Sam
Waterston.
How does a show that
loses six cast members in five short years survive-and still thrive?
To find out, we asked the people who make up Law & Order. As they
say about the cops and prosecutors in the show's sonorous opening voice-
over, these are their stories.
Smoke from not-so-distant
fires is just another reminder of the show's gritty urban setting. "It
keeps us honest," says Jill Hennessy, 26, who joined the cast last
season as assistant DA Claire Kincaid. "You run into real lawyers
every time we film outside. You can't fake it here, baby."
Nobody seems to fake
it on Law & Order, either on- or off-camera. Free from the hothouse
politics of isolated Hollywood soundstages, the cast members are as
open and voluble as old-fashioned New York cabbies.
Take S. Epatha Merkerson,
42, who plays Lieut. Anita Van Buren. "They got a bargain with
me," she says about being African-American and female. "Just
picture what it's like trying to explain to the six white guys who write
the show what it's like to be black and a woman. I win some and lose
some, but I don't back down."
As they shoot exteriors
and courtroom scenes downtown, many in the cast are still reeling from
the previous week's bombshell about Noth. Much of their anger is directed
at the show's creator and executive producer, Dick Wolf, who oversees
the show mainly from Los Angeles.
"I've given up trying
to figure out how these people think," says Hennessy. "It's
not worth it to me to sit around and figure out people's motives. This
is just a business full of surprises." Wolf sounds resigned to
the criticism. "Firing people is the worst part of the job,"
he says.
Wolf insists he's dropping
Noth because there isn't enough conflict between his character and Det.
Lennie Briscoe, played by Jerry Orbach, 59. Wolf wants Briscoe's new
partner to be a "Generation X type" and has hired 30-year-old
Benjamin Bratt (Texas). Wolf once called Law & Order "actorproof"
but now regrets the remark because it upset the cast. Many of them wish
episodes focused more on their characters' personal lives, since that
would give them more opportunities to emote.
Wolf maintains, however,
that Law & Order succeeds precisely because the show is the star.
"No producer voluntarily screws with what's working," says
Wolf. "But I think the Chris thing had to be done now. I'm not
infallible. I may have done something terrible, but I don't think so."