If you stay in the game long enough, they’ll call your name. The city keeps feeding you this delicious energy.”Ī: “We’ve all just reached the age where they need codgers. Even when you’re in the studio, you still have that New York aura, as you’re dealing with New York teamsters and New York actors. They respect the process, and you get the energy of the city. Q: How does it feel to be back filming in The Big Apple?Ī: “New York is a wonderful place to shoot. I had to take a beef heart out of a dummy cadaver in one scene, and I thought ‘I could just sort of juggle these, I suppose.’” You also know you’re working on something that’s not real. Q: Don’t you ever get squeamish while dealing with the sometimes graphic subject matter in “Unforgettable?”Ī: “You reach a certain age, and I come from a culture of open caskets so you sort of get over that squeamishness. He basically told me about the day-to-day existence of medical examiners, what their education is like, and how they generally relate to other people within the department. I also met with a former Medical Examiner, Shiya Ribowsky, who was just so interesting. A: “I watched a lot of procedural dramas that had medical examiners so I know what they did.
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