Orlando Sentinel

To Leary, ‘Moodys’ are a perfectly functional family

- By Luaine Lee FOX

Comedian Denis Leary confesses that his sense of humor has always gotten him into trouble. The first time he was only 6.

“I specifical­ly remember the first day I went to school in the first grade. And we were out in the yard. Right before school started, you were allowed to play around in the yard,” he recalls.

“And all these kids were out in the yard, and when the bell rang, this really mean-looking old nun came out and started yelling at us to go inside. My house is only about four blocks away, so I took off. I thought, ‘I’m not doing what she tells me.’ So I got detention my first day of first grade. And it never stopped.”

Though the punishment became less severe, it never did stop for Leary, who polished his funny bone in the process. “I went to Catholic school for 12 years,” he says, “at the same school in my neighborho­od with the same kids, the same nuns, the same priest. So I don’t know why, but very quickly I realized that I was more interested in making the other kids laugh than actually doing what the nuns told us to do. That was my talent — so I went with it (he laughs), and it paid off.”

It paid off all right. Since then Leary has ticked off myriad projects on his colorful resume, from writing to producing to starring in television series such as “Rescue Me,” “Sirens” and “Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll.”

In his latest, “The Moodys,” Leary plays the put-upon patriarch snagged in an unruly and zany family. The Fox series, returning for its second season Thursday, is not so far from his own rowdy clan, Leary admits.

“I grew up in a house that whatever your feelings were, everybody knew them because we were all yelling and screaming all the time,” he says.

“That part of (the show) spoke to my heart, and also the idea of a bunch of kids that can’t get away from each other, like most families. When they finally do get away from each other, they find their way back together,” he says.

In spite of their foibles, he regards his TV family as perfectly functional.

Comedian Denis Leary plays the patriarch to a zany family in “The Moodys,” which is back for a second season.

“Coming from a workingcla­ss Irish household where everybody wore their feelings on their sleeves, I don’t find it dysfunctio­nal. I think it’s dysfunctio­nal based on what people consider the ‘perfect family.’ But I don’t know a perfect family. I’ve never met one. I have a feeling it would be pretty boring. In this case, it’s the opposite. There’s always somebody screaming or upset or planning something, so it’s

a blast to shoot based on all the things they go through.”

In his career, it took a while for Leary’s brand of razor-edged comedy to catch on, but he wasn’t troubled by the wait. “I can’t remember who said it, but it’s the difference between longing to do something and needing to do something — for better or worse,” he says.

“So when I was young I was trying to act in the theater, that’s where I came from, the theater.

I wasn’t making any money, but I didn’t have a credit card, didn’t have any debt, didn’t have a car, my rent was really cheap. And I actually didn’t have any other talent, so it didn’t bother me. I just loved waking up and doing comedy and acting in shows that nobody saw. It didn’t bother me. Did I want to be famous? Yeah, but as little money as I was making was better than working a 9-to-5 job, which wasn’t my gig.”

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