The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Archie Panjabi leads the cast of Peacock’s show ‘Departure’

- By Mark Kennedy

NEW YORK » Though she’s making a name for herself, actor Archie Panjabi still gets a kick out of it when strangers ask for her and clearly don’t anticipate what they’re getting.

“They expect a blond Scottish boy with blue eyes to come out,” she says. “They’re always pleasantly amused when I tell them Archie is me.”

Panjabi is certainly helping her name recognitio­n levels these days: The actor, who earned a supporting Emmy for her work on “The Good Wife,” is back on American screens this month, but this time as the star.

On Peacock’s six-part series “Departure,” Panjabi is the star opposite Christophe­r Plummer and Claire Forlani. She plays a brilliant aviation investigat­or and single mom who is called in to solve the strange disappeara­nce of a jetliner en route to London.

Was it a hijacking? Pilot error? Could it be a government coverup? The mystery deepens when a survivor is miraculous­ly located in the middle of the ocean. Panjabi calls the series, which was inspired in part by missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, “highly bingeworth­y.”

“It’s everybody’s worst nightmare to have a member of family or somebody that you love on a flight and the flight goes missing,” she says. “And I think there is this universal kind of fear and fascinatio­n of flying.”

If anyone tuning in to the series is worried that her character won’t survive the mystery, relax: Panjabi is speaking from the Toronto-based set of season two of “Departure.” “That’s a bit of a giveaway. But I do,” she says, laughing.

The London-bred actor of Indian descent initially was sent all six scripts for season one and devoured them. In addition to the loss on the plane, her character is trying to process the death of her husband. “I remember reading it and I couldn’t put it down,” she says.

“You go on this journey where you’re just so unsure of what could be the cause. I thought, ‘Well, if I’m feeling like this and I read so many scripts in my line of work, I really feel this would be that kind of show that an audience would want to watch all in one go.’”

Christina Jennings, the executive producer of “Departure,” calls Panjabi one of the smartest actors she’s ever worked with and considers Panjabi’s role as a woman stuck in a vice. “She’s in the vice of being a mother, her own grief, dealing with a son and this investigat­ion all at the same time,” Jennings says. “She was the best women for the job.”

Season one of “Departure” was filmed last summer over seven weeks and has aired elsewhere in the world. The Peacock streaming platform will launch the American premiere of “Departure” on Thursday, and it will air in Canada on Oct. 8 on Corus’ Global Television.

The world has changed so much since the first season wrapped that Panjabi is not entirely sure how it will be greeted now. Will a disaster show during a disaster fall flat? Or will viewers actually seek it out?

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