Windsor Star

Brooklin Nine-nine’s Braugher Star Of Tv, Stage

Actor Braugher skips the drama as NBC picks up Brooklyn Nine-Nine

- LYNN ELBER

Brooklyn Nine-Nine

Thursdays, NBC and City When Andre Braugher learned last May that Fox’s Brooklyn Nine-Nine was cancelled, it was an ending that he’d anticipate­d after five years and softening ratings.

“When we weren’t on the schedule for Fox, I said to my wife, ‘Here’s the new chapter, or whatever it is. Let’s see what it brings.’ And then I went to bed.”

Morning arrived with the news that the police sitcom was getting a second chance at NBC, which had decided there was life left in the series produced by corporate sibling Universal Television. It begins its new season Thursday, airing also on City.

“I missed all the drama. I have no idea what happened overnight,” said Braugher, whose steady gaze and thoughtful manner indicate not much else eludes him — unless by choice.

That includes the Hollywood glad-handing that can be critical to building a career. Instead, Braugher has given priority to his East Coast-based family, including his wife, actress and singer Ami Brabson, and their three sons. “I would be neglecting something important for something not so important,” he said during a taping break. “So there’s a lot of parties I’ve missed. But that’s OK.” He’s succeeded without the networking and although he started at a time when parts for AfricanAme­rican actors were, as he put it, “few and far between. Period.” The breakthrou­gh came with his Emmy-winning lead role as police detective Frank Pembleton on the 1990s series Homicide: Life on the Street, now part of a full, 30-year screen career stretching from Glory in 1989 to Men of a Certain Age in 2009-11 to the career-twist comedy of Brooklyn Nine-Nine. Besides his 10 Emmy nomination­s (including three for Brooklyn Nine-Nine) and a second Emmy for Thief in 2006, Braugher earned Obie Awards for his New York City stage work in Henry V and Whipping Man.

When he thought the sitcom was over, Braugher looked to the stage for a different challenge. He’s producing as well as appearing in a new play, Tell Them I’m Still Young by Julia Doolittle, taking advantage of a taping hiatus for Brooklyn Nine-Nine to balance the dual commitment­s.

“I’ve been an actor my entire life, and so I’ve been one cog in a giant machine,” he said. “But now I think I want to really explore learning more about the larger process, rather than my one part about it.” The work, about a couple whose marriage under siege from heartbreak, makes its debut with a Jan. 24-Feb. 3 run at the performing arts centre in South Orange, N.J. Braugher stars opposite Broadway actress Michele Pawk (Hairspray, Mamma Mia). “People under extraordin­ary stress perform in extraordin­ary ways,” he said. “This couple has lost their daughter, so in the midst of this tragedy they’re looking to regain and hold onto what they have.” The New Jersey production is a springboar­d “to see how much interest I could generate” for a New York City staging, he said. While he’s known for drama, Braugher said he adapted happily to the change-up of Brooklyn Nine-Nine when the sitcom that revels in physical shtick started in 2013.

After doing much research on “horrific crimes,” including for his Law & Order: Special Victims Unit role as attorney Bayard Ellis, “there comes a time in which you want to do something different, something lighter,” Braugher said. Brooklyn Nine-Nine gave him the opportunit­y to learn from Andy Samberg and the show’s other comedic actors as he shaped his performanc­e as Capt. Ray Holt, who’s contented in his home life with husband Kevin (Marc Evan Jackson) but seeking to advance in the police ranks.

“I just felt as though it was an opportunit­y to do something strikingly different from the rest of my career,” Braugher said. “I like it because it just simply opens up my mind and forces me to think in a different way. So I think I’ve become much more sort of supple as an actor, and more open to the incredible number of possibilit­ies of how to play a scene.”

Dan Goor, who created the comedy with Michael Schur, is unsparing in his praise of Braugher. He is “a genius whose gravitas and warmth as an actor anchor the entire show,” Goor said. Since Braugher has made it clear there’s more to life than work, he’s kept to his schedule of taping the sitcom in Los Angeles and heading home each weekend. His youngest son is in boarding school, the other two in college, including the oldest at Braugher’s alma mater, the Juilliard School.

“They’re pursuing their lives. They’re well-adjusted,” he said. “I’ve accomplish­ed one of my great goals, which was to see my young men become honourable men.” He said he fills his off hours with cooking, hanging out with his wife and helping her start an arts-related business by serving as her “gof ’er, her all-around factotum. And that’s a good thing to do.” There’s also the tantalizin­g thought of what’s ahead.

“I want to learn more and I want to do more,” Braugher said. “I mean, I may be 56 years old, but I feel like there’s a wellspring of new ideas, new energy flowing in me.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Actor Andre Braugher will be back to lead the gang as the sitcom Brooklyn Nine-Nine moves to a new network.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Actor Andre Braugher will be back to lead the gang as the sitcom Brooklyn Nine-Nine moves to a new network.

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