Daily Press

‘Will Trent’ digs deeper into the past

Star Rodríguez says show is ‘compelling and captivatin­g’

- By Rodney Ho

Solving a crime in broadcast TV land isn’t difficult. Finding a hit show that can last several seasons in broadcast TV land is only getting harder.

ABC believes it may have its own “Blue Bloods” or “Chicago PD” with “Will Trent,” a police drama that recently returned for its second season.

The procedural, based on a series of bestsellin­g books by author Karin Slaughter, is not only shot in Atlanta but also set in the city. The first 13 episodes drew an average of about 10 million viewers after 35 days of viewing via ABC and Hulu platforms and received a quick second season renewal before the first season finale last spring.

Ramón Rodríguez, who plays Trent, said he is happy to be back to work after a monthslong delay courtesy of the writers and actors strikes last year.

“Everyone is really charged and excited,” said Rodríguez in a recent Zoom call with Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “It was great to see everyone again. It felt like seeing your old classmates. We’re in our sophomore year”

His character, raised in a foster home and now a super effective agent for the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ions, apprehende­d a serial killer at the end of Season 1. Played by Greg Germann (“Ally McBeal”), the criminal had almost killed his closest childhood friend and gritty Atlanta Police Department homicide detective Angie Polaski, portrayed by Erika Christense­n (“Parenthood”).

He also learned the fate of his mother, who died when he was born, and

was told his boss Amanda Wagner (Sonja Sohn) saved him from death as a baby. Unfortunat­ely, as a single woman in the 1980s, Amanda was unable to adopt Will, but she quietly made up for it by nurturing him as a detective when he became an adult.

“There’s some fun unlayering that we’re going to get to do and explore,” Rodríguez said. “Will has some hints of where he came from. He knows he has a crazy uncle. He has some connecting points. We gravitate toward this point of identity. He doesn’t know much about himself. He’s picking up these

breadcrumb­s about his life and trying to put together the puzzle: ‘Who am I? Where did I come from?’ ”

Rodríguez takes none of this success for granted given his own struggles in Hollywood after nabbing major roles in TV shows like ABC’s “Day Break” (2007) and Fox’s “Gang Related” (2014) that didn’t last.

“They don’t give away second seasons for nothing,” he said. “We are trying our best to create something compelling and captivatin­g at a time when people have a lot of options, maybe too many options. We give you emotional

journeys and an interestin­g crime that may tie into a character’s own story. We add a layer of humor and we have a Chihuahua.”

Trent’s sweet emotional support animal is Betty the Chihuahua, whom he adopted in Season 1. The dog, who actually answers to Bluebell, does not have a real-life stunt double. “During rehearsals, we’ll use a stuffed animal that sits on the mark until she’s ready to do her thing,” he said. “She is wonderful. I missed her, too.”

The Angie-Will dynamic doesn’t get any easier in Season 2.

“These two have been through so much together that only they know,” Rodríguez said. “They know each other’s darkest secrets. They sometimes mix it up romantical­ly and that might not be the best thing, but they can always count on each other.”

Slaughter, who is working on her 12th Will Trent book, said in a separate interview that she has already seen the first three episodes of Season 2 and is happy with how the writers are maintainin­g the spirit of what she has come up with.

“They’re able to capture that balance of humor and bad things happening,” she said. “At the end of the day, it’s about the good guys figuring out how to stop the bad guys.”

The specifics between the show and the books, she noted, are not always the same.

Rodríguez’s Trent, for example, is Hispanic and on the short side, evoking a bit of Tony Shalhoub’s character in “Monk.” The book version of Trent is tall and blonde.

“It’s really a gift to me that he doesn’t look like my Will because I don’t cross them in my head,” Slaughter said. “My Will in the book also doesn’t talk much. He has three pages of thoughts, then says, ‘Yes.’ You can’t do that on TV. Nobody would watch that.”

In the book she’s currently writing, she writes of a chef cooking a Puerto Rican meal. “I asked Ramón about it and he helped me out,” she said. “In the show and in person, he’s such a sweet guy. They’re both very attentive and watch and listen a lot.”

She also enjoys how much the show highlights Atlanta.

“I get weird texts from friends who say, ‘Oh, I was at Oglethorpe (University) and your show is filming there,’ ” she said. “Another one texted, ‘Oh my God! Erika Christense­n is in the restaurant.’ I just tell them not to be weird when they come up to her.”

She hasn’t had a chance to visit the show this year yet but enjoyed strolling through Eagle Rock Studios in Norcross last year where the set pieces are located.

“I try to stay out of their hair, but it’s really fascinatin­g to see,” Slaughter said. “The first time I walked through the GBI set, I saw Will’s office, Amanda’s office. It looked really close to GBI headquarte­rs on Panthersvi­lle Road (in Decatur), an aesthetica­lly styled 1970s office. It’s nice compared to the Atlanta police precinct’s grungy, rundown look.”

 ?? ABC ?? Ramón Rodríguez stars as the title character in the police drama “Will Trent.”
ABC Ramón Rodríguez stars as the title character in the police drama “Will Trent.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States