Dayton Daily News

‘SNL’ ALUM ADJUSTS TO HIS NEW TV LIFE

Actor’s new sitcom is premiering tonight on CBS.

- By Chris Barton

Bobby Moynihan has seen a lot of changes in quick succession. Fresh from his dream job at “Saturday Night Live” — his comedic homeaway-from-home for nine years — he’s shifted to “Me, Myself &I,” a sitcom on CBS premiering tonight.

As if that weren’t enough, Moynihan married in 2016 and soon after became a father. His casting in “Me, Myself & I” was swiftly followed by a move to Los Angeles, which came with its own adjustment­s for the native New Yorker. Such as, say, having a yard for the first time.

“I don’t know what’s going on here,” Moynihan begins by phone. “But people just are on our lawn all the time. People just walk their dogs and are physically on our lawn to the point where they were right near our front window this morning.

“I don’t know if it’s just socially acceptable in L.A. to just stand on someone’s lawn and let your dog go to the bathroom or if we’re just soft targets,” he adds with a laugh. “If you come within 10 feet of someone’s property in New York, there’s going to be words.”

It’s the stuff of reaching a new place in his life, canine trespasser­s and all, and it’s that sense of watching big moments unfold that makes Moynihan uniquely qualified for “Me, Myself & I.” Created by Dan Kopelman (“Malcolm in the Middle”), the series explores one man’s life — would-be inventor Alex Riley — at ages 14, 40 and 65 and plays with the pivotal decisions and coincidenc­es that shape what follows.

Played as a teenager by Jack Dylan Grazer and a wealthy recent retiree by TV veteran John Larroquett­e, Moynihan — who turned 40 this year — portrays Alex at midlife: a father whose life has run aground amid a sudden divorce and work struggles.

Though Moynihan’s life is considerab­ly more in order, he still felt an immediate kinship to the character.

“My whole life completely changed in a matter of weeks,” he says, recounting his whirlwind year. “There’s definitely this feeling of ‘I’m just glad we’re here, we made it, and everyone’s happy and healthy. This is it, this is a whole new thing now.’ That’s definitely where Alex is on the show.”

Grazer, who made his bigscreen debut in the recently released adaptation of Stephen King’s “It,” said he also found parallels to his character.

“We’re both in middle school, we both have our awkward moments with girls and stuff,” he said. “We’re both creative, I’m an actor, and he’s an inventor. It’s kind of the same.”

For Kopelman’s part, he was drawn to the unconventi­onal idea of depicting a single life in three stages as a byproduct of an addiction to reading and watching biographie­s, which can depict the ripple effect of a single moment in a person’s lifespan.

“Bobby’s very talented,” Larroquett­e said in a later phone call. Doing double duty with this series along with his role in TNT’s fantasy-drama “The Librarians,” he travels to L.A. as soon as that series finishes production. “I think the sketch thing happened (for Bobby) at a time when, like many of us in our careers, you sort of go with the river the direction it’s flowing … but he’s an actor first.”

Moynihan studied acting at the University of Connecticu­t and was attracted to being able to draw more from that experience.

“After reading the script, I went like, ‘Oh, I get to act in this,’ ” Moynihan says with a laugh. “I mean we do acting on ‘SNL,’ but I’m usually in a diaper or some weird costume. So this was nice — to play a real adult male.”

Moynihan spoke of leaning on Larroquett­e and his costar Jaleel White (aka Urkel of “Family Matters” fame) to learn the ropes of the sitcom world. Though the memorizati­on has been an adjustment after nine years of reading cue cards, his new gig represents the starkest difference from “SNL,” whose marathon-like writing and rehearsing schedule between shows is the stuff of legend.

“There’s a little tiny part of me that goes, ‘Oh, I could’ve done (“SNL”) for the rest of my life, easily.’ Then there’s also the 40-year-old part of me that loves sleep,” he says. “It’s nice to come to work and know that in 12 hours you’re coming home.”

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 ?? NEIL JACOBS/CBS VIA AP ?? This image shows Bobby Moynihan, left, and Jaleel White in a scene from “Me, Myself & I,” premiering tonight on CBS.
NEIL JACOBS/CBS VIA AP This image shows Bobby Moynihan, left, and Jaleel White in a scene from “Me, Myself & I,” premiering tonight on CBS.

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