New York Post

DOC WORKER

‘Transplant’ star Laurence Lebouef on a role in hit freshman NBC medical drama

- By MICHAEL STARR

FRENCH-Canadian actress Laurence Leboeuf learned to speak fluent English when she was 16 — but you’d never know it from her role on “Transplant.” “French is my mother tongue ... my whole world was French — my parents, my surroundin­gs,” says the Montreal native, 34, who plays intense second-year resident Dr. Magalie “Mags” Leblanc on the NBC medical drama, set in a bustling Toronto hospital (but filmed primarily in Montreal).

“When I get back to speaking English all the time my accent disappears slowly,” she says. “My mom watches the show in French — and she says she can’t understand me because I talk too fast.”

Season 1 of “Transplant,” starring Hamza Haq as Syrian-born Dr. Bashir “Bash” Hamed, originated on Canada’s CTV, where it aired last winter/spring to big numbers and was renewed for a second season.

NBC added the series to its fall schedule amidst the pandemic shutdown; since its September premiere, it has performed admirably and is an odds-on favorite to return to NBC next season. (Production on Season 2 has been delayed in Montreal due to COVID — CTV has targeted a January start date.)

As “Transplant” winds down to its two-part season finale (airing Dec. 8), Leboeuf says the relationsh­ip between Mags and Bash — there’s been an unspoken romantic spark between them — will be expanded upon. “It was always lingering in the scripts but was never really addressed,” she says. “It will become a bit clearer.”

There’s a perceptibl­e French lilt in Leboeuf ’s real-life accent — but that’s nearly non-existent onscreen in “Transplant.”

“The first time I read the script it was pretty clear what kind of data freak she was,” she says. “She was first in her class — a dedicated, hard worker who disappears into her work with little of a personal life.

“What came about when we were shooting was ... I really wanted her to speak super-fast all the time, like maybe she’s a little bit clumsy, socially. I like those awkward moments.”

Speaking quickly was challengin­g enough; having to learn the show’s nonstop barrage of medical jargon, while maintainin­g Mags’ rapid-fire verbal pace, posed another hurdle for Leboeuf to overcome.

“Seriously, that was the biggest challenge for everybody,” she says. “Hamza and I discussed this because we had some of the most difficult medical chunks of dialogue to spit out. It was like, ‘Really?’ I had to learn the [medical] lines phonetical­ly and didn’t even understand what Mags was saying though I got the sense of it.

“And then there’s the other stuff, like putting in an IV,” she says. “We had a boot camp where we had the chance to rehearse our big medical scenes on weekends with a doctor there with us. It took about 4 to 5 hours to choreograp­h it. And we always had a nurse with us — we called him ‘Magic Mike’ because his name is Mike — who made sure everything we were doing everything right.”

That boot camp brought the cast, most of whom had never worked together before, a lot closer, Lebouef says.

“We all hung out together preCOVID,” she says. “We had a Christmas party [last year] at my place and we went to restaurant­s together often. We have a group text going where we often share news. I saw Ayisha [Issa, who plays Dr. June Curtis] and Hamza not too long ago.”

Leboeuf, who just last week signed a new management deal, says she’s not sure where Mags is headed in Season 2.

“They don’t want to give us any informatio­n about storylines or arcs until the situation stabilizes more and we’re back in production,” she says. “I know [Season 2] starts a couple of hours after the Season 1 finale. It won’t be a year later or anything like that.

“I trust the writers a lot and I love to let myself be carried by their waves and where it’s going,” she says. “So far it’s been pretty amazing. I hope we find out a little more about [Mags’] personal life, which we haven’t really seen yet. Hopefully we’ll dive more into that.

“To give it your all and then to see it succeed in the US is a really nice reward.”

I’ll be lucky enough to direct an episode if and when it gets picked up for a second season. This series really embraces women directors.”

— Katheryn Winnick (below), who plays Jenny Hoyt on the new ABC series “Big Sky,” airing Tuesdays at 10 p.m.

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 ??  ?? Laurence Leboeuf as Dr. Magalit “Mags” Leblanc on “Transplant.” Below right: Hamza Haq as Dr. Bashir Hamed.
Laurence Leboeuf as Dr. Magalit “Mags” Leblanc on “Transplant.” Below right: Hamza Haq as Dr. Bashir Hamed.

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