New York Post

IGGY’S POP

‘New Amsterdam’ arc mirrors co-star Labine’s life

- By MICHAEL STARR

‘NEW Amsterdam” springs back into action Tuesday night at 10 — with the pandemic and psychiatri­st Dr. Ignatius “Iggy” Frome (Tyler Labine) at the forefront.

The NBC hospital drama’s delayed Season 3 premiere opens with a five-minute (silent) montage dramatical­ly relating how the pandemic impacted the New Amsterdam medical staff, both mentally and physically — followed by hospital chief Dr. Max Goodwin (series star Ryan Eggold) scrambling to solve the season’s first medical crisis after a plane crashes into the East River. While Iggy performs his profession­al duty, treating the doomed flight’s pilot, he’s also wrestling with long-repressed personal demons — an eating disorder, which will eventually bubble to the surface and mirrors Labine’s psychologi­cal journey. In fact, the story arc was his idea. “There were seeds planted [in previous seasons] with Iggy’s weird behavior around food,” said Labine, 42. “He’d be eating a Crudite and then eating Gummy Bears and pigging out on chocolate bars and then talking about some juicing diet.

“Those stories are all true and are all from my life,” he said. “As a person who’s struggled with an eating disorder and body dysmorphia my whole life . . . I felt a little irresponsi­ble, at some point, by having Iggy suffer from these, like, ‘What are you guys playing at?’ ” he says of the show’s writers.

“So I wrote [showrunner] David Schulner a big e-mail and said, ‘I don’t think we should play at something that’s so serious to a lot of people unless we’re really going to go for it.’ I also talked to David Foster, one of our writers, who’s a doctor. And to their credit they came to me and said, ‘What’s the story you would like to tell? It’s interestin­g to us.’

“We basically decided that if we’re going to represent eating disorders in men, which we never see, we should do it.”

In next week’s second episode viewers will see how Iggy’s eating issues relate to his childhood — particular­ly to his relationsh­ip with his father, which cuts close with Labine.

“It’s obviously my story and it was really hard for me to see that written in a script,” he said. “It made me really look at it differentl­y and realize that a lot of people have these stories [of ] body issues and body-shaming. And it comes from a place of love. I don’t think my dad is a bad guy. I love him. He just had some . . . bad informatio­n given to him when he was a kid from his dad, and it became an epidemic of your worth being caught up in how much you weigh.

“I don’t blame my dad. I did for a long time,” he said. “He’s a huge fan of the show and I haven’t told him about that episode and I know when he watches it he’s gonna be like, ‘That sounds pretty familiar.’ ”

Labine said that Iggy’s storyline has been extremely “cathartic” for him.

“I’ve had huge breakthrou­ghs with both of my parents and I have tattoos on my biceps that commemorat­e my experience on what we’ve shot on the show and telling these amazing stories. One [tattoo] says ‘All the Good’ and the other says ‘All the Bad.’ I just had this unificatio­n happen to me. I’d been walking around with all these shadows and demons for years . . . And finally, in shooting some of this stuff and talking with my therapist I had this moment where it was like, ‘This is who I am.’

“And it’s f—ing cool.”

 ??  ?? Tyler Labine as hospital psychiatri­st Dr. “Iggy” Frome on “New Amsterdam,” whichisset­in Manhattan. It returns for its third season Tuesday at 10 p.m. on NBC.
Ryan Eggold plays Dr. Max Goodwin
Tyler Labine as hospital psychiatri­st Dr. “Iggy” Frome on “New Amsterdam,” whichisset­in Manhattan. It returns for its third season Tuesday at 10 p.m. on NBC. Ryan Eggold plays Dr. Max Goodwin

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