The Bergen Record

Selleck refuses to quit on ‘Blue Bloods’ final season

Network broadcasti­ng shows are listed in Eastern/Pacific Time, unless noted otherwise. Shows air one hour earlier in Central/Mountain Time. Cable broadcasti­ng shows are listed in Eastern Time.

- Bryan Alexander

VENTURA COUNTY, Calif. – Tom Selleck isn’t ready to bid farewell to “Blue Bloods.”

On a cold, rainy January day at his 65acre ranch about 40 miles west of Los Angeles, the TV icon, 79, won’t discuss farewells or emotional endings, even after CBS announced in November that “Blue Bloods” was ending its run a final 14th season.

Selleck, an executive producer who stars as police commission­er Frank Reagan, the procedural’s patriarch, wants to continue the business of making TV episodes that have made “Blue Bloods” a Friday-night staple for its loyal older fan base.

“I see a lot of very upset people out there. We’ll see what happens,” Selleck says of the looming exit after a split season that resumes in the fall for eight final episodes. Even if “Blue Bloods” ends, it won’t be drawn out. “Whatever happens, it’s not going to be a whole season of endless soap operas winding down.”

Retirement, whether Reagan’s or his own, is the furthest thing from Selleck’s mind as he pulls up to his 1930s hunting lodge in a camouflage Can-Am Defender off-road vehicle. There are no handlers, just Selleck stepping in from the rain wearing unzipped fleece and a denim shirt, smiling through his famed and still robustly dark mustache. He apologizes for being late to the interview (he’s actually early) due to a weather-related delay on his short commute from the property’s big house nearby, where Selleck lives with Jillie, his wife of 36 years.

Since “Blue Bloods” premiered in September 2010, Selleck has commuted to New York City to shoot his scenes with an ensemble cast that features Donnie Wahlberg, Bridget Moynahan, Len Cariou and Will Estes as a multi-generation­al family of NYPD cops (with Moynahan playing the one legal outlier in the district attorney’s office).

“At the time, lasting 14 seasons wasn’t even conceivabl­e,” says Selleck.

But the family-centered drama became a steady ratings magnet: Selleck found that rare second long-running hit after “Magnum, P.I.” ended on CBS in 1988 after an eight-year run.

“We really started catching on and found our groove in ‘Blue Bloods’ somewhere in the first season,” says Selleck. “I said to myself, ‘I can’t be this lucky twice.’”

He credits the contributi­ons of producer Leonard Goldberg, who perfected the “Blue Bloods” formula of the intertwini­ng family storylines, all coming together at the centerpiec­e Sunday Reagan family meal at widower Frank’s house. (Goldberg died in 2019.)

“That meal, at the end of the episode, and Leonard’s gift of casting are probably why we are still around,” says Selleck, who relishes playing the respected figure at the head of the table. “I love the role. And he’s not done. I’m not done. And I think there’s plenty of room for the show.”

There was a very different departure journey with “Magnum, P.I.” which made Selleck a household name in the 1980s as the Detroit Tigers baseballca­p-clad private eye in Hawaii. Selleck had to be convinced to return for a seventh and then a final eighth season. The private star yearned to start a family in Los Angeles, secretly marrying his second wife, actress Jillie Mack, in 1987. (”It was like a commando mission. We were proud to keep it secret for 30 days,” he says.)

After being forced to turn down prized roles like Indiana Jones in “Raiders of the Lost Ark” due to his “Magnum” role, Selleck also had a sizzling movie career with 1987’s hit comedy “Three Men and a Baby.”

“Whenever somebody mentions that ‘Magnum’ was canceled, I’m always quick to point out that ‘Magnum’ was never canceled. (CBS) never would have done that. It was wildly successful,” says Selleck. “I wasn’t tired of it, I was tired from it because I was in every shot. Plus, I had done the No. 1 movie in the world. And so I guess it was time.”

Selleck continued to produce and starred in passion projects as the troubled New England police chief Jesse Stone in nine TV movies. He also earned “Friends” immortalit­y with his recurring role from 1995 to 2000 as the much-older love interest to Monica (Courteney Cox).

But he admits to having regrets about ending “Magnum.”

“It was the right decision,” says Selleck. “But still, it’s impossible not to have some lingering thoughts.”

“Magnum, P.I.” started afresh with a 2018 reboot starring Jay Hernandez as Thomas Magnum with twists that included turning the character Jonathan Higgins (originally played by John Hillerman) into a love interest and investigat­ing partner Juliet Higgins (Perdita Weeks).

Selleck’s silence about the remake, and his notable absence from the remake, spoke volumes during the fiveseason run that ended in January.

“There was no way I was going do a cameo. All they’re doing is getting the old stars to say ‘This is OK,’ ” says Selleck. “The show was a real dilemma. I said I wasn’t going to say anything bad about it while it’s on, but I didn’t want anything to do with it.”

What will happen in ‘Blue Bloods’ Season 14?

Longtime executive producer Kevin Wade says writers haven’t mapped out how “Blue Blood” will end in the fall.

“We’ll have to figure out how to deliver a satisfying and emotional final episode without spending three months trying to tee it up,” he says. “These characters need to move forward in their fictional jobs and grow. We have to deliver 18 good episodes.”

Selleck promises the first two are “phenomenal.” Episode 3 features a tribute to Treat Williams, who played Frank’s former partner Lenny Ross and died in a June motorcycle accident.

“It will be an unsentimen­tal tribute to Treat Williams that not’s a maudlin hourlong show,” says Selleck.

Even if his CBS bosses are continuing with plans to wrap up the show, Selleck remains too optimistic to talk about the ending. After all, his upcoming memoir (due May 7), still unfinished, is titled “You Never Know.”

“They say it’s an eight-episode winddown, and I say, ‘We’ll see,’” says Selleck, with a laugh. “Look, I’ll do whatever is best for the whole situation. But I love this show, obviously. And I think CBS is going to end up being very conflicted with their present plans.”

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 ?? PROVIDED BY PATRICK HARBRON/CBS ?? The Sunday dinner “Blue Bloods” staple will continue in Season 14. From left: Will Estes stars as Jamie Reagan, Vanessa Ray as Officer Eddie Janko, Bridget Moynahan as Erin Reagan, Tom Selleck as Frank Reagan, Donnie Wahlberg as Danny Reagan, Andrew Terraciano as Sean Reagan, and Len Cariou as Henry Reagan.
PROVIDED BY PATRICK HARBRON/CBS The Sunday dinner “Blue Bloods” staple will continue in Season 14. From left: Will Estes stars as Jamie Reagan, Vanessa Ray as Officer Eddie Janko, Bridget Moynahan as Erin Reagan, Tom Selleck as Frank Reagan, Donnie Wahlberg as Danny Reagan, Andrew Terraciano as Sean Reagan, and Len Cariou as Henry Reagan.
 ?? CBS ?? “The Equalizer”
CBS “The Equalizer”

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