Variety

Gone Too Soon

“Winning Time” should have been a shoo-in for the FYC race… then it was canceled

- By MICHAEL SCHNEIDER Television Editor @franklinav­enue

Think about how competitiv­e the Emmy race is: There are so many excellent shows that deserve attention yet fail to make the nomination cut because they’re either not considered one of the frontrunne­rs or they air on a broadcast network. (Sorry, broadcast networks.) That’s rough.

Now, imagine being a critically acclaimed drama on a premium network/streaming hybrid in a season where the drama race is pretty wide open. You’ve got big stars, high production values and well-known source material. Shoo-in, right?

Not if you’ve been canceled. (Cue sad trombone sound effect.) That’s the unfortunat­e fate of “Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty,” the HBO series executive produced by Adam Mckay that continued to earn raves in Season  for its heightened, not-quite-accurate-but-entertaini­ngly-close-enough take on the Š s rise of the “Showtime”-era Los Angeles Lakers. “Winning Time” should be in the awards conversati­on … but wound up getting canceled in September.

“No one wants to leave with Boston winning,” director Salli Richardson-whitfield jokes, referring to how Season  ended with the Lakers’ heartbreak­ing Š¤ NBA Finals loss to the Celtics. The show added a hastily produced coda with John C. Reilly as Jerry Buss, to give the show a slightly brighter ending. But it was an unfortunat­e ending to a series that should have still had its biggest moments in front of it.

“I have not run into one person who knows that I do this show that wasn’t really stunned and shocked,” Richardson-whitfield says. “Because they loved it so much, and Adam really set up a very interestin­g world. As a director, there were a lot of new things that I could have explored. I think that people are going to look back and go, ‘That was a really special show.’ This was a hard show to make. But the brilliance of what I saw on set, I’ve never worked with a cast this amazing.”

Besides Reilly, that cast included Quincy Isaiah (as Magic Johnson), Jason Clarke (Jerry West), Gabby Hoffman (Claire Rothman), Solomon Hughes (Kareem Abdul-jabbar) and Adrien Brody (Pat Riley). It’s truly unfortunat­e that “Winning Time” ended before Brody had the chance to go full, slick late-’ s Riley.

“We were really yearning for a third season,” Brody says. “We had just finally delved into the Pat Riley that I had set out to play and is the man that I recognize. It really was just the precipice of what I had intended to do and what I had been really striving to do with my representa­tion of him. That, of course, was very disappoint­ing for me, especially after you’ve spent years inhabiting someone and working towards achieving something. There are not many things that I would say I’d really love to have had another bite at. But that time in history, and his participat­ion in the Lakers was really something I was looking forward to.”

There are plenty of examples of canceled shows getting Emmy nomination­s — such as HBO’S “Lovecraft Country,” which landed a whopping  nods in   despite getting the ax after one season. But it’s still a rarity. Once you’re canceled, you rarely get FYC attention, as networks use their campaign dollars elsewhere. Brody and Richardson-whitfield tell me this is the first interview they’ve even conducted for Emmy season about “Winning Time.”

“I wanted to show my support and appreciati­on,” Brody says. “Obviously, we were all dealt a bit of a complicate­d hand with multiple strikes and an inability to promote the work that we all worked so very hard on. But I was really moved by how many people and still daily people come over and really love the show.”

If anything, awards recognitio­n might convince someone, someday, to finish the “Winning Time” tale and get through the true Lakers dominance on the court in the late-Š s. “That would be fantastic,” Richardson-whitfield says, while acknowledg­ing that it would probably take a lot to get this busy cast back together again. “Adrien’s probably doing  movies right now at the same time. But of course, I think the fans would love it.”

 ?? ?? Quincy Isaiah starred as Magic Johnson in “Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty.”
Quincy Isaiah starred as Magic Johnson in “Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States