Back in 1998, Susan Green and I wrote the only companion book on the popular legal drama Law & Order. Besides being in the rare and charmed position of having the show's creator, Dick Wolf, give us complete access to cast and crew, we were also allowed complete autonomy to write what we wanted. With that freedom in mind, we both opened up to the possibilities the book offered in terms of content. For instance, we thought why not have other voices besides ours. We quickly conceived a chapter which would include a number of other people who also had an intelligent and probing perspective on the program. After soliciting a number of people, we were thrilled to see that all of them agreed to take part. They included civil rights attorney William Kunstler, former Ontario Premier Bob Rae and theatre and film critic Steve Vineberg. Unfortunately, our publishers didn't share our enthusiasm for broadening the scope of the book and all the pieces were turned down. Speaking with Steve Vineberg recently on the phone, however, he reminded me that he still had that piece he wrote, which was about how a number of great performers provided what he termed an actor's paradise on the show, and it was still unpublished. Since Steve now writes for Critics at Large, that terrific essay has now finally found the home it was once denied.
Kevin Courrier
Editor-in-Chief
Critics at Large.
Over seven and a half seasons (at this writing), Law and Order has sustained a remarkably high caliber of performance. It’s arguable that no television series has ever displayed so much terrific acting over such an extended length of time. You might expect the show’s steel-bound structure to hem in actors, and that doubling up the process of policing a case and trying it would strip away character detail, but in fact the set-up of the program operates, for both series regulars and guest stars, like strong, taut staging or the rules governing a verse form: it liberates them. The writing, as stylized in its way as the agit-prop theatre of the thirties or the film noirs of the late forties and early fifties – though the dialogue has a subtler ring and hews more closely than either to the tenets of realism – obliges the actors to sculpt their scenes with sureness and precision, so the characters have to be acutely observed and soaked in the brine of contemporary New York experience. Even the regulars, whose characters devoted viewers assemble for ourselves week upon week, don’t usually have the luxury of relaxing into their roles; the style of the show demands from them, too, an economy of characterization.
For four seasons, Hill’s Schiff provided grumbling commentary for the moral torments of Michael Moriarty’s Ben Stone, a deep-dyed – though renegade (i.e., divorced) – Catholic whose integrity and genteel formality left him in a position of permanent unease in an imperfect world. This profound discomfiture is perhaps most movingly visible in the “American Dream” episode, where a brilliant yuppie sociopath (Željko Ivanek), imprisoned by Stone on a murder charge years ago and now released on (bogus) new evidence, takes revenge on the prosecutor by invading his guarded personal life. When the yuppie insists on addressing Ben by his first name, Moriarty uses his response – pained outrage, as if he’d collided with a wall in the dark – as an indicator of his capacity for being affronted by the unreasonable and the unjust. Law and Order’s writers warmed to the beleaguered crusader Ben Stone and built some of the show’s most memorable episodes around him, like “Sanctuary” (which features an audacious barroom exchange on race between him and a black defense lawyer played by Lorraine Toussaint) and his valedictory “Old Friends,” where his overzealous and – in this case – blinkered pursuit of pure justice hurls his star witness (Allison Janney) straight into the path of a mob bullet. The title “Old Friends” alludes to the unspoken bond between Stone and Schiff, underscored in a brief, uncharacteristic moment of physical connection between them in the final scene that left many of us alone with our tears at the fourth season’s conclusion. It also refers, I think, to our own association with Stone, who rode out on our behalf, week after week, into the complex warfare of the courtroom, and ended up crucified on his own immovable – and finally irreconcilable – principles.
Steven Hill as District Attorney Adam Schiff. |
It took Jill Hennessy nearly a season to shake off the slight dullness that may have been her legacy from Richard Brooks, who played Ben Stone’s original sidekick, Paul Robinette. Brooks was very dull indeed – until his guest-star return in “Custody,” where the long-absent Robinette loses the flattop that never looked right on him and is reborn as an activist for the African American causes he had to let pass him by in his days in the Manhattan D.A.’s office. Hennessy, always a trifle cowed by Moriarty, came into her own when Waterston joined the series. She seemed to feel freer to use her body; she turned into the sexiest feminist on TV – a welcome anomaly in a puritanical era. Carey Lowell, who stepped in as D.A. Jamie Ross when Hennessy left, is highly competent and has an underused penchant for comedy: her best moment so far has been the grilling of a credulous attorney (Robert Stanton) who fell for her airhead-novice act in “Shadow.” But the show has yet to spotlight Lowell or Ross in a distinctive way.
Sam Waterston and Jill Hennessy. |
A pair of flatfeet patrol the first half of every show: one older, one younger. George Dzundza’s weathered foot soldier, Max Greevey, an NYPD vet cut from the same venerable cloth as his chief, Cragen, died shockingly at the hands of a mob goomba in his own driveway and was replaced by Phil Cerreta (Paul Sorvino), who had good Sicilian manners and carried his compassion around like a badge. It never seemed to occur to this guy that New York cops are supposed to flash a veneer of been-around cynicism. I remember how his face came undone like a hastily wrapped package when he found a murdered child in “Cradle to Grave,” and the tone of his voice in “Heaven” when he murmured, “God save us,” as dozens upon dozens of charred bodies were laid on the pavement outside a torched Latino social club. It would have been harder to see Sorvino leave the show if his replacement hadn’t been the peerless Jerry Orbach, whose Lenny Briscoe is a leathery ex-drunk, way past being surprised by anything his dirty job turns up but still capable of both humor and nausea. My favorite Orbach moment – among many – is during the interrogation of a man (Kevin O’Rourke) who appears to have killed his baby (in “Precious”), when Briscoe has to hood his feelings long enough to coddle the suspect into revealing the corpse’s whereabouts.
S. Epatha Merkerson & Jerry Orbach. |
Watching Law and Order can give you new respect for the New York working actor. The casting, down to three- and four-line parts, is close to flawless, and the actors burrow into their succinct, line-drawn roles. The featured players fill our consciousness – and I include Carolyn McCormick, in a recurring role, now completed, as the psychiatrist Elizabeth Olivet, who made intellection seem an elegant process and psychology a truly compassionate one. But they’re not the only faces we remember afterwards. We recall the guest-star lawyers (several of whom have appeared more than once), especially Lorraine Toussaint, George Grizzard, Elaine Stritch, Alan King, Bob Dishy, Tovah Feldshuh, Patti LuPone, Ron Leibman, Sandy Duncan, Lee Richardson, Richard Libertini, Elizabeth Ashley, Brooke Smith, John Pankow and the late William Kunstler as himself in “White Rabbit,” a take on the Katherine Ann Powers case and on the legacy of the sixties in general that is my own most treasured hour of the series. (Jerry Orbach’s debut on the show was in the role of a lawyer, in “The Ways of Love.”)
Jerry Orbach and Benjamin Bratt. |
When you cast your mind back over seven and a half seasons, generally what you end up focusing on is some eloquent acting moment. Jack Gilpin, as a grieving husband, shuffles around, dazed like a man shocked awake by the glare of a klieg light (“Progeny”). Bruce Altman explains tersely to Ben Stone, with a grim laugh, that he won’t give up his Mafia brother-in-law because he prefers to keep breathing (“The Torrents of Greed”). Allison Janney, cornered into giving evidence against a mobster, weeps in terror on the stand (“Old Friends”). Adam Trese, as a reined-in young cop, finally admits to Logan that he’s gay (“Manhood”). Robert Joy cowers in the doorway of his apartment with hunted eyes at Briscoe’s covert threat to expose his secret homosexual life to his family (“Pride”). Peggy Roeder rips open the tender old wound of an unrequited love for a leftist comrade (“White Rabbit”). Caroline Kava blinks, stunned, as Stone fingers the moral contradiction in her defense for blowing up an abortion clinic (“Life Choices”). Marcia Jean Kurtz, as a character suggested by Hedda Nussbaum, looks helplessly at her husband (Groh) after the verdict comes in against them and asks him, “What are we going to do, Daddy?” (“Indifference”). Wil Hornef, as a teen with a homicidal fury whose lawyer’s defense strategy is to prove him physiologically incapable of self-control, insists on being tried as an adult; when Stone intervenes, explaining that he’s trying to save the boy’s life, Hornef replies, “What’s the use?” (“Born Bad”). Wisely, the director fades out on the young actor’s face: what more potent image could he find to follow this? Law and Order’s brightest move, over all these seasons, is its acknowledgement that on the small screen, as on the large one or on the stage, there’s nothing as articulate or affecting as a good actor in the throes of a performance.
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review and is the author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in American Movies.
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