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House - TV Line - Is Robert Sean Leonard Leaving House?

7 Apr 2011

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TVLine | Why did you wait seven years to return to Broadway?
This is my last season of House. I’m shooting my last episode now. Contractually this is it. There’s also no deal for House next year because Comcast bought NBC Universal and no one has a deal. If I do House next year it’ll be under a new umbrella. But legally and contractually, I’m free after this [season]. So my wife [Gabriella Salick] and I were wondering how the summer looked and what we wanted to do. And I’ve never had enough time to do a play [while doing House] because our hiatuses are only about a month of maybe six weeks long.

TVLine | You don’t really believe this is your last season, do you? I mean, House will eventually get renewed, and you’re a huge part of the show so they’re going to want you back.
[Pauses] I. Love. Money. Very, very much. But I also love my wife and my daughter. And when this play first came up I knew the only way it could work is if the show was over because the run [would overlap] with House‘s shooting schedule. And when my contract was not renewed this season… The long and short of it is, I don’t know. I would love to make more money. Money is nice. I also really miss [living in] New Jersey. I also really miss theater. I miss my friends. Gabby misses her family. I’m sick and tired of living in a place I don’t feel at home. There are very pressing, strong things pulling us in both directions at the moment, so I really don’t know what we’re going to do. It’s going to be a family decision, but it’s not one we have the discomfort of making right now because we’re not being offered options. I assume they’ll make another year of House. And I assume I will do it. But I can’t say for sure. My wife and I are really strange people. We never spend any money. I got my first car when I got out here — a Jetta — and I’ve been driving it since the pilot. We haven’t spent much of the money we’ve made.

TVLINE | You’re shooting the season finale of House now. Does it allude to a possible Wilson departure?
That’s not the plot of the episode, no. That’s not what the episode is about at all.

TVLINE | Even if you do return next season, you’ll still have to miss a couple of episodes because of the play, right?
I’d have to miss quite a few. We could do what we’re doing now, but I’m not sure I would do that – for any amount of money. Commuting 2700 miles is too much for me, and it’s too much for my voice… It’s just hard. I would either have to not be in the first few episodes or they’d have to delay the start date. Or I can be written lightly in them and shoot a couple of Mondays here and there. Anything’s possible.

TVLINE | Why did you decide to make Born Yesterday your Broadway comeback?
Because I love the play. And because [director] Doug Hughes hired Nina [Arianda]. If Doug had hired a famous actress I would have been hesitant. The point of Born Yesterday and the joy of Born Yesterday is Nina Arianda and discovering [her character]. And if you do the play right, then the joy of the play is redefining her every 18 minutes. You think you know who this girl is, and then every 18minutes or so you go, “Wait a minute. Where’d that come from.” That’s what makes the play work. Unfortunately, there aren’t many times in theater when you have someone good enough to pull it off, and we somehow got lucky with Nina.

TVLINE | Was it tough to get back into the eight-shows-a-week grind after doing a TV show for seven years?
No, not at all. I’m at House 17 hours a day. To go into a theater and do a play and be home by 11 – oh my god, are you kidding? It’s like nothing to me. And when you have two dogs and a two-year-old daughter, that’s a nice schedule. I drive to [the House set] in the dark and I come home in the dark. Sure, theater is tough because you’re not home at night a lot and you work on weekends – every job has its downside. But to do something that you love doing for two hours a night, that’s a pretty sweet gig.

TVLINE | Did you miss it?
Oh my God yes. I almost didn’t do it because of scheduling. I looked at the schedule and said, “This is insane. There’s no way.” I had days highlighted in yellow that I was going to be in L.A., and days highlighted in pink that I was going to be in New York. I looked at my wife and I said, “Forget it. There’s no way. I’ll lose my mind.” And she basically said, “If you don’t do this I’ll kill you. You need this. You need to do something you feel this [passionate] about.” I’ve been [on a high] since the first day of rehearsal. I love this company. I love Doug Hughes, I love the play. I love doing it. I can’t wait to get to work every night. I enjoy every minute of it.

TVLINE | I gather House has been accommodating with the scheduling?
Yes, amazingly so. They were extremely, extremely accommodating and sweet about it. They were great. They moved some things around, and they probably wrote me lighter in the final episodes.

TVLINE | Were you prepared to use the “Olivia Wilde got to take a year off to make a movie” argument if they resisted?
No. When I called I said, “Look, you guys — If this can work, great. If it can’t, there are no hard feelings.” Wilson is many things but he’s not Thirteen. I can’t just go away. Thirteen can disappear; Wilson can’t. The show just isn’t structured that way. He has to be there. It’s the way the show works. [He's like] Carlton the Doorman on Rhoda.

TVLINE | What is Wilson’s arc in these final episodes? Is it mostly him continuing to prop up House?
He’s kind of propping up House. This season has mostly been about House and Cuddy and them trying to make [a relationship] work, which is fine with me. I’ve had a lot of time with my dogs and my daughter. I’m just around to pick up the pieces this season.


Read the rest of this interview on TV Line

Source: TV Line

15 comments:

  1. He doesn't seem to happy with the show anymore - he also sounds a bit... egotistical (for lack of a better word) as well!

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  2. Two thoughts:

    1.) RSL really seems to have lost interest in this show and has no problem expressing his take-it-or-leave-it attitude or...

    2.) RSL has got an early jump on "contract renegotiation hardball." After all, "He. Loves. Money."

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  3. I think he sounded about as professional as could be... in the strictest sense. This is his job and not his life... not his love. It was less detached and more realistic to me. All too often interviewees gush and amp up their level of passion to draw people in... this seems like a real frank discussion without embellishment. Not so much "I am tired of house" as "I want my old life back".

    Fans sometimes get so emotionally invested in characters, and actors can too, but most think of it as a just a job and sometimes not much more. Not many will admit it of course because they want to keep those jobs regardless of how passionate or stoic they are about them.. Some jobs are better than others or you enjoy them more than others and it me it sounds to me like he enjoys the live theater more than taped TV acting.

    I quit watching House this year because the Cuddy and House relationship made me painfully annoyed every episode, but if he indeed leaves, Wilson will be missed I am sure. He was always my second favorite character on the series after House himself.

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  4. "I want my old life back".

    That, I believe, is a genuine sentiment on his part. This is far from the first time he's expressed that particular opinion. He's made his bones and now he wants to simplify his life. With the cash he's raked in on House he's in a position to do exactly that.

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  5. Can't really blame him I guess. His role has always been small for the most part, but it's been marginalized the last year by the Cuddy relationship plot.

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  6. IF RSL leaves, they might as well cancel 'House'

    Wilson, is in essence, House's "conscience". He keeps House fairly grounded when House otherwise would probably go off the deep end. Past couple of episodes have shown House to really be going far overboard. Without Wilson around to steer him right, House will be lost forever.

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  7. This makes me wonder if the show isn't already preparing for this eventuality. I was wondering why the show made the choice to bring House and 13 closer together and now I'm thinking that the show may be grooming her to be House's new Wilson.

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  8. Maybe, that would make some sense. She is fun and all but not Wilson to me.

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  9. Wouldn't be House without Wilson. Fingers are crossed he stays a bit longer!

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  10. I love how blunt he is. I don't think the show is ever going to get back on form, so I'm happy for him to move on. At this point I'd rather the show finish sooner than later.

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  11. I loved his tone too! It is refreshing to have someone answer directly with actual blunt , concise factual statements and not flower it all up. Pretty rare in most interviews I have read.

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  12. Guys, let's face it: House has to end someday. And this can be a good way for it to happen, Wilson leaving House "to be his own man". I'm not saying the show can't go on without RSL, all I'm saying is that maybe it shouldn't.

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  13. that is exactly what i thought. he is always kind of sarcastic and has a sort of dry humor maybe that just did't come up in print.

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  14. i dont think it got marginalized by cuddy but by the writers. they could have done more with the two of them

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  15. Thank God, let's face it, House has been on a steady decline since season 4. There really isn't too much left for them to do with it at this point. There should be a definitive ending, so there should be one more season, but the final season should really wrap it up. Whether RSL returns or not doesn't matter, the show is dying off anyway.

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