This piece requires a
little more introduction then usual, so I’ll hope you’ll indulge me.
One of the great
gifts of Peak TV has been something we may not appreciate until a series has
ended: the recurring character. They are played by actors in roles that we
don’t see in the first wave of credits but in the second wave, the characters
who aren’t regulars but who in many ways can do much in their few minutes
onscreen. One of the best examples of this in the past decade has been the
Salamanca clan, who we saw get killed off one by one in Breaking Bad and
then see again in Better Call Saul. Think of Mark Margolis, who was able
to do so much in his scenes in a wheelchair only able to communicate by ringing
a bell and you know what I’m talking about.
Breaking Bad and Better Call
Saul did this perfectly and there have been many other great shows in this
century that mastered the craft: Oz, The Wire, Battlestar Galactica and Orange
is the New Black are among the most prominent examples of this. Yet for
whatever reason during this period, I’ve noticed that network television has a
tendency to do this somewhat better than cable and streaming. The West Wing was
a master class in this, particularly with the secretarial staff and so many of
the minor political figures we would see for a few episodes each season; Buffy
the Vampire Slayer and Angel both demonstrated a level of commitment
to this as well as continuity between the backstories of all of them; 24 was
extremely skilled at doing so, often in unexpected ways over the years and The
Good Wife did so superbly, particularly when it came to its recurring use
of judges, rival attorneys and almost everyone else. (It didn’t shock me when
Carrie Preston got her own series; I’ve long since thought they could do entire
series based on any number of the recurring characters the show did.) And Lost
had a minor gift with this with so many of its characters during its run;
few of us who saw Mira Furlan’s stint as Danielle Rousseau will ever forget the
impression she could give in just a few scenes.
One of the kings of
character acting during this period is Zeljko Ivanek. You might not know (or
even be able to pronounce) his name but you’ve seen a lot of him during the era
of Peak TV and if you have you loathe him. I don’t know what it is about Ivanek
but he has a gift to emote villainy, smarminess or contempt (depending on the
character) with every word. It has nothing to do with his appearance: Ivanek
looks more ordinary than any actor. But ever since the era of Peak TV began, he
has been playing the villains more effectively than almost other character
actor alive.
Few of us who saw OZ
can forget his work as Governor Devlin the Governor of the unnamed state
the series took place who every time you met him seems more horrible then the
rapists, murderers and gangstas in Oswald put together. He disappeared from OZ
in its fifth season to play Andre Drazen in the first season of 24, the
primary villain at the center of the first horrible day Jack Bauer would ever
have. He had a one-episode stint on Lost as Edmund Burke (Juliet’s
ex-husband) and when he died from being hit by a bus, you were rooting for the
bus. (One of his lines before he died on the phone: “Because you’re
insufferable and you’re mean. Well you asked for the truth, Mom.”).
I don’t know about
the role he had on the third season of Heroes but while that was going
on, he played JJ, a former husband of Chloe Sevigny’s character on Big Love who
among other things had bullied his wife and had held Sevigny’s daughter from
her without knowing her mother. On Banshee he played a mortally ill
government official who arrived in town after the first season’s horrors played
out and died soon after. It wasn’t until Madame Secretary debuted in
2014 that Ivanek was finally granted to play a recurring actor for the first
time in his life: he was one the show for all six seasons.
If you’ve noticed a
trend through these roles and figure Ivanek’s characters get killed a lot: gold
star. This happened on almost every series he was a part of as even a guest
star – True Blood, Revolution. And even the historical characters he
plays are kind of douchey: on John Adams, he played John Dickinson, the
Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress who is Adams’s biggest foe
towards united the 13 colonies towards independence. That is true even for the one role that got
him his most recognition.
If you’ve read my
blog you know what a fan of the series Damages I am. One of my greatest
pleasures watching the Emmys in history came on Emmy night 2008. On that night
Zeljko Ivanek won the Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Emmy over such more
respected competition as Michael Emerson for Lost, William Shatner and
Christian Clemenson for Boston Legal and his own co-star Ted Danson, who
was the heavy favorite in that category for his work as Arthur Frobisher. Some
consider this one of the Emmys most shocking choices but while I have never
been the Emmys biggest fan, Ivanek’s victory was one of the ones that gave me
the greatest pleasure. (For the record, that’s also true of many of those other
‘surprises’, including Edie Falco and Merritt Weyer for Nurse Jackie, Ben
Mendelsohn for Bloodline and Toni Collette for United States of Tara.)
It was not just
Ivanek’s brilliant work as Ray Fiske that made me think he deserved it –
although it absolutely did. In his work as Ray Fiske, the troubled corporate
attorney whose duel with Patty Hewes ends with him killing himself in front of
her, Ivanek played one of the great tragic character in the series run. But by
that time, Ivanek had impressed as the kind of actor who should have been
getting nominations from the Emmys over the years yet somehow this was his
first one. (It was also the only nomination he ever got.) But the biggest
thrill during his speech came when among the people he thanked was Tom Fontana.
This is one of those
moments I’m pretty sure all but the most devoted television fan would have
missed. Because Ivanek did owe Fontana for launching him. Ivanek had worked
constantly before he became known to public for his work as the Governor in Oz.
He’d been working constantly through the 1990s, in such varied series as The
X-Files, Murder She Wrote, Law and Order, Chicago Hope and Frasier. But
Fontana had trumped all of them by giving him the first steady work he had in
his life on Homicide.
Now before I explain
that I have to give a definition of the kind of recurring roles that were on Homicide
because they tended to fall into four major categories, all of which had to
do with their association with the Baltimore police department. The first were
the bosses who I’ve mentioned in a previous article on the show. There were
also the patrol officers, who we saw three or four of multiple times over the
seven year run of the series. (Two of the actors who played them Kristin Rohde
and Granville Adams, ended up getting more significant supporting roles on OZ.)
There were the medical examiners, who had their own roster over the years and
who managed to make their own impressions. (I should mention some of them got
their jobs through family connections. Herb Levenson was Barry Levinson’s
cousin and Harlee McBride was Mrs. Richard Belzer.)
The last group were
the prosecutors or states attorneys (as they’re known in Baltimore) There were
two or three of them who appeared throughout the series but the one who had the
largest role was that of Ed Danvers, who Ivanek played over seven seasons. Ivanek’s
recurring role was the largest of any guest actor: he appeared in 37 of Homicide’s
123 episodes, which is in fact more than several actors who were series
regulars played over the years. And what’s particularly remarkable about
Danvers’s character was that he was different than almost any prosecutor we’ve
seen on TV over the last thirty years, even in series that have them front and
center particularly Law & Order.
There’s an argument
that, just as TV had never seen cops like those on Homicide, it had
never seen a prosecutor like Ed Danvers. By the time Homicide debuted in
1993, Law & Order was entering the public consciousness
though it wasn’t yet the phenomena it became. But by looking at characters like
Ben Stone (and later Jack McCoy) TV was getting its first look at prosecutors
who were willing to take on the powerful in courtrooms, vigorously cross
examine the defendants and give thundering closing arguments.
Ed Danvers, by
contrast, always looked exhausted and put-upon every time he went to the squad
room. He seemed perpetually miserable and always seemed determined to rain on
the detective’s parades about the cases they were bringing him as being
fundamentally weak. And he never wanted to set foot in a courtroom if he could
help it, always convincing the detectives to have the newly arrested murderers
take pleas so he could put them in Jessup and move on to the next case. In
short, Danvers almost certainly was a more realistic DA then any of the ones
we’ve seen in Law & Order – or really any courtroom drama since.
The writers actually
made this clear in Danvers’s very first appearance which was in the second
episode “Ghost of a Chance.’ We’re at the start of the Adena Watson
investigation that will be the backbone of the first season (and the soul of
the series). Under normal circumstances if a DA came to the squad room, it
would be to discuss a search warrant for the case involved. Danvers shows up to
talk to Kay Howard about a case that’s already closed and is about to go to
trial. And he’s not happy about how it looks. In one of his first lines of
dialogue Danvers tells Kay Howard what he believes his duties are: “My job as
an assistant state’s attorney is to maintain a better-than-average conviction
rate so that when I retire and go into private practice I can land at a better
than average law firm…Preferably an L.A. firm.” (An in-joke to L.A. Law which
was still on the air in 1993 and still the gold standard for legal dramas.)
Like the cops in the squad, such things as justice are secondary concerns to a
day’s work, and like the cops, Danvers wishes he were anywhere else but here.
During the first half
of Homicide’s run Ed Danvers appeared on the show only a dozen times,
though he was mentioned sporadically throughout that period. His biggest role
in the first two seasons was not so much as a states attorney but rather as a
love interest for Kay Howard (Melissa Leo). In keeping with how the show
worked, most of the relationship took place off-screen and like almost every
romantic relationship in the series ended for reasons we never learned. While he made far more appearance in the
second half of the series, his role never changed fundamentally.
And that role was to perennially
tell the squad just how weak their cases
are and that he didn’t want to go anywhere near a courtroom with them. This
actually fits in with how Homicide worked as opposed to Law &
Order (yes, I’ll get to that). As far as the series was concerned, once
they slapped the cuffs on the suspect and/or got them to confess, their job was
over. The names would go from red to black. They might have to testify in court
later on (Danvers sporadically would show up to prep them for trial) but after
that they were on to new business.
That’s why we almost
never saw the inside of a courtroom on Homicide. Ed Danvers job was to make
deals and plea the bastards out to the best plea he could get. The detectives
knew from the start how this would play out, it was the sewer they had to navigate.
That’s why, like
everything else, Homicide had a better way of seeing how the criminal
justice system worked that Law & Order ever did. It’s also why Danvers
always seemed so exhausted: in addition to his visits the squad room, he was
also buried in motions from other lawyers, meeting with other clients, working
out plea bargains, talking to other DAs about other cases, going from courtroom
to courtroom to deal with motions and every so often, giving an argument in a
trial.
So when Homicide would
crossover with Law & Order as it would do three times when the two
series were both on the air while the show did put the focus on Danvers more
than it would in regular series, it also seemed slightly unrealistic whenever
Danvers got involved. In the first crossover Ivanek wasn’t even in the Law and
Order segment and when the action moved to Baltimore he was only in a courtroom
to make an argument against Claire Kincaid over whether the suspect should be
extradited to New York. That may have been the most realistic use of Danvers in
a sense, mainly because Maryland isn’t as rich a state as New York and probably
can’t afford for its prosecutors to go on trips across the Hudson the way so
many ADAs seemed to do throughout the series.
Ivanek had a more
significant role in ‘Baby, It’s You’ a case that parallel the Jon Benet Ramsey
killings (the episodes aired in 1997). Brittany Janaway, a teenage model, is
found dead of toxic shock. The parents have joint residence in Baltimore and
New York and eventually it becomes possible that the killing might have had its
origin in Baltimore. Danvers sends Munch and Paul Falsone to New York in order
to stake his claim on the prosecution.
Eventually it becomes
clear the crime did take place in Baltimore and jurisdiction is ceded jointly. Jack
McCoy and Ed Danvers end up co-prosecuting the case. It is a measure how skilled
an actor Ivanek is that he was able to hold his own along side the force of
nature that is Sam Waterston. Then again, when you’re sharing the screen with such
powerhouses as Melissa Leo, Andre Braugher and Kyle Secor on a regular basis
you learn not to be awed.
But Ivanek’s biggest
role came in the final crossover: ‘Sideshow’. Janine McBride, a federal employee
who worked in Baltimore is found dead in New York. As the detectives work
together they learn McBride was a closeted lesbian (in 1999, this was a big
deal then it is today) who believed she was transferred from DC to Baltimore
because of a government coverup.
Danvers ends up
working with Jack McCoy as the investigation progresses and they quickly make
the enmity of the independent council William Dell (George Hearn). While this
was clearly modeled after Kenneth Starr, Hearn clearly plays Dell as if he were
Roy Cohn, arrogantly demanding the names of witnesses in the murder and
refusing to give any details as to why he wants to see them. He subpoenas Jack
McCoy before the grand jury, rakes him over the coals and eventually has him jailed
for contempt when McCoy refuses to give the name of the witness. McCoy’s efforts
prove futile as Dell eventually learns all the details because of an
information leak – which Mike Giardello, in his capacity as FBI liaison inadvertently
caused.
In the second part,
Danvers tells McCoy that he is about to be named to a federal judgeship as he
continues his prosecution. Danvers is told that he has to step carefully as
they continue to prosecute the murder – and begin to target Dell. But Dell has
his own cards to play and in the final act he reveals what it is.
Ivanek manages to get some put much-deserved screen-time as he
reveals that, in his own way, he is as ruthless a prosecutor as McCoy can be.
They go after Dell directly early on, and he becomes more engaged the longer
the investigation becomes. Even when they find themselves in the White House
for a murder investigation - something that seems to rattle the ever
belligerent McCoy - he remains calm. And it costs him. He's still willing to
try and put himself on the line - when Sheppard and Munch tell him that, in
order to try and pursue the case, he's going to have to confront a federal
magistrate on what could be a quid pro quo, he does so. But after he indicts
the man behind the murder, the independent counsel comes after him, and it
torpedoes him. As a juvenile Danvers was part of a street gang that was
involved in a racially motivated assault. When the record comes into play, he
confesses to Al about this, and Gee rallies the troops to stand by him. This,
however, costs him any chance of him being confirmed by the Maryland
legislature..
But for all the efforts of their investigations, the police and
legal work come to nothing. Just as they arrest the man behind the murder,
Dell's representatives move in, and take him into custody. When Danvers and
McCoy furiously confront Dell, he makes it very clear that he considers their
murder meaningless compared to his investigation into the White House. The
final scene of the two men comes as Dell gives his press conference announcing
his ‘triumph’
“One hundred million dollars’ worth of misinformation,” McCoy
says sadly.
“And we helped him dig up the dirt,” Danvers adds.”
(By the way if you’re wondering if Ivanek appeared on Law
& Order before this crossover, yes he did – and after it. He appeared
in a Season 4 episode ‘American Dream’ where he played a yuppie trader who
represents himself in order to get out of a murder conviction Ben Stone laid on
him ten years earlier and he appeared in an episode in Season 15 as a wealthy
businessman who commits a murder to hide the fact that he’s having a homosexual
relationship. There were Law & Order co-stars in both episodes that
were in the Homicide crossovers but somehow, neither of them mistook him
for Danvers.
But for all of the fire of these episodes Ivanek’s finest hour
on Homicide came in one of the highpoints of the series. During Season 5
we learned that Danvers was engaged to be married to Meryl Hansen, a public
defender. For the first half of the series Danvers is involved as much in the
possibility of the matrimonial bliss as telling the detectives how messy their
cases are. Then in the teaser of Blood Wedding he goes with his fiancée to a
bridal shop for her to get fitting for her dress.
While they are there an
armed robber comes into the store with a gun. Somehow, Meryl ends up dead at
the end of a .38 and Ed Danvers spends much of the episode with his clothes
splashed with the blood of his intended.
The case
ends up being Pembleton’s first as a primary detective since his stroke nearly
six months ago and when Danvers learns this he doesn’t think Frank’s up to the
task. However, even though Frank is still a little rocky as an investigator, Ed
is in no shape to be making judgments of sense. Danvers is constantly
challenging Frank, interfering with witnesses statements and coming up with
different angles for the detectives to investigate. Pembleton is understandably
pissed at having to deal with this, especially when Giardello backs Danvers on
this.
Eventually
Frank and Tim track down a suspect in the robbery homicide. They find some
evidence linking him to the robbery—ammo, ski masks, threads--- but nothing
that conclusively links the suspect to the murder. In the interrogation they go
after the robber hard, especially saying that since the victim was a public
defender, every prosecutor in the city will want to convict him and no lawyer
in the city will want to defend him. This shakes the suspect up but not enough
to make him confess. The stoic prosecutor voices his demand very simply—he
wants the suspect to die. So much so that he goes down to see him and lock-up
and tells him that he will make it his life’s work to see the man dead.
But neither
Danvers nor anyone else will get any kind of closure with this case, because at
the end of the episode the suspect hangs himself in his cell. In typical Homicide fashion, we never learn whether
this is out of guilt or because of the fear that the detectives and Danvers
rammed into him.
Ivanek gives the most emotional and intense
performance that he will ever deliver as Ed Danvers finds himself at the hands
of the callous investigative process and the indifference of the legal system,
an indifference he himself fostered. In a powerful scene near the end of the
episode, he berates himself for all the years of cutting corners and closing
files, of forgetting the victim’s names and the heinousness of the crimes. This
is a strong scene made even stronger by the fact that when Danvers returns to
work later this season, he will be obeying the same rules and sticking with the
same indifference; the criminal justice system cannot survive any other way.
The actors and
actresses that we have the hardest time appreciating are almost always
character actors, particularly the ones who underplay their roles to the point one
almost doesn’t notice how good they are. We have seen our share of them during
the era of Peak TV from Richard Jenkins to Lance Reddick to Julianne Nicholson
and Alison Wright and in recent years we’ve become aware of such talents as Carrie
Coon and Shea Whigham. Ivanek has been known for playing villains more frequently
over the years but he was always just as gifted at playing the Everyman, someone
we all knew and related too. In Homicide he got a chance to play that
role in one of the most famous archetypes of recent TV history and gave a more
realistic portrayal of that kind of character because it was everything we didn’t
– and still don’t - expect of the kind
of attorneys we see on TV these days.
Many people may go to
law school because they want to become Jack Mcoy but it is far more likely they
become Ed Danvers and that’s actually better for our justice system. As messy
and imperfect as it is – and Danvers himself knew how flawed it was – people like him make it function and are more vital
to that system. I’m guessing when Jack McCoy became DA in his own right, he had
more than his share of Danvers’s on staff and he was more grateful for them
then he might have wanted to admit.
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