When he started writing NBC’s medical drama “Brilliant Minds,” sequence creator Michael Grassi says he had just one actor in thoughts to painting his present’s protagonist, Dr. Oliver Wolf.
That could be Zachary Quinto, the Emmy nominee whose tv credit embody “Star Trek” and the “American Horror Story” anthology sequence, and who has appeared on Broadway in acclaimed revivals of “The Glass Menagerie” and “The Boys in the Band,” amongst different reveals.
“I’ve never seen Zach play it safe in a performance. Everything he does, he always takes a big swing,” Grassi, whose TV credit embody “Schitt’s Creek” and “Riverdale,” informed HuffPost. “We’ve seen him play villains before. We’ve seen him do so much genre. But the thing that Zach brings to the show — something I didn’t know was possible — is incredible wit and levity. I’m excited for viewers to see how much warmth and humor he brings.”
“Brilliant Minds,” which premiered final week, is predicated on the life of Dr. Oliver Sacks, the world-renowned neurologist and writer once referred to as the “poet laureate of contemporary medicine.”
Like Sacks, Dr. Wolf is each a revered neurologist and a man of extremes — in the present’s pilot episode, he takes a night swim in the murky waters of New York’s Hudson River amid a skilled disaster, as the real-life Sacks was known to have done. The character shares Sacks’ love of bikes and indoor fern gardens, and in addition has prosopagnosia, a cognitive dysfunction additionally known as face blindness that enables him to empathize with his sufferers in methods some of his friends don't.
Though Sacks died in 2015 at age 82, “Brilliant Minds” takes place in present-day New York. In order to make Dr. Wolf plausible as a fashionable character, Grassi opted to offer some aspects of Sacks’ life an replace. Most notably, Dr. Wolf is a homosexual man who makes no secret of his sexuality whereas working at Bronx General Hospital, whereas Sacks stayed celibate and was closeted for a lot of his life.
“To find somebody who is a hero, who is so dedicated to his patients [and] who also happens to be gay, is exciting to me,” Grassi stated. “While Dr. Wolf has a lot of walls up and is dealing with a lot of complex things, I wanted him to be living in today’s world. I wanted all of our cases and relationships to feel urgent and in conversation with things we are now experiencing.”
To flesh out different elements of Dr. Wolf’s character, Grassi developed a quartet of younger interns (Aury Krebs, Ashleigh LaThrop, Alex MacNicoll and Spence Moore II) in addition to two foil characters: Dr. Carol Pierce (Tamberla Perry) and Dr. Josh Nichols (Teddy Sears).
Pierce is loosely based on Dr. Carol E. Burnett, the first Black graduate and one of the first ladies to graduate from New York’s Albert Einstein College of Medicine in 1960, who was additionally Sacks’ shut pal.
As for Dr. Nichols, Grassi stated he noticed the character as Wolf’s “adversary who would have very different ideas about medicine and a different POV on what’s best for a patient, someone who would be a rival who he could go toe-to-toe with.” It additionally gave Quinto a probability to reunite with Sears, with whom he co-starred on the premiere season of “American Horror Story” in 2011.
Though reviews of “Brilliant Minds” have been mostly positive, Grassi is acutely aware of the incontrovertible fact that some viewers could dismiss the present as yet one more entry into a TV panorama with no scarcity of medical dramas, with “Grey’s Anatomy” kicking off its twenty first season final week and “ER” nonetheless an everlasting favourite 15 years after it final aired.
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Grassi says he’s “a huge fan of all of those shows” and expects “Brilliant Minds” to “honor” such predecessors as the season progresses. Still, he’s fast to emphasise that his present is “doing something different.”
“What really differentiates our show is Oliver Sacks,” he stated. “This is a love letter to a real-life doctor who treated real-life patients and told their stories.”
He went on to notice: “On many medical dramas, it’s usually about the quick fix. We want the cure, the solution … we want everything to be OK and we want to move on. But in medicine, the reality is that there often isn’t a quick fix. You can leave the hospital and your problems aren’t solved. When you get a diagnosis that doesn’t have a cure, how do you find a way forward? How do you find purpose? That’s a theme we explore on our show that feels unique.”
Watch the trailer for “Brilliant Minds” under:
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