The camera guy can't keep the camera straight because he's shaking from laughing. The writers come over to whisper an alternate line in your ear and you try to say that as a trick to crack up the actor in front of you. "It's such a fun way to live," Mosley says about acting in a TV comedy. When he's not terrorizing Castle and friends, Mosley stars as the prickly EMT Johnny on USA's "Sirens." The show gave him the chance to return to comedy after he appeared in the last season of "Scrubs" on ABC. The "Castle" two-parter starts tonight, Feb. I don't think Tyson works without Castle." It's nice to see him unnerved by something. Castle's such a physically opposing but charming character, and I'm not. "I also think there's a ying and a yang to it. Whereas Tyson's fascination comes in acting out those impulses," Mosley says. he's equally fascinated by suspense and terror, but has a healthy outlet for it in his books. His real last stop is Castle because he thinks Castle has a similar interest. Mosley believes his psychopathic murderer will continue to terrorize those around him until he's officially declared dead. The real drama will center on the cat-and-mouse game between Castle and Tyson that has played out over the last four years. The 36-year-old actor wouldn't reveal exactly how their characters will interact, but calls Wersching's performance "spooky." Both actors knew their story lines connected when they met on set, but this will be the first episode they appear in together. Wersching also returns in the two-part episode. Boudreau claims the good doctor also gave him the appearance of Tyson. Javier Esposito (Jon Huertas) and medical examiner Lanie Parish (Tamala Jones) in an episode last season. Kelly Nieman (Annie Wersching), a devious plastic surgeon that worked on two murder victims and made them look like Det. It bears fruit.The crime novelist never believed Tyson died in the shooting and linked his case to Dr. As infuriating as Avi can be, he's also very successful with it. And I think that we just all trust him with that. He is quite extraordinary in his insightfulness. And I think in that way, he's absolutely invaluable to this squad that my character Kathleen Davies has surrounded herself with. Because he sees that first, he invites you to do that also. "I think in the genre of lead detectives that we've become accustomed to, he is quite atypical," said Robinson, "because he sees all of these people as human beings first, as wives and husbands and parents and, you know, whatever they do for a living. Rather than slamming a suspect's head into a desk, he'll ask very personal questions instead of antagonistically interrogating someone, he senses their emotions and taps on his own innate sense of spirituality to locate their humanity. Avraham is a unique character in this genre while he's the kind of maverick loner we often see in cop shows, his renegade style is much more compassionate and centered on human dignity. Stop talking, will do.'"īesides both having a lot of fun navigating Kelley's well-written world, Robinson and Mosley were happy to be in a different kind of police show, one where social justice and morality are just as important to law enforcement as cuffing the criminal and looking cool doing it. She'll start to give you the look, and you'll be like, 'Yeah, shut up, okay. "Karen is no joke, like when we're in that little interrogation room, and maybe I went on a little too long about something, she can just give me that look and her character can stop you. Mosley was also happy to work with Robinson, and some of their best scenes in The Calling are with each other as they help Avi with the season-long case of the missing boy, simultaneously fascinated and frustrated by the great detective. We kind of figured out towards the end kind of who he was." I don't think we all knew kind of who he was at the beginning, and I think that was kind of fun to get to explore that with the writers and the team. I think that it was also fun with this Earl character. When I saw that, and then I heard it's shooting in New York in the summer in Brooklyn, I thought that sounded lovely. "Yeah, same," added Mosley, "with both Kelley and Barry Levinson. Related: Exclusive: The Calling Executive Producers on Peacock's New David E.
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