On Friday 19th, Fox announced that production
on Glee would be pushed back until August in the wake of Cory
Monteith‘s sudden death last week. The postponement subsequently
moved the show’s Season 5 premiere back a week, to Sept. 26.
The relatively short delay was met with surprise given
the enormity of the tragedy, particularly for the show’s leading lady and
Monteith’s real-life girlfriend Lea Michele.
Here, Glee cocreator Ryan
Murphy breaks his silence on the actor’s passing, explains the
thinking behind the brief postponement (and the role Michele played in the
decision), reveals the show’s plan to explore the death of Monteith’s character
and offers the first glimpse of how Glee will carry on without Finn.
TVLINE | Thanks for your time. I know you
wanted to talk a little bit about the reason for the one-week delay and why it
wasn’t longer. Some people thought maybe it should be.
Well, it’s such uncharted water for me, personally. We
had several options. We could delay shooting until November, we could delay
shooting until January. But, ultimately, what we decided to do for the cast and
crew was start shooting with something that we had already written. We had
written two Beatles episodes in May and had been working on that tribute for
four years. We just decided that it would probably be the best for everybody to
get back together and be working and have grief counselors on set for two
weeks, which we’re going to do. But, ultimately, we made no decisions without
consulting Lea. [Executive producer] Brad Falchuk and I talked to Lea and
really asked her what she wanted to do. We laid out every possible option. And
she was very adamant that she thought it was best for the cast and crew to get
back together sooner [rather] than later so that mortgages could be paid and
people could take care of their families. Cory was so beloved that she felt
people really needed to be together in this time. So we sort of followed her
lead.
TVLINE | Will you address Finn’s absence in the
first two episodes?
I don’t think so. We were supposed to be on in the fall
with four episodes, and that’s just not going to happen. So we’re going to go
on the air with two episodes and right now we’re writing the third episode,
which deals with Finn’s death – which, you can imagine, is a very difficult
episode to write. [It] has to be done very carefully and with a lot of taste
and really making sure that it’s a tribute to Cory. Then, who knows? Maybe
we’ll wait to shoot that. We really have to see how everybody feels… We’re
going to take a long writers’ hiatus after that episode to refigure the season
and continue to take care of the cast and crew and work on setting things up in
Cory’s honor – scholarships, what have you – because that’s something we’re
dedicated to doing. It’s just a crazy, really difficult, very emotional time. I
think what we’re really trying to do is deal with it as a family, which is what
that group of people is. Lea is obviously very grief-stricken but she’s also
one of the strongest people I know. She wants people to be better and get back
to work. So that’s what we’re going to do.
TVLINE | So Lea will be back with the show at
the start of Season 5, including the Beatles two-parter?
Yes. She wants to be with people. The [Glee] family is
her family. She wants to be with the cast and the crew.
TVLINE | The tribute episode will be shot
immediately after the two-parter, then you go on hiatus?
Yes. I mean, who knows how long it’s going to take to
craft and what it’s going to be? I just got back into town Tuesday from
shooting [HBO's The Normal Heart] and immediately, even in New York, was
dealing with the specifics of Cory’s death. I don’t have all the answers. But I
just wanted people to know that no decision has been taken lightly and it’s
been a week where everyone, from [20th Century Fox TV chiefs] Dana Walden and
Gary Newman to [Fox bosses] Kevin Reilly and Peter Rice to [21st Century Fox
chairman and CEO] Rupert Murdoch, everyone has weighed in and wanted us to do
the best thing for the cast and crew.
TVLINE | And in terms of what fans will see on TV, the
two Beatles episodes will air, followed by the tribute episode, and then a
hiatus?
Yes. It’s impossible to start the season with the tribute
episode; we have no time to prepare it.
TVLINE | You mentioned that you’ve spoken to
Lea. A lot of people are really curious about how she’s holding up.
It’s just a very tragic thing. It’s been a very difficult
thing for all of us, including Lea, to love someone who is an addict. It’s
something all of us have been dealing with for many months. It’s a disease and,
unfortunately, the disease flared up. As soon as we found out, we staged an
intervention with Cory that Lea was 100 percent running, out of love and trying
to get him better, saying, “Look. Don’t worry about your job; you will always
have a job. Don’t worry about fear. Don’t worry about shame. Just worry about
getting better and getting stronger…” He was like a son to me… He was both
very loving and very sweet and also very stubborn. I really expected him to
fight me. He wanted to finish those last two episodes of [Season 4], and that’s
when we found out about the addiction flaring up again and I said, “F–k no.
We’re writing you out of these episodes. Your life is more important than any
stupid TV show. You’re not going to film. You’re going to get in a car right
now and get help that I and Brad and Lea have arranged.” I thought he was going
to fight me. He said, instead, “OK, I’m so glad it’s over.” He embraced it and
went without a fight and got in a car and went to rehab.
TVLINE | And you thought he was doing OK?
All early reports were that he was doing really well. I
spoke to him, and he was really grateful. Lea was very instrumental in trying
to save his life and get him the help that he needed and I think for everyone,
including myself and her, it’s just a shock. It happened so quickly and without
warning, as it often does for many people… She’s also been a rock for many
people as well. I’ve never, ever met a 26-year-old girl or boy who’s capable of
doing what she’s done in the past week. I marvel at it. I really have taken –
as we all have – our lead from Lea. We won’t do anything that she doesn’t want
to do. We’re planning a memorial service this week for the cast and crew and
people at Fox, everybody who loved him. She’s been planning that and making
decisions.
TVLINE | Do you have a memory of Cory that
epitomizes who he was for you?
The thing that I struggle with is the darkness that
befell him, it was so the opposite of the person that I knew and tried to save.
It was a really hard part to cast. The first time I saw Cory was on a videotape
where he was playing Tupperware drums. But he was in the first scene of the
first shot when I directed the Glee pilot. It was a scene with Mr.
Schue and Finn where they were in Mr. Schue’s office and Mr. Schue was framing
him. It was a very strange pilot and it was a musical, which nobody had really
done successfully. So people were nervous, I was nervous about it.
And I remember after his first take, he came up to me and said, “This is gonna
be fun.”
From Michael Ausiello for TVLine
Credit: http://tvline.com/2013/07/20/ryan-murphy-glee-cory-monteith-death-season-5-delay/
From Michael Ausiello for TVLine
Credit: http://tvline.com/2013/07/20/ryan-murphy-glee-cory-monteith-death-season-5-delay/

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