14 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 15, 1999 Creative, namic stones Former 'Melrose' vixen stars in drama 'Profiler' reappear e Wahington Post. With the surprising popularity of the summertime quiz show "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire," it might be tempting to envision next-millennium television as a variety of game shows broken up by the news magazine programs proliferat- ing throughout the prime-time network schedule. Bt as the final television season of the 1900s gets into full swing this week, a different, if short-term, vision appears. The Storytellers are back They are the creative and dynamic forces behind programs, the ones who generally work under the titles of creator and eecutive producer. Several of network television's best have programs on this season's prime- time schedule, giving the fall season a sense ofnarrative drive-and occasion- al ofrginality. Soert of these producers and creators have programs on the air from seasons past and, yes, some cloning has been going-on. But judging from a preview of avail- able pilot episodes, the season's dramas and comedies offer some new ideas and new settings, giving curious viewers a variety of plots and twists from which to choose. One-fall program that has attracted favorable comment from advertising buyers and critics is the Washington- baseddrama "The West Wing" The series has as well-credentialed a creator-executive producer team as you could want. John Wells, the executive producer of "ER,"one oftelevision's most successful current dramas, is teamed with creator- executive producer Aaron Sorkin, who gave television one of last season's most praised new shows, "Sports Night." Sorkin's distinct writing pattern - his work on "Sports Night" totally abandoned the set-up, punch-line cadence of half-hour comedy - is brought to bear here in dialogue that may sget under some viewers' skin. One such scene is part of the pilot episode in which Martin Sheen, as the president, skewers a group of religious conserva- Los Angeles Times Jamie Luner was filming a movie in Alabama when she heard about the chance to become the title character in the NBC drama "Profiler." Unable to fly back to Los Angeles to meet the show's producers, the one-time "Melrose Place" vixen went to a local video outlet and shot an audition tape, asking one of the store's employees to feed her lines. "I actually got it to Federal Express in the nick of time," Luner says. Having sufficiently impressed the producers and NBC, Luner is replacing Ally Walker in the program's central role - that of an FBI profiler working for the bureau's Violent Crimes Task Force. Walker, who had asked to leave the show, appears in the first two episodes to set up the switch. Luner plays Rachel Burke, a former prosecutor who moves to the FBI. Her first assignment is to try to locate Waters, who disappeared in last season's cliffhanger finale. Though few series successfully have changed leads in this manner, executive producer Stephen Kronish is hop- ing fans of the show accustomed to Walker's character of Samantha Waters will continue tuning in because they enjoy the program's format and storytelling, not just its star. "There's no question any time you make a change like this it carries with it some risks," he says. "(But) Ally has been very cooperative in making this transition. We can do it in a way that feels organic to the show." Because Burke isn't burdened by the same emotional baggage as her predecessor - whose husband was slain by a serial killer she was hunting - Kronish thinks the producers can lighten the show's overall tone. He also intends to offer more detail regarding the characters, which include Robert Davi, Roma Maffia, Julian McMahon and George Fraley as the task force mem- bers. "Look, it's never going to be 'thirtysomething,' " he says. "We do hope to be able to explore more aspects of, the other characters' lives. If it's unrenittingly grit, you're asking the atdience to nork too hard.' As for Litner, her new on-scrcei persont pros ide', vehicle allowing her to 'diversify .t little bit in the public eye," she says, after plying back-to-back femie fatales in two Aaron Spelling soaps: Peytton in the short-lived WB network series "Saxannihs" followed by her stint as "Melrose's" scheming Levi. After being part of those large ensemble casts, Loner finds herself adjusting to the rigors of standing center stage. "It's amazing the hours you pull when you're the lead of a show," she says. The WB had sought to develop its own new program around Luner, but that deal fell through; still, the actre.* had no qualms about joining "Profiler" under less than ideal circumstances - in essence, trying to board a mov- ing train. "You just go where the work takes you," she says, con- ceding that the rapid pace of events has left her little time to research her role or gain a clear fix on where it's head- ing. Asked about the series' path this year, she says, "I don't know much, actually. They're sort of figuring it out as they go along." A Los Angeles native, Luner grew up around shoe business, deciding she wanted to act early on. Her moth- er and former manager, Susan, currently works as a tal- ent coordinator on the syndicated "Donny & Marie" show. Luner appeared in the sitcoms "Growing Pains" and "Just the Ten of Us" while still attending Beverly Hills High. According to Kronish, Luner has proven a good fit thus far, able to project the strength and intelligence nec- essary to pull off her character. As for those who might question whether many FBI agents chasing serial killers look quite as fetching in negligee - the attire Luner frequently sported o "Melrose" and "Savannah" - the actress just laughs. "Oh come on," she says. "It's television." "Profiler" begins its fourth season Saturday on NBC. Courtesy of Toucstone Sorkin, who wrote for the praised "Sports Night," is working on "The West Wing." tives with what' at first seems to be a light-hearted anecdote. But Sorkin promises the show will not be politically one-sided. "Enjoyment of the show won't depend on how a viewer feels about politics," he said recently. "There will be characters who can argue all sides of an issue." Meanwhile, Wells gives the White House, with its many staffers and min- ions working on a set borrowed from "The American President," a sense of urgency and importance on a scale with the work of the "ER." In this- case, the blood on the floor is figurative. And no, there won't be an intern. Here are some other creators and executive producers offering fall shows: David E. Kelley, creator of "The Practice," "Chicago Hope," "Picket Fences" and "Ally McBeal," this season offers "Snoops" on ABC. Edward Zwick and Marshall Herskovitz, creators of the critically acclaimed series "thirtysomething" and "My So-Called Life," are executive pro- ducers and co-creators of ABC's "Once and Again." Glenn Gordon Caron, who created "Moonlighting" after writing and pro- ducing the first 10 episodes of "Remington Steele," is the executive producer, director and writer of CBS' "Now and Again." Chris Carter, creator of"The X-Files," this season offers "Harsh Realm" on Fox. Paul Haggis, the man behind quirky "Due South" and the densely plotted "EZ Streets," this season heads the more conventional "Family Law" on CBS. Christopher Keyser and Amy Lippman, from "Party of Five," are the creators and executive producers of "Time of Your Life" on Fox. Judd Apatow, executive producer of NBC's new "Freaks and Geeks," helped write and later co-executive produced "The Larry Sanders Show." Two producers extend their franchis- es. Dick Wolf of "Law & Order" has "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit," which will feature some cross-casting between Wolf's NBC series. And "ER's" Wells ofters "Third Watch," an NBC series centered on emergency personnel. Later in the season on CBS, Stephen Bochco, producer of "NYPD Blue," "L.A. Law" and "Hill Street Blues," will offer "City of Angels," set at an inner- city emergency hospital. 'Slight Case' has substance A !li ° ~ - A y . The Breakfast Club The Kiss-Hotel DeVille Hokusais Wave - e k 99 Wednesday-Frida September 15-17 Bob Marley Re the Riveter M ichigan - Union- Ground Floor /lam-5pm Visa, MasterCard & Photos 00 AmEx Accepted Dr Ev Van Gogh's Starry Night BelushN Newsday Love those old movies? Especially the high-contrast film noirs, with their seedy private detectives, devious femmes fatale, rain-slick streets and double-cross twists'? So does movie critic Terry Thorpe. And so do the folks who placed him at the heart of the delicious, "Columbo"- like comic suspenser "A Slight Case of Murder," debuting on TNT Sunday night. A light touch makes this "Slight Case" more substantial than most of the would-be noir homage flicks, which can get bogged down in their reverence. Not only does Sunday's script by star William H. Macy and director Steven Schachter (adapted from the Donald E. Westlake novella "A Travesty") refrain from beating us over the head with too many overt noir references, but it mis- chievously concedes the ones it makes. Why not? Macy's complex Thorpe character teaches a film class. He can ask the students to consider why it's always nighttime and raining. He can bond with investigating police detective Adam Arkin by answering whether it was Raymond Massey or Basil Rathbone in "The Pearl of Death." He can explain his initial reaction to Arkin's bombshell wife, Julia Campbell, by saying she looks like the cover of a 1943 Liberty magazine. The references are specific enough that they aren't just referential, they reflect and propel the story. And they're updated, too. "Don't worry," Macy confides to the creatively peeping camera (which even gets to play that subjective point-of- view trick from Robert Montgomery's noir gem "Lady in the Lake"). "I know this looks like a scene out of 'Notorious.' I'm not Claude Rains. I'm more like John Cassavetes in 'Rosemary's Baby."' No, he's more like William H. Macy, that treasure of indie films like "Fargo" (he played the scheming car salesman), "Boogie Nights" (Little Bill) and courtesy of Gramercy Pictures William . Macy, seen here in "Fargo," wrote the first script for "Slight Case." "Searching for Bobby Fischer", not to mention such TV turns as "ER" (Dr. Morgenstern) and "Bakersfield, PD." (the deranged cable system employee who took the captain hostage). Macy's greatness is that he's casually calculat- ing and comic, chaotic and calm, lik- able and loathable. Maybe it's that Midwestern face, exploited to its fullest in "Fargo," the red hair, blue eyes and pale skin of an ambiguous everyguy, who just happens in "Slight Case" to have committed a murder. Or was it an accident? Does it mat- ter? Macy does the movie thing anyway, and scrambles to conceal his contact with the victim. This, of course, snow- balls. Before long, he's playing "Columbo" by helping Arkin and his short-fuse partner, James Pickens Jr., try to solve the cranky case. Ah, but then there's James Cromwell, as that ever-too-present private eye. Cromwell's lanky figure - so pas- toral in "Babe," so loose-limbed in "Star Trek: First Contact" - is loom- ing here. Boy, does he wear a hat well. He's an ominous '40s refugee, whose office still has a transom over the doo . But blackmail sums have gone up, of course, to keep pace with inflation. Macy's whole '90s world has that new/vintage flavor..Cab driver Vincent Pastore (the beloved Pussy on "The Sopranos") is an old Warner Bros. sup- porting player, except he wants to cri- tique "L.A. Confidential" vs. "Titanic." (You know which wins.) Girlfriend Felicity Huffman ("Sport, Night," and Macy's wife) is watchi4* "The Thin Man" on TV when the sub- ject of That Murder comes up in bed between them. Yet - and this is the key - they behave in recognizably '90s ways. Except for Cromwell's outright homage, they're modern folks living an old story in a contemporary style. Arkin's cop, for instance, is much more laid-back than those boring-in officer. of old. And he's got a very contemporary hobby into which Macy gets roped. (No spoilers!) Besides that, one key twist involves spotting a central character on TV Another features dueling faxes. "This is hard!" confides Macy to his co-conspirators, who would be us. "I have a newfound respect for actors." And I have one for screenwriters, at least when they're this deft. "A Slighl Case of Murder" is a crackerjack sue penser and comedy. Moments of hilari- ty mix with several of true menace. You don't know whether to laugh or cringe at Macy's most outlandish efforts on his own behalf. Just when you think you know how far he'll go, he goes fur- ther - or retreats a few paces. "Now I'm the first to admit," he comments, "my moral position is a bit tenuous." But so is ours. Who're we cheerin for? Macy, the cutthroat critic? Really. His crimes are piling up. But he's taken us into his confidence. Arkin, the unyielding investigator? He's so stolid, so dull, so dumb. Or is he? The final twist is a doozy. Too bad this isn't "Columbo." I'm ready for next week's episode. it rt1 a r L 5? \ Are you waiting too long to make your copies? Come to Dollar BillOur automated self-serve copiers have many features designed to get your projects done quickly and efficiently. Without the wait. 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