Winter TCA: USAâs âGracelandâ tracks crime, not white jumpsuits
On USA network, nothing on âGracelandâ is what it seems.
For the network that boasts an open-door policy for characters, the larger-than-life persona of the King of Rock and Roll (Elvis Presley) will not be one of its new recruits when the networkâs new drama premieres this summer -- and thereâs no Vegas backdrop or the Memphis mansion either.
The drama, which comes from Jeff Eastin (the man behind the networkâs mainstay âWhite Collarâ), centers on a group of agents from the FBI, DEA and Customs who are shacked up in a drug dealerâs Manhattan Beach mansion that has been seized by the government (in the show, the drug dealer is a fan of the King -- hence the houseâs moniker and the showâs title).
âWithin [the houseâs] walls thereâs safety,â Eastin told reporters Monday during the showâs panel at the Television Critics Assn. press tour (coincidentally, a day before Presleyâs birthday). âFrom that idea came this sanctuary. And âGracelandâ flowed out of that.â
The series, inspired by a real-life group of undercover housemates living in Manhattan Beach, stars Daniel Sunjata (âRescue Meâ) and Aaron Tveit, who is fresh off his big screen role in âLes MisĂ©rablesâ as Enjolras (you know, âRed - the blood of angry men! / Black - the dark of ages pastâ).
Despite its beachside setting, the sunny skies take on a slightly neo-noir look. Eastin, who considers the âGracelandâ pilot the best script heâs written, said the series is a darker show than the networkâs other offerings. But he says the darker tone comes from reality, âwhereas âWhite Collarâ sort of creates its own realityâ -- a reality that has proved to be quite successful for the network.
âDefinitely, thereâs pressure,â Eastin said. âI think one thing I learned from âWhite Collarâ was to cast it right. Once the cast is set, itâs 90% of the battle.â
USA ushers in the new series just as it has cut ties with three others: âCommon Lawâ and âFairly Legalâ were canceled, and the network chose not to extend the life of the limited-series âPolitical Animals.â On Monday, the network announced it would bring back âNecessary Roughnessâ for a third season.
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