"New Amsterdam" premieres next week on FOX with two new episodes airing Tuesday, March 4th at 9:00PM ET/PT and Thursday, March 6th at 9:00PM ET/PT. Both episodes air immediately after American Idol.
07/23/2007 - Nikolaj Coster-Waldau - FOX TCA All Star Party at the Pier - Santa Monica Pier, Pacific Park - Santa Monica, CA © Chris Hatcher / PR Photos
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, star of the series New Amsterdam, took time out to speak to a group of online journalists about his new show:
Did you enjoy filming the flashback sequences?
N. Coster-Waldau : Some of the flashback scenes I really enjoyed. I guess it was a change, but also, it’s always great with a character who has a lot of secrets, and this guy has truckloads.
For example, in the first episode, we find out that he is a member of AA, and then four episodes later, we find out how he joined AA. That was a great show to make. Yes, it was a lot of fun to go back in time, but also, still, running down the streets as a New York detective wasn’t too bad either.
Has FOX been receptive to "New Amsterdam"?
N. Coster-Waldau : I can only speculate. I think I sense that there’s an enthusiasm growing, and when they saw was David Madison delivered, they got really excited. That’s my gut feeling. I think they do support it a lot and also by getting us those two American Idol slots. That is pretty good, to say it’s great.
Is it a drama? Is it sci fi? What genre would you classify this show?
N. Coster-Waldau : It’s a combination I think. I think that’s what we’re trying to use flavors of each are. We go back and forth in time in each show, so there is a big element of sci-fi in it.
What would you make of being able to live for hundreds of years?
N. Coster-Waldau : That’s a good question. I think anxiety would kick in a little sooner, and fear. I guess John Amsterdam is a little lucky. He’s lucky the way he happens to be blessed or cursed in New York. Doing this show, of course, I’ve been reading a lot on the history of New York, and its breathtaking the amount of events that have unfolded in this city. So, I’m not sure he’s been bored.
What attracted you to this role?
N. Coster-Waldau : I liked the script. I heard the concept first and I was a little, does this mean I have to have false teeth and all, but then I read the script and I really liked it. You know that feeling. I went up in the attic the other day and I found old notebooks that I wrote when I was in my teens, and it was funny, because I kind of recognized the guy, but still, he was someone else.
To have a character here, John Amsterdam, where you get to go back in his life, and you go back a long time and you have to find the common ground, like 100 years ago, for example, he was working as a coachman and there was a whole different set of social circumstances. To do that every week was just intriguing, and it’s been really interesting to make some choices that, of course, the audience would still recognize John and John Amsterdam, but also make sure that it made sense that he was who he was at that given time.
Then, on top of that, of course, for the pilot, I’ve been a fan of Lasse Hallstrom a long time. When I found out he was doing the pilot, that was also a big draw, and they offered me the part. That’s a big part.
What has you schedule been like with the interruption of the strike?
N. Coster-Waldau : We finished shooting the last episode three days before the strike started, and then I did my last work, sound-wise, in December, so it hasn’t been that long. Of course, early in May, we were told it was a fall show, so, of course, we were pushed back to mid-season, but yes, it’s been a long way, but it’s only on Tuesday. That’s all that really matters to me.
What are the challenges and the rigors of doing a show like this?
N. Coster-Waldau : There were some surprises. Of course, the workload, before you tried it you can’t really imagine. I’d never done television before, so you work hard and you work long hours, but I had such a good time. The part is, because, I think, of the mix of stories in a way. We have the crime stories, and you have the ongoing love story throughout the show, and then you have the flashbacks. It was always exciting to go to work, because you knew there were some great scenes to do every day, and nothing really felt the same.
I guess a thing that surprised me is how alike it is, and, of course, you shoot faster, but people that do television, do movies, you get the same sense of team spirit, which is really rewarding. I think I’ve experienced it in every film set I’ve ever been on really that there’s just something unique about it.
How does the show progress?
N. Coster-Waldau : I think it did change a bit from the first pilot. Then we did some re-shoots, once we got picked up. Then, of course, this show evolves, and I think there’s a truth in the way that the series takes a while to really understand what a show can do. I think we discovered in the last three or four episodes, more and more where we could take the show, and what we could achieve with going back and forth in time with the love story. So, yes, it does. It’s the same guy, more or less. It’s the same basic story, but the way we tell it does change a bit.
Who is John and what does he want in life?
N. Coster-Waldau : I think what he wants is some kind of normality, and also experience what it’s like to be with someone, to have a relationship that lasts and to grow old with someone. I think that’s the biggest dream he has, to actually spend his life with one person and have a family and to be able to be there for his children, and also when they grow up.
All of that has been something he’s only been able to watch at a distance. I don’t think he sees it as a loss, but of course, I think that’s one of the things that would be interesting to examine is basically, be careful what you wish for.
If this is really what he wants, how will that affect him if he actually does become mortal? It will affect the way he performs his job as a homicide detective, that’s for sure.
What do you think about immortality?
N. Coster-Waldau : I think immortality is if there’s one thing that unites all of us, it’s the fact that were dying, and for a lot of us, I think myself included, you look at he idea of death with some anxiety and fear. Of course, immortality, I guess it’s always been part of literature.
We’ve had that forever really, using what would it be like. What if we were immortal, what could we do, time travel and all that stuff?
I think it’s like with anything you do in a dramatic context. You use something that enables you and gives you some freedom to tell a story in a different way. Here it gives us the freedom to go back and explore, first of all, the history of New York, but also that whole thing about learning from your past mistakes.
That’s very much what John does, and I guess that’s what I wish I would be able to do more. He’s able to remember and able to look back and see, well, that happened then, how can that affect my life or my work now.
What about your co-stars?
Zuleikha Robinson
N. Coster-Waldau : Yes. My partner, Eva Marquez, is played by Zuleikha Robinson, who is a British actress, whose been living in Los Angeles for ten years, I think. She’s great. She was in the movie 'The Namesake', and 'Rome', and I don’t know her CV. She’s a great actress.
Then there’s the guy who plays Omar, Stephen Henderson. He’s just a wonderful man. He’s done a lot of stage work in New York. He plays my best friend. He plays the one guy in the show who knows my secret, and he’s really the guy who is very important for the show to work, because he gives the audience the information they need by being able for me to be honest with this guy.
Then, of course, there is Alexie Gilmore, who plays the girl I think is the one. She’s done loads of great work. I know she did the movie that’s coming out later with Matthew McConaughey.
I was very lucky to get to work with those guys, and also, I heard it before when they say that the reason that some shows shot in New York have great supporting casts, and it really is true. I was amazed, because I’ve tried a number of times myself to come on a show or a movie and have three or four days. It’s always difficult, and these guys, they just nailed it. I was really impressed.
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