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IR Interview: Zachary Quinto & Tamberla Perry For “Brilliant Minds” [NBC]
The Inside Reel
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9/22/2024
Actors Zachary Quinto and Tamberla Perry talk to The Inside Reel about approach, tone, perspective, empathy and energy in regards to their new drama series on NBC: “Brilliant Minds”.
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TV
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00:00
And it's interesting to see the dynamic of perspective and perception.
00:25
Could you talk about that element of both for Dr. Pierce looking at Dr. Wolfe,
00:31
but as Dr. Wolfe, looking at the idea of his perspective and perception
00:36
because of his issues, but also his strengths?
00:41
Right. Yeah, good question. I mean, look, the mind is the last unknown frontier. Consciousness
00:49
and the subjective human experience, I think, is something that there are endless revelations and
00:57
surprises that unfold in the human mind and in the human experience. And so our show is really
01:05
dealing with that, right? We're dramatizing neurological disorders, diseases, conditions,
01:10
and injuries for which oftentimes there is no cure, there is no fix. So the patients that we
01:15
meet on our show are never going to return to a sense of normal as they might have known it before.
01:22
But Oliver Wolfe is motivated in just the same way that Oliver Sacks was by understanding how we can
01:28
evolve and adapt beyond those adversities and beyond challenges that many people might consider
01:34
insurmountable. Oliver Sacks never considered these challenges insurmountable. He always was
01:42
driven by an insatiable desire to understand the human mind, to understand his patients, and to
01:49
always find for them and with them a sense of dignity and a sense of purpose and ideally a
01:55
sense of joy in life. And one of his favorite quotes was, ask not what disease a patient has,
02:00
ask what patient the disease has. Who is the person, where is the person, and how can I as a doctor
02:07
find them and help them find themselves again? And so that's really what we're exploring on
02:13
Brilliant Minds. And my hope is that as entertaining as the show might be, that it
02:19
also has some substance and some meaning and that audiences can come to these stories and see
02:26
themselves in them and feel maybe motivated and inspired in a way that they didn't necessarily
02:33
expect when they stay tuned after The Voice on Monday nights at 10 p.m. on NBC.
03:04
It's another coping mechanism? Well, it's not the worst thing we'll smell today.
03:09
And here is your office. I'm right down the hall. Just like in med school. Except now we're
03:16
prescribing drugs instead of taking them. Speak for yourself. It's about the details.
03:22
Tamara, could you talk about that? Because the thing is, it's about how everybody else also
03:27
interacts with this character of Dr. Wolfe. And, you know, the aspect of what understanding
03:33
versus acceptance means. Because you don't have to understand to accept. Could you talk about
03:38
that notion of her approach? Because she has such a history with him all the way back into,
03:43
obviously, med school. That's right. Carol is the chief of psychology based off of a real-life
03:51
person as well, Carol E. Burnett, who was a longtime friend, loyalist, and colleague of
03:57
Oliver Wolfe. So when Carol Pierce, my character, recruits him to this hospital, she knows that,
04:05
you know, he's a bit of a work in progress and that people may not accept his methods of medicine.
04:12
But she also knows that he is literally going to do whatever he can, including stepping into the
04:18
shoes of his patients to figure out what's going on with them. And that was her goal,
04:26
to create this team, this dream team of neuropsychology, even though she knew
04:31
going into this relationship, bringing him in, that it might be problematic for some.
04:37
But I think that's one of the things that she loves about him, is that he is not going to,
04:41
he is vigilant in finding out what is going on with his patients, where other people may have
04:46
deemed them hopeless or helpless. He's not going to stop until he figures it out.
05:16
But it's also about placing, you know, your people in it, both you as characters,
05:45
but also the people around you in that world. That's why, you know, obviously, whether you're
05:49
talking about the first episode, second episode, third episode, it's about meeting people where
05:53
they are, which is sort of interesting, plus the idea of teaching, because as you're being mentored,
05:59
you're mentoring other people. That's why sort of the intern structure really works both for humor
06:04
and for irony, but also for dramatic content. Could you sort of talk about that and finding
06:10
that balance of energy? And I know Zach, we've talked about this before with other projects,
06:13
but can you talk about that?
06:14
Yeah, absolutely. Well, first of all, the interns, this collection of younger actors who are just so
06:22
talented and wonderful, Ashley Lathrop, Alex McNichols, Spence Moore II, and Ari Krebs,
06:29
who play the young doctors on the show. I have never in my career met four actors who more
06:36
easily and organically embody the quality of the characters that they're playing, the qualities of
06:40
the characters that they're playing. It's uncanny, actually. And so there is this immediate
06:47
authenticity to who those characters are in the world of the show, because they're so similar to
06:51
the people that they are in real life. And also, the ways in which what the patients that we
06:58
encounter experiencing reflect back on the doctors who are treating them. So the cases and the
07:04
stories that the doctors on the show encounter with their patients also have reverberations for
07:10
the way that the doctors interact with one another, and all of the personal stories that
07:14
are the overarching narratives that we explore through the course of the season. So that, to me,
07:20
is also something that Michael Grassi, our incredible, talented, and amazing showrunner,
07:26
was able to capture and very kind of subtly thread through the narrative of the whole
07:34
first season arc. So I think that's something that is unique about the show, and something
07:39
that makes it all the more fun to play, because we do meet these patients pretty much on a weekly
07:44
basis and get to learn. I mean, I can't tell you how many scripts I read early in the season where
07:49
I was like, okay, well, that's made up. You know, that didn't really happen, and that isn't really
07:52
possible. But as we discussed a minute ago, the brain and the mind are so endlessly fascinating,
07:59
and there's no depth to the abyss of what that part of our body is capable of. And so all of
08:07
it is real. All of the cases, all of the disorders and diseases and injuries and conditions are real.
08:14
And so the way that those are catalysts for conversations and deepening dynamics in the
08:23
relationship of the doctors, I think, is also a really interesting aspect of Brilliant Minds.
08:28
Pierce, why is my patient getting an MRI? Nichols, this is Dr. Wolfe, our new neuro
08:33
attending. Of course, I've heard a lot about you. I haven't heard about you. Nichols is our chair of
08:41
neurosurgery. He performed a procedure on Hannah. Who hasn't had a single seizure since I operated,
08:46
so why are you... Yes, but you did turn her into the woman who snubs her kids. It's expected post-op
08:52
brain edema. She'll be back to normal in a week. That's unlikely. She has severe selective emotional
08:56
detachment. It wasn't my job to make her a good mother. It was my job to cure epilepsy, and I
09:00
succeeded. But by all means, keep wasting your time and hospital resources. Do I ever have to
09:09
talk to him again? Yes. Unfortunately, your new job requires working with people who won't always
09:14
recognize your genius. And my last question to you guys, thank you very much. It's about the
09:19
power of the human spirit. The thing is, it's great to see something positive, people
09:25
adversity, but you also still have the empathy and the compassion. That's why seeing,
09:30
Zachary, your character reflect on childhood, because everything comes from childhood.
09:36
Everything's reflected. Can you both talk about that? Because that's what made these people
09:42
who they are and who they continue to be and continue to evolve to.
09:47
Yeah, I'll just say, and then I'll shut up because I've done too much of the talking here,
09:50
but I've definitely played a lot of darker characters in my career. And I think people
09:57
know me for some of the more indelible villains that I've played in my journey as an actor. And
10:03
so at this moment, both in my personal evolution and my own life, but also in this moment,
10:10
culturally, socially and politically in our world, I feel so deeply grateful to be a part of a story
10:17
that is actually putting positivity, optimism and hope into the world and something that is
10:24
coming from a place of compassion and sensitivity. It's deeply personal for me and it's deeply
10:32
gratifying for me. And I hope it's something that people are excited about seeing from me
10:38
because I think it's new and probably a little bit unexpected.
10:43
The one thing I wanted to add, Tim, is that I think Zach may have been touched on it,
10:46
is that you're not going to come week to week and see cases where people are coming in
10:52
the beginning of the episode with a thing wrong with them and then walking out at the end of the
10:56
episode fixed or dead because the fix didn't work. Our patients, there are several of them
11:05
that are recurs. So we see them week to week because we are working on adaptability into
11:12
the real world, into finding out the root of what is going on with you is what our show is about,
11:20
which is just so important because mental health is such a hot topic right now in conversation.
11:26
People are more transparent than ever about what's going on with them.
11:29
So our show, I like to say that our show is out here saving lives. People are seeing themselves
11:36
in our characters, in our patients, as well as their doctors. And we want this to be a place
11:42
where people can come and watch and see themselves, feel seen and know that there is,
11:48
it's a hopeful show. You don't have to stay in whatever state. There is
11:53
someone who is as dedicated to you as Oliver Sacks was to his patients.
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