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12:16 pm - 12/19/2012

Elementary: Female Watson 'Started as a Joke'


Rob Doherty's choice to pair Jonny Lee Miller's Sherlock Holmes with a woman resulted in fall's No. 1 new series, and inclusion in THR's 2012 Rule Breakers portfolio.

"It started out as something of a joke," creator Rob Doherty confesses of his decision to make the Watson in his Sherlock Holmes tale a woman. When he began to research the story's original characters, he came across a handful of experts who had written up psychological assessments of Sherlock; one of them had noted an aversion to women.

"I thought to myself, 'What would make Holmes crazier than taking the figurative rock he has in Watson and making him a woman?' I scribbled it down and then went back to my research," the 38-year-old Elementary showrunner continues. "The more I thought about it, the more I wanted to try it."

The result: casting Asian-American film star Lucy Liu as the first female Watson opposite Jonny Lee Miller's Sherlock and an impressive 13.9 million viewers tuning in weekly, making Elementary the No. 1 new series with total viewers this fall. (Among the key 18-to-49 set, the series ranks No. 2 behind only NBC's breakout Revolution.) And come February, the CBS drama -- one of the season's few hits with critics and audiences alike -- will get the coveted post-Super Bowl slot.
The show's stars, Liu, 44, and Miller, 40, still are making sense of the series' success, particularly rewarding because the show colors outside the lines in a way that excites both of them.

"To me, one of the best things you can do in this profession is to take a risk," says Miller, whose co-star plays sober coach to his recovering-addict Sherlock. Liu says the tweak in formula can liberate the story in other ways as well: "There's an endless supply of unpredictability that we can delve into and we can change and add. It will still be a pound cake, but it could be marble, it could be lemon, it could be poppy seed."


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DELICIOUS VIDEO @ SRC
beesknees7 19th-Dec-2012 08:03 pm (UTC)
Godspeed. I marathoned DW a couple of months ago and the decline in quality was palpable. To go from the heights of S3&4 to the derivative shit casserole that was S5 was just....i can't. Luckily I had an awesome DW-stan pal who also thinks that Moffat is a total hack and kept me sane.
sarahvma 19th-Dec-2012 08:15 pm (UTC)
That's what I find so weird, though. People seem to stan like crazy for Tennant, but in talking to a lot of people I know who watch, they act as though the show is still consistently amazing.

So I'm not quite sure what to expect.
sherlockholmes 19th-Dec-2012 08:18 pm (UTC)
The show is a trainwreck for me ... I just can't...look...away.
beesknees7 19th-Dec-2012 08:22 pm (UTC)
Honestly, it became a chore to watch. I never even caught up completely because I couldn't give less of a fuck about Eleven or the Ponds. Maybe people who have been fans for a while or dig the show as an institution are more likely to not let the new direction bother them?

I'd give cash money to see Nine interact with Martha and Rose, but I wouldn't want to see someone like Moffat bring that to life.
sarahvma 19th-Dec-2012 09:25 pm (UTC)
That's what worries me about the upcoming 50th anniversary stuff. Eccleston sounds like he might actually be coming back now, but given what I've heard, I'm not sure I want Moffat to write him.
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