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Monk | |
---|---|
Season 3 | |
Starring | Tony ShalhoubBitty SchramTed LevineJason Gray-StanfordTraylor Howard |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 16 |
Release | |
Original network | USA Network |
Original release | June 18, 2004 – March 4, 2005 |
Season chronology | |
← Previous Season 2 | |
List of Monk episodes |
The third season of Monk originally aired in the United States on USA Network from June 18, 2004, to March 4, 2005. It consists of 16 episodes. Tony Shalhoub, Ted Levine, and Jason Gray-Stanford reprise their roles as the main characters, and Traylor Howard joins the cast. Bitty Schram left the show due to a contract dispute during the Winter hiatus. A DVD of the season was released on July 5, 2005.
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Crew[edit]
Andy Breckman continued his tenure as show runner. Executive producers for the season include Breckman and David Hoberman. NBC Universal Television Studio was the primary production company backing the show. Randy Newman's theme ('It's a Jungle Out There') continued to be used, while Jeff Beal's original instrumental theme can be heard in some episodes. Directors for the season include Randall Zisk, Jerry Levine, Michael Zinberg, and Andrei Belgrader. Zisk received an Emmy award-nomination for his work on 'Mr. Monk Takes His Medicine.' Writers for the season included Andy Breckman, David Breckman, Lee Goldberg, William Rabkin, Joe Toplyn, Daniel Dratch, Hy Conrad, and Tom Scharpling.
Cast[edit]
Tony Shalhoub returned as the titular character and OCD detective, Adrian Monk. Ted Levine and Jason Gray-Stanford reprised their roles as Captain Leland Stottlemeyer and Lieutenant Randall 'Randy' Disher, respectively. Bitty Schram portrayed Monk's nurse, Sharona Fleming, for the first half of the season, but left due to a contract dispute. Traylor Howard was then cast as Natalie Teeger in a main role as Monk's new assistant. Andy Breckman, the show's creator, stated, 'I will always be grateful to Traylor because she came in when the show was in crisis and saved our baby [....] We had to make a hurried replacement, and not every show survives that. I was scared to death.'[1]
Guest stars for season three are in even more abundance than the previous two. Stanley Kamel reprised his role as Monk's psychiatrist, Dr. Charles Kroger, in nine episodes, while Kane Ritchotte continued to play Benjy Fleming, Sharona's son. Emmy Clarke entered the series as Julie Teeger (Natalie's daughter), and Melora Hardin returned as Monk's beloved deceased wife, Trudy Monk. Tim Bagley made his first two appearances as Harold Krenshaw, Monk's main rival. Jarrad Paul portrays Kevin Dorfman, Monk's annoying upstairs neighbor, while Glenne Headly continues to portray Karen Stottlemeyer, the captain's wife. Other guest stars for the season include Brooke Adams, Scott Adsit, Kelly Albanese, Amy Aquino, Moon Bloodgood, James Brolin, Emma Caulfield, Jonathan Chase, Maree Cheatham, Enrico Colantoni, Frank Collison, Alicia Coppola, Carmen Electra, Patrick Fischler, Rosemary Forsyth, Sutton Foster, Neil Giuntoli, Michael A. Goorjian, Parker Goris, Harry Groener, Eileen Grubba, Saverio Guerra, Bob Gunton, Philip Baker Hall, John Michael Higgins, Rick Hoffman, James Intveld, Sung Kang, Chris Kennedy, Edward Kerr, Korn, Lance Krall, Olek Krupa, Mako, Ken Marino, John Maynard, Larry Miller, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Glenn Morshower, Lochlyn Munro, Niecy Nash, Arthel Neville, Patrick Thomas O'Brien, Raymond O'Connor, Nick Offerman, Faith Prince, David Purdham, Judge Reinhold, Mark Sheppard, Nick Spano, Josh Stamberg, Nicole Sullivan, Alanna Ubach, Jill Wagner, Michael Weston, Mykelti Williamson, Adam Wylie, and Rachel Zeskind. The band Korn also makes an appearance.
Episodes[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | U.S. viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 | 1 | 'Mr. Monk Takes Manhattan' | Randall Zisk | Andy Breckman | June 18, 2004 | 5.54[2] | |
Monk, Sharona, Stottlemeyer, and Disher fly to New York in order to pursue a lead in Trudy's murder. They are sidetracked into helping the NYPD solve the shooting death of a foreign ambassador in a hotel lobby and a mugging in Central Park, with Monk briefly getting lost in the city as he ponders the importance of a wet overcoat. Once the cases are solved, he meets with Warrick Tennyson (Frank Collison), who admits that he was paid to build the bomb that killed Trudy by a man with six fingers on one hand. | |||||||
31 | 2 | 'Mr. Monk and the Panic Room' | Jerry Levine | David Breckman and Joe Toplyn | June 25, 2004 | 4.70[2] | |
The police find a music producer shot to death in the locked panic room of his own mansion and his pet chimpanzee holding the murder weapon. Sharona steals the animal from police custody to keep it from being euthanized and stashes it at Monk's house, driving him to distraction as he tries to work out how the victim's wife (Carmen Electra) might be involved. | |||||||
32 | 3 | 'Mr. Monk and the Blackout' | Michael Zinberg | Daniel Dratch and Hy Conrad | July 9, 2004 | 4.55[3] | |
A bombing at a power plant leads to a citywide blackout in which three people die, and the prime suspect is an activist who has apparently been dead for nine years. The case is further complicated by a second bombing and blackout, the death of a protester (Judge Reinhold) at a construction site, and a power company spokeswoman (Alicia Coppola) who takes a romantic interest in Monk. | |||||||
33 | 4 | 'Mr. Monk Gets Fired' | Andrei Belgrader | Peter Wolk | July 16, 2004 | 4.68[4] | |
Nursing an old grudge against Monk, the new police commissioner (Saverio Guerra) revokes his private detective license and fires him from his consultant's position with the SFPD. Monk is devastated, but still cannot resist trying to find the connection between the discovery of a woman's limbless torso, a case of arson at a wig shop, and two attempts to steal the commissioner's hat. | |||||||
34 | 5 | 'Mr. Monk Meets the Godfather' | Michael Zinberg | Lee Goldberg and William Rabkin | July 23, 2004 | 4.73[4] | |
A mob boss's nephew is killed in a shooting at a barbershop, prompting him to turn to Monk for help in finding the culprit. Reluctantly taking the case at the behest of an FBI agent (Rick Hoffman), Monk is drawn into a brewing mob war and must figure out how a missing gumball machine and a report of valuable coins missing from the United States Mint tie into the crime. | |||||||
35 | 6 | 'Mr. Monk and the Girl Who Cried Wolf' | Jerry Levine | Hy Conrad | July 30, 2004 | 5.40[5] | |
Plagued by repeated visions of a man with a bloody knife in his chest and a screwdriver jammed in his ear, Sharona begins to think she is having a mental breakdown. She takes some time off and hires a temporary replacement (Niecy Nash) who quickly grates on Monk's nerves, but all three are soon drawn into a murder based on a story Sharona has written. | |||||||
36 | 7 | 'Mr. Monk and the Employee of the Month' | Scott Foley | Ross Abrash | August 6, 2004 | 5.77[6] | |
When the longtime Employee of the Month at a local department store dies, Monk's former partner (Enrico Colantoni) – fired from the SFPD for allegedly stealing drugs from the evidence room and now in charge of store security – calls him in to determine if the death was a murder. Monk starts working at the store in order to figure out whether and why any of the other employees may have wanted the victim dead. | |||||||
37 | 8 | 'Mr. Monk and the Game Show' | Randall Zisk | Daniel Dratch | August 13, 2004 | 4.85[7] | |
While Sharona is out of town, Trudy's father Dwight (Bob Gunton) invites Monk and Kevin Dorfman to Los Angeles to look into his suspicions of cheating on a game show that he produces. The trip revives Monk's bittersweet memories of Trudy as he ponders the death of the assistant to the show's host (John Michael Higgins) and unearths evidence of blackmail and murder. Tony Shalhoub is the only main cast member to appear in this episode, as the others were involved in contract disputes at the time. | |||||||
38 | 9 | 'Mr. Monk Takes His Medicine' | Randall Zisk | Tom Scharpling and Chuck Sklar | August 20, 2004 | 5.88[6] | |
The SFPD launches a citywide manhunt after Stottlemeyer is shot and wounded on the job with a gun belonging to a woman who has just committed suicide. Feeling overwhelmed by his OCD, Monk starts taking a new medication to control his symptoms, but it causes a drastic personality change and hinders his ability to find a connection between the two incidents. Final regular-series appearance of Bitty Schram as Sharona Fleming. | |||||||
39 | 10 | 'Mr. Monk and the Red Herring' | Randall Zisk | Andy Breckman | January 21, 2005 | 5.50[8] | |
Now that Sharona has moved back to New Jersey and remarried her ex-husband, Monk needs to find a new assistant. He discovers that bartender Natalie Teeger might be perfect for the job, but must first figure out why two men who recently broke into her house - one of whom she killed in self-defense - were trying to steal her daughter Julie's pet fish. First appearance of Traylor Howard as Natalie Teeger. | |||||||
40 | 11 | 'Mr. Monk vs. the Cobra' | Anthony R. Palmieri | Joe Toplyn | January 28, 2005 | 4.10[9] | |
The author of an unflattering book about a martial arts movie star is murdered in his own home, and evidence at the scene seems to implicate the star - who has supposedly been dead for six years. Monk's working relationship with Natalie and his life both come into danger as he tries to find the common thread linking this crime to an unsolved jewel robbery. | |||||||
41 | 12 | 'Mr. Monk Gets Cabin Fever' | Jerry Levine | Hy Conrad | February 4, 2005 | 5.00[9] | |
When Monk witnesses a gang murder, an FBI agent (Josh Stamberg) puts him into the United States Federal Witness Protection Program to keep him safe until he can testify against the shooter. Taking shelter at a remote cabin in the woods, and accompanied by Natalie and Stottlemeyer, Monk becomes convinced that a woman in a nearby cabin has killed her husband. Meanwhile, Disher begins dating a woman (Moon Bloodgood) who convinces him that fortune cookies can predict the future. | |||||||
42 | 13 | 'Mr. Monk Gets Stuck in Traffic' | Jerry Levine | Tom Scharpling and Joe Toplyn | February 11, 2005 | 5.02[10] | |
Monk, Natalie, and Julie get caught in a huge traffic jam caused by an overturned car with a dead body behind the wheel. Making the acquaintance of a down-and-out lawyer (Larry Miller) and receiving an unexpected tip from the band Korn, Monk uncovers a feud between an environmental activist and a construction company owner that may have led to murder. | |||||||
43 | 14 | 'Mr. Monk Goes to Vegas' | Randall Zisk | Tom Scharpling, David Breckman, Daniel Dratch, and Joe Toplyn | February 18, 2005 | 5.40[11] | |
Stottlemeyer drunkenly calls Monk from Las Vegas during a friend's bachelor party, claiming to have proof that a millionaire casino owner (James Brolin) murdered his wife. Monk and Natalie arrive to find him badly hung over, with no memory of what he did at the party or why he thought he had solved the case, and must also stop Disher from going broke at the blackjack table. | |||||||
44 | 15 | 'Mr. Monk and the Election' | Allison Liddi | Nell Scovell | February 25, 2005 | 4.85[12] | |
Natalie's campaign for a seat on the school board is marred first by a sniper attack on her campaign headquarters, which barely misses her and leaves a security guard dead, and later by a grenade thrown through her living room window. Suspicion falls first on Harold Krenshaw (Tim Bagley), Natalie's opponent and another of Dr. Kroger's patients, but Monk suspects that the culprit's motive may go beyond local politics. | |||||||
45 | 16 | 'Mr. Monk and the Kid' | Andrei Belgrader | Tom Scharpling | March 4, 2005 | 4.44[13] | |
Stottlemeyer calls Monk in to investigate when a toddler finds a freshly severed human finger in a park. Monk surprises everyone by volunteering to take the boy into temporary foster care, and determines that the finger belongs to a kidnapped concert violinist who is being held for ransom. |
Unfilmed episodes[edit]
One episode that was written but never filmed for the first half of season 3 would have been an episode called 'Mr. Monk Is At Sea'. The premise would have been that Monk and Sharona would investigate a murder committed on a cruise ship. A script was made for the episode, but it was never filmed because no cruise line was willing to loan a ship to the production crew to use for shooting, out of sensitivity to the idea of murders being committed on-board or people falling overboard. They refused to budge even when the victim count was reduced and the killer's identity was changed. This script became considered the series' 'white whale' or 126th episode. It only came to light in early 2014, when it was rewritten and published by Hy Conrad as Mr. Monk Gets on Board, which maintains most of the original plot, but substitutes Natalie for Sharona, and adds in a subplot involving a book collector.[citation needed]
Awards and nominations[edit]
Emmy Awards[edit]
- Outstanding Actor - Comedy Series (Tony Shalhoub, won)
- Outstanding Directing - Comedy Series (Randall Zisk for 'Mr. Monk Takes His Medicine', nominated)
Golden Globe Awards[edit]
- Best Actor - Musical or Comedy Series (Tony Shalhoub, nominated)
Screen Actors Guild[edit]
- Outstanding Actor - Comedy Series (Tony Shalhoub, won)
References[edit]
- ^Kaufman, Joanne (January 9, 2009). 'Here's What Happened: How Natalie Rescued Monk'. The Wall Street Journal. News Corp. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
- ^ abFitzgerald, Toni (June 30, 2004). 'Monk, tics and all, is USA's main man'. Media Life Magazine. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ^Romano, Allison (July 13, 2004). 'USA's Missing Persons Find Big Audience'. Broadcasting & Cable. NewBay Media. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
- ^ abFitzgerald, Toni (July 29, 2004). 'July's hot cable surprise: Nick at Nite'. Media Life Magazine. Archived from the original on April 18, 2015. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ^Romano, Allison (August 3, 2004). 'USA Records Dramatic Victory'. Broadcasting & Cable. NewBay Media. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
- ^ abFitzgerald, Toni (September 9, 2004). 'In a rainy August, a hotter FX Network'. Media Life Magazine. Archived from the original on April 18, 2015. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ^Romano, Allison (August 17, 2004). 'USA Gets Cable Ratings Gold'. Broadcasting & Cable. NewBay Media. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
- ^Becker, Anne (January 25, 2005). 'Monk Debut Tops Cable'. Broadcasting & Cable. NewBay Media. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
- ^ ab'Development Update: February 9'. The Futon Critic. February 9, 2005. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
- ^Vasquez, Diego (February 16, 2005). 'For NBC, it's also the little blunders'. Media Life Magazine. Archived from the original on April 18, 2015. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ^Becker, Anne (February 23, 2005). 'TNT Shines with All-Stars'. Broadcasting & Cable. NewBay Media. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
- ^'Cable Series by Total Households: week of 02/21/05-02/27/05'. Zap2it. Tribune Media Services. Archived from the original on March 7, 2005. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
- ^'Cable Series by Total Households: week of 02/28/05-03/06/05'. Zap2it. Tribune Media Services. Archived from the original on March 14, 2005. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
The Casino is one of the greatest movies about Las Vegas directed by Martin Scorsese. This iconic movie, released in 1995, tells the story of two mobsters who are the best friends and who try to create their own casino empire. The most exciting thing is that the plot is based on a true story ofFrank “Lefty” Rosenthal (played by Robert De Niro) and his real-life gangster friend Tony Spilotro (played by Joe Pesci). But there isn’t the only interesting fact about the movie Casino. Here are 10 little-known and peculiar facts about the Casino.
- Before filming the Casino, Robert De Niro met the man on whom his character – Sam Rothstein – is based. He met with Frank Rosenthal in person.
- Not many people know that the Tangiers casino didn’t really exist. Unlike such real casinos as the Venetian Macao in China, Yebo Casino for South Africa or Foxwoods Resort Casino in Connecticut, the Tangiers casino was just a fiction. But the film was shot in a real, operating casino called the Riviera.
- Frank Rosenthal ran the Stardust and was a former executive at that casino. This fact was well documented in Vegas history books. So, Martin Scorsese decided to highlight this fact via the soundtrack. The track “Stardust” is heard three times throughout the film.
- Due to the fact that Robert De Niro’s character was a chain smoker, he constantly had to hold the cigarettes the same distance from the lit end in order to avoid the continuity issues. So, Sam Rothstein’s cigarettes lengths never appear to change throughout the movie.
- According to Frank Rosenthal, the worst scene of the Casino was when Sam was juggling. He really hated it because he claimed that on the Frank Rosenthal TV Show he never juggled and thought this scene made him look foolish.
- The actress Claudia Haro, who played Trudy, the co-host/bandleader “Ace’s High”, was Joe Pesci’s wife in real life.
- The most eye-catching gold and white beaded gown in which Sharon Stone appears during the casino scene weighted 45 pounds.
- There were 7,000 extras in the Casino movie. 120 of these extras had speaking parts.
- Sam Rothstein’s attorney, Oscar Goodman, is a lawyer in real life and he actually defended several mobsters from Las Vegas. Besides, in 1999, he became Mayor of Las Vegas.
Casino Cast Trudy
- The costume budget of the Casino was about $1 million. Robert De Niro changed 70 various costumes throughout the film, Sharon Stone changed 40 outfits. After the shoot, they both were allowed to keep their costumes.
5 Casino Fun Facts
- Most dialogues between Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci were absolutely improvised. The director just told them where to start and where to end.
- Joe Pesci re-broke the same rib during the filming of the Casino that had been broken 15 years earlier during the filming of the Raging Bull.
- James Woods so wanted to be in the movie directed by Martin Scorsese, so when he heard that the famous director was interested in working with him, he called the Scorsese’s office immediately and said that he was ready to start “any time, any place, any part, any fee”.
- Sharon Stone could meet Martin Scorsese only on the third occasion. Her first two auditions were canceled by the director for different mundane reasons. She decided not to try a third time and go out with her friend instead. But the director of the Casino found Sheron at the restaurant where she was dining with her friend and made her a personal appeal.
- According to the producers of the Casino, the most difficult thing about filming this masterpiece was finding those people who could tell them how to cheat in the casino.
Cast Of The Movie Casino
3 Interesting Facts about Casino Movies
The Casino certainly is the most memorable casino-themed movie, but not the only one. For the fans of themovies about gambling and casinos, here are the top 3 casino films in addition to the Casino and most interesting facts about them.
Full Cast Of Casino
- The Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas directed by Terry William has become a cult classic movie. Despite the fact that this movie describes the casino life of Las Vegas, very little of the movie was really shot in Las Vegas.
Cast Of Casino Tv Show
- Being one of the most popular casino films ever made, the Ocean’s Eleven was produced on a budget of $80 million and was the fifth highest grossing film the year of its release, raked in $450.7 million in the box office.
Cast From Casino
- The Casino Royale (2006) is an updated casino movie which describes some new ways of gambling with the help of Mobile Casinos. Amazingly, but it took almost six weeks to film the Parkour chase at the beginning of the movie and Daniel Craig lost two of his front teeth when filming a fight scene in Prague.