The public risks and private turmoil faced by LA’s first responders are at the core of Ryan Murphy’s new Fox series “9-1-1” — his first straightforward procedural since he launched “Nip/Tuck” in the days before he ruled television.
The drama series stars Angela Bassett, Connie Britton and Peter Krause as coordinating members of the city’s emergency services team and showcases each of these well-known, charismatic performers in a new way.
Bassett, who embraced everything from voodoo queen Marie Laveau to three-breasted circus freak-show attraction Desiree Dupree on Murphy’s “American Horror Story,” plays LA police sergeant Athena Grant, who crosses paths with Britton’s 911 operator Abby Clark and Krause’s Bobby Nash, a firefighting paramedic who goes to confession to ease his conscience when he’s lost somebody.
“People always marvel at the bravery of first responders, the true heroes in our culture,” says Murphy. “This show really is: ‘What is your emergency?’ But we’re referring to the callers and the people handling them. We don’t go into the operating room or into the hospital. I thought that was a clear narrative line to follow.”
Bassett wears a tailored police uniform as she zips around in her cop car, but we also see her at home in more relaxed attire as Athena deals with a life-changing announcement made by her husband, Michael (Rockmond Dunbar). “We have action sequences that take an inordinate amount of time [to film] because of the safety involved and then you have these wonderful actor scenes,” says Bassett. “You hope the tone has a seriousness, some levity and some strange, quirky fun in there as well. [It’s the] gumbo Ryan likes.”
“9-1-1” also has one of the sleekest firehouses ever seen on TV, but Murphy insists it’s not a triumph of set design over reality.
“It’s not your father’s firehouse,” he says. “It seems outlandish and fantasy-like, but … it’s based on a real firehouse in Pasadena. I wanted to do something that’s more contemporary and modern that’s also based on fact.