Close Menu
    Monsoon News
    • Search Page
    • Bollywood
    • Exclusives
    • TV Shows
    • Movies
    • Privacy Policy
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms of Use
      • Cookie Privacy Policy
      • DMCA
      • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Monsoon News
    Home»Exclusives»How Should the Show Deal With It?
    Exclusives

    How Should the Show Deal With It?

    adminBy adminMay 23, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit WhatsApp Email

    When last we left Tom Hardy in the season one finale of MobLand, he was slumped in a chair with a butcher knife sticking out of his chest.

    Turns out, more than a few people on that show may have had reason to leave it there.

    Hardy, of course, plays Harry Da Souza, the reluctant fixer for mob boss couple Conrad and Maeve Harrigan — Pierce Brosnan and Helen Mirren — in Paramount+’s gritty London underworld drama. Or at least he did. Reportedly, Hardy exited the series shortly after it wrapped its upcoming second season, following long-simmering friction with the showrunners over lateness, script disputes and clashes over the series’ shift toward a more ensemble approach. He will not be appearing in a third season, assuming there is one.

    That leaves MobLand’s makers with a problem — what to do with the body.

    It’s an awkward spot, but television has been here before, plenty of times. Usually when an actor in a major role skedaddles a series in mid-stream — because of firings, feuds, contract fights, health crises or creative flameouts — the show finds a way to go on. Sometimes they simply kill off the character by pushing him in front of a train (take a bow, Charlie Sheen), sometimes they pull a Darrin (looking at you, Dick Sargent), sometimes they just send them upstairs never to be heard from again (remember Gavan O’Herlihy?).

    Below, a brief history of emergency exits.

    KILL ‘EM AND CARRY ON

    When a star becomes too much trouble, television’s most time-honored solution is also its most satisfying: kill them. On Two and a Half Men, Charlie Sheen’s Charlie Harper got pushed in front of a Paris train by his stalker girlfriend. On Valerie, Valerie Harper’s character was killed in a car crash — and then, just to rub it in, the show was renamed The Hogan Family and Sandy Duncan moved into her house. On The Conners, Roseanne Barr’s Roseanne Conner died of an opioid overdose — about five minutes after Barr fired off a racist tweet. And when McLean Stevenson decided he was too big for M*A*S*H after season three, Colonel Henry Blake’s helicopter was shot down over the Sea of Japan on the way home from the war. Stevenson went on to star in a string of failed sitcoms. The show ran eight more seasons.

    MEET THE NEW DARRIN

    Then again, murder isn’t for everyone. The gentler option: keep the character, swap out the actor, and trust that the audience won’t notice — or won’t care. Dick York spent five seasons as Darrin Stephens on Bewitched before a spinal injury and a painkiller dependency took him off the set; Dick Sargent stepped in without a word of explanation, a move so brazenly unacknowledged it coined its own TV phrase — “pulling a Darrin.” The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air tried the same thing when Aunt Viv went from Janet Hubert to Daphne Maxwell Reid mid-run.

    THEY WENT UPSTAIRS

    Remember Chuck Cunningham? Nobody else does either. That’s because during a season two episode of Happy Days, Richie’s older brother — played by Gavan O’Herlihy — walked upstairs and was never heard from again. No explanation, no farewell episode, no acknowledgment that a human being had just evaporated from the cast. Even Henry Winkler, asked about it fifty years later, could only shrug: “He went upstairs and never came down…a mystery.” Family Matters did the same to Judy Winslow, who disappeared after season three. And on The West Wing, Moira Kelly’s Mandy Hampton was a full series regular in season one and simply ceased to exist in season two.

    WHO NEEDS A STAR?

    David Caruso was so sure he was too big for television that he quit NYPD Blue after season one to become a movie star. His subsequent film career lasted two movies. Jimmy Smits stepped into the precinct and many viewers decided they preferred the new arrangement. The show ran eleven more seasons. The Office lost Steve Carell after season seven and kept going for two more, sustained by an ensemble that had been steadily doing the heavy lifting all along. And Grey’s Anatomy has now outlasted so many of its leads — Patrick Dempsey was killed off in season 11, Sandra Oh gone a season earlier — that it has essentially become a different show that happens to share a name with the original. It is still on the air.

    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleNikki Is Haunted By Her Dreams While Phyllis Gives Patty A History Lesson
    Next Article Set To Beat Christopher Nolan’s Oscar-Winning Oppenheimer’s Global Haul
    admin
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Who Is Stewart ‘Stew’ McLean? 5 Facts About the ‘Virgin River’ Actor

    May 23, 2026

    A Slow-Burn Border Town Thriller

    May 23, 2026

    Netflix Buys Cannes Film ‘The Black Ball,’ With Penelope Cruz, Glenn Close

    May 23, 2026

    How to Watch Online for Free

    May 23, 2026

    ‘It Takes Two’ Rapper Was 59

    May 23, 2026

    Hafsia Herzi in Home-Invasion Hell

    May 23, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Recent Posts
    • Pixar Could Be Looking At Its Biggest Debut Since Inside Out 2!
    • Who Is Stewart ‘Stew’ McLean? 5 Facts About the ‘Virgin River’ Actor
    • Katie Needs An Answer, RJ Is Will’s Victim While Bill’s Plan Gets Thrown
    • A Slow-Burn Border Town Thriller
    • Set To Beat Christopher Nolan’s Oscar-Winning Oppenheimer’s Global Haul
    • How Should the Show Deal With It?
    • Nikki Is Haunted By Her Dreams While Phyllis Gives Patty A History Lesson
    • Netflix Buys Cannes Film ‘The Black Ball,’ With Penelope Cruz, Glenn Close
    • “You’ll Be Dead In This Business”
    • Within 48 Hours, Pravin Tarde’s Film Becomes 4th Highest Marathi Grosser Of 2026!
    • Home
    • Movies
    • TV Shows
    • Gaming

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.