LAURA INNES REVEALS WHY
SHE'S LEAVING THE ER
By: Ileane Rudolph
Published:
January 11, 2007
It's goodbye to the last remaining — well, almost — original ER cast member. Tonight Kerry Weaver hangs up her scrubs and leaves Chicago's County General for warmer climes (Florida) to deliver medical news for a prestigious TV station. Laura Innes, who has played the irascibly endearing doc for 11 and a half seasons, gives us the dish on why she needs an abrupt exit, her years on the long-running hit show, and what she's up to next.
TVGuide.com: Say it ain't so! After nearly 12
years, Dr. Kerry Weaver's leaving County General for
good?
Laura Innes: Yeah. There's some talk of her
coming back a little bit next year, but we'll see.
TVGuide.com: In what way?
Innes: There's an idea about integrating her
new job on the medical show into a story line. Part of
that thinking had to do with the fact that next year
would probably be ER's last year, but the show's doing
so well, I don't know what's going to happen.
TVGuide.com: The producers kept your departure
awfully quiet. Everyone went, 'What?" when Weaver was
fired. Why so under-the-radar?
Innes: We decided to just have it be a
surprise. It may not have been a smart decision, but
it was good storytelling — making it happen the way it
might in real life.
TVGuide.com: It was left a little vague last week.
My colleague's daughter, who's a major fan, said that
after watching she thought that maybe you'd still be
around in some way.
Innes: Nope. I'm in this week's show and have a
couple more meaty goodbye scenes to wrap it up. I'm
basically doing cleaning-out-my-locker kind of stuff.
So one more [episode] for me, and as I said, there's
talk about maybe a couple next year, but I [told
them], "We'll see if that feels right."
TVGuide.com: Why are you leaving in the middle of
the season?
Innes: There are other big stories happening
and... Aaron Sorkin just walked in the room. I'm so
sorry, I have to talk to my boss for a minute. [Innes
calls back five minutes later.] I'm directing a Studio
60 episode for him.
TVGuide.com: Already moving on. Sounds like some
other ER characters could be leaving at the end of the
year?
Innes: That's a possibility. There are a lot of
discussions with the actors about what they want to
do. They felt, in case there does end up being another
departure, that they wanted to wrap me up early.
TVGuide.com: How long has your departure been in
the works?
Innes: About a year ago we talked about it. For
the past couple of years, I've been doing half
episodes, and I have a directing deal with [ER
creator] John Wells. So I've been easing off the
acting. This summer we talked about what was going to
take place.
TVGuide.com: Whose idea was it for you to make
your exit?
Innes: It was kind of mutual — one of those
things where it just feels like you're running out of
steam. It's awfully hard to leave this show, though,
because it's such an incredible joy. But it seems like
[it's] time, doesn't it? I just told them, "I don't
want to be sick or die." I didn't want to send this
message that this woman who had this history of
disability and is gay — now we're going to kill her
off. I said, "Let her have a happy end." So I'm happy
about that.
TVGuide.com: Is that why Weaver had an operation
and finally threw away her crutch?
Innes: It did feel like the character was
shedding some of her hardness and moving on in her
life.
TVGuide.com: You're not kidding. She gets a glam
TV job and a gorgeous girlfriend to boot.
Innes: I know. Weaver must be so good in bed!
All of her girlfriends are so hot. I definitely raised
the bar in the lipstick-lesbian category.
TVGuide.com: Speaking of hot girlfriends, do you
watch Elizabeth Mitchell, who played your first female
lover, on Lost?
Innes: Isn't she great? You never know which
way she's going to go. [Her character] is this creepy,
beautiful lady.
TVGuide.com: Over the years, Weaver has been
portrayed as abrasive, prickly, intensely ambitious
and disloyal. Was playing a bitch fun?
Innes: I didn't see her so negatively, because
if I did, I might have played her as an evil person.
But I remember early on, being in a department store
and hearing a woman say, "Oh, I just want to slap
her!" That's when I realized this character is going
to drive everybody crazy. She's the boss from hell,
which was fun to play. But just at the point where
you'd want to shoot her, they'd plop in poignant story
lines where she'd show empathy, like when I signed
with this deaf little girl.
TVGuide.com: Do you think it was brave of you to
play her bitchy when she was also a role model for the
disabled and lesbian communities?
Innes: [Laughs] A bitchy role model. But you
know what? If I had to choose a doctor, it would be
Weaver. Her bedside manner is sometimes lacking, but
at least she'd save me.
TVGuide.com: Was there a real responsibility being
that two-for-one role model?
Innes: For the disabled community, it was a
mixed thing. To have somebody who's disabled be a very
strong, capable person is great, but I'm not actually
disabled, so it was this kind of back-and-forth. But I
did always feel a responsibility. I said to the
writers, "It's OK if I'm the hard-ass, but I hope you
always show her being compassionate, because I
represent this large group of people."
TVGuide.com: And then Weaver came out. How was the
reaction?
Innes: It explained her avoidance of a personal
life. That was my favorite story line. I feel that the
producers and NBC didn't really get enough credit,
because it was a big deal to have a main character on
a mainstream show come out. Some viewers were not
happy with that, and my friends said, "People will
assume you're really gay." Everyone should get over
it. A lot of people do think I'm gay. But for that
character, what could have been more interesting to
do?
TVGuide.com: You're a married mom of two. C'mon,
aren't you sorry you never got to kiss George Clooney
or Goran [Visnjic]?
Innes: How do you know I didn't?
TVGuide.com: Did they throw you a big party?
Innes: Yes. Everybody came. It was Dec. 6, my
last day, after an emotional goodbye scene I had with
Maura [Tierney, Abby], who has become a close friend
in real life. They put together a reel of scenes and
outtakes and because I'd been on the show so long, it
was a long reel. They also gave me a framed copy of my
very first call sheet. I was something like No. 47 on
that — and the past two years, I've been No. 1. It's
like I clawed my way to the top of the call sheet.
TVGuide.com: How Weaverish of you. So is it Laura
Innes, director, from now on? You've directed ER,
House and now Studio 60.
Innes: I'll definitely keep acting if anything
interesting that's not like Kerry Weaver comes along,
some hot old chick.... I won't wear a lab coat, and I
never want to say, "Pass the CBC Chem 7" again. I
would like to do some comedy. I love The Office.
TVGuide.com: There are so many former residents of
ER out there. Do you ever hang out?
Innes: There are! We could start our own show —
an alternative universe version of ER. I keep up with
Julianna [Margulies] and Gloria [Reuben] and I see
Tony [Edwards] once in a while.
TVGuide.com: Any last words to your fans of 11 and
a half years?
Innes: I would just say, "Thank you, thank you,
thank you for watching. I have had a blast."


