The Lyon's Den
The Lyon's Den | |
---|---|
Series title card | |
Genre | Legal drama |
Created by | Remi Aubuchon |
Starring | |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 (7 unaired) |
Production | |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Production company(s) |
Brad Grey Television Baby Owl Works 20th Century Fox Television |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Original release | September 28 – November 30, 2003 |
The Lyon's Den is a 2003 American legal drama television series set in Washington, D.C.. The legal drama starred Rob Lowe as a lawyer named Jack Turner, newly appointed as partner of a long-established law firm that, as the plot revealed, harbored some dark secrets; the series' title and firm's name are allusions to the surname of Lowe, who also served as executive producer. Much of the plot centered on the firm's internal politics and on Turner's attempts to uncover information on some of the firm's conspiracies while acting as the defense for some of the firm's higher-profile clients in a different case each episode.
The cast, headed by Lowe, also included Matt Craven, Elizabeth Mitchell, Kyle Chandler, Frances Fisher, and David Krumholtz.
The series premiered on the American television network NBC on September 28, 2003, but although thirteen episodes were ordered and produced, only six aired before NBC cancelled the show due to poor ratings. When the UK's channel five bought the UK terrestrial TV rights to the series in 2004, it aired all thirteen episodes. Years later, Rob Lowe later stated that after finding about the show's cancelation he and the show's producers decided to make the last episodes - which they were contractually obligated to make - as absurd as possible, including an "off the wall" and freakish ending.
Characters
Character descriptions courtesy of Entertainment Weekly[1] and The Blade[2]
- John "Jack" Turner (Rob Lowe), "the most principled lawyer" working for the corrupt firm Lyons, Lacrosse, and Levine longtime friend
- Grant Rashton (Kyle Chandler), one of "amoral lawyers"
- Brit Hanley (Frances Fisher), Rashton's "evil secretary"
- Ariel Saxon (Elizabeth Mitchell), a lawyer recovering from alcoholism, hired by her lover Rashton to "discredit Jack"
- Jeff Fineman (David Krumholtz), Ariel Saxon's paralegal, who is attracted to her
- Terrance Christianson (James Pickens Jr.), one of "amoral lawyers"
- Harlan M. Turner (Rip Torn), the Washington, D.C. senator and Jack's father
Production
Singer Jewel's casting
In his memoir, Love Life, Lowe stated that he lobbied for singer-actress Jewel to be cast as his love interest in the show after seeing her performance Ang Lee's cult film Ride With The Devil. However, when she arrived on set there was no chemistry between the two and Jewel brought her then-boyfriend, rodeo star Ty Murray, to the set with her on the day the actors were to film a love scene. According to Lowe, Jewel appeared uncomfortable at having to kiss Lowe, and unsuccessfully asked if the scene could be removed.
Finally relenting by stating, "Let's just do this", Lowe said Jewel agreed to do the scene. Lowe stated: "But as we approached the kissing moment it became strained and it's never good when you can't trust that your fellow actor is on the same page... I pecked her on the lips; her mouth scrunched closed like you would do if someone was going to stick something unwanted into it, which I was not intending. I sort of moved my head from side to side to make it look real, like there was at least a dollop of energy or passion. 'Cut', said the director. Jewel looked at me and wiped the back of her hand across her lips like an American Sign Language version of 'Yuck'".[3]
Cancellation and improvised ending
Lowe said, in an May 9, 2014 appearance on the NPR radio gameshow Wait Wait Don't Tell Me, that he and the show's producers purposefully made all 13 episodes - which they were contractually obligated to make for possible DVD distribution - as absurd as possible. The last episode ended with Lowe's character being exposed as a serial killer by Grant Rushton (Kyle Chandler), whom he then kills before jumping to his death from the firm's office tower.[4]
Episodes
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Pilot" | TBA | TBA | September 28, 2003 |
2 | "The Other Side of Caution" | TBA | TBA | October 5, 2003 |
3 | "Things She Said" | TBA | TBA | October 12, 2003 |
4 | "Hubris" | TBA | TBA | October 19, 2003 |
5 | "Trick or Treat" | TBA | TBA | October 26, 2003 |
6 | "Ex" | TBA | TBA | November 30, 2003 |
7 | "The Quantum Theory" | TBA | TBA | UNAIRED |
8 | "Separation Anxiety" | TBA | TBA | UNAIRED |
9 | "Blood" | TBA | TBA | UNAIRED |
10 | "Duty to Save" | TBA | TBA | UNAIRED |
11 | "Beach House" | TBA | TBA | UNAIRED |
12 | "Privileged" | TBA | TBA | UNAIRED |
13 | "The Fifth" | TBA | TBA | UNAIRED |
References
- ↑ Tucker, Ken (October 10, 2003). "TV Review: The Lyon's Den (2003)". Entertainment Weekly.
- ↑ Owen, Rob (September 27, 2003). "Back in the Spotlight: In Lyon's Den, Rob Lowe shows West Wing forgotten". The Blade. Toledo, Ohio. Block News Alliance. p. D-3.
- ↑ Rob Lowe, "Love Life" (2014) pp. 108-109
- ↑ NPR - Not My Job: Brat Pack Member Rob Lowe Gets Quizzed On Bratwurst 05-09-2014, National Public Radio
External links
- The Lyon's Den at the Internet Movie Database
- The Lyon's Den at TV.com
- Wait Wait Rob Lowe appearance and interview: http://www.npr.org/2015/04/11/398798395/brat-pack-member-rob-lowe-gets-quizzed-on-bratwurst