Patrick recently visited the set of "Mockingbird Lane" and got a
chance to spend time with the cast, and he offers the BRBTV News Blog a
real treat with these personal photos. And -- best of all -- Patrick
will be appearing on the new show, which is scheduled to premiere in early 2013.
We talked with him more about
that, and about the show's fresh approach.
Soooooo .... in honor of the
Halloween season (it's always been our second favorite holiday!) we
offer up the goods on Butch Patrick and the new "Munsters" reboot ...
"I think this TV show will be hugely successful," Patrick tells
BRBTV. "Kids who turn on 'The Munsters' for the first time now just love
it. I think they're on to something big. And the characters and the way
they've done it. The dynamic and the interactions and the character
establishment. It is dead-on, right where it should be, in my opinion."
"Mockingbird Lane" is being developed by "Pushing Daisies" creator
Bryan Fuller, with Bryan Singer of "X-Men" fame also on board. The show
will explore the origins of the Munster family but in a darker and
edgier fashion than the original. The characters will look more human,
however, with toned-down costumes and makeup for the characters.
The news about the show
broke two years ago, then it sputtered a bit, then about a year ago it
headed back into development. NBC
gave the green light last November
. Was Patrick surprised to see Bryan Fuller's name attached to this project?
"No, I thought he was perfect," he says. "I loved 'Heroes.' 'Pushing
Daisies,' I didn't see that often, but it got great reviews. He's
attached to 'Hannibal,' too. So, no Bryan's a good guy for it. He seems
to have a real feel for these sort of dark
dramas. I was more surprised by Bryan Singer doing it, because he's a
feature director, dropping down to TV."
But he adds that the
industry is changing in that way. "A lot of feature film people are
taking on some TV projects, which is great."
The cast for "Mockingbird Lane" has a pretty high wow factor, with Jerry
O'Connell as Herman Munster, Portia de Rossi as Lily Munster, Eddie
Izzard as Grandpa, Charity Wakefield as Marilyn Munster, and Mason Cook
as Eddie Munster. And of course, Patrick got the chance to meet his
young counterpart in his time on the set.
"He's a great guy, a great kid. I met him and his mom on the set.
And he and I started tweeting back and forth a bit afterward. I said the
character's in good hands. He's been working over at Disney. Just a
great little guy. Good actor."
What about Jerry O'Connell as Herman? Can he pull it off?
"He
can," Patrick says. "In fact, the way this thing is done, it's really
sheer genius on Bryan Fuller's part. Fuller and Singer are both big
fans of 'The Munsters,' so they want to do it right. They don't want to
out-Herman Herman Munster. They want to bring the drama to the screen
utilizing the tools we have today, almost 50 years later. What we're
doing is we're not going after the makeup aspect. There is one scene
with full Bram Stoker, old-school makeup. But as far as Jerry goes, it's
all about the love between him and Lily."
He continues, "They all have more of a base of themselves, as five individuals. Eddie
is the grandpa and is the strong character of the family. Kinda like in
the original. Portia de Rossi -- she's just beautiful. Everyone always
talks about Marilyn being so attractive on the original show, but when
you think about it, Lily was really the top beauty of the show."
He says, "Grandpa sorta steals the show. Jerry is a little bit more reserved. What they've done, they established that
he's been put together by Grandpa's laboratory."
Patrick was impressed by the $10 million sets for the show.
"It
takes up two separate soundstages. Big ones. Every room is gigantic,"
he says. "It looks a little like a feature film staging much more than a
TV show staging. For some reason NBC didn't pick it up for the fall, I
can't imagine why they didn't. If for some reason they don't pick it up
later, I can't imagine it will fall by the wayside, because there's just
too much there."
NBC
took the pilot for "Mockingbird Lane" out of the fall 2012 schedule, reportedly to give it more attention, indicating that the pilot will air in 2013. And the
choice of name won't hurt its chances, Patrick explains.
"What
happened was, the last day of shooting, a friend of mine named Kevin
Burns, he was asked by Bryan Singer and Bryan Fuller, the director and
the writer, his opinion on the 'Munsters' show," Patrick tells BRBTV.
"They had trouble with people participating in the casting, because the
actors didn't want to be pigeonholed into roles like that. Kevin
suggested to them, why don't you change the name to 'Mockingbird Lane'?
The 'Munsters' fans will know instantly what it is about, but it will be
unique and will appeal to everyone else."
Patrick notes, "The fans today that are watching 'Walking Dead' and
'Twilight' are much different than the fans who were watching 'The
Munsters.'"
And since Patrick is the key surviving member of the core "Munsters" cast (besides Pat Priest) ...
"They asked Kevin if I wanted to be in it. He told them, it would be
good for you to talk to
Butch. Their concerns were, what if he doesn't like it? To be honest
with you, I've said Hollywood should leave a lot of those old shows
alone, because a lot of the remakes they've done haven't been good and
have been no better than the originals."
But, Patrick says, "Kevin told them, 'He will certainly act
professionally even if he doesn't like it, but I know he will like it.'
The last day of shooting, they invited me out."
Patrick was also
asked to introduce a clip of the show at San Diego's Comic-Con in July.
He tells BRBTV a little bit about the role he'll have in the series,
though he hasn't taped his scenes yet:
"They're going to have me in there as a Scoutmaster for Eddie's
troop. There are plans for the character to be further developed. They
seem to time these werewolf situations for Eddie around a camping trip.
So hopefully I'll have a recurring role."