Interview: Eddie McClintock Was Hanging By a Thread (and Then He Got Cast on WAREHOUSE 13!)

Posted on 11 August 2009 by Brent Hartinger, Editor

In the new SyFy Channel show Warehouse 13, Eddie McClintock plays Pete, the looser, laid-back half of the show’s Secret Service agent duo assigned to protect the magical artifacts stored in South Dakota’s mysterious Warehouse 13.

But in reality, right before being cast in the show, the enormously appealing actor was coming to a cross-roads. The 42 year-old Ohio native had been kicking around Hollywood for more than a decade, consistently working in guest spots on shows such as Friends and Felicity, and even starring in four short-lived shows of his own.

But he’d never “broken out,” and with two young kids, he had mouths to feed.

To hear Eddie tell it, things were getting pretty dire toward the end — so much so that, in a nice bit of synchronicity, it took future Warehouse 13 co-star Joanne Kelly to talk him down enough that he could even finish the audition for the show.

And like the plot out of an actual TV show, it may have been that moment they shared in the audition waiting room that led to their both being cast on the show in the end.

But hey, it’s better to let Eddie tell it:

TheTorchOnline: Congratulations on the fact that the show’s a hit. Are you surprised?

Eddie McClintock: I’m not so surprised, but relieved. This is my fifth series in twelve years, and I’ve never had a hit. I’ve been going and going. I like to think of myself as one of the more successful anonymous guys in Hollywood. I’ve continued to work, but nothing has ever hit. So when people use that word “hit” with me, I’m, like, I don’t know, because I’m gun-shy.

TTO: The actors all have great chemistry. Was there right from the beginning?

EM: It was from the beginning. I was coming off my seventh test refusal. I’d gone through six or seven [rejections] in a row.

TTO: Ouch.

EM: But you can’t let that show [on your next audition], or they’ll read it right away. I had gone in a few times [for Warehouse 13], and there was  a mix and match — there were six Petes and six Mykas. Which was depressing, because you expect maybe two. You see that and you say to yourself, “Wow, they still don’t know what they’re looking for.”

So I had gone in and came out, and I came down to me and this other guy. And the other guy was standing there, and the director came out and put his arm around him and they walked down the hall together.

And I said, “That’s it! I can’t take it!” I took off my tie, I took off my jacket. And Joanne [Kelly, my future co-star] was sitting there, Indian style in the chair, relaxed, which is interesting, because her character is so different. And she’s, like, “Dude!”

And I said, “No! You don’t get it! I have these two little boys, they’re like baby chicks, and I’m supposed to fly in and spit up the worm, and I got no worm, you know? And I can’t deal with that anymore.”

And then the producers come back and say, “Eddie, you’re coming back in.” And I’d already taken off my tie and jacket, and Joanne and I had been talking, and she’d basically talked me down, off the clock-tower.

And we were standing there reading, and she blew a line. She was supposed to call me a “showboat,” and she called me a “shoi-boit.” And then I made it into a robot thing, started acting like a robot.

You know, actors are terrified of screwing up in those rooms. We ended up making a thing out of this gaffe. And apparently when we walked out of the room, they said, “There it is.”

TTO: So the chemistry really was there right from the very beginning!

EM: [laughs] Yeah.

TTO: So why do you think this was the show that finally connected?

EM: I think there’s a certain amount of luck and timing. A large portion goes to the fact that the writers have created something that is right for right now.  I think people want to escape — the economy is terrible, people are losing their jobs. Who wants to turn on the TV and watch people shoot other people, dead bodies? That’s what life is, man.

Our show, you get to escape into this world where there are these unexplained artifacts. It’s funny, it has a heart, it’s about family, it’s suspenseful.

TTO: I think a big part of it is the humor. There’s been a lot of serious sci-fi fantasy, and there still is. I’m curious if you get self-conscious about the comedy on the set, if you were confident that everyone else was going to think it was funny?

EM: No! I had no idea. I usually do something, and if people laugh, that’s funny. They’ll say, “Keep doing that. Whatever it is, keep doing that.”

At the beginning, I don’t think we were sure, because you’re just finding the show. In the writing of the show, there’s not a whole lot of comedy that’s on the page. They don’t write the comedy, they just sort of let it come as we find it.

Jack Kenny, our executive producer, one of the producers on one my first show, [is] brilliant and really funny. David Simkins is the other side of it, he’s the sci-fi guy, he’s the gadget guy. So together they’ve been able to create this great blend of both.

But when Jack is on the set, and I’m working, he’ll come up to me and say, “Hey, try this.” Or I’ll come up to him and say, “Can I try this?” Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t, but I’ve think we’ve found a pretty nice balance.

TTO: So when do you go back to work?

EM: They haven’t picked us up yet.

TTO: But they will.

EM: I think so. But again, don’t get my hopes up!

TTO: Is there a particular moment you’re most proud of in these first thirteen episodes?

EM: The episode “Burnout” was probably the most challenging for me as an actor. I was faced with having to make a huge decision as a character, and then in doing so, having to make a huge decision as an actor. I would either fall on my face, or people would go, “Wow, that was really good.”

TTO: What was scene exactly?

EM: The artifact affects Pete in such a way that he makes a decision to take his own life. The scene leading up to that decision was very emotional and powerful for me as the actor and the character, and I’m pretty proud of just being able to trust [the moment]. It was  real milestone for me as an actor.

Warehouse 13 airs Tuesdays at 9 PM/8 C on the SyFy Channel.


Similar Posts:

9 Responses to “Interview: Eddie McClintock Was Hanging By a Thread (and Then He Got Cast on WAREHOUSE 13!)”

  1. Angela says:

    I certainly hope SyFy picks WH13 up for another season. The show is fun.

  2. Mendylew says:

    Do we need to write SyFy to make sure they are going to keep up with
    WH13? I haven’t watched SyFy in a long time but this show has brought me back to them. I watched Monster Ark with Renee O’Connor the other day and I could swear at the end that they but that monster’s ark in the warehouse. Wouldn’t that be a cool thing if all the SciFi original movies somehow tie into the Warehouse? LOL!

  3. Maziegirl says:

    WH13 is the most outrageous and unique show I’ve seen in a long time. I love and so does my husband. Shades of Raiders of the Lost Ark. I hope Syfy picks this up for many more seasons!

  4. brett says:

    It has been picked up, we can expect more of this awesome show

  5. peter smirk says:

    fantastic just watched the first episode uk sci fi channel on sky can,t wait for the next one

  6. KD says:

    I love this show. I’m happy they picked it up, but puhleeeeeze add more episodes (go for it SyFy - the big 20+). And, maybe not make us wait all the way until next summer?? Oh, and please don’t do the bad Eureka thing of REALLY OBVIOUS advertising in the middle of the show. It’s become distracting.

    Go Eddie!!!

  7. jack lallathin says:

    I really love this show, I was very skiddish about it at first and I didn’t want to like it but it instantly pulled me in and now i am really excited to see next seasons episodes, I just hope that it continues for a while so many good shows get axed “the Dresden files” for one which Joanne Kelly was a part of, here’s hoping it will be on for at least ten years :)

Leave a Reply

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture.
Anti-spam image

Site Sponsors

Torch TV: Featured Videos

Bad Behavior has blocked 5033 access attempts in the last 7 days.