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Actors Who Quit a Show/Appear and Disaappear - Page 2
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Patinkins first love is musical threater and he does tv to pay the bills between big broadway hits
. The LA times did a interview with patinkin asking why he left criminal minds and simple put it wasnt money or cast conflicts it simple the show was taking a progressive wierder, vile and more graphic than he care to act in so he left the show.

In regards to Patinkin, DLM was cancelled after two seasons, so he didn't really jump ship on that show. He didn't appear in the direct to dvd movie b/c he was filming Criminal Minds. I was always holding out hope that he quit Criminal Minds b/c DLM was in talks to come back and he was more interested in picking back up in that series, other than continuing on in Criminal Minds.
Some earlier examples not mentioned would be Martin Landau and Barbara Bain qutting Mission: Impossible over salary matters and that move didn't help either of their careers.

On the other side of the ledger we have John Travolta and George Clooney, who really were bigger than the shows that made them stars, and proved it by moving on and becoming much bigger in movies. (And Tom Hanks who did the same, but loyally stayed with his show until it was thorugh with him, rather than vice versa.
)Actually, "Bosom Buddies" was dead and buried before Hanks became a star. The show was never a hit, and it was done by spring 1982. Hanks didn't have a movie hit until two years later, so he had no show to leave - it was canceled well before he became succesful.
I thought Clooney stayed with "ER" much longer than expected. He was still on it pretty regularly through the 1998-99 season, while most actors who made the leap to movies would've been gone a couple of years earlier.
Travolta had to go when he did. It just looked ridiculous to have an Oscar-nominated "A"-list actor play a supporting role on a crummy sitcom. Some of the actors cited here let success go to their head and moved on earlier than they should've; Travolta did some 1978-79 episodes, so he stayed LONGER than he probably should've, though that was probably a contractual obligation...
Anyway, while not completely anti-chemistry, the pairing with these actors was tepid. By the end of Season 1, there was a scene with Remy entering - I believe it was a bedroom - with Anne as the door closed.
Fast forward to Season 2 with hardly a mention of Anne at all, if any, and Leslie Bibb joined the cast as a young police recruit. The show died later that season.
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- Ockeghem
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Remind me not to try out for that show. ;)
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Kind of a minor character, but I always enjoyed her, was Megan on NUMB3RS, played by Diane Farr.
She left a season or two ago. IMDB shows she did an episode of Californication this year and has a series on USA called Life UneXpected coming out sometime next year, so hasn't completely disappeared, but not much going on.
Diane Farr left "Rescue Me" after just one season, too. Too bad -- I liked her on the show.
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Hawaiian Eye - Anthony Eisley (Tracy Steele) left after the 1962 season allegedly over a contract dispute.
Route 66 - George Maharis left midway through the 1963 season over a contract dispute and the fact he contracted hepatitis in real life. No mention was ever made of his disappearance, just suddenly Todd Stiles (Martin Milner) was in his Corvette by himself. Lincoln Case (Glenn Corbett) took Maharis's place a few episodes later until the end of the series run.
Edited by Richard V - 9/2/09 at 9:05am
Greg didn't say "sent upstairs" he said that the character "...literally went upstairs." And he meant what he said. This isn't a metaphor. In one episode the character was shown walking up a flight of steps (presumably to a bedroom) and was simply never seen or metioned again.
And shows used to be much more cavalier about this sort of thing. They were seen (by both the producers and the audience) as disposble ways of killing a half hour or an hour, the episodes were all stand-alone by design and there was little or no thought given to continuity. If a character wasn't working out or an actor wasn't happy (or doing the job) they'd be gone the next week and no one felt any need to "explain" anything.
Regards,
Joe
She also filmed a few scenes for the pilot of "Firefly" before Joss Whedon decided he didn't like her and replaced her with Morena Baccarin, reshooting that character's scenes.

Greg didn't say "sent upstairs" he said that the character "...literally went upstairs." And he meant what he said. This isn't a metaphor. In one episode the character was shown walking up a flight of steps (presumably to a bedroom) and was simply never seen or metioned again.
And shows used to be much more cavalier about this sort of thing. They were seen (by both the producers and the audience) as disposble ways of killing a half hour or an hour, the episodes were all stand-alone by design and there was little or no thought given to continuity. If a character wasn't working out or an actor wasn't happy (or doing the job) they'd be gone the next week and no one felt any need to "explain" anything.
Regards,
Joe
That practice has pretty much disappeared. Most times now, the writers at least try to resolve a character's departure with a spoken line in passing. But Boston Legal was notorious for having characters disappear with no explanation. I recall that in the second season, two new characters were introduced in the season opener, both actors appeared in the opening credits, and both characters just disappeared a few episodes into the season. One of them remained in the opening credits long after the last time we saw her character.
The Rebecca Gayheart story reminds me of the bizarre case of Perry Mason's William Talman: apparently he was attending a somehat wild party in Beverly Hills (everyone was in the nude!) that got crashed the the vice squad for alleged marijuana use, a la Robert Mitchum's 1948 arrest. CBS demanded that he be fired, so for the first half of the 1960/61 season there was no D.A. Hamilton Burger! However, both the viewers and star Raymond Burr felt that Talman was given a bad break and he was rehired after a few months.
Family Matters just didn't get rid of some kid actors, it also got rid of its leading lady! Jo Marie Payton left after a disagreement with the producers (it was either over money or the show becoming 'Urkelized'- I'm not sure), and she was replaced in the final season (the CBS one) by a Judyann Elder who simply lacked the sass Payton brought to Harriette Winslow.
The whole 'kid that went upstairs never to return' trick is much older than Happy Days or Family Matters: when All My Children premiered on ABC in 1970, widower Dr. Joe Martin (played by Ray McDonnell, who is still on the show after nearly 40 years!) had three children: premed student Jeff, highschooler Tara, and preteen Bobby. Well, creator Agnes Nixon realized there was no real use for little Bobby, so after a few episodes he went upstairs to get a pair of skis and- you know the rest! It's been something of an inside joke on the show ever since.
In my book, the most unusual handling of a character's disappearance was the absence of matriarch Kate Bradley for the final two seasons of Petticoat Junction. Star Bea Benadaret had died of cancer in late 1968 though she had done a few episodes in early 1968 before she got too sick to work. In the middle of the 1967/68 season, Kate went away to visit relatives, but came back early in the following season for the birth of her first grandchild. Since Miss Benadaret was too ill to actually appear onscreen for that October 1968 show, the producers cleverly used a body double shot from behind and in longshots while Benadaret's actual voice was used for the dialogue (recorded from her home), along with flashbacks from previous episodes to complete the illusion. Sadly, the episode aired only days after Bea died.
The producers now had to address the passing of its central character- or did they? The next thing you know, June Lockhart joins the cast as Dr. Janet Craig, a new 'mother figure' on the show and Kate Bradley was never mentioned again! It was as if she had never existed despite being the lead character on the show for the previous five and a half years!!!

Since Miss Benadaret was too ill to actually appear onscreen for that October 1968 show, the producers cleverly used a body double shot from behind and in longshots while Benadaret's actual voice was used for the dialogue (recorded from her home), along with flashbacks from previous episodes to complete the illusion. Sadly, the episode aired only days after Bea died.
That reminds me of the awful CGI the Sopranos used to superimpose archive clips of Nancy Marchand's head on a body double after the actress had died. It was creepy.
I recall that in the second season, two new characters were introduced in the season opener, both actors appeared in the opening credits, and both characters just disappeared a few episodes into the season. One of them remained in the opening credits long after the last time we saw her character.
This would have been a contract issue. The actor was probably guaranteed "x" episodes for the season. Even after she was let go, the producers would have to credit her for the remaining episodes on her contract because payments and residuals (and union auditing thereof) are based on screen credit. When Babylon 5 was renewed for a fifth season at the 11th hour, they had a problem: The final episode of the fourth season was the series finale, set 20 years after the main action of the show on the assumption that the fourth season would be the final one. So they wrote the first episode of the fifth season production schedule as a new S4 finale, and simply swapped the two episodes: the original episode 422 went into the 522 slot, and the episode shot as production # 501 became 422.
Shortely before the deadline to uplink the new episode 422 to the satellite for distribution to the affiliates, someone at the studio realized they had another problem. Claudia Christian had not renewed her contract and didn't return for the fifth season. But they were using the fourth season credits - which included her. If the show aired that way, she would be due an additional episode payment for an episode she didn't appear in, plus residuals for that episode for as long as they were payable. (She was being properly credited in the series finale, which would air much later, so it wasn't like she was losing any money. In the course of seasons 4 and 5 she appeared in a total of 22 episodes and was paid for 22. Had 422 aired with her credit, she would have done 22 and been paid for 23 - plus residuals.) So they removed her credit and dropped an extra FX shot into the opener for that episode and saved themselves a few bucks.
Creepy and unconvincing. It has been so long I don't remember - was there anything really vital that Livia had to be seen doing or saying at that point? Anything that altered the plot? Or could have just have had her pass away off screen? If the stuff was really needed I think they should have given the work the time and the money it needed to do a better job. The whole thing made my skin crawl.
Regards,
Joe
However, there was also at least one NYPD Blue character who really did just disappear - one season she was in the show, the next season she was gone (without any explanation).
The character was Adrienne Lesniak, played by Justine Miceli.
On his fine web site dedicated to the show, Alan Sepinwal basically said the writers made such a mess of the character, they just threw up their hands and made her disappear.
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