IMAGE: CNS photo/CBS Entertainment
By Mark Pattison
WASHINGTON
(CNS) — Television audiences may recall seeing actor Joe Morton as Eli Rowan
Pope, the father of professional Washington fixer Olivia Pope, on the hit
series “Scandal.”
With
“Scandal” having ended last season, Morton was left with nothing to do. But a
script came to him with an intriguing concept: A professed atheist who podcasts
his lack of belief gets a Facebook friend request from God. The atheist accepts
it, and before long starts seeing how interconnected people are to each other
without even realizing it.
That’s
the premise behind “God Friended Me,” which premieres Sunday, Sept. 30, 8-9
p.m. EDT on CBS.
Morton
isn’t the atheist in question; that role belongs to Brandon Micheal Hall.
Rather, Morton plays the atheist’s father — a minister at a New York City
church who has lamented how his son has turned away from God.
“I
wanted to buy a house, so I wanted another job,” Morton told Catholic News
Service in a Sept. 24 phone interview from New York City, where the show is
filmed, shortly before he was due back on the set.
But not
just any other job. “I wanted something that would be diametrically opposed to
‘Scandal.’ I was really attracted to the show, of people going out of their way
to help other people, and the prospect that somehow we’re all connected,” he
said. Given the tenor of the times, and “the atmosphere in general that we’re
going through these days, this kind of show is just the thing.”
Morton
said his character, the Rev. Arthur Finer, will have his own crosses to bear on
“God Friended Me.” “There’s two things we’ll be dealing with,” he noted. First is “that gap” between father and son that “has to be closed in some sort
of way.”
Second
is the backstory affecting both the reverend and his two grown children; the
character of the preacher’s daughter (Javicia Leslie) also is a series regular.
“We will look at him as a human being,” Morton said. “What has he gone through?
He’s lost his wife when his children were very young. Did he did do a good job
(raising them on his own)? Did he not do a good job? What is his life now that
he’s been a single parent for so many years?”
He told
CNS the show, which was filming its eighth episode at the time of the
interview, is not merely a matter of the writers dropping off the script for
that day’s filming and leaving it to the actors to say their lines.
“There
has been a lot of talk even before we started shooting,” Morton said. “We talked
to them about what their ideas were. It was a real collaboration from beginning
to end. To enhance and imbue these characteristics is what we’re attracted to.”
He
cautioned: “We’re not ‘Touched by an Angel,'” a hit on CBS 20 years ago. “We
are not that show. This is not a show that is about God as it is a show about
how people can help one another — again, how connected we all are” as opposed
to people “floating around on a little island without any connection to anyone,”
Morton said, adding, “It’s a need we have: to re-examine and redefine how closely
we interact.”
Lofty
goals indeed, but “God Friended Me” is going up against NBC’s juggernaut
“Sunday Night Football.” However, Morton has a counter to even that argument about the scheduling affecting the new show.
“When
you have a group of actors who are about telling the story, not ‘I’m supposed
to be first,’ functioning like a healthy family, trying to tell these stories,
I think that’s such a great formula for success,” he said. “That’s why these
Sunday shows do so well.”
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