Everyone knows what an incredible work Peter Krause has done in the death scene for his 9-1-1 character, from distribution to showrunner Tim Minear to fans at the head of the spin-off now, 9-1-1: solitary star.
“I watched him and I thought he was beautifully written, beautifully played. Peter is a spectacular actor,” said Rob Lowe, who played Owen Strand for five seasons in the Fox series before his end in January, told Variety. “At some point in a program like this, and Tim said it publicly, from time to time, you have to overturn a few walls if you want to keep the sound of the structure of the house. Ironically, it could rejuvenate the show in a whole new field, but it will be the same without Peter, which was, from the start, such an incredible actor. And the way he played that the death scene was skimmed by his nuance and she undergoes. And Angela (Bassett) and the rest of the actors do it on this program, certainly. “”
It was in 9-1-1 Season 8 Episode 15 that Bobby died, having been infected with a super-formation of the CCHF (Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever). It was in the previous episode, the first of the two parties, that the 118 entered a laboratory to cope with a fire. During an explosion, Chimney (Kenneth Choi) lost his facial mask and was exposed. And so when there was only one dose of the antiviral, and at that time, Bobby knew that he was infected, the captain gave him to his firefighter and his friend, only revealing him he too was sick after everyone was evacuated.
Minear told TV Insider that killing Bobby was a strictly creative decision.
“No one wanted Peter, especially me, but I just had the impression that we are going in season 9 and it would have been comfortable keeping the whole status quo and happy happy. But it is a first show of respondents, and I put these people in situations of life and death, except that you could look at it and say that I simply put them in situations of life because nobody dys.
He also explained how Peter Krause contributed to a key moment in the death scene of Bobby and his last moments, as he said goodbye to his wife Athena.
“What I saw in him is a combination of Bobby and Peter,” said Minear. “It was difficult to see how we were going to approach this because simply on what this virus was and what it was doing, the thing could have become macabre, horror of the body, horror film, which is not what we wanted. You must understand what is going on, but we did not want it either to be the possibility of prayer. Peter.
9-1-1Thursdays, 8/7c, ABC