With the very talented @robert_knepper & @brianethonpson on #H50 ep. 413. Keep an eye out for this one. ; ) pic.twitter.com/NK6yclLVV8
— Daniel Dae Kim (@danieldaekim) November 27, 2013
Fresh off of a one-episode gig playing the bad guy of the week on NBC's "The Blacklist," Robert Knepper will find himself on the other side of the investigation on an upcoming installment of CBS's "Hawaii Five-0."
During a junket interview in Beverly Hills today for "Mob City," the Frank Darabont-created L.A. noir three-week-event series coming to TNT in December, the former "Prison Break" baddie who plays mob enforcer/psychopath Sid Rothman in "Mob" was discussing whether he ever worried about consistently being cast as a villain when he let slip that he will be saying aloha to McGarrett and the gang come early 2014 as a member of the long arm of the law.
"I'm playing an internal affairs guy. Every season they go after one character and they devote the whole episode to that character. Mine is with Daniel [Dae Kim], who plays Chin Ho Kelly. It is basically a two-hander, just the two of us through the whole thing," explained Knepper, adding that going good takes more focus and energy on his part. "I'm playing a straight and narrow cop. In my head, I'm going, 'OK, I gotta make it interesting.' Whereas if I play a bad guy, I never have to think about that."
Source: Yahoo TV
During a junket interview in Beverly Hills today for "Mob City," the Frank Darabont-created L.A. noir three-week-event series coming to TNT in December, the former "Prison Break" baddie who plays mob enforcer/psychopath Sid Rothman in "Mob" was discussing whether he ever worried about consistently being cast as a villain when he let slip that he will be saying aloha to McGarrett and the gang come early 2014 as a member of the long arm of the law.
"I'm playing an internal affairs guy. Every season they go after one character and they devote the whole episode to that character. Mine is with Daniel [Dae Kim], who plays Chin Ho Kelly. It is basically a two-hander, just the two of us through the whole thing," explained Knepper, adding that going good takes more focus and energy on his part. "I'm playing a straight and narrow cop. In my head, I'm going, 'OK, I gotta make it interesting.' Whereas if I play a bad guy, I never have to think about that."
Source: Yahoo TV
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