March 1, 2009

Tom Selleck On "Thin Ice"

The Star Returns For His Fifth Outing As Police Chief Jesse Stone

  • Tom Selleck stars as a small town police chief in

    Tom Selleck stars as a small town police chief in "Jesse Stone: Thin Ice."  (CBS)

(CBS)  As Magnum P.I., Tom Selleck ruled the TV roost for years. Tonight on CBS he's back, in "Jesse Stone: Thin Ice," the fifth in a series of made-for-TV movies. Talent and staying power are two keys to his lasting success, as Rita Braver shows us in this Sunday Profile:

Meet Tom Selleck … multi-faceted Hollywood big wheel.

We know him from his work in front of the camera, and in countless television shows and films. But in tonight's "Thin Ice," Selleck not only stars as small town police chief Jesse Stone … he's also an executive producer and co-writer.

"Is it harder to do everything?" Braver asked.

"Well, there's a lot of levels to it," he said. "It is hard. If my fellow actors think I'm just some big-time producer who is gonna take all this film we shoot and then edit it so as to make myself look good, rather than tell the story of the piece we're doing, you lose the trust that actors need with each other."

Selleck's good-guy persona in films like 1990's "Quigley Down Under," comes through in real life, too. He still takes care of the horse he rode in the film.

"I used him in two more movies, and now Spikey's kind of retired."

Spikey's retirement home is Selleck's 63-acre ranch in Ventura County, California, Selleck's home for the past 20 years. It was once owned by Dean Martin.

"Alan Ladd, I know, spent a lot of time out here," Selleck said while offering a tour. "Roy Rogers had a ranch down the road. It's pretty neat."

He grew up in the San Fernando Valley, the son of a real estate salesman. While at the University of Southern California, he decided to try acting, but at first it was tough going …

"I spent a lot of time being brilliant in the car, in my used Volkswagen on the way home from readings," he said, "and invariably, I would then realize I was really good in the car and not good at all at the audition! I'd kind of beat myself up [which he physically demonstrates] and you get some very strange looks!"

"Did people ever say, 'Oh, he's too good-looking to be believable in that part?" Braver asked.

"Oh, I got that all the time, all the time."

He did years of modeling, bit parts in films like "Myra Breckenridge" (he played The Stud), and also guest spots on TV shows like "The Rockford Files."

He had lead roles in six pilots that were never picked up.

"I sold clothes," he said, "and collected unemployment and got by."

"And then finally you're cast in 'Magnum P.I.," Braver said.

"Yeah, go figure!"

He was 35 and desperate, but he didn't like the part, which Selleck described as "Kind of perfect. And I said, I won't do it. At the time they said, 'Who the hell do you think you are?'"

(CBS)
Selleck succeeded in getting the producers to change the character, creating a flawed and loveable private eye.

"He didn't even have a business card," Selleck laughed. "And he owed everybody money, and he failed with women all the time."

Selleck also fought for Magnum to be a Viet Nam veteran … complete with flashbacks.

"'Magnum' was put in the Smithsonian Institution as the first show that recognized Viet Nam veterans in a positive light, and we're very proud of that."

Yes, Magnum's trademark Hawaiian shirt is now a museum piece.

The show lasted 8 seasons, and earned Selleck a Best Lead Actor Emmy. But there is a footnote: To do the magnum, Selleck had to give up the lead in "Raiders of the Lost Ark"!

The series hadn't been picked up yet, so Selleck continued to go on interviews for more work. He says he was the last person to be screen tested for the part of Indiana Jones, "and I got the part."

But just as that happened, CBS picked up "Magnum." Selleck honored his commitment and has never looked back:

"Harrison Ford brought whatever unique thing he is and has to that role, and it's his role," Selleck said. "It's just kind of an interesting anecdote now. I've hardly had a cross to bear. I mean, I've been very fortunate. I'm still working."

Selleck's film career took off in movies like "Three Men and a Baby."

But in the early '90s, Selleck - who is married to British actress Jilly Mack with whom he has one daughter - made headlines when he demanded (and got) apologies from a tabloid publication that alleged he was gay.

"It has nothing to do with being gay," he said of the legal fight. "It has to do with … you made a choice in your life and you're married, and it would turn your life into a fraud."

But in 1997 he went on to play an openly gay character in "In and Out."

"Well, sure," he said. "That's a wonderful movie. I love that movie."

His kiss with Kevin Kline became a sensation:

"It was kind of a slap-in-the-face kiss. It was kind of 'wake up, you're gay, you know?' We spent the day on that scene and we had traffic control. It was at an intersection, and people were driving by and we had a traffic cop going 'Whoa … what kind of movie is this?'"

Selleck prides himself on taking risks in his work. In 1996 he accepted a small part playing Courtney Cox's much older boyfriend on "Friends":

"I remember people in my professional life, advisors saying 'Don't do that. They're gonna say you're crawling back to TV and you're looking for a job. You can't guest on a show!'"

He was so popular, it became a recurring role … and earned him an Emmy nomination.

In private life, Selleck is an avid outdoorsman, but his relationship with the National Rifle Association has been controversial. An NRA ad he did promoting safe-sports shooting for young people released in 1999, around the time of the Columbine massacre, led Rosie O'Donnell to confront him when he was promoting a film on her show.
O'Donnell: Why the NRA wouldn't say as a matter of compromise, "We agree, assault weapons are not good?"

Selleck: I'm not, I can't speak for the NRA.

O'Donnell: But you're their spokesperson, Tom, so you have to be responsible for what they say.

Selleck: I'm not a spokesperson, I'm not a spokesperson.

O'Donnell: But if you put your name out and say, 'I, Tom Selleck …'

Selleck: Don't put words in my mouth. I'm not a spokesperson.
Later in the show, O'Donnell apologized to Selleck "on a personal" level.

(CBS)
At age 64, Selleck now tries to keep his personal and political views out of the limelight, concentrating on roles like police chief Jesse Stone, based on a character created by crime writer Robert Parker.

Tonight marks the fifth film in a series that has earned Selleck another Emmy nomination, and he says portraying this loner with a drinking problem is one of the highlights of his career:

"He's funny," Selleck said. "He does not feel sorry for himself, which is I think his saving grace, and the audience then kind of roots for him."

The audience seems to root for Tom Selleck, too …

"Most actors are enormously talented and don't get as lucky as a few of us. You better not ever forget that."

Tom Selleck certainly hasn't forgotten.

© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 19 Comments
by Rizzzo1945 March 16, 2009 12:01 AM EDT
Really want to see more Jesse Stone movies made, I even tollerate the nine million commercials, well the first time I watch it, speed watch the next time on DVR. Keep em coming Tom.
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by rupert88 March 13, 2009 10:31 PM EDT
hi, i like tom selleck. but we dont need another darkly dressed person on tv, that is not something new. they are all mostly in black and gray and look 20 years older than they are. wearing black just picks up the shadows of your old eyes and wrinkles. i am soo tired of people on tv who are into the arts and music and they all dress so dark and grayish. art is not about no lite, music is not about no life. thats what it means. we are all accepting these colors ike we are robots. kitchenware black, car interiors black, macdonald restaurants black gray, sunday morning banner blackish, the extra tv show is half black, childrens clothing going black, electronics and computers mostly black or gray. i like tom because he used to wear colorful hawaiian shirts and white pants. now he too has gone the way of the black mel gibson, pink floyd, jackson brown, robin williams, paul shafer, the eagles etc etc, the worse is james taylor in black and gray like he doesnt look morbib already. am i alone in seeing all these darkness??
watch walmart entrance sometime, 3 out of 4 people are in black or gray.
watch TMZ most stars are in black or gray.
we used to be flowers, now we are shadows. we used to identify with rainbows, flowers and summer. now its the black roads, the black tires, the gravestones and the concrete buildings. this is true whereever you go in america by the way.
on a cross country trip 2 years ago, even people in new mexico, the AMerican Indians! were mostly in dark clothes. in florida, mostly dark.
watch spanish tv, i used too, but now that has gone black. the light is going out and we all seem okay with that. rebel at the dying of the light!
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by longpath999 March 4, 2009 6:12 PM EST
Did you really need to show the footage of Tom Selleck kissing another man from a previous film. My 7 year old son asked me why a man was kissing another man. This is beneath the Sunday Morning that I've always respected in the past.
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by dcd915 March 3, 2009 3:03 AM EST
Its nice to see quality movies on TV, and not cable. No nasty language, no spoon fed plots but good actors who you can 'see' as their characters. I wish him and the rest of the cast and producing staff well as they continue this genre. Magnum was a great show and I hope if they do get the movie off that it isnt shortchanged
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by Tsemasjr March 2, 2009 11:16 PM EST
CBS,really should bring back a modern version of Magnun P.I.With all the old cast of characters,if they're still available.I loved that show,and one of the best shows CBS ever had.Tom could Produce,Direct,and Act in it.That show would be # 1,for along time..
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by rbrown3003 March 2, 2009 8:02 PM EST
I loved Tom Selleck in Thin Ice! I have now watched the show 2x and plan to keep it saved. It is always a special treat to watch anything with Mr. Selleck's acting. I hope he continues to be in front of the camera for a long time!!!
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by cabridges March 2, 2009 1:40 PM EST
Tom

Have been trying to get in touch with you for the past couple of weeks. Talked with Bettye McCartt last week as she was moving.

As a fellow Detroit alumnus , now Colorado cowboy, I have a great story idea that is made for you. Michigan based and called "Five Days to Remember." Think you would find it very interesting to both produce and star in.
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by Socalted88 March 2, 2009 12:57 PM EST
I missed the March 1st CBS Sunday Morning show which profiled Tom Sellick.

Will CBS be rebroadcasting this episode?
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by mwsimacek March 2, 2009 10:57 AM EST
I missed Tom Sellick in Jessie Stone's Thin Ice last night. Can you tell me if it will be repeated? I have seen all the other shows and would appreciate it someone could answer me . Thanks
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by bonniellen March 2, 2009 9:45 AM EST
I enjoyed this movie so much..It was the first thing on tv in months that I enjoyed.Tom Selleck and cast were terrific and being from the Boston area was more interesting to me especially the town mentioned, Shrewsbury etc..You had to follow it closely but that is to me what makes a mystery a mystery..Thanks for some decent entertainment and I sure do hope Tom and company come back again for another great Jesse Stone episode...
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by aubfmet March 2, 2009 5:01 AM EST
The next Jesse should include Higgins, if he can make it.
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by k12librarian March 2, 2009 1:19 AM EST
Sorry, but I think all the smoking was distracting and unnecessary, unless of course, it was paid for by the cigarette industry?
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by tommyselleck March 1, 2009 11:27 PM EST
I have loved EVERY movie Tom Selleck is in! He is a humble man and I never tire of seeing his Magnum PI series. My son started me with the first dvd series and we have continued it buying ALL eight of them! Jesse Stone is an excellent character choice for Tom Selleck and I hope to see more. I relate with the "underdog" in life. My brother could be Tom's look-alike and he has MS.. He has dealt with so much but never complains and doesn't want sympathy. He is 49 but a "spitting image." Keep acting Tom. I'd to hear from you.
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by dwril March 1, 2009 10:42 PM EST
This movie has the most horrific excuse for closed saptioning I have ever seen!!
I am hard of hearing and depend on closed captioning.. This mess is so screwed up I can't follow the movie!!
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by emhaz March 1, 2009 10:12 PM EST
As much as I love Tom Selleck, Jesse Stone is and always will be R obert B. Parkers character. I resent the fact that Rita Braver(who I usually like) , totally blew off that fact, even refering to him as Robert Parker, rather than Robrt B. Parker, which is his professional name.
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by louiselriley March 1, 2009 9:40 PM EST
I love anything Tom Selleck is in. Love the Jesse Stone movies. I have read the "Cat Who" books and I think he would make a terrific Jim Quilleran, jounalist/sleuth. It calls for a middleaged (I know Tom is a little older than that) man with a moustache. Perfect. It would make a good series or good movies.
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by below7 March 1, 2009 9:15 PM EST
I knew Tom in high school. southgate michigan, He is a great guy , and actor . keep makeing movies Tom. G.C. your friend G.C.
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by 888irish March 1, 2009 7:14 PM EST
I loved "Quigley Down Under"!

I try to ignore the fact that he belongs to the NRA, but it's hard.
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by PVperson2 March 1, 2009 5:32 PM EST
I have always enjoyed everything I ever seen him do and I bet he would have been a terrific Indiana Jones.
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