Page 1 of 1

Interview with Tom Selleck about Magnum P.I. Reboot

Posted: Tue Jun 19, 2018 6:50 pm
by Core 4
Tom Selleck Weighs In on the 'Magnum P.I.' Reboot — And If He'll Make a Cameo
Yes, Tom Selleck wishes the new Thomas Magnum well. No, he won’t have anything to do with it.

If you haven’t heard yet, CBS has ordered their Magnum P.I. reboot to series. If you’re a millennial who doesn’t pay attention to old stuff, that’s the loosey-goosey detective show starring the irresistibly charming Tom Selleck that ran on CBS from 1980-1988 and earned him a Best Actor Emmy.

Peter Lenkov, the redo specialist responsible for updating Hawaii Five-O and MacGyver is the guy in charge. He’s hired Jay Hernandez (The Expanse, Suicide Squad) to play Thomas Magnum, like his predecessor, a former Navy Seal turned private investigator who lives in Hawaii.

So what does Selleck, now happily playing NYPD commissioner Frank Reagan in Blue Bloods, another long-running series — it will beat Magnum’s length of service next season — have to say about the new version? He chose to share his feelings for the first time to TV Guide Magazine and TV Insider.

The actor says when he was in L.A. (he lives on a ranch north of the city when he’s not shooting Blue Bloods) he was asked to come to CBS’s West Coast HQ for a meeting with Lenkov and David Stapf, the CBS TV Studios president.

“CBS is kind of my home network,” says Selleck. “I’ve done The Young and the Restless and (most of) the Jesse Stone movies as well as Magnum and Blue Bloods with them.” They told him if he “had a problem” with the remake, their relationship was important enough that they wouldn’t do it. "Peter was very effusive about the project; he grew up with Magnum and this was his dream,” he adds.

Stapf suggested that he talk to Les Moonves, CBS Corporation’s CEO and Chairman of the Board. According to Selleck, Moonves talked about how, since Universal owned the show, they could “do whatever they want with it,” the actor recalls. “Les said, ‘We’d like to control the show We think we can do a better job.’"

"I went home,” Selleck continues, “and thought about it for about a day. In the end, I thought, ‘We couldn’t have a better bow tied around our show. We went off with our final episode as the number one show on all of television. We’re in the Smithsonian for recognizing Vietnam veterans in a positive light, the first show to really do that. And it led to countless other opportunities. I just felt success is so hard to come by in this business, why do I want to root for somebody to fail. I just stepped back, and said, ‘I won’t get in your way.'”

He also won’t be involved in any way. “They asked and I said, ‘Absolutely not. I’m busy with Blue Bloods.’” But more than that, he concedes, “It will never be what in my fantasy world, I would make it to be.”

Don’t expect a fun guest spot either. “I told them that I won’t do some cameo guest spot to let the audience know I approve.” He’s aware that could disappoint some fans of his and the shows. “I’m sure they’d like it, but I have an obligation to my version. And Peter’s going to do his take on what a Magnum under some similar circumstances should be about.”

This isn’t the first time that Selleck turned down a TV offer concerning the ionic role. In the early ‘90s, Selleck was working with big fan and best-selling author Tom Clancy — just off the success of The Hunt for Red October — on a Magnum movie. “Tom and I worked on a story — a good story for a movie. The character wasn’t done; when we left him, he went back into the Navy. I thought it was time because I was having success with features. Three Men and a Baby had been the number one movie in the world.”

Universal Studio chief Sidney Sheinberg had other ideas, Selleck says. He wanted to use Magnum in a wheel of rotating mysteries. “I had no interest; they weren’t thinking big enough and they really blew it.”

Over the years, Selleck says he heard rumors about other movies and TV ideas. He didn’t speak ill of them, but he “wasn’t particularly thrilled," he admits. "This seemed okay because it’s probably going to happen sooner or later. Why choose to be offended? This is Peter’s dream, let him run with it. He’s a nice man.”

https://www.tvinsider.com/696360/tom-se ... eboot-cbs/

Re: Interview with Tom Selleck about Magnum P.I. Reboot

Posted: Tue Jun 19, 2018 11:11 pm
by Nikita70
Spoken with class, as usual. I’m glad he turned down a cameo.

Re: Interview with Tom Selleck about Magnum P.I. Reboot

Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2018 12:22 am
by Pahonu
Thanks for that Core 4. I've been wondering about his thoughts on the reboot, but thought he might remain silent about it.

Re: Interview with Tom Selleck about Magnum P.I. Reboot

Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2018 3:18 am
by NotthatRick
I, too, am glad he won't be involved with it. And yes, he is a class act.

Re: Interview with Tom Selleck about Magnum P.I. Reboot

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 1:38 am
by MagnumsGMTMaster
I am a little disappointed in Selleck's response to Sidney Sheinberg's idea. While I understand Selleck's protectiveness towards the character and the series, sometimes you don't always get your way. I mean if Selleck had created or owned the character in some way, fine. But he was one of many who brought the show to life. The star sure, but come on. Think of the fans. Think of the other actors who didn't go on to bigger and better things. He said it himself regarding the reboot, "I just felt success is so hard to come by in this business, why do I want to root for somebody to fail. I just stepped back, and said, ‘I won’t get in your way.'” Why didn't he apply that attitude to the efforts in the 90s to revive the show and characters in a different format (to include him, just like he wanted!)? I mean look at the Rockford Files movies of the 90s. They were one off in a series. And very successful. And James Garner fought to get them made as part of a lawsuit over a contract dispute, but still. To me, Selleck's other characters have never resonated. Yeah, my issue, not his. But I feel he shouldn't have been so stubbon. End rant!

Re: Interview with Tom Selleck about Magnum P.I. Reboot

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 1:07 pm
by KingKC
I am so glad he is staying out of this one. A cameo would be cheesy to say the least. I am still not sure I will watch it but rather let it go the way of the new Hawaii 5-0 and MacGyver. I haven't watched those either. They may be successes in their own right and the new MPI may also be one, but the original is the one for me.

Re: Interview with Tom Selleck about Magnum P.I. Reboot

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 11:30 pm
by perfectlykevin
Glad to hear he's staying out of it too. I always get that cringe when I see the old actor making a cameo in a reinterpretation of their original show. Selleck played it smart with this.

Re: Interview with Tom Selleck about Magnum P.I. Reboot

Posted: Sat Jun 30, 2018 11:32 pm
by J.J. Walters
Perfect response from Tom Selleck. Class act! I'm glad he won't be doing a cameo!

Re: Interview with Tom Selleck about Magnum P.I. Reboot

Posted: Thu Jul 12, 2018 3:28 pm
by Stelth
Selleck is so gracious. He is the ultimate gentleman. I am so pleased he'll have nothing to do with that ill-conceived travesty.

Re: Interview with Tom Selleck about Magnum P.I. Reboot

Posted: Sat Jul 14, 2018 11:08 pm
by jholtzinger8354
I just replayed an interview of the cast of the Magnum PI reboot and an interview with Tom Selleck about the same. Tom has always been a great example of grace and class. As for me, not so much. I don't like reboots of anything. They never have the same cachet as the original and I have yet to see one that was worth watching. In no way is this an attack on the young actors who are looking forward to their roles. Magnum PI (original) caught lightning in a bottle. That doesn't happen twice, by design or by accident. When interviewed the new cast prattled about putting their mark on the update; lots of cars, explosions and chases. Not what Magnum PI was about at all. I am glad Mr Selleck won't appear in the new version. I have great respect for his integrity and his acting. Tom Selleck IS Magnum PI. I own all the episodes so I can enjoy them without the tinkering done with the remake. I won't be watching it.