Steve Howey guest stars on Brilliant Minds on Monday, October 7. He stars as Wyatt James, a rugged motorcycle mechanic who comes to Dr. Wolf with memory loss and an accidental gunshot wound.
As the severity of his condition worsens, Wyatt is forced to make an impossible decision that will alter his life and those he loves.
TV Fanatic chatted with Steve Howey about how Wyatt deals with this difficult dilemma, working with Zachary Quinto and the Brilliant Minds cast, and how the role differed from previous ones.
Check out the interview below:
Hi, Steve. Please tell me about your character, Wyatt James, in next Monday’s Brilliant Minds.
Wyatt James is a biker who’s friends with Dr. Wolf and works on his bike. Wyatt accidentally shoots himself because he has this tremor. Dr. Wolf is intrigued and wants to know more about this tremor.
Then he gets tested and finds out that he has a tumor in his head that’s pushing on the fornix, affecting memory.
The tumor could grow larger and kill him, or they could remove the tumor, but at the same time remove the tumor, they’ll remove the capability for Wyatt to have any more memories.
So, he has this dilemma. Dr. Wolff also introduces him to his estranged daughter, an adult daughter with whom he has had no relationship.
The relationship between Dr. Wolff and Wyatt is not only doctor-patient but also friendship. This was written very well, and Zachary Quinto acted beautifully in it.
How does Wyatt deal with his impossible decision and avoid regrets?
There is a line in the show. It’s a voiceover from Dr Wolf, who says that for Wyatt to heal, he has to make peace with his past.
The whole point is that regret is living in the past. You hold on to it but have no control or power over it. The only thing that you can control is the present moment.
My philosophy is that there are no losses. There are only lessons.
The more you can stay out of the past, out of the future, and into the present, the more joy and completeness you feel in the present moment because you’re not distracted by the past or the future.
With Wyatt, he probably hasn’t had to deal with a lot of these issues. He’s been avoiding the fact that he has a daughter that he hasn’t talked to.
He’s been dealing with these health issues, these tremors, and these issues, and not telling his wife about him being a quote-unquote tough guy.
Fortunately, or unfortunately, he has a friend like Dr. Wolf, who allows him to go to his house, bang on his door, and force a surgical procedure after hours.
True. Speaking of that, what was it like working with the cast, especially Zachary Quinto?
I was a fan of Zachary Quinto before. I liked his work, and I liked his face. Afterward, I’m a huge fan. He is a brilliant actor.
As an actor working with an actor, you want someone to bounce off of because there’s a lot of listening. There are many moments where you’re trying to tell a story.
The batter can’t hit it out of the park if the pitcher doesn’t throw hard. I need a fast pitch to swing hard to hit it out of the park, and it’s back and forth. It’s vice versa. I can hit it as hard as possible if it’s a soft pitch. It’s not going to be a home run. That’s my sports analogy.
Coming from the theater world, he’s intense. It was great working with him because there’s a lot of vitality and life there. And he has a very intense look. So, I loved working with him.
The director, Demane Davis, was amazing. I loved her. She would come in and whisper that Wyatt didn’t know yet. I learned a lot from working with her and Zach.
It made me think about wanting to do theater because I worked with William H. Macy for all those years in Shameless, and he’s a theater actor. There were similar tendencies, but it was just this intensity when it was go time.
What about the actress that plays your wife, Kate Corbett? You guys seemed like you had a good connection.
Kate Corbett (Good Witch) was great, lovely, and beautiful. She lives in Toronto and just had a baby, so she was going through that.
It’s not difficult to connect with another person if both parties are willing to have that connection. So, as an actor, you don’t necessarily have to have a connection.
You don’t have to get in a personal place. You act, you pretend. But I think it’s easier to tell a story as a character when you have a connection because there’s only so much you can fake.
You can’t fake chemistry. There’s a certain je ne sais quoi about it. It’s indescribable. You either know it or you don’t.
So, we connected on a personal level, and that chemistry came through in her love for Wyatt, her fear of him, and her desire for him to do whatever was necessary to survive.
What would you want your final memory to be? If you heard, might you lose the ability to make new memories?
Seeing my children’s faces would be my final memory.
That’s lovely. Will your fans enjoy seeing you in a different role in this episode?
I haven’t thought about it. It’s more drama. There’s not a lot of goofy comedy where I get to be a clown. It’s a lot more sincere.
Very true. The last role I saw you in was True Lies.
Oh, True Lies. It’s a lot different. Honestly, I never think about how the fans are going to react.
I’m trying to have all these things happen simultaneously, which is trying to have fun. I’m trying to enjoy it.
I’m trying to play. I’m trying to tell a story, connect with the actors, listen to what they say, and create something that the audience will enjoy through the story we’re creating as the actors playing these characters.
I’ve been very fortunate that the fans have enjoyed my process, but I will never stop having fun.
Doing Brilliant Minds was fun because I hadn’t done it before.
It discussed important things to many people, so I hope they will see that joy, even though it is a serious topic.
You can watch Steve Howey in Brilliant Minds on NBC on Monday, October 7 at 10/9c.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.