When Does Monk Become a Cop Again

Fictional American individual investigator and actor

Adrian Geoffrey Monk
Monk character
Tony Shalhoub as Adrian Monk.jpg

Shalhoub as Monk

Get-go appearance "Mr. Monk and the Candidate"
Last appearance Mr. Monk and the New Lieutenant (2015 novel)
Created by
  • Andy Breckman
  • David Hoberman
Portrayed by Tony Shalhoub
Aaron Linker (in Little Monk)
In-universe information
Alias
  • Larry Tilbert ("Mr. Monk and the Red Herring")
  • Frank Conway ("Mr. Monk Gets Cabin Fever")
  • The Monk ("Mr. Monk Takes His Medicine")
  • Jerry Little ("Mr. Monk Bumps His Head")
  • Adrian Melville ("Mr. Monk Is At Your Service")
  • Brother Adrian ("Mr. Monk Joins a Cult")
  • Leland Rodriguez ("Mr. Monk Is On the Run")
  • Frank DePalma ("Mr. Monk Is Someone Else")
  • "Captain Cool" ("Mr. Monk and the Class Reunion")
  • Ben Lincoln ("Mr. Monk Goes to Jail")
Gender Male person
Occupation Police homicide consultant; sometime SFPD Detective
Family unit
  • Jack Monk Sr. (father)
  • Agnes Monk (female parent)
  • Ambrose Monk (blood brother)
  • Jack Monk Jr. (half-brother)
Spouse

Trudy Monk

(1000. ; died )

Alma Mater UC Berkeley[ane]

Adrian Monk, portrayed past Tony Shalhoub, is the title character and protagonist of the USA Network boob tube series Monk. He is a renowned one-time homicide detective for the San Francisco Police Section. Monk has obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) and multiple phobias, all of which intensified after the murder of his married woman Trudy, resulting in his break from the department. He works as a private police homicide consultant and undergoes therapy with the ultimate goal of overcoming his grief, taking command of his phobias and disorder, and being reinstated equally a constabulary detective.

Series co-creator David Hoberman says that he based Monk partly on himself, and besides on other fictional detectives, such as Lt. Columbo, Hercule Poirot and Sherlock Holmes. Other actors considered for the part included Dave Foley, John Ritter, Henry Winkler, Stanley Tucci, Alfred Molina and Michael Richards. The network eventually chose Shalhoub because they felt he could "bring the humor and passion of Monk to life".[two] Stanley Tucci and Alfred Molina had invitee appearances on Monk, with Tucci appearing in season 5 episode "Mr. Monk and the Actor", and Molina appearing in flavor 6 episode "Mr. Monk and the Naked Man".

Both Monk and Shalhoub have garnered many accolades. Monk was included in Bravo'south list of The 100 Greatest Television Characters of All Time, and Shalhoub has won diverse awards for his portrayal, including a Golden Globe Award, 3 Primetime Emmy Awards and ii Screen Actors Order Awards.

Character development [edit]

Creation [edit]

Monk was originally envisioned as a "more goofy and concrete" Inspector Clouseau type of grapheme.[3] [4] [5] However, co-creator David Hoberman came up with the idea of a detective with obsessive–compulsive disorder.[3] This was inspired by his own bout with self-diagnosed obsessive–compulsive disorder; in a Pittsburgh Postal service-Gazette interview, he stated that, "Like Monk, I couldn't walk on cracks and had to bear on poles. I have no idea why—but if I didn't practice these things, something terrible would happen."[4]

Other fictional inspirations include Columbo[3] [vi] [seven] and Sherlock Holmes, and his obsession with neatness and guild may be an homage to Hercule Poirot.[iii] Like Holmes, and occasionally Poirot, Monk is accompanied by an earnest banana with piddling or no detective ability, similar to Doctor Watson and Captain Hastings, respectively;[8] Monk'southward ii major allies from the police force department, Captain Stottlemeyer and Lieutenant Disher (credited as "Deacon" in the pilot episode), are reminiscent of Inspector Lestrade and Primary Inspector Japp, Holmes'due south and Poirot's well-meaning only ineffectual respective police counterparts. In addition, Monk has a brother whose abilities of deduction are fifty-fifty more than amazing than his, all the same much more geographically limited due to his own personal bug, somewhat in the way of Mycroft Holmes (who is more adept than Sherlock but also notoriously lazy).[six] [9] [10]

When trying to think of a possible proper noun for the character, co-creator Andy Breckman decided to look for a "simple monosyllabic terminal proper noun".

Casting [edit]

Shalhoub was bandage because the producers felt he could "bring the humor and passion of Monk to life".[2]

Co-creator David Hoberman revealed that the casting sessions were "depressing".[11] USA Network's executive vice president Jeff Wachtel stated that looking for the right actor to portray Monk was "casting hell".[12] After two years of developing, the producers still had not found an histrion to play the function.[xi] Although Michael Richards was considered, distributors of the show ABC and Touchstone worried that the audience would typecast him for more comedic roles later on his previous work every bit Cosmo Kramer on the sitcom series Seinfeld.[2] [13] After Richards dropped out of the project, he went on to star in another series well-nigh a private detective, The Michael Richards Evidence, which was cancelled after six episodes.[fourteen]

Personality [edit]

"Monk is a living legend. Quick, vivid, analytical... [with] an encyclopedic knowledge of a dozen anarchistic and assorted subjects, from door locks to horticulture to compages to human psychology."

Breckman'south clarification of Monk.[9]

Phobias [edit]

In the script for the pilot, "Mr. Monk and the Candidate", Monk is described as existence "a modern day Sherlock Holmes", simply "basics".[3] In the introductory scene of the episode, he is examining the scene of Nicole Vasques' murder, and picks upwards several important clues, merely frequently interrupts himself to wonder aloud whether he left his stove on when he left the house that forenoon. In the flavor 6 episode "Mr. Monk and the Naked Man", Monk mentions that he has 312 phobias. The strongest of these phobias are: germs, dentists, abrupt or pointed objects, vomiting, death and dead things, snakes, crowds, heights, fright, mushrooms, and small spaces, as Monk besides mentions in the flavour two episode "Mr. Monk and the Very Very Old Human being". In addition, new phobias develop at seemingly random intervals, such every bit a temporary fear of blankets at the end of the season 5 episode "Mr. Monk Gets a New Shrink". Though it is impossible to determine his strongest phobia, there does appear to be some form of bureaucracy betwixt them: in the series finale "Mr. Monk and the End", it is fabricated clear that his fear of vomiting is greater than his fright of death. He has also stated, "Snakes trump heights!".

Due to his overpowering fearfulness of germs, Monk refuses to touch door handles and other common objects with his bare hands, avoids contact with anything dirty, and always uses sanitary wipes after homo contact, including bones handshakes.[xv] He is also unable to eat food that other people take touched—as shown in the flavor 7 episode "Mr. Monk Falls in Love" when he and Leyla Zlatavich get out to a Zemenian restaurant—and tends to throw abroad household items after people touch them, such as ladles and plastic storage containers.

Administration [edit]

Monk's phobias and anxiety disorders make him depend on personal assistants, who drive him around, do his shopping, and always carry a supply of wipes for his use, as shown in episodes like "Mr. Monk Meets the Playboy", "Mr. Monk Goes to the Carnival", etc.[16] They as well take active roles in organizing his consultancy work, and sometimes investigate cases themselves.[17] His get-go assistant, Sharona Fleming (Bitty Schram), is a single mother and practical nurse by profession, hired by the police force section to help Monk recover from the three-year catatonic state he lapsed into afterwards Trudy'southward death.[15] After several years of loyal service, Sharona leaves the show in flavor 3 to return to New Jersey and remarry her ex-married man Trevor.[xviii] Later her abrupt departure, Monk has a hazard meeting with Natalie Teeger (Traylor Howard), whom he hires every bit his new assistant starting in "Mr. Monk and the Red Herring".

Fixations [edit]

Monk carries out futile and endless attempts to make the world "balanced".[19] [20] Monk is fixated with symmetry, going so far as to ever cut his pancakes into squares.[22] He strongly prefers familiarity and rigorous structure in his activities. Monk only drinks Sierra Springs water throughout seasons 1–5 and a fictional brand (Summit Creek) throughout seasons vi–8, to the point that in the season 2 episode "Mr. Monk Goes to Mexico", Monk goes without drinking for several days because he cannot find any Sierra Springs. Monk likewise has nifty difficulty in standard social situations, so much and so that he must write down common small talk phrases on note cards in an attempt to successfully socialize.[23] While his obsessive attention to minute item cripples him socially, it makes him a gifted detective and profiler.[9] He has a photographic retention,[17] and can reconstruct entire crime scenes based on lilliputian more than scraps of detail that seem unimportant to his colleagues.[15] His trademark method of examining a crime scene, which Sharona used to call his "Zen Sherlock Holmes thing", is to wander seemingly frantically effectually a criminal offense scene, occasionally holding upwardly his hands, equally though framing a shot for a photograph.[24] Shalhoub explained in an interview that Monk does this because information technology "isolates and cuts the crime scene into slices" and causes Monk to look at parts of the offense scene instead of the whole.[24]

Monk'south delicate mental condition means that his power to office can be severely impaired by a variety of factors. One example is shown during the flavor 5 episode "Mr. Monk and the Garbage Strike", in which the smell of garbage prevents Monk from being able to easily identify the murderer of sanitation matrimony dominate Jimmy Cusack, eventually causing him to have a psychotic break. Another example is when entering a chaotic murder scene in the episode "Mr. Monk Meets Dale the Whale", his outset impulse is to straighten the lamps, though he is frequently able to hold off his fixations when examining bodies or collecting evidence.[25] Even though Monk's mental state in the series is said to be a issue of his married woman's death,[15] [26] he shows signs of OCD in flashbacks dating back to childhood.[27] To deal with his OCD and phobias, Monk visits a psychiatrist – Dr. Charles Kroger (Stanley Kamel) in the first six seasons and Dr. Neven Bell (Héctor Elizondo) in the last 2 seasons – weekly, and at several points, daily.[28] Moments of farthermost stress tin cause Monk to enter a dissociative state, every bit seen in the Season 1 episode "Mr. Monk and the Earthquake"; he begins speaking in gibberish during these periods, severely hindering his investigative skills.

Over the form of the show (roughly viii years), Monk overcomes many of his phobias and some aspects of his OCD. Though he has not been cured of many of them, if any at all, he has been able to put them in the dorsum of his mind when involved in case work. One breakthrough is shown in the flavor viii episode "Mr. Monk Goes to Group Therapy", when Adrian is locked in a machine trunk with his fellow OCD patient and personal rival, Harold Krenshaw. During the terrifying trip, both men overcome their longstanding claustrophobia (fear of small spaces), likewise as their own differences, resulting in them becoming friends. Possibly due to this, also as the many cases Monk has solved over the years, he is reinstated as detective offset class by Stottlemeyer in the season 8 episode "Mr. Monk and the Badge". Though he is very excited about his reinstatement initially, Monk realizes that becoming a detective again did not mean that he would exist happier. In a session with Dr. Bell, Monk realizes he was ever happy as a private detective and consultant to the SFPD as his ain boss. After overcoming his fright of heights and singlehandedly capturing a killer window-washer, Monk turns in his bluecoat. In the series finale, he learns that his belatedly wife, Trudy, had given birth to a daughter earlier they had met. The noesis and events of the episode lead to him becoming more than cheerful.

Character background [edit]

Childhood and family [edit]

Monk was born October 17, 1959. This is shown in the episode "Happy Birthday, Mr. Monk", which takes place during the calendar week of October 16, 2009 (It is stated that his 50th birthday is the next day, October 17, 2009).

Information technology is known he was built-in in the fictitious Marin County town of Tewksbury, to parents Agnes (Rose Abdoo) and Jack Monk, Sr (Dan Hedaya). His parents were very strict and over-protective, although his mother was emotionally afar and seemed to have difficulty expressing affection.[27] Adrian'south father, Jack Monk, abandoned the family when Adrian was viii years onetime when he went out for Chinese food and did not render.[20] Adrian has an agoraphobic brother named Ambrose (John Turturro), from whom he was estranged for vii years following Trudy's death.[29] Monk states that his mother died in 1994.[xxx] The episode "Mr. Monk and the Marathon Homo" reveals that Monk ran track in loftier schoolhouse, but quit when he entered higher. The episode "Mr. Monk and the Other Detective" reveals that his alma mater is the Academy of California, Berkeley. In "Mr. Monk and the Grade Reunion", it is revealed that Monk had the nickname "Helm Absurd" in college, and Natalie is amused to observe that he got information technology from the fact he spent every weekend defrosting the educatee lounge fridge in his dormitory. His dorm room was number 303.

In the episode "Mr. Monk and the Three Pies", it is revealed that Monk was angry at his brother for never contacting him after Trudy'south decease.[29] When the two are reunited, Ambrose admits he did non call Adrian because he believed that he was responsible for the incident. Trudy was getting Ambrose coughing medicine and was in the store's garage when she was killed.[29]

Their father, Jack, remained unseen in the series until the season 5 episode "Mr. Monk Meets His Dad".[20] Jack explains that he did non return to his family because the bulletin in his fortune cookie read "Stand by your human being", which he interpreted to mean that he should follow his own path.[20] Adrian does not forgive his begetter at starting time, just warms upwards to him while assisting him on his duties equally a truck driver.[20] Jack mentions reading Sherlock Holmes stories to Adrian, who somewhen learned to solve the mysteries before hearing the stories' endings.[20] At the end of the episode, Jack teaches Adrian how to ride a wheel—something he was not there to do when Adrian was a child.[20] Jack also mentioned that he has a son from another married woman, named Jack Jr. (Steve Zahn).[20] Monk later meets Jack Jr. in the episode "Mr. Monk'southward Other Brother", and helps to clear him of murder.[22]

Trudy's death [edit]

Throughout the series, Adrian mourns his wife Trudy (Melora Hardin/Stellina Rusich), who was killed on December fourteen, 1997 past a car bomb he believes was meant for him.[15] [31] The death of his wife exacerbated Monk's already existing obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD).[24] [32] [33] I yr later, the San Francisco Police Department granted him a psychological discharge.[17] Monk calls it "a temporary suspension" and hopes to be reinstated.[17] His grief over Trudy'southward death is intense and with him every twenty-four hour period of his life; he has stated more than in one case that he is never truly happy and never expects to be truly happy e'er again.[34] Since Trudy'due south death, Monk has been consulting with San Francisco law detectives on various cases.[fifteen]

Equally the serial progresses, Monk makes several discoveries in his ongoing search for the man who killed his wife.[35] He discovered that the automobile bomb was indeed meant for Trudy and was built past a human being named Warrick Tennyson (Frank Collison),[36] who was hired past a 6-fingered homo named Frank Nunn (Courtney Gains).[35] [37] In the sixth-flavor finale, he finally catches up with Nunn, who claims to be yet another pawn with no thought why Trudy was killed.[37] This turns out to exist part of a larger plot to have Nunn prepare upwardly another bombing then frame Monk for killing him; he is shot earlier Monk can have him arrested or convince him to surrender the name of his employer in Trudy'southward murder.[37] In one case Monk is cleared in Nunn'southward death, the police observe correspondence from Nunn dating dorsum to the era of Trudy's death.[37] There are no names discovered, but there is a reference to the person responsible, referred to as "The Gauge".[37] In the two-part series finale, "Mr. Monk and the Cease", it is revealed that "The Judge" is Ethan Rickover, an actual courtroom judge portrayed by Craig T. Nelson.

Trudy gave nascence to a girl, Molly Evans, on January two, 1983. Had she not been adopted out, Adrian would have been Molly's stepfather.

Music [edit]

In the pilot episode "Mr. Monk and the Candidate," Monk plays the clarinet during his visit to Trudy'south grave. His musical abilities show upwardly again in "Mr. Monk and the Red-Headed Stranger," when he is invited to sit in with Willie Nelson's band and afterwards plays "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain" with Nelson at Trudy's grave. Though Monk is not seen playing the clarinet afterward, it occasionally is brought up in conversation (such equally during a chat with Kris Kedder in "Mr. Monk Goes to a Rock Concert").

Monk describes himself as Nelson'due south 2d-biggest fan and Trudy as his biggest.

Reception [edit]

Critical reception [edit]

Critical reviews of grapheme Adrian Monk have been positive. Howard Rosenberg of the Los Angeles Times called Monk "Boob tube'due south nearly original sleuth always".[25] In a review of the show'due south pilot, Tim Goodman of the San Francisco Chronicle stated: "With his history and his sympathetic but funny 'bug', he [Monk] becomes ane of television receiver'due south most likable characters and floats a evidence that is, to be frank, riddled with improbability and simplicity".[38] Monk is ranked number 99 on Bravo's list of The 100 Greatest Television Characters of All Time.[39] [forty] He was named one of Tv'southward Smartest Detectives past AOL.[41]

Shalhoub'south performance in the series has also been praised.[42] [43] Michael Sauter of Entertainment Weekly called Shalhoub'due south performance "original and first-class".[44] Nancy Franklin of The New Yorker said that Shalhoub is "bright at conveying the tension between Monk's want to conquer his disorder and his dug-in defense of his behavior".[45] Michael Abernethy of PopMatters describes Shalhoub's performance as "exceptional", and Melanie McFarland of the Seattle Mail-Intelligencer states that Shalhoub is a "careful and nuanced histrion".[46] Alan Sepinwall of the Star-Ledger described Shalhoub as "the perfect fit" for the grapheme.[47]

Awards [edit]

Shalhoub has earned diverse awards and nominations for his piece of work in Monk. He has been nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Role player in a Comedy Series each twelvemonth from 2003 to 2010,[48] [49] [50] winning in 2003, 2005 and 2006.[51] In 2003, Shalhoub won the Aureate Globe Award for Best Thespian – Television Series Musical or Comedy;[52] he was nominated for the aforementioned category in 2004, 2005, 2007 and 2009.[53] [54] [55] [56] He received the 2004 and the 2005 Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance past a Male Actor in a Comedy Serial,[57] [58] with nominations in the same category in 2003, 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009.[59] [60] [61] [62] [63]

References [edit]

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  3. ^ a b c d e Erdmann & Cake 2006, p. 2.
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  9. ^ a b c Erdmann & Block 2006, p. five.
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  12. ^ Erdmann & Block 2006, p. 4.
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    • Scharpling, Tom; Conrad, Hy; Dratch, Daniel (2008-02-22). "Mr. Monk is on the Run pt. 2". Monk. Flavour 6. Episode 16.
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Sources [edit]

  • Erdmann, Terry J; Cake, Paula M (July 2006), Monk: The Official Episode Guide, St. Martin's Griffin, ISBN0-312-35461-4

sholeslaregrell.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adrian_Monk

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