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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, February 6, 2007

Team works on quiet crime-solving drama hit 'NCIS'

By Mike Hughes
Gannett News Service

Mark Harmon, center, and his team (Michael Weatherly, left, and Cote de Pablo) solve crimes on the CBS series "NCIS."

CLIFF LIPSON | CBS

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'NCIS'

7 p.m. Tuesdays

CBS

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Mark Harmon was looking around his workplace approvingly.

"This is a bunch of blue-collar guys who get the work done," he says.

He was talking partly about the actors in "NCIS." Like Harmon, a former college quarterback, they bring a sensible work ethic.

And he was talking about the people they portray. The real Naval Crime Investigative Service is filled with quiet crime-solvers.

Appropriately, "NCIS" has been a quiet, under-the-radar hit.

Currently, this is the only show that prospers against "American Idol." Even when "Idol" had its top-rated audition episodes, "NCIS" finished No. 9 and No. 10 in the weekly Nielsen ratings.

Part of the show's appeal is basic crime-solving, but there's more. "People like the characters," Cote de Pablo says. "And it's multigenerational."

At one end is David McCallum, 73, an erudite Scotsman who had a popular series ("The Man From U.N.C.L.E.") 42 years ago.

At the other is de Pablo, 27. "She's been terrific for the show," says Harmon, 55.

She's a native of Chile and grew up in Miami, where her mother (Maria Olga Fernandez) has been a Spanish-language TV personality. For a time, de Pablo also hosted a Spanish-language show. Now, ironically, she plays a liaison from the Mossad, the crack Israeli unit.

"Once, I had two pages (of dialog) in Hebrew," de Pablo says. "That was interesting."

The role brings a zesty, love-hate relationship with Tony DiNozzo, played by Michael Weatherly. When she was auditioning, Weatherly ad-libbed to throw her off.

"She just looked at me and said, 'Are you a maniac?' " Weatherly recalls with a grin. "Then she went right on."

He's not maniacal, but he does prefer to stay loose. After spending his first series ("Dark Angel") in a wheelchair, Weatherly, 38, bristles with physical and verbal energy.

"I ad-lib a little," he says. "I might go, 'You know what Tony is spelled backward? Y-not?' "

The show does manage to keep its balance. "We have a liberal dose of humor and strangeness," Weatherly says.