Catching Up With Michael Mosley
Sirens, the new comedy premiering tonight on USA at 10 p.m., follows three EMTs as they drive the streets of Chicago encountering all sorts of medical situations. The series comes from executive producers Denis Leary (Rescue Me) and Bob Fisher (The Wedding Crasher) and features Leary’s trademark ability to generate laughs and poignancy out of life-or-death situations.
Michael Mosley stars as Johnny Farrell, a Chicago EMT who takes his job, but not his life, very seriously. The Iowa native starred in the ninth and final season of Scrubs and in the short-lived ABC drama, Pan Am. Paste recently had the chance to talk to Mosley about his new gig, what it’s like to work with Leary and when he knew he wanted to be an actor.
Paste: Tell me about the audition process for this part.
Michael Mosley: I auditioned for it in 2012. I went in once with a big group of guys, and we just went through the material. I walked through the door and threw the sides away. I always throw the sides away. It’s kind of a flushing of the audition. I kind of thought it was done. And then I think I went in one other time and still didn’t get the vibe that anything was happening. Then all of the sudden they were like, “Oh you’re testing for the show.” I was walking down the hall to go the restroom, and Denis was walking the other way and he goes, “Mosley!” and I was like, “Oh, he knows who I am.” Then I got the call that it was a go, and I couldn’t believe it.
Paste: Had you watched any of Denis Leary’s other shows?
Mosley: I loved Rescue Me and everything he’s done. He’s such a specific brand, such a specific type of humor, and it’s so unapologetic and true. I’m a big fan of stuff like that. I hope to someday create something like that.
Paste: What’s Leary been like to work with?
Mosley: I just didn’t know what he was going to be like. He turned out to be one of the coolest bosses I’ve ever had, if not the coolest. He’s so egalitarian—what’s funny floats. He’s so invested in us as characters and as actors because he’s an actor. A lot of times directors don’t know how to speak to actors, or writers don’t know how to communicate. He speaks the language and everything. He knows how to pull out what he’s trying to get out of you without telling you to shut up and stand there and say your lines.
Paste: What kind of research did you do before you began filming?
Mosley: The show is based on a book called Blood, Sweat and Tea, so I read that book. It’s just about the banalities and the enormity of the job. Sixty-five, seventy-five percent of the job is somebody thinks they’re having a heart attack and they’re just having a panic attack or indigestion—stuff that’s not so terrifying. But everyone once in a while you get that critical situation, so that was kind of fascinating to learn about. We also had EMTs on set always looking to call “bullshit” on anything that they saw. We would run everything by them.