Canadian TV Guide
October 3rd 1987
This guy's got a crazy quality to him
Tour of Duty's starring
sergeant, Terence Knox, is solidly unorthodox-in the roles he chooses and the life he lives
by GLENN ESTERLY
Waiting for
production to start on Tour of Duty', the new CBS series in which he plays an
American combat sergeant in Vietnam, Terence Knox decided to stay sharp by playing a
skid-row resident for free in a friend's film. Knox did such a convincing job of looking
and acting like a derelict that a Los Angeles Times photographer took his picture for a
newspaper series on L.A.'s street people. Only the intervention of an assistant director
on the movie kept Knox's fictional character out of the news pages.
This is the sort
of story about his personal adventures Knox relishes. Of course, he sees nothing unusual
about other aspects of his life-like the fact that he currently lives in a downtown L.A.
loft apartment within shouting distance of skid row, and right
across from a transvestite bar. Or the Howie Mandel story from when Knox was a colleague
on St. Elsewhere (as Dr. Peter White), living on Vine Street near Hollywood's seedy
red-light district. ' 'Terry built a skylight in his place, just carved it
out of the ceiling," Mandel recalls. "Since it was a rental and he didn't clear
it with the landlord first, he got kicked out.
What with having played a physician-rapist on St. Elsewhere and a psychotic gunman in the TV-movie "City Killer:. Knox's career hasn't exactly been orthodox either. Those aren't the kind of parts that typically build toward the leading-man status he has in Tour of Duty.
Zev Braun,
executive producer, says. "The network people were leery of that look in Terry's eye.
They said, 'This guy's got a crazy quality to him; he's got this look.' They also
said, 'We want more of a leading-man type'-that kind of crap. I said, 'Yeah, he's got a
strange look all right-the look of an exceptional actor and exactly the right guy for this
role: Terry L,; not a manufactured guy-he's got some rough edges."
So here he is,
Terence Knox,
I was scared.
Finally I decided
the sergeant is a career soldier, hes not political and he figures the more American
can soldiers he can keep from dying the more he's contributing. He's experienced, and he
knows how to lead through example and humor instead of intimidation and force. After I got
that fix on him, no problems."
No problems with the characterization, but 36-year-old Knox did have to lose 15 pounds at
Braun's insistence. "There's a lot of physical action in this series,' , Braun says,
"and I didn't want a chubby guy running around." Knox, an ex-Inland Empire
(Washington, Montana, Idaho) Golden Gloves champion, lost the weight in just two weeks.
The show's impressive pilot and the rest of the series is shot in
Hawaii. Braun and Knox agree that as the series goes on, more attention will be focused on
bringing out the personalities of the young recruits Sergeant Anderson leads. ' 'There's
all kinds of potential for coming of age stories there," Knox says., 'I keep getting
asked if this is going to be the television version of 'Platoon.' To me, the only
similarity is that they're both set in Vietnam. 'Platoon' was more about the war within
the platoon itself. In Tour of Duty, it's 1967, before the Tet offensive, and these
guys aren't going to be killing themselves. But in the process of doing their duty, we're
going to find out a lot about what makes them tick. "
What makes Terence Knox tick isn't easy to nail down .
To Stephen Caffrey, who plays the lieutenant frequently at odds with Knox's sergeant, he's
"pretty happy-go-lucky, very boyish; a big lunk oozing goodwill. You can't be
depressed around him-he won't allow it. He's got this sly look in his eye all the time ,
like he's in on some secret most people don't know about and he's going to share it with
you".
At the same time, says Caffrey, "he's a lone wolf, a very
distinct, singular individual. Away from work, he doesn't hang out with the other guys.
He's got a few years on most of us, and maybe he's gone through his phase of going out and
drinking till he turns green and picks up a fat woman".
"I have a
theory" Howie Mandel says, "that Terry is beamed up to some other
Zev Braun. 'Terry's a rough, tough guy with a big heart and a big, if wacky, sense of
humor.
Knox himself says, 'I'm a loner, yeah. When I'm working, I'll be one of the guys, I'll
roll over and pee on the rug, whatever it takes. But in my personal life I'll, say, go to
Venice Beach and walk around alone all day and just absorb what's going on without any
communication contact. I can spend an entire week by myself, then spend a day with people
and have the sense that I have a social life
Men of the platoon (clockwise from centre):Terence
Knox,Stephen Caffrey,Joshua Maurer and Ramon Franco
Eating
breakfast one morning at his favorite downtown hangout, Gorky's, Knox talks about a
temporary glitch in his social life. "I was driving home from a movie with my
girlfriend, and I see another Austin-Healey [Knox drives a 1965 Austin-Healey].I love Austin-Healeys,
and we'd just seen 'Predator,' so the blood is up anyway, and I take a different route to
follow this other car to have a look. Plus, I'm reading all these books about Vietnam and
feeling a little harsh these days.
And all I want to do is get a good look at this other car, but my girlfriend has lost her
centre over this. She's acting like we're lost in the " wilderness, never to return.
"And I
yelled, 'Bleepity bleep, bleep. I think I can find my bleeping way home!' I yell a lot,
all right? That was two days ago.
We haven't talked since then. This morning, I
pick up the phone, start to call her, " hang up the phone. I'm missing being around
her, I miss the comfort of it, but I can't quite make the call." Pause.
"Somebody wrote, .The rooster crows out of
of depression.' I'm starting to believe it."
Talk of work is a
happier subject this day. "I love what I do for a living. And I'm good at it.
I don't mind saying I'm damn good, because I can also say there are people who, in some
ways, I'm not in the same league with. David Morse [Dr. Jack Morrison on St. Elsewhere] is like that, He's just a
thoroughbred he has the ability to do things at times that warp your mind and put you
away.
"It's like in basketball- I play a lot
of one-on-one- I'm sort of a Kurt Rambis type [power forward, Los Angeles Lakers], but if
I could be anybody in the game I'd be Isiah Thomas [flashy, high-scoring
Detroit Pistons guard]."
Growing up in the
rural community of' , Richland, Wash. , the son of a construction worker and a secretary,
Knox graduated
with an English degree from Washington State University.
"While I was in college, most of this country was still for the war; he recalls.
"In 1967, when the series is set I was still in school and had a deferment ,bad
knees." Candid, as usual, he adds, 'Thinking back, if I'd been faced with going to
Vietnam, would I have had the nerve to say no? Or to go to Canada? I don't think I'd have
had the nerve to do either."
Knox married and
divorced young and decided to give acting a try, enrolling in the theatre department at
Portland State University (Oregon). Then, moving to Hollywood, he gained some notoriety
for his little theatre roles in "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead; , , , A
Streetcar Named Desire; , and' 'When You Comin ' Back, Red Ryder?" He also did bit
roles in the movies "Used Cars" and "S.O.B."
He was bartending at a tough tavern called the Bald Eagle when St. Elsewhere came
''We started filming those episodes, and I was very concerned how it would go over. But
the reports came back very positive, so I started to really throw myself into it.
So I went for that kind of quality in the doctor. At first, when I stared at women in the
checkout lines, I'd be very embarrassed when they noticed. I kept doing it till I wasn't
feeling so embarrassed, because this guy wouldn't begin to understand normal
feelings."
Originally, when
the St. Elsewhere producers told Knox he was going to be a rapist ' , I thought it
was the end of the world. Ultimately, it was the best possible news-it gave me a chance to
do things as an actor I'd never done."
Knox was upset again when he
was informed his character was going to be shot and killed. "But that character made
a bigger impact than anything I've done;' he says now. "People still approach me on
the street about it."
("Terry will not die on Tour of Duty; , jokes Zev Braun, ' 'unless, of
course, he starts making unreasonable contract demands.")
"The more American soldiers he can keep from dying, the
more he's contributing,"
says Knox(right with Franco) of his character
Knox returned to St. Elsewhere for last season's two episodes in
which Howie Mandel's character (Dr. Fiscus) came close to death and dreamed he was in
purgatory. Mandel and Knox did their scenes on a lake, where the demented Peter White
was stranded, hysterically trying to explain the motivation for his sins. ' , It was a
reminder;' Mandel says, .'of how phenomenal Terry's work is. The guy is a great actor. For
all his wackiness away from work, when he's in front of the camera, he's all
business."
Knox's next series
was a sitcom, All Is Forgiven, in which he played a doughnut franchise entrepreneur
who marries Bess Armstrong's TV producer character. Despite healthy ratings and good
reviews during a limited run, NBC canceled it. .'It
came as a big shock to all of us on the show;' Knox says. "So they ended up with The
Tortellis [a Cheers spin-off that was a roaring failure] instead."
On the face of it,
Tour of Duty shouldn't be around long, since it goes up against the top-rated Cosby
Show. Having experienced the TV realities of getting killed and having a show
canceled, Knox says, ' .The scheduling certainly gives viewers an alternative at
that hour. But CBS seems very committed to this one."
When he isn't
shooting the series in Hawaii, Knox pretty much keeps to himself in that downtown L.A.
loft apartment. He likes the high ceilings because he's claustrophobic: "I'm not
looking forward to the tunnel scenes in Tour."
The sparsely
furnished apartment houses Knox's homemade wooden drums ('.Learning how to keep rhythm was
a big deal in my life"), but he's especially proud of the l0-foot-high platform he
built for his bed to rest on. (If he ever falls out of bed , he's dead.) And there's a
skylight. Funny thing, too-the landlord still hasn't figured
out how that got there.
TV GUIDE OCTOBER 3 1987