'Boston Blue' Creators Reveal How They Brought Iconic 'Blue Bloods' Family Dinner into New Spinoff (Exclusive) ...Saudi Arabia

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“I converted to Judaism,” Sonnier explains in an exclusive interview with Parade. “We were writing this around the time that my oldest son was having his bar mitzvah. In my family, we celebrate and have 'forever Shabbat.' We come together as a family and have Shabbat dinner and do the blessings on Friday nights. And so, part of watching Blue Bloods and seeing that Sunday dinner – I was raised Catholic before I converted – and I was like, ‘Oh, I understand that.’ And now here’s our version.”

Related: Donnie Wahlberg Reveals How Danny Reagan Moved from ‘Blue Bloods’ to ‘Boston Blue’ (Exclusive)

Will it be every week like it was on Blue Bloods?Brandon Sonnier: We will have Shabbat every week. I have Shabbat in my house every week.

It’s my understanding that you presented this to CBS as a cop story, but it wasn’t with Donnie. Talk about the idea of then incorporating him and having the Reagans and the Silvers together.Brandon Sonnier: The show initiated with a pitch that we had, in a similar space to Blue Bloods, just as a genre that we enjoy. I love Blue Bloods. And one of the things that we love so much about that show is that it is a family drama that is wrapped up in a police procedural. We’ve done cop shows for our whole career, but I have four children, he’s got two children. We also live a lot of family drama in our lives. And so, we wanted to tell a story about a family of police – and not all police, law enforcement, truly, we have a district attorney in our family. We also have a local reverend in our family, because the story was kind of this interracial, interfaith family in Boston with a police officer from Los Angeles, which is where we both live, who comes in to follow his estranged son. So, it was a slightly different setup.And as that story started to evolve and as we got deeper into that story, it was Jerry Bruckheimer Company and CBS, who said, “There’s an opportunity here, would you consider making the police officer Danny Reagan? Could this be a story in which Danny Reagan is the police officer who comes in?” And we said, “Yes, please.” That’s maybe the best note we’ve ever gotten in our entire career.Brandon Margolis: And the truth is, we had to ask more questions because our story was, again, about a cop following his estranged son, who was a police officer in Boston.  And when we left Blue Bloods, Danny had sons, but neither one of them were cops. So, we had to ask the question, “Well, does the story still make sense if one of his sons joined a police force outside of New York?” And they said “yes.” So that’s really when we were like, “Okay, there is enough connective tissue and we could play this forward and see what happens if this man from such an iconic family as the Reagans suddenly becomes a transplant, and what do those stories look like.”And from there, it was a matter of calibrating the Silver family, who was always the same family members as they were, but just reimagining it through the lens of Blue Bloods. And that’s where we landed on having a weekly dinner and having some of those familiar surprises as we hope they come across.

Donnie Wahlberg

Photo: John Paul Filo/CBS

Related: Everything to Know About Blue Bloods Spinoff Boston Blue

Talking about Sean, you recast. Talk about the decision to bring in a different actor to play the role.Brandon Margolis: We loved Andrew’s [Terraciano] work. We’ve seen him grow up on Blue Bloods. But for us, it made a lot of sense that if we were to start embarking on a new chapter of Sean’s life and taking on this new direction, that the energy of a different performer felt organic to the story we were telling. We were open to all sorts of ideas. But when we saw Mika’s audition, he had a lot of heart and soul in his performance and also reminded us of Andrew in a lot of ways that made it a fairly easy decision for us to see what he could do.

Mika Amonsen as Sean Reagan

Photo: Seacia Pavao/CBS

Talk about your goal for the first season. What is it that you hope to achieve?Brandon Margolis: You know, a couple of things. I think first and foremost, we really want America to have the chance to meet the Silver family and to see in them a group of people that they want to sit around the table with once a week the way they did with the Reagans for years and years.  So much of what Donnie’s experience in the real world has been of people coming up to him and saying, whether they were law enforcement families or not, that they saw themselves on that screen because of the family and the bonds that they had.So, for us, we really did want to put that theory to the test and show another family that had a universal connection the way that the Reagans did to see just a different table that people could sit at once a week.Brandon Sonnier: I think the goal is to honor the legacy from Blue Bloods, but to evolve it in a way for a new time and a broader audience.

Boston Blue airs Friday nights at 10 p.m. ET/PT on CBS. Streams next day on Paramount+.

Next, ‘Boston Blue’ Showrunners Explain Shocking ‘Blue Bloods’ Cameo and Future Crossover Plans.

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