Thursday, June 4, 2009

Jeffrey Donovan in "Blue Notice" TV Series

Jeffrey Donovan is American Television Actor. Amesbury, Massachusetts, USA.

Career milestones, job, education and family.

MIAMI (AP) — Every city has its own unique pulse of life. That’s what Jeff Freilich, executive producer of the USA network series “Burn Notice,” believes.

By setting the show in Miami — and actually filming it here — producers have been able to make the city itself a character.

“Burn Notice,” whose third season begins Thursday, is the top-rated cable show and the first scripted television series to shoot at least three seasons primarily in South Florida since “Miami Vice” more than two decades ago. Shows like “CSI Miami” are mostly filmed in Los Angeles.

As a multiethnic, multicultural, international city located in a tropical climate, it’s nearly impossible to fake Miami anywhere else, Freilich said. Even the actors seem to respond to the climate and culture of the city.

“It’s visceral, and it’s something you can read on camera,” Freilich said.

“Burn Notice” revolves around Michael Westen (Jeffrey Donovan), a former U.S. spy, who is fired in the middle of an operation and dumped in his hometown of Miami. When a spy gets fired, it’s called a burn notice.

Westen, with the help of his friend Sam (Bruce Campbell) and his sometime-girlfriend Fiona (Gabrielle Anwar), uses his spy skills to help those in need, while trying to figure out who burned him and why. Michael also uses his time in Miami to mend relationships with his nagging mother (Sharon Gless) and irresponsible brother (Seth Peterson).

Most television shows and movies set in Miami have actually been shot in L.A. over the years, but Freilich said it’s never quite right. Miami’s palm trees sprout fronds sooner, the leaves are greener, the ocean is more turquoise, the air is cleaner and the city’s signature Art Deco architecture is unmistakable.

“Everything about the city infuses the film that you shoot here,” Freilich said.

By using the closed Coconut Grove Expo Center as their sound stage and headquarters, producers have been able to take full advantage of the city, said Matt Nix, the show’s creator and producer. Besides having ample space to build their sets, the building’s centralized location makes it relatively easy for actors and crew members to film at locations as many as five days a week.

“You can go two miles away from the convention center and you can be in a working-class neighborhood that’s a little rough,” Nix said. “You can find mansions and suburban neighborhoods. As a back lot, it works wonderfully.”



Graham Winick, president of the nonprofit group Film Florida, said “Burn Notice” has become the highest impact production in the state. The show employs more than 100 Florida crew members and casts mostly Florida actors for supporting roles and extras. “Burn Notice” spent just more than $34 million in Florida during production of its first two seasons, according to state records. That made the show eligible for nearly $6 million in state subsidies.

Besides the direct spending, the show also provides exposure for other South Florida businesses, particularly tourism.

“Burn Notice is a largely free infomercial for the city,” said William Talbert, president of the Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau.

While “Burn Notice” has become a successful part of the South Florida community, it was only a matter of chance that the show ended up in Miami at all.

Nix initially wanted to tell the dark, gritty story of a spy who had severed all personal connections to enter the cutthroat world of international espionage.

But rather than Miami’s sunny beaches, Nix originally envisioned the show in Newark, N.J. Network executives quickly dismissed the idea and suggested someplace sunnier. After some wrangling with the executives, Nix finally agreed.

“I had to reconceive the show as something that would work in Miami,” Nix said. “It became more about seeing this darker character in relief against a brighter background. I discovered in working on that, it freed me up creatively and made the show lighter and more fun to write. It actually turned out to be a great idea.”

Jeffrey Donovan American TV Actor


Jeffrey T. Donovan (born May 11, 1968) is an American television actor. Amesbury, Massachusetts, USA.
Career milestones, job, education and family.

Career

After earning his MFA, Donovan made his film debut in Inside Out. His next film, Throwing Down, took the top jury prize at The Hamptons Film Festival. Donovan also played Jeffrey Patterson in Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2. Since then, Donovan has been seen in television show guest appearances, such as Homicide: Life on the Street, The Pretender, Spin City, Witchblade, Monk, CSI: Miami, and Law & Order. He has also been in made-for-television movies and the lead in the cancelled USA Network television drama series Touching Evil (also starring Vera Farmiga). A role as the villainous Dr. Sloan in the short-lived TV series Threshold followed. He has also had roles in several major motion pictures. Donovan appeared in the 2005 romantic comedy Hitch starring Will Smith and Kevin James. He also starred as Cal in the 2006 film Come Early Morning opposite Ashley Judd. Also in 2006, he starred in the film Believe in Me, in which he played the coach of a women's basketball team from Middleton, Oklahoma.



Donovan was cast as a supporting role in the hit series Crossing Jordan as William Ivers. He is currently starring in Burn Notice on the USA Network as Michael Westen, a secret agent who has been burned and cast away from the government, and is trying to find who burned him and get back his life.

Donovan also performed in many various stage productions such as A View from the Bridge as Marco, An Inspector Calls and Off-Broadway in Things You Shouldn't Say Past Midnight as Gene, Hamlet as the title role, The Glory of Living as Clint, Toys in the Attic as Julian Berniers, On the Waterfront as Terry, Oedipus as Teiresias and Freedomland as Seth.



Donovan last starred in the movie Changeling which was released to U.S. theaters in October 2008. In the film (directed by Clint Eastwood), he stars opposite Angelina Jolie as corrupt police captain J.J. Jones who hid L.A. Police corruption during the Wineville Chicken Coop Murders in 1928.

Personal Life

Donovan was born in Amesbury, Massachusetts, and raised, along with his two brothers, by their mother, a single mom. Of his childhood, Donovan recalled:

I grew up really poor. We grew up on welfare — a single mom with three boys. We didn’t have anything. Christmas would come around, she’d rewrap gifts she’d given us before. We moved about 10 times in my childhood. When you come home from school and the lights don’t go on, you think: We’re moving! You can’t pay electric bills on welfare. We became very frugal.

Donovan went to college at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. He then went on to earn an M.F.A. degree from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts.



Donovan owns a home in California, in a rural area overlooking the 11,000-acre Topanga State Park. It is entirely electric and will be completely solarized by the end of 2009, due to the actor's strong belief in the importance of 'green living'.Donovan also drives a hybrid Toyota Camry.

Donovan was accompanied by Kathryn Kovarik during the touring premiere for Changeling throughout 2008.