Dracula star Jonathan Rhys Meyers is one of the industry's more troubled talents. So NBC created a financial incentive for the actor to complete filming all 10 episodes of the series this summer in Budapest.
According to sources, the network
withheld a substantial part of Rhys Meyers' compensation -- estimated at
$100,000 an episode -- until filming was finished. Rhys Meyers, 36, whose
struggles with substance abuse plagued his previous series, Showtime's The
Tudors, required increased scrutiny before NBC would sign off on casting
him in Dracula. So the Irish actor received per diem payments and other
small dispensations, but the lump sum of his salary was contingent on him
completing the season.
This was not the first time the
payment ploy had been used: NBC did it, for example, with Alec Baldwin
deep into 30 Rock's seven-season run -- not because of the substance
issues that have followed Rhys Meyers but because Baldwin had been making
noises about leaving the show.
Dracula posted a solid premiere when it launched in the 10 p.m.
hour of NBC's Friday block Oct. 25, averaging a 1.8 rating in the adults
18-to-49 demographic and 5.3 million total viewers. The Nov. 8 outing saw a
steep dip, losing nearly a full ratings point, but initial DVR returns are
promising as three days' worth of time-shifting saw the pilot improve 56
percent to a 2.8 rating.
The series is said to be a passion
project for NBC Entertainment chairman Bob Greenblatt, who courted Rhys
Meyers for the role of America's first vampire. In Greenblatt's previous
position as president of entertainment at Showtime, he oversaw Tudors,
which starred Rhys Meyers as King Henry VIII. (The actor's performance brought
him two Golden Globe nominations.)
Obviously, Greenblatt is abundantly
familiar with the actor's personal issues, which include several stints in
rehab and alcohol-related detainments at airports in Dublin, Paris and New
York. According to sources, the star's problems recurred while filming Dracula
when, following a meltdown, he returned to London and quietly was hospitalized
for a short time. Nonetheless, all 10 episodes of the Cole Haddon-created
series have been delivered. Sources say Rhys Meyers, who required a sober
companion to accompany him on set, returned to rehab as soon as filming was
completed.
NBC declined comment on the
situation. A source close to Rhys Meyers observes that the show is doing well,
adding, "Jonathan's in a really good place, and he's healthy."
http://tv.yahoo.com/news/jonathan-rhys-meyers-dracula-salary-delayed-nbc-amid-050000495.html
http://tv.yahoo.com/news/jonathan-rhys-meyers-dracula-salary-delayed-nbc-amid-050000495.html
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