Advertisement
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsNews

'Big Bang' generates harmonic convergence with its cast

TELEVISION

Stars of the CBS sitcom, on board for another two years, work hard at being funny but enjoy each other's company.

June 01, 2009|Margaret Wappler

J.J. Abrams may have muscled up his version of "Star Trek," but the franchise will always be the domain of pencil-thin, graph-paper-pale geeks like the Caltech prodigies on CBS' "The Big Bang Theory."

Exhibit A: The popular YouTube video of Sheldon, played with spazzy flair by Jim Parsons, explaining the rules of Rock, Paper, Scissors, Lizard, Spock.

Advertisement

"It's very simple: Scissors cuts paper, paper covers rock, rock crushes lizard, lizard poisons Spock, Spock smashes scissors, scissors decapitates lizard, lizard eats paper, paper disproves Spock, Spock vaporizes rock and, as it always has, rock crushes scissors."

That kind of giddy celebration of the nerd mind has given the program, created by Bill Prady and Chuck Lorre, a steadily growing audience, with promise for more: The show, which netted 9.76 million viewers for its second season finale on May 11, was picked up in March for two more years in a multimillion-dollar deal.

On a sunny afternoon in Hollywood, Parsons, along with the show's other lead geek, seasoned sitcomer Johnny Galecki, met in a fancy diner to ponder their luck.

"It's security I never dreamed I'd be able to say I have," Parsons says. The Houston-native actor, who was a regular on "Judging Amy," is wittily verbose like his character, but he doesn't pretend to have the scientific aptitude.

When asked if he's learned any new concepts from the show -- Schrodinger's cat, anyone? -- he blinks his blue eyes and says, "Learned? More like memorized in less than a week and then promptly forgotten."

Galecki, who's still fondly remembered as Darlene's slouchy boyfriend on "Roseanne," plays Leonard, the straight nerd to Sheldon's fussy one. For him, two more years means "so many more lines. It's not like we get to just sit back now."

Well, maybe some of them do. Listen to Galecki and Parsons talk about costar Kaley Cuoco, who plays Penny, the sweet but dippy waitress next door, and you might believe she has super-powers.

"I don't know how she does it," Parsons says conspiratorially, "but she always has every single word memorized."

"She never makes a mistake," Galecki adds.

Even a moment that takes on a life of its own, like Lizard, Spock, can come with a cost. "That scene was my nightmare," Parsons says. "I kept mixing it all up and making the wrong hand signal."

Los Angeles Times Articles
|
|
|