'Wire' creator working on New Orleans project
NEW ORLEANS - David Simon, creator of the critically acclaimed television shows The Wire and Homicide: Life on the Street, is in New Orleans working on his next project.
NEW ORLEANS - David Simon, creator of the critically acclaimed television shows
The Wire
and
Homicide: Life on the Street
, is in New Orleans working on his next project.
Named after the Creole neighborhood known for its rich musical history, Treme (truh-MAY) is a prospective TV series geared for HBO that aims to capture New Orleans' heritage and traditions as residents struggle to recover from Hurricane Katrina.
But it's not just another Katrina project, Simon is quick to say.
"This is an American story," he said in an interview from outside a jazz club where the hourlong pilot was being filmed Wednesday. "This is about an American city trying to pick itself up and doing it without a great deal of help."
To tell the story, Simon abandons almost all the backdrops New Orleans is best known for - the French Quarter and Garden District included - and gets into grittier, lesser-known neighborhoods he says have been "under-chronicled."
"We had to get inside New Orleans traditions," he said. "You can't do that from the French Quarter."
He said it was important to capture the city's dysfunction as well as its grace.
"New Orleans is not the most efficient, best-run metropolis in America. It never has been," he said. "But it's a city with an ornate and essential culture and musical tradition that is maybe one of the most original things America ever invented."
He said the story should resonate with Americans, considering the recent economic downturn. He compared Americans' faith and reliance on the nation's economic structure to New Orleans' faith and reliance in the city's levee system, both of which have proven to be "more fragile than anyone ever assumed."
"It's a metaphor for where we are in America right now," he said, standing outside Vaughan's Lounge, a music club near one of the city's hardest-hit neighborhoods, the Lower Ninth Ward. He said the pilot would keep the name of the club. He even employed the lounge's regular doorman to play one in the show.
Simon said he had been wanting to tell a story in New Orleans for more than a decade before Katrina, which hit in August 2005, but "couldn't find a hook."
Much of his Treme writing team is from New Orleans. It includes resident Tom Piazza, author of the nonfiction Why New Orleans Matters and the novel City of Refuge, and Lolis Eric Elie, a reporter for the Times-Picayune newspaper. Elie also produced a documentary, Faubourg Treme: The Untold Story of Black New Orleans, now airing on public television.
Other writers include George Pelecanos, a crime novelist and writer for The Wire, and David Mills, a screenwriter for Homicide, NYPD Blue, and The Wire.
A host of locals also made the cast. New Orleans-born actor Wendell Pierce, who played Detective William "Bunk" Moreland on The Wire, plays a Treme musician, a role he called "a dream come true."
"Being from here, I've always wanted to be a musician, but I was always the actor hanging out with the musicians," he said with a laugh on the set, trombone in hand. Between takes, Pierce practiced with Kermit Ruffins, a trumpet player featured in a scene that included a cameo by singer-songwriter Elvis Costello.