Donnie Wahlberg

The actor talks about his guest-starring stint in the new season premiere.

Donnie Wahlberg will make a guest appearance on the season premiere episode of In Plain Sight, which airs on Wednesday, March 31st at 10 PM ET on the USA Network. Wahlberg recently held a conference call to discuss his role on the premiere and here's what he had to say.

What was it like working on a TV series again?

Donnie Wahlberg: It's different as a guest as opposed to being a star of a series. A guest star is a whole different responsibility. It's much different than being a regular. You come in and it's a lot of unfamiliar faces and you want to try to fit in as best you can, but also you want to stay there without making waves. But at the same time you want to come in and be hopefully the best you can be and bring something new to the table. I've been a regular before and I know that it becomes not a grind. That series that I've been a regular in, I was very committed and very dedicated, but it was always fun when a new actor came along and brought something to the table. All that said, I felt incredibly welcomed. I also knew that there was a really a new spirit going on on the show. That everybody was really looking to raise the bar for season three with John McNamara coming in. I felt like I was playing with a team that was really trying to great. So everyone was very encouraging and very welcoming of me.

I was wondering if you found there was instant chemistry when you began working with the cast. I know sometimes it takes a little bit of time to develop, but did you find the rapport was instant?

Donnie Wahlberg: It was pretty instant. I think when we did a table read a few days before and I got to sit next to Mary McCormack and she was very gracious and stuff. But I felt, again, very safe. I'm not a big fan of table reads or sitting around a table and reading a script. I'd rather do it on set and do it for real. I generally hate table reads, in fact, but it was a great atmosphere and everybody really seemed excited I was there. The regulars on the show were just very welcoming. I think part of it is maybe is the New Mexico charm that everyone has down there. But at the same time, I think there's a real great spirit on that show and it starts at the top with Mary and Fred and they've very, very gracious.

So keeping with the theme of the show, which is witness protection, how do you think it would be to really give up your identity and become someone else in order to remain safe? What would you miss and what wouldn't you miss?

Donnie Wahlberg: I've thought about it before, actually, just in time when fame and success gets a little challenging. There's been moments when it was what would it be like. I've been lucky enough to travel to many, many places. And there's times when I've been in some really obscure towns working and I thought about what it would be like to set up shop here and just kind of disappear and just be like anyone else. I guess because I've been in the spotlight so often in my life, it's sounded really appealing to me. But I think I'd probably eventually get pretty stir crazy. I'm sure I'd miss all the things that that I take for granted. I think in my experience in life speaking to people or knowing people who've lived on the run or lived with a false identity, it's really one of the hardest things to do. A lot of fugitives eventually who are living on the run usually turn themselves in because they can't the pressure of living a false life and hiding anymore. It's a lot of stress; it's a lot of pressure. It's a pretty big weight to carry around. I don't know if you meant specifically in a witness protection situation or just living in a different life of hiding out somewhere. But I think it would be fun for a while, but I think eventually I'd miss probably everything, simple things like going to the supermarket and saying hello to my neighbor and not wondering if they're going to recognize me or not. That would be a lot of pressure, I think.

It was really nice to see you in the role of a dad. How can you relate to your character on In Plain Sight and what element of yourself do you see in the character?

Donnie Wahlberg: Well, I think being a dad, that's certainly something I was able to relate to immediately. I have a 17 year old boy and I'm starting to experience what that means, the different things that they get into, 17 year olds and teenagers in general and the pressure and sometimes the head scratching that comes along with it. It's amazing. There's so many clichés about getting older or are kids doing things that we did or having their own way of going about doing similar things to what we did and I'm experiencing it all right now from the flying to the styles to the music to everything. I thought everything that I liked when I was 17 was the coolest. But I guess liking a band like New Edition is like my mom loving the Four Tops to my 17 year old. It's not so cool to them. But I think that was really the thing that I zeroed in on the most was just being a parent and understanding the pressure and responsibility of taking care of and protecting the child. There's a lot of ....and stuff on the show and different elements that I actually borrowed from a friend of mine who's had similar life experience. I talked to him about it and brought those things to the table in terms of witness protection and stuff like that. But I think really the thing that was most important thing to me was the family aspect of it and the responsibility that a dad has, no matter where he is or what his circumstances are. I think my character on the show was just, it was just important for him to be a good day when he was out of the streets being a criminal as it was for him being a straight laced guy in this witness protection program. His son was the most important thing to him in both scenarios.

We were wondering if you could tell us about the Send a Kid to Camp charity event that you held with your brothers earlier this week.

Donnie Wahlberg: That was actually an event that I had planned or wanted to do for a while. Mark and I do different events with the Mark Wahlberg Foundation. He does a couple different events a year. I tend to pick specific things that I want to do and I will do it in conjunction with my brother, Jim, who runs the Mark Wahlberg Foundation. As an example a couple of years ago, I did a fundraiser for Hurricane Katrina and I put it together and was the host and the force behind it. But Mark lent his time and energy to it as well and we end up raising with the week of preparation, $750,000 for Hurricane Katrina. I know there's poker has become a very popular game. I know there are tons and tons of poker players in Massachusetts, so I have tons of relationships. But I just thought it would be a very successful way for us to raise money. What we were raising it for is to send inner city kids from the neighborhoods that we grew up in to go to summer camp and to be able to do something that we never could do. We didn't go to summer camps. We hung out on the street corners and either got in trouble or not, depending on what the day was and what we got into. So this is something that was really important to us was to give inner city kids something constructive to do and something that may steer them in a different direction than the options and opportunities that we had ourselves. We raised $300,000 incidentally. And we're going to be sending, I think, 200 kids to camp this summer and next summer off of the success of that, so it was a pretty amazing night.

Your character on In Plain Sight is a bad boy with a big heart and in New Kids, you were considered the bad boy. So is it more fun to play a shady character and why?

Donnie Wahlberg: I don't know. I think I enjoy playing all types of difference characters. I think the challenge with this particular character was to do something different with the character that was somewhat similar to things I've done in the past. I played a lot of cops. He's obviously not a cop, but it's tricky because in playing this guy, I didn't want to do things that I'd done before, mannerisms or certain behaviors or actions or even the way that I spoke. But at the same time, I didn't want to be too selfish because the character is written, the way he's written for a reason. My insecurities or whatever, I didn't want to bring those to the table and try and to overdo something in order to satisfy myself and say I made this character different than anything I've ever done and it's very unique. I wanted to accomplish that, but at the same time, I couldn't do it in a way that was selfish and not in the best interest of the show. John McNamara is an amazing writer. He wanted me for a lot of specific reasons. Those sort of things that he saw in my past work, it's a responsibility for me to bring those things to the table and then add something to that. So I've played ballroom dancers. I've play psychotics. I've played cops. I've play silly cops and serious cops. I've played so many different roles, but I just try to take each role based on the material. And if I like the material, then I'm attracted to it. If I'm attracted to it, then I'm going to give all my energy to it. And if I give all my energy to something, it usually if nothing else, then I know that I've been committed and gave all I could. And I usually feel very satisfied at the end when I'm in that predicament. If I don't like the material, I just generally pass, no matter what it is. If it's a studio movie or a big opportunity, if I can't pile into something in the character, I usually don't do it.

You touched on some of your charitable projects that you're working on. I was wondering what other film or TV projects do you have going on these days?

Donnie Wahlberg: I just finished shooting a film called The Zookeeper with PEHTSMLJdlKsLQ and the voices talents of Adam Sandler and Sylvester Stallone, Nick Nolte, Cher. That was great, great to shoot that film. It's a comedy role for me. It's a very big comedic studio film. It's something that I haven't gotten a chance to show in my repertoire. It makes me excited. And so to do a film like that was going to be seen by so many people is really, really exciting for me. I'm currently shooting a pilot for CBS, just at least tentatively titled Reagan's Law with Tom Selleck and myself.....Alexander. I'm really excited about that as well. I think that this opportunity in some ways is indirectly related to In Plain Sight. I think In Plain Sight, working on a television schedule again, working with a great writer like John McNamara and a great cast, it really invigorated me and reminded me how much I like working on television. It was amazing to do a film like The Zookeeper, but I really have always loved television, just for the work, the amount of hours I put in and the amount of energy it takes and the consistency of it. I love to work really hard. I love to stay close to the character I'm playing. A lot of times it becomes you work two days, you're off for a week. You work three days, you're off for a month. Dragging a character out over that much time and not working very often, it can be very challenging. With television it's sort like a nine to five. I've always loved going to work every day and staying close to a character. So I think In Plain Sight relit that fire for me and indirectly a lot of relationships that I have in the CBS pilot that I'm shooting are sort of somewhat forged from my time on In Plain Sight. It's about three degrees of separation in a lot of instances. I think those degrees are connected. I think In Plain Sight actually directly led to me finding myself in shooting this pilot.

Who are the actors that you like that you most appreciate in terms of presence, acting skills and have any of them influenced you?

Donnie Wahlberg: It's funny. Your description of me is sort of how I like to think of myself. I think I agree with you a lot from you're saying. I think jumping into a leading man situation when I wasn't ready probably could have been disastrous. Doing it at that early age when I really hadn't worked for it might have sent me on the wrong path because it took me a while to realize that I am character actor and that's what I want to do. That's what I want to be. I look at actors like Gene Hackman and he does the kinds of roles that I aspire to. He's the kind of actor I hope to be like one day. He's very much a character actor, but he's also capable of being a leading man at times as he did in The French Connection and being incredibly good at it. But like James Gandolfini is another example. And then there are actors like Michael Parks, who a lot of people don't even know who he is, but every time I see a ....movie and he pops up in a totally unrecognizable role, I'm just amazed by him and I love to do those kinds of things myself. I think had I jumped into acting just because the opportunity was there because I was very famous in the musical group, I'm not sure I might have taken the time to A, put in the work that was necessary to be the best actor I could be, but also B, to identify what I really wanted to do and the kind of roles I wanted to play. When The Sixth Sense came along, for example, that's a role that I jumped all over it. My manager at the time told me to pass on it. It's like it's a day of work, what good is that going to do. It's blah, blah, blah. I said this is the best script I ever read and this is a character that could be very memorable if I could commit myself to play it. I would have done that part for free. To be able to have that sort of sense of what I wanted to do and what was important to me, it really came from hard work and I'm building a career and not just having one handed to me. So while it was the biggest struggle, I'm certainly glad that it went that way. I appreciate the kind words you said and I think that's really it. Sometimes people will say do you want, do you ever compete with Mark for roles or stuff like that. We never do. He's a movie star. He's a leading man and I've always thought of myself as a character and I take great pride in that. It's really all I could ever hope for is to be having a good reputation as a really solid character actor. That's really a great place for me to be in my opinion.

So can you talk about how you got the part? Is there an audition process for In Plain Sight?

Donnie Wahlberg: It wasn't an audition. It was actually I came, I met with John McNamara a few times in the past. We both expressed a mutual want to work with each other. John ....for something before, but I just didn't quite have the right energy for him. I had just come off tour and he called and asked for a meeting and he said, "I've always wanted to work with you. I'm going to be running the show In Plain Sight now and I want to build a character for you. I think this is a great opportunity for us to finally work together." So he sort of told me what he was thinking for the character and shared some ideas with me and asked me if I had any ideas. And I presented him with a lot of thoughts and I think we both saw it in a very similar way. He went and wrote the character. I think for a guy who's not from Boston, a guy who's not from that world, I didn't know what he would come up with when it was finally on paper. But I really only had minimal note for him. I think he got the talk right and that's the hardest part. He wrote a guy that sounded like he was a Boston guy and sounded like he was a real guy dealing with real stuff and that appealed to me. So that was really the process. Fortunately, I didn't have to audition because I pretty rather stick nails in my eyes than audition for anything. It's many people as I'm saying in front of them in my life and acted in front of them and performed in front of them, I still get pretty nervous about auditioning.

So going back to you were saying about the kind of roles you take and that, what would be your ultimate dream role, if you could choose or make up a role?

Donnie Wahlberg: Wow. It's kind of hard to answer. I'd like to think that I've played it a few times and that the next one is coming, the next dream role is coming along. I think in some ways, I've probably had that about four times. I think The Sixth Sense was a dream role because it was the ultimate challenge for me to transform physically and emotionally and to really-I didn't set out to shock people or surprise people. I just set out to make that character real and to get myself as close to him as possible physically and emotionally. But I think for me that was a dream role because I should have never gotten that role. That role was written for a 14 year old skinny little teenager and at the time I got it, I was about 30 year old muscular very fit man and the director took his chance on me and gave me that shot. Another dream role was in a little independent film that was at Sundance called Marilyn Hotchkiss' Ballroom Dancing and Charm School. I played a very complicated ballroom dancer. Again, it's a role that from where I come from and the upbringing that I had is just a role that I would have never envisioned myself being able to play. Being allowed to transform myself to that person and then got such a complicated character, it's an amazing opportunity and it really is a dream role. It was a dream role for me. And then to do it with a cast that was in that in movie, it was Robert Carlyle and Marisa Tomei and Mary Steenburgen, it was just an amazing cast, that's a dream role. So I think every opportunity is a dream role. If the material is good and the challenge is there and quite frankly, if I leave work smiling, I guess to bring it full circle, again, I think doing In Plain Sight really-I was with a great cast. I was with a great writer, a great director, a great network and a great studio who all believe in what they're doing and all really take great pride in their show and have fun. I left work everyday on that show smiling and feeling very lucky to have an opportunity to work on something so fun. I think any time I can leave work at the end of the day smiling and probably even if it's a stinker of a movie or whatever, then I'm pretty much in a dream role, because what more can I ask for than to be happy with what I'm doing? I'm really grateful to John McNamara and the team on In Plain Sight because I really do think that they helped spark the acting bug in me again. Hopefully, the work reflect that's. I know my experience personally no matter what the result at the end of the day, I felt that way. I felt very, very blessed to be in New Mexico with that group of people doing what I love to do.

You can watch guest star Donnie Wahlberg in the season premiere of In Plain Sight which airs on Wednesday, March 31 at 10 PM ET on the USA Network.