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Det. Mike Logan | |
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Law & Order franchise (Law & Order and Law & Order: Criminal Intent) character | |
First appearance | Season one ( Law & Order ): "Prescription for Death" Season four ( CI ): "Stress Position" |
Last appearance | Season five (Law & Order): "Pride" Season seven (Law & Order: CI): "Last Rites" |
Portrayed by | Chris Noth |
Voiced by | Kid Beyond ( Law & Order: Legacies ) [1] |
In-universe information | |
Nickname | Mike Mikey (by Phil Cerreta, Don Cragen, Tony Profaci, and occasionally Lennie Briscoe) |
Title | NYPD Detective (L&O) Senior Detective (CI) |
Occupation | Police Officer |
Family | Unnamed father (deceased) Unnamed mother (deceased) |
Partner | L&O Max Greevey Phil Cerreta Lennie Briscoe Exiled Tony Boyer Frankie Silvera L&O: CI Carolyn Barek Megan Wheeler Nola Falacci |
Seasons | 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 (L&O) 4, 5 , 6 , 7 (CI) |
Michael Logan is a fictional character in the police procedural and legal drama television series Law & Order franchise, played by Chris Noth. He appears in 148 episodes of the franchise (111 episodes of Law & Order and 36 episodes of Law & Order: Criminal Intent ) as well as in one episode of Homicide: Life on the Street . He also appeared in Exiled: A Law & Order Movie .
Logan initially appeared on Law & Order from the show's pilot episode. He appeared in every episode beginning with the first season in 1990 until Noth's dismissal from the series in 1995. After appearing in the franchise telemovie Exiled, the character then guest-starred in the Law & Order: Criminal Intent season-four episode "Stress Position". Logan subsequently became a regular on Criminal Intent, starting with the first episode of season five, "Grow", which originally aired on September 25, 2005. Logan then left the series in the 21st episode of season seven, "Last Rites", which originally aired on August 17, 2008. [3]
Mike Logan was born in 1958 [4] in New York City's Lower East Side into a working-class Irish-Catholic family. His father was also a police officer. [5] [6] He spent 10 years attending Our Lady of Mercy, [7] where he was often in trouble and sent to see the guidance counselor. [8] Little is revealed about his extended family, but he has stated that his family crest has a griffin on it, suggesting a European maternal line distinct from that of his surname. [9]
He is originally portrayed as a cocky, womanizing misanthrope with a short fuse, which his captain, Donald Cragen (Dann Florek), refers to as his "famous temper". [4] Later episodes, however, reveal a more complex side to the character; gradually he is revealed to have been abused as a child, both physically (by his unstable, alcoholic mother [5] [10] ) and sexually (by his parish priest, whom he later confronts and brings to justice [4] ). These early traumas lead to his cynical view of the church; he quips in one episode, "My old lady had a rosary in her left hand while she beat the crap out of me with her right. The next time I go to church, six of my closest buddies will be carrying me." [7] Producer Dick Wolf noted of Logan that he provided this complex backstory in creating the character "for the sake of continuity in the writing" and to "provide the foundation for the conflict that drives much of the drama in the series". [11] When he was a young man, his pregnant girlfriend had an abortion against his wishes. [12]
In several episodes, his anger explodes. When his first partner, Max Greevey (George Dzundza), is murdered by a suspect in a racketeering case, Logan forces a confession from the murderer at gunpoint, and comes very close to killing him. The incident nearly costs Logan his job. He eventually learns to accept Greevey's death, however, with help from forensic psychiatrist Elizabeth Olivet (Carolyn McCormick). [13] He and Olivet become close, and it is later implied that they slept together. [14]
Logan's second partner, Phil Cerreta (Paul Sorvino), is also shot in the line of duty, [15] but he survives and takes on a desk job. [16] For the rest of the character's tenure on the show, Logan is partnered with Lennie Briscoe (Jerry Orbach), with whom he forms a close friendship.
Logan dislikes wealthy people with upper-class professions, especially lawyers, accounting for his antagonistic relationship with Executive Assistant District Attorney Jack McCoy (Sam Waterston). He has diverse political views; he is adamantly pro-choice, [17] [3] favors drug legalization, [18] and compares the Patriot Act to George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four . [19] While he has at various points harbored prejudices against people of Arabic [7] and Japanese descent, [20] by 2007, he shows unbridled disdain for any form of racism.
When Noth was fired from the show in 1995 over a salary dispute, the Logan character was written out; in the Law & Order universe, Logan is transferred from Manhattan Homicide to the Staten Island Domestic Disputes squad in 1995 for publicly punching a homophobic politician who had been tried for the murder of a gay man (based on the Dan White case). [21] The transfer is considered a punishment and a career dead end for Logan; McCoy refers to Logan's new assignment as "doing 5 to 10 in Staten Island". He is replaced by Det. Rey Curtis (Benjamin Bratt). After Noth's firing was announced, Orbach sought to have the character of Logan killed off, to provide Orbach's character with an "Emmy moment" of "a sobbing Briscoe... cradling the dead body of Mike Logan in his arms"; Wolf declined this request, thus making it possible for Logan to return as a character later in the franchise. [22]
The Logan character was revived in 1998 and given his own TV movie, Exiled: A Law & Order Movie. By the time of the movie, Logan has become a homicide detective again, but is still in Staten Island. He tries to get back to Manhattan by solving the murder of a prostitute, in the process discovering that his old friend, Detective Tony Profaci (John Fiore), is involved in the crime.
In 2005, the character was added to Law & Order: Criminal Intent, a presence described as providing "the strongest link between CI and Law & Order". [22] He was reintroduced in the fourth-season episode "Stress Position", where he helps the Major Case Squad's investigation of a case of prisoner abuse involving corrupt corrections officers who torture Arab prisoners. [19] Detectives Robert Goren (Vincent D'Onofrio) and Alexandra Eames (Kathryn Erbe) question Logan's girlfriend, prison nurse Gina Lowe (Arija Bareikis), about prison drug testing and her interactions with a murdered corrections officer. Later, the detectives deduce that Unit Counselor Kurt Plumm (Wayne Duvall) is the ringleader and is planning to have Lowe killed to silence her.
Goren and Logan attempt to escort her to safety, but the prison goes into lockdown, trapping all three inside. Plumm and his partners corner Logan, Goren, and Lowe in a corridor. Goren convinces the other guards to defy Plumm, however, and one of the officers opens the gates to free the detectives and Lowe. Logan picks up a guard's discarded billy club and approaches Plumm menacingly, but he resists the urge to assault the man. "That guy," Logan later says to Goren, "he would have been worth another 10 years in Staten Island." Also in the episode, Captain James Deakins (Jamey Sheridan) reveals that Logan's former superior officer, Lieutenant Anita Van Buren (S. Epatha Merkerson), had tried three times to get him transferred back to her command after his reassignment, all to no avail.
Logan returns to Manhattan as a detective at the Major Case Squad in the fifth season (under Deakins' directive), promoted to senior partner with Det. Carolyn Barek (Annabella Sciorra). [23] In the 2006 episode "To the Bone", he uses deadly force against a murder suspect, unaware that the man is an undercover police officer. He is cleared of official misconduct, but is troubled by having killed a fellow officer; he reaches out to Olivet for counseling. [24]
Logan's shooting of the undercover officer sets in motion a chain of events that eventually leads to Deakins' retirement from the NYPD. In the sixth season, the Major Case Squad is handed over to a new captain, Danny Ross (Eric Bogosian), and Logan is assigned a new partner, Det. Megan Wheeler (Julianne Nicholson). [25]
At the end of the sixth season, while Wheeler goes on temporary assignment (due to Nicholson's first pregnancy), Logan begins dating his neighbor Holly Lauren (Kelli Williams), but she is murdered before the relationship can develop. During the investigation, Logan discovers that Lauren had a whole other life. Her name used to be Kathleen Shaw and she was running from an abusive ex-boyfriend, who becomes a person of interest in her death. When District Attorney Arthur Branch (Fred Dalton Thompson) drops charges against Lauren's ex, Julian (Alec Von Bargen), due to lack of evidence of a homicide, Logan is deeply upset. [2]
At the start of the seventh season, he has a new partner, Detective Nola Fallaci (Alicia Witt), who is assigned to him from Brooklyn North homicide, while Wheeler is teaching American police procedures to officers in Europe. [2]
In the episode "Last Rites", Logan goes head to head with Terri Driver (Leslie Hope), a corrupt ADA who had made her career by railroading defendants she had cause to believe were innocent. Driver, who is running for attorney general, threatens to go after Logan's job and builds a case against Wheeler's fiancé, who is arrested by the FBI for fraud and racketeering. Logan solves a 16-year-old homicide that Driver has been trying to bury and exonerates a man she unjustly sent to prison, but the inflexibility and corruption of the justice system he sees in this case leaves him angry and disenchanted. Father Chris Shea (Denis O'Hare), a priest who first alerted Logan to Driver's corruption, advises him that, after over 25 years as a cop, it is time to do something else with his life. Logan nods and walks out of the room, [26] but his decision is not revealed until the following season, when Ross mentions to Wheeler that her partner "quit on her", referring to Logan. [27] He is replaced by Zack Nichols (Jeff Goldblum).
Mike Logan carries a Smith & Wesson Model 36 .38 Special caliber revolver in the original Law & Order series. In Law & Order: Criminal Intent, he still carried the Model 36 in his early appearances, but he later switches to a Glock 19 9mm semiautomatic pistol before moving to a Colt Detective Special, another .38 caliber revolver.
In the precredit sequence of the 1995 Homicide: Life on the Street episode "Law & Disorder", Mike Logan hands off a prisoner (John Waters) to Baltimore Detective Frank Pembleton (Andre Braugher), while they engage in friendly banter about which city, New York or Baltimore, is better. [28] Noth was uncredited for his appearance, but received a special thanks.
Along with the rest of the cast of Law & Order, Chris Noth was nominated for a Screen Actor's Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series in 1995 and 1996. Noth was also nominated for a Viewers for Quality Television Award for his performance as Logan in 1994.[ citation needed ]
A 2004 retrospective on the Lennie Briscoe character, aired after Orbach's death earlier that year, noted that some fans "were never able to move beyond Chris Noth's Mike Logan as Briscoe's partner", and that in adjusting to having Briscoe as his new partner, "Logan was even more gruff than Briscoe". [29]
Noth has appeared in 111 episodes in Law & Order and 36 episodes in Law & Order: Criminal Intent .
Seasons | Years | Episodes | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | ||
1 | 1990-91 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 1991-92 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 1992-93 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
4 | 1993-94 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
5 | 1994-95 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Seasons | Years | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 |
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1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | ||
4 | 2004-05 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
5 | 2005-06 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
6 | 2006-07 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
7 | 2007-08 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Seasons | Years | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 |
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Squad | Borough | Division | Partner | Direct Superior |
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27th | Manhattan | Homicide | Sgt. Max Greevey | Capt. Donald Cragen |
Sgt. Phil Cerreta | ||||
Det. Lennie Briscoe | ||||
Lt. Anita Van Buren | ||||
128th | Staten Island | Domestic Dispute | Det. Tony Boyer | Lt. Kevin Stolper |
Homicide | Det. Frankie Silvera | |||
1PP | Manhattan | Major Case Squad | Det. Carolyn Barek | Capt. James Deakins |
Det. Megan Wheeler | Capt. Danny Ross | |||
Det. Nola Falacci |
Law & Order is an American police procedural and legal drama television series created by Dick Wolf and produced by Wolf Entertainment and Universal Television, launching the Law & Order franchise.
Law & Order: Criminal Intent is an American police procedural drama television series set in New York City, where it was also primarily produced. Created and produced by Dick Wolf and René Balcer, the series premiered on September 30, 2001, as the third series in Wolf's successful Law & Order franchise. Criminal Intent focuses on the investigations of the major case squad in a fictionalized version of the New York City Police Department set in New York City's One Police Plaza. In the style of the original Law & Order, episodes are often "ripped from the headlines" or loosely based on a real crime that received media attention.
Exiled: A Law & Order Movie is a 1998 (two-hour-format) television film based on the police procedural and legal drama television series Law & Order . Written by Charles Kipps, and directed by Jean de Segonzac, the film originally aired on NBC on November 8, 1998. The film revolves around Noth's character, Detective Mike Logan. Kipps received a 1999 Edgar Award for his screenplay.
Robert "Bobby" Goren is a fictional character featured in the NBC-USA Network police procedural and legal drama television series Law & Order: Criminal Intent, portrayed by Vincent D'Onofrio.
Leonard W. Briscoe is a fictional character on NBC's long-running police procedural and legal drama television series Law & Order. He was created by Walon Green and René Balcer and portrayed by Jerry Orbach. He was featured on the show for 12 seasons, from 1992 to 2004, making him one of the longest-serving main characters in the series' history, as well as the longest-serving police detective on the show. He also appeared in three Law & Order spin-offs and was part of the original cast of Law & Order: Trial by Jury, appearing in the first two episodes prior to his death. He appears in 282 episodes, the TV movie Exiled and the Law & Order video games Law & Order: Dead on the Money, Law & Order: Double or Nothing, Law & Order: Justice Is Served and Law & Order: Legacies.
Donald 'Don' Cragen is a fictional character played by Dann Florek in the American police procedural television series Law & Order and its spinoff, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, on NBC. Cragen is a homicide captain with the New York Police Department who later becomes captain of the department's Special Victims Unit. A recovering alcoholic, Cragen is a tough police veteran who is loyal to his officers. He appeared in the first three seasons of Law & Order and in the first 15 seasons of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. Having credited appearances in 400 episodes in the Law & Order franchise, Cragen has appeared in the third-most episodes of any character in the franchise; this mark is surpassed only by Olivia Benson and Fin Tutuola, main characters on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.
John Munch is a fictional character played by actor Richard Belzer. Munch first appeared on the American crime drama television series Homicide: Life on the Street on NBC. A regular through the entire run of the series from 1993 to 1999, Munch is a cynical detective in the Baltimore Police Department's Homicide unit, and a firm believer in conspiracy theories. He is originally partnered with Detective Stanley Bolander. Munch is based on Jay Landsman, a central figure in David Simon's 1991 true crime book Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets.
Law & Order is a media franchise composed of a number of related American television series created by Dick Wolf and produced by Wolf Entertainment. They were originally broadcast on NBC, and all of them deal with some aspect of the criminal justice system. Together, the original series, its various spin-offs, the TV film, and crossover episodes from other shows constitute over 1,000 hours of programming.
Anita Van Buren is a fictional character on NBC's long-running police procedural and legal drama television series Law & Order, portrayed by S. Epatha Merkerson. The character of Van Buren was an "authoritative lieutenant" in the New York Police Department, who supervised teams of detectives who worked out in the field, and originally served as "commander of the 27th Precinct Detective Squad." The fictional Van Buren achieved the rank of NYPD lieutenant before any actual policewoman in New York did so, creating a "dissonance" with reality. Van Buren appeared in 390 episodes of Law & Order. When she crossed the 300-episode mark in 2008, Lt. Van Buren became the longest-running African-American character in television history.
The third season of Law & Order aired on NBC between September 23, 1992, and May 19, 1993 which remained unchanged. This season marked the introduction of Jerry Orbach as Lennie Briscoe, who replaced Paul Sorvino after "Prince of Darkness." A year prior, Orbach had guest starred as a defense attorney in at least one season two episode: “Wages of Love”. At the end of the season, both Dann Florek and Richard Brooks departed the main cast.
The fifth season of Law & Order aired on NBC between September 21, 1994, and May 24, 1995.
Dr. Elizabeth Olivet is a fictional character on Law & Order, the TV crime drama. Carolyn McCormick portrayed her from 1991 to 1997 and in 1999. The character was revived in 2002, although her appearances were infrequent and her last was in 2009. Since Law & Order’s cancellation, the Dr. Olivet character has occasionally been on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, most recently in 2018.
Alexandra "Alex" Eames is a fictional character within the Law & Order universe portrayed by Kathryn Erbe. Eames first appears on Law & Order: Criminal Intent as a detective partnered with Robert Goren. Following the end of the series in 2011, Erbe reprised her role in two episodes of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, with her character promoted to lieutenant and now working in the joint City/Federal Homeland Security Task Force.
The first season of Law & Order: Criminal Intent, an American police procedural television series, was developed by Dick Wolf and René Balcer. It began airing on September 30, 2001, on NBC, a national broadcast television network in the United States. It is the second spin-off of the long-running crime drama Law & Order.
The eighth season of Law & Order: Criminal Intent premiered on the USA Network in the United States on April 19, 2009. It consisted of sixteen episodes, and concluded on August 9, 2009. The day following each episode's broadcast on television, they are made available to purchase and download from the iTunes Store. Law & Order: Criminal Intent is an American police procedural television series set and filmed in New York City. It is the second spin-off of the long-running crime drama Law & Order, and was created by Dick Wolf and René Balcer. Law & Order: Criminal Intent follows the New York City Police Department's Major Case Squad, which investigates high-profile murder cases.
The seventh season of Law & Order: Criminal Intent premiered on USA Network on October 4, 2007, and ended on August 24, 2008.
The sixth season of Law & Order: Criminal Intent premiered on NBC September 19, 2006, and ended May 21, 2007; this was the last season to air original episodes on NBC.
The fifth season of Law & Order: Criminal Intent premiered on NBC on September 25, 2005, and ended on May 14, 2006.
The fourth season of Law & Order: Criminal Intent premiered on NBC on September 26, 2004, and ended May 25, 2005. The series remained in its time slot of Sundays at 9 PM/8c, but the season finale episode "False-Hearted Judges" aired on Wednesday, May 25, 2005, at 10 PM ET/9 CT.
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