- Meldrick Lewis
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Detective Meldrick Lewis
Meldrick, February 1996First appearance "Gone for Goode" Last appearance Homicide: The Movie Created by Tom Fontana Portrayed by Clark Johnson Information Gender Male Title Detective Family unnamed mother; unnamed grandmother; Anthony (brother) Spouse(s) Barbara Shivers-Lewis (divorced) Religion Baptist Nationality American Meldrick Lewis is a fictional character on the television series Homicide: Life on the Street played by Clark Johnson. The character was in the series for its full run and had the very first and last lines of the series. Born on August 27, 1962, Lewis was raised in Baltimore's Lafayette Court housing project; in Season 4, he watched its demolition and kept a brick from the rubble as a memento. He attended Lake Clifton High School and graduated in 1980. It is indicated he was raised Baptist, but his wedding was performed by a member of the Universal Life Church.
Meldrick has been a murder police since May of 1990. His first partner in the series was Steve Crosetti, who occasionally irritated him with his arcane historical interests and demeanor. The two usually got along well, however, so Crosetti's later suicide deeply unnerved Lewis. At first he refused to even believe it could be a suicide, reasoning that Crosetti, a devout Catholic and devoted father, would never violate his faith and abandon his child. In time he accepted Crosetti's suicide, but still felt a certain dismay that he had never known Crosetti was "in that kind of pain" and apparently felt he could not tell Lewis about his problems. Stan Bolander comforted Lewis by saying that in giving up his prized vintage yo-yo as a gift to Lewis, Crosetti was in his own way saying goodbye.
He remained without a partner for a time until partnering with Mike Kellerman, formerly of the arson squad. This partnership initially worked reasonably well, but also had its strain as Kellerman slid toward alcoholism and humiliation when he was falsely accused of having taken bribes while in his previous position. As Kellerman kept his problems less secret than Crosetti, Lewis was able to stop a potential suicide attempt. Lewis and Kellerman had earlier found themselves arguing with each other over a Nation of Islam group acting as a private security force in a Baltimore City housing project. During a Homicide investigation, the Muslims baited Kellerman with racial remarks and it didn't help him when Lewis agreed with the Muslims' presence in the projects as because of them, there were fewer Homicides in the projects. Lewis nonetheless forced the Muslims' leader to answer both him and Kellerman (the leader would only speak to Black Homicide Detectives about the identity of a murder suspect) during an attempt at turning the two against each other. When Kellerman and Lewis were finally able to snare drug kingpin Luther Mahoney for drug trafficking and murder, Lewis beat up Mahoney until the criminal grabbed Lewis' gun. However, Kellerman and Terri Stivers showed up in time to prevent Mahoney from killing Lewis, and Kellerman shot and killed Mahoney during an ambiguous standoff. Although Lewis initially approved of Kellerman's actions, he later decided they couldn't be partners any more because of Kellerman's action.
During Season 6, Lewis got into an altercation with Mahoney's sister Georgia Rae and was suspended. He persuaded fellow detective Paul Falsone to feed him information about the organization, which he used to start an internal war that eventually led to a bloodbath for both the police and the criminals. Kellerman finally admitted the truth about the Mahoney shooting - that the man had not been pointing Lewis' weapon at anyone when Kellerman shot him - and resigned in order to keep Lewis and Stivers from losing their jobs. Kellerman then asked to borrow Lewis' gun so he could commit suicide, but Lewis refused to give it to him. In Season 7, Lewis developed problems with his new partner, Rene Sheppard, when she suffered a brutal beating and had her gun taken from her by a suspect, who shot at Lewis and nearly killed him (the bullet nicked the brim of his trademark hat). The two reached a reconciliation of sorts by the end of the series.
According to the Season 4 episode "I've Got a Secret," Lewis had a mentally ill brother named Anthony, who was institutionalized roughly 20 years earlier as he was a danger to himself and others. Lewis confessed to Kellerman that he did not intervene on one of Anthony's suicide attempts, and even briefly hoped it might succeed as it would end his suffering and the hardships he put on the rest of the family. Lewis estimated that he last visited Anthony in 1978; he tried to do so again during this episode, but Anthony refused to see him.
Lewis had a harshly realist view of the job, and was openly critical of Tim Bayliss for putting so much of his emotional energy into the unforgiving field of police work. In the fourth season, he married a woman named Barbara Shivers on extremely short notice. The couple eventually split up. Those who knew Lewis were unsurprised at the breakup; in fact, up to the moment of the wedding many of his co-workers (particularly Munch) assumed the engagement was a hoax.
Behind the scenes
Clark Johnson regularly improvised during filming and made up his own jokes and dialogue; writer and producer James Yoshimura called Clark the "king of the ad lib".[1]
References
- ^ Yoshimura, James (1998-11-04). Anatomy of "Homicide: Life on the Street" (Documentary). Baltimore, Maryland: Public Broadcasting Service. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0324999/.
Homicide: Life on the Street Creators Original characters Tim Bayliss · Stanley Bolander · Steve Crosetti · Beau Felton · Al Giardello · Kay Howard · Meldrick Lewis · John Munch · Frank PembletonOther characters Ed Danvers · Megan Russert · Mike Kellerman · J. H. Brodie · Julianna Cox · Stuart Gharty · Terri Stivers · Paul Falsone · Laura Ballard · Michael Giardello · Rene Sheppard · George Barnfather · Roger Gaffney · James C. HarrisEpisodes Season 1 · Season 2 · Season 3 · Season 4 · Season 5 · Season 6 · Season 7Related media Categories:- Homicide: Life on the Street characters
- Fictional Baltimore Police Department detectives
- Fictional African-American people
- Fictional characters based on real people
- Fictional characters introduced in 1993
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