Ex-street cop relishes
new role in TV land
By: Dan Robson
Date:
August 25th, 2009
Source:
Toronto Star
Toronto's most notorious
cop is suddenly all Hollywood Starbucks cup in one hand, Dominican cigar
in the other.
On the set of The
Bridge, a joint CTV-CBS project loosely based on his tumultuous
career running the Toronto police union, Craig Bromell puffs a cigar as
the tape rolls.
"Quiet! Quiet on the
set! and Action!"
Dramatically, a pretty
blonde actress standing beside a silver Mercedes coupe delivers the line
of her character, a lawyer: "You know Frank will do anything to help a
cop in trouble."
To which an equally
pretty blonde actress playing a cop replies: "Even if it means
crossing the line to do it." They glare at each other coldly.
"Cut!"
For Bromell, The
Bridge is fiction with a touch of reality because he, of course,
would also do anything to help a cop in trouble. For six years at the
head of the Toronto's 7,500-member police union, he did just that and
those years were controversial to say the least.
He first hit the
headlines as one of nine officers from 51 Division accused of beating up
a homeless man in 1996.
The case languished in
court for years, until they were acquitted, but eventually an
out-of-court cash settlement was reached in 2003.
"Street cop becomes
union boss that's where it ends," Bromell says of the line between him
and Frank Leo, the show's main character.
"Everything is
fictional. All the characters are fictional. The stories are all
fictional."
During his term as
union boss, critics accused Bromell of ushering in a police state.
Some politicians feared
he had officers bugging their offices and following them.
He championed the "True
Blue" campaign to offer windshield stickers that indicated the amount of
money drivers had donated to the union.
"Obviously he's an
inspiration," says the show's acclaimed writer, Alan Di Fiore. "But we
worked very hard to find stories and situations that were universal."
Back on the set
sockless in brown leather loafers, beige shorts and a wide Hawaiian
shirt Bromell takes another puff. During the shoots, he provides a
touch of authenticity for the actors.
His goal, he says, is
to someday produce a Hollywood movie. He has more than 300 stories
banked from his policing days, he says, and there are already whispers
of another show.
"This is what I do," he
smiles, as the two beautiful actresses are powdered to reshoot a scene.
"It's f---ing unbelievable."
Aaron Douglas, a.k.a.
Chief Galen Tyrol from Battlestar Galactica, plays Frank Leo on
The Bridge. Despite the apparent similarities between Bromell
and Leo, the actor says the former cop turned executive producer really
only contributed "the cop walk, the cop talk, the stance, that sort of
thing."
Douglas says the show
deals with the part of reality of policing the "public never sees, never
hears about." Sometimes, he says, officers have to make sure "justice is
served" through less than judicial means.
"You have to bend the
law to enforce the law and sometimes you have to break the law to
enforce the law," he says.
Sound familiar?
The Star's own
headlines splash across Bromell's controversial legacy: "Bromell huffs,
puffs, and blows his credibility" "Bromell takes heat for comments"
"Bromell defies summit" "Police Union bullying" "Man sues, alleging
beating by nine officers."
But he seems to have
loosened up today.
He takes another puff.
"I wanted to be a stunt
driver they wouldn't let me," he says with a laugh. "I wanted to beat
someone up they wouldn't let me."
Still, as an executive
producer, Bromell does manage to get his way:
"They said they wanted
less blood," he says. "I said, `I want more blood.'"
Bromell seems oddly at
home here, in TV land, where controversy and violence are just part of
the script.
"People aren't going to
expect this," he said about the show, which is set to air late this
year, or early in 2010.
"These aren't hero cop
stories cops can be heroes and cops can be villains."

Photo Source: PAWEL DWULIT/TORONTO STAR
Former Toronto
police union president Craig Bromell chats with actress Ona Grauer on
the Queens Quay set of 'The Bridge.' The CTV-CBS show, set to air late
this year or early next year, is loosely based on Bromells career as a
cop. (Aug. 24, 2009) |