12 years is a long time to keep a TV marriage going, yet that’s just what David Boreanaz and Emily Deschanel managed to do on “Bones.” Granted, their on-screen counterparts, Dr. Temperance “Bones” Brennan and FBI Special Agent Seeley Booth, weren’t literally married the whole time (they didn’t marry until season 9), but for all practical purposes, they were Can also. Both actors were also instrumental in ensuring that “Bones” was a more character-driven procedural than Fox’s, even taking extra time to work with an acting coach to hone their chemistry. . In fact, it’s hard to imagine that the show would have lasted so long if its star and creator Hart Hanson had been content to simply Xerox “The X-Files” as the network wanted.
However, despite this, the series had to work hard to reach 12 seasons. Whether it’s Fox constantly finding excuses to cancel Henson’s sometimes dwarfed and romantic, sometimes downright disgusting murder investigation show, the disturbing sexual harassment allegations made against Boreanaz during her time on the show, or John Longtime cast members like Francis Daly are being forced to leave the series. It was nothing easy for “Bones” on its way to its golden years in syndication and streaming, while pursuing other business endeavors. Still, through thick and thin, Boreanaz and Deschanel were the glue that kept the ship from falling apart. In fact, by all accounts, the “Bones” pair were a very rare example of co-workers who actually respected the other offscreen as much as they did when the cameras were on.
It must have been equally boring for all those TV fans who can’t get enough of the dirty behind-the-scenes drama, This undoubtedly made Henson’s life easier — so much so that he often relied on Boreanaz and Deschanel to improvise key moments on “Bones,” including the show’s final scene.
Boreanaz and Deschanel knew how to play Bones’ final scene
The “Bones” series finale, season 12’s “The End in the End” has all the ingredients that make the show come alive. There’s a race against time to catch the season’s big bad (Gerardo Selasco’s serial killer Mark Kovac), followed by an unexpected complication (Kovak and his fake wife/sister in the guise of Britt Shaw’s Jeanine Kovac explodes Bones suffers a brain injury) at the Jeffersonian Institute, which messes with his crime-solving abilities throughout most of the episode), plot-driven character development (Bones’ [Squ]The interns rally to make their lab-mom proud and track down Kovacs until he recovers), and even a few hints of newfound romance along the way. The whole thing then ends with Bones and Booth sitting and talking about, well, everything on a bench near the remains of their old home at the Jeffersonian (maybe the memory of it is a blessing to everyone except Boreanaz. Ho, who was eager to blow up the laboratory from Season 1).
talking to tvline In 2017, Hanson confirmed that Bones and Booth’s benchside chat was mostly improvised by Boreanaz and Deschanel. As he explained:
“One of the things that made the show so good is that there’s always a last-minute conversation between Booth and Brennan [as their dialogue] Roads closed. Sometimes those things are scripted, but often David and Emily improvise. It was a mixture of that. So it was written up to a certain point and then David said, ‘Don’t worry about it. We are going to do our job. And they did. This has always been a show where there is a lot of trust. They trust us with what we put on the page and then they add that extra element, that extra little spark that has worked so well for 12 seasons.”
It worked in that closing moment, too. After 12 years of its heroes battling twisted killers behind the clock (all the while getting caught up in romantic entanglements in their off-time in and out of the workplace), “Bones” is set to end things with What better way than talking with its heroes about everything they’ve been through? In the end, that’s what the show was ultimately about: a story about two kindred spirits who find each other and make their way together through this strange, confusing, and ultimately humbling journey we call life.
“Bones” is currently available to stream on Hulu.