http://thetvaddict.com/2010/08/31/talking-white-collar-with-star-tim-dekay/ By: Melissa Girmonte
Good and evil. Salt and pepper. Starsky and Hutch. Some things simply compliment one another so well that it’s nearly impossible to imagine one without the other. So while some might speculate that the primary reason USA Network’s WHITE COLLAR has become such a summer smash has a little something to do with
this, we humbly submit that it has less to do with the hotness of leading man Matt Bomer and more to do with the partnership between his bad-boy-makes-good alter ego and the yin to his yang, Tim DeKay’s by-the-books FBI agent.
What is it about white collar crime that makes it so appealing for viewers, and for you as an actor?
Tim DeKay: I think what makes it appealing to the viewers is similar to what makes it appealing to an actor. There’s a heightened reality to it. There’s something wonderfully dramatic and glamorous and sexy about bonds and stolen paintings and gambling rings, things that for the most part have a non-violent nature to them. I think it harkens back to a different time of To Catch a Thief and The Thomas Crown Affair. I really feel that because there isn’t a huge violent element to our show, that gives it the levity and sense of fun that is easy to watch.
There’s no denying the chemistry between your character, Peter Burke, and Neal Caffrey. What is it like for you working on a series that has such a strong relationship at its heart?
It’s wonderful as an actor. It’s great because this is what you look for when you’re an actor and looking for certain roles. You look for those relationships. I truly feel that the key to this show, through the writing - because I think the writing is top notch - is that these guys write “relationship”. As an actor, it’s fun to play “relationship”, much more than it is to play “exposition” and and the “murder of the week”. Also, just Matt [Bomer] and I have a great respect for each other, and we can bounce things off each other, and we’re not afraid to be vulnerable in front of each other.
New York City itself is very much a character in WHITE COLLAR. Could you imagine the series set in any other city?
That’s a fantastic question. Nobody’s asked that. It’s almost as if asking could you see someone else playing Neal Caffrey, because New York is such a character. Could I see another city playing the role of New York City, and right now, I couldn’t. Maybe Paris.
That might be cool for an episode.
Well, now you’re talking. I think I should get on the phone with Jeff Eastin and say there’s an international crime ring that Peter and Neal have to solve in Paris, which then takes them to Florence, then to Milan, then to Prague.
If you had to choose, what has been the most challenging and the most satisfying scene that you’ve been a part of this season?
All of the scenes have been challenging and rewarding. I think the reward comes with the challenge. I’m leaning toward this one particular episode (last week’s “Prisoner’s Dilemma”), I got to drive both a Ferrari and a Lamborghini. For at least maybe two weeks, I will be a cool dad. Until I do something at home in front of them that makes me become the not cool dad that I normally am in front of them.
USA Network is known for being character driven, and offering outside support to its actors to help develop the authenticity of its characters. Who was brought in to help you become Peter Burke?
There was a gentleman named Tom Barton who is a retired special agent. He has helped me as a technical advisor as far as how relationships work with CI’s, which are criminal informants. He’s told me some great stories that he’s had with his criminal informants, how some of them had crossed the line, so he had to turn around and knock on their door and the wife answers and she asks, “Tom, what are you doing here?” and he doesn’t want to say, “I’m here to arrest your husband.” He’s told me how it’s been difficult. He’s the one who received some holiday cards from some criminals he’d gotten to know, while they were in prison, and that’s what gave Jeff Eastin the idea that Neal sent Peter some birthday cards.
The show has such a passionate fan base. What’s the most notable fan experience that you’ve had so far, and do you plan to attend another event like Comic-Con in the future?
I would love to attend another type of Comic-Con event in the future. It was incredibly rewarding to see all of those fans. There’s something wonderful about Comic-Con that I’d never experienced before and I thought it was just a great energy about a ton of people coming to one place to celebrate storytelling.
I found it inspiring and endearing. There was a woman, I think her name is Tricia Owen, she sent Matt and me some comic strips that she had done of certain scenes in the show, but then she wrote her own jokes to the photos that she had grabbed from online. They were really quite funny and interesting. In addition to all of the great comments and the pictures that people take on the street, I thought it was pretty cool that someone had written some comic strips about Neal and Peter.
follow link to read rest of interview and to find out who chose the song matt and tim danced to and tim's reaction to the hits it go on you tube :)