

And just that whole mentality of kids should be seen and not heard and most of the time not even seen. And that was such a great indicator of where he was when we started this story. And you see the door open and just you see Abe push his grandson, without saying anything, just push Ethan into the room and with giving Midge the stink eye, like get this kid out of my hair. And I remember this one… I registered this one particular moment where Midge and Rose are talking in the bedroom, in the kids’ room, the baby’s room. I’m in my study and Ethan, the very young grandson, is there, and I need him out of there. I remember recently for a totally different reason was watching the pilot again, and there’s this one moment in the pilot where I’m trying to get…. Tony Shalhoub: Yeah, I think it’s part of Abe’s overall character arc over five seasons. Where do you think that comes from for him? He becomes very obsessed with his grandkids this season, which results in some of my favorite comedic bits. And Abe has a very particular interactions with his grandkids. So bittersweet to let this one go, but it’s been a great journey. Sam Eckmann: Hello everyone, I’m Sam Eckmann of Gold Derby here with the wonderful Tony Shalhoub of the final season of The Marvelous Mrs. SEE Watch more than 400 interviews with 2023 Emmy contenders But having seen Season 5 now, I feel they couldn’t have ended it in a better way.” He added, “I mean, they really did serve each one of these characters and their character arcs.” Looking back on the show as a whole, Shalhoub told us in our webchat, “We were not ready to let it go. Shalhoub won three Emmy Awards for “Monk” (lead in 2003, 2005, 2006) and another for “The Marvelous Mrs.

In the final episodes, Abe finally tells his daughter that he’s “proud” of the rough road she took to become a stand-up comic in the 1950s. The veteran actor portrayed patriarch Abe Weissman for five seasons, the father of Miriam ( Rachel Brosnahan) and husband of Rose ( Marin Hinkle).
