Starring on TV's hottest show is a dream, and Isaiah Washington fought hard to keep the role of Preston Burke on Grey's Anatomy.
But the Associated Press reports that after twice using an anti-gay slur, the actor was doomed to lose the biggest role of his career because of timing, a track record of volatile behavior and pressure within the industry.
While series creator and executive producer Shonda Rhimes wept when she got on the phone last Thursday to tell Isaiah Washington he was officially out, the decision was a coolly calculated move by Rhimes' bosses at the network and ABC Television Studios.
His "pattern of behavior" represented a potential liability that was too much risk for the Walt Disney Co.-owned companies, a source close to the production said. The source is not authorized to comment publicly on the matter and spoke on condition of anonymity.
The operation to remove Isaiah Washington, 43, was quick and neat.
The studio declined to exercise his contract option for another season â" Isaiah Washington would have earned about $2.7 million in salary â" and he was dumped shortly after the May finale.
With Dr. Burke conveniently written out of the show in the last episode of Season 3, "Didn't We Almost Have It All," many feel the move had to have been planned for some time.
The decision was made by executives including ABC Studios President Mark Pedowitz, ABC Entertainment President Stephen McPherson and Disney-ABC Television Group President Anne Sweeney. ABC and the studio declined comment, but Washington said he was "saddened" by the outcome.
"I can only apologize so many times. I can only accept so much responsibility," he told EW.com in an interview published Wednesday.
"... Isaiah will go on and do what I love to do. And I have to go about the business of letting people know what's written about me is not the truth."
Gay rights leader Neil G. Giuliano said Washington was caught up in changing attitudes toward anti-gay vitriol â" the same backlash felt by Ann Coulter after she derided John Edwards with the same word.
"All of this is crescendoing, with people saying, 'Enough is enough,'" said Giuliano, president of the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation.
Hollywood's image as an unbiased haven for gays is overstated, Giuliano said. But he did field outraged calls from producers, writers and actors â" both gay and straight â" after Washington's remarks.
Giuliano said he told the callers to make waves at the networks, and "I have good reason to believe most of those folks, who are not shy, made their feelings known."
One black gay activist sees the lobbying far differently. Jasmyne Cannick, a friend of Washington's, said the case reflects a strong division between Hollywood's powerful white gays and lesbians and those who are minorities.
"The ones calling for (Isaiah Washington's) head are what I refer to as the gay Mafia," Cannick said.
There may have been more behind the decision than intolerant language.
Bryan Birge, while working as a costumer in 1997 on the police drama "High Incident," said Washington erupted in anger on the set and then grabbed him after Birge asked him to remove a magazine from his pocket for an upcoming scene.
"It was bizarre," Birge said. "The guy is less than easy to be around."
Washington, a Houston native who served in the Air Force, had campaigned vigorously to redeem his image. He apologized publicly, to his colleagues and to GLAAD.
He filmed a public service announcement for GLAAD and the Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network. He made a publicly announced donation to a favorite cause, help for the African nation of Sierra Leone.
"We did everything that was asked of us" by ABC, said Washington's publicist and representative, Howard Bragman.
Washington was undone by a spat last October with co-star Patrick Dempsey in which he used the epithet to refer to fellow cast member T.R. Knight.
Washington issued a public apology for his behavior and "unfortunate" use of words in reference to T.R. Knight, and media attention waned.
But in January, Washington reignited the furor during a backstage interview at the Golden Globes in which he denied having used the slur, then uttered it again.
Gay rights groups - the same ones that had demanded Washington apologize - say they didn't seek his firing and gained nothing by it.
Those who might have jumped to his defense, whether co-stars or those taking interest in the plight of a black actor, were silent or measured in their remarks.
"If he's being let go because of that incident, I'm not sure the punishment fits the crime," said Vic Bullock, executive director of the Hollywood bureau of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
The NAACP has asked ABC for "further clarity," Bullock said.
Tavis Smiley, the national TV and radio talk-show host and author, said Isaiah Washington's words cut too deep.
"As a society we are still grappling with the notion of forgiveness and redemption," Smiley said in an e-mailed comment.
"What this incident shows us, not unlike the Don Imus matter, is there is some pain so deep, that an apology, no matter how sincere, just doesn't suffice."




June 15th, 2007 9:05 AM
"some pain so deep, that an apology, no matter how sincere, just doesn't suffice." Seriously? but even GOD forgives.
June 15th, 2007 9:54 AM
it's going to be hard to make the show just as good without Dr. Burke!
June 15th, 2007 11:10 AM
a liability, thats such a lame excuse. im pretty sure he has learned his lesson and was realy trying to make it right, i dont think he would be a liability anymore. maybe if his co-stars werent such babies, heigl and knight, there wouldnt be such a problem in the first place. i think the show is going to fail now
June 15th, 2007 11:49 AM
Seriously?? That last sentence makes it sound as if TRK was the first and only person ever who had to cope with a thing such as name calling! What a joke!
Millions of people go through this not only once or twice but sometimes even on a daily basis and they are still standing! And he (and almost everybody around him) acts like he is a baby!
If people who are black/asien/... or have a funny name would suffer from this "deep pain,...." every time they hear a joke or a slur about them, they would all have agoraphobia and would close themselves in at home! Please, people, get real!
What does not kill us, makes us stronger! TRK should take this to heart and just let it go and so should the media and everybody else!
I love Dr. Burke and I really wish they could undo the past few days and rehire Isaiah Washington for the next season!
June 15th, 2007 12:43 PM
http://www.petitiononline.com/weluviw/
VOTARR!!!
SOMOS TODOS FANS!
ES UN IDOLO EN ESPAÑA!! ES MUY GUAPO!
June 15th, 2007 1:39 PM
There has been so many stories told on this matter I don't see how anyone can have an honest opinion a therory maybe. I don't agree with anybody on how this was handled just from everything I have read. If I left an opinion on every website I read most of them would be different just bases on the person reporting on it. GOD BLESS AMERICA!!!
June 15th, 2007 1:44 PM
I am so tired of all this blabla. I am fed up with all those communities who want to impose "their" opinion be it religious, politics, sexual, regional whatever. I live in a country where the flemish community criticizes the french community, the native belgians criticizing all the foreigners living here (used to be the south europeans then the north african now they are against the eastern europeans). Slurs are happening every day and no one says anything. I am fed up with the lack of intolerance of so many people I can't believe that we supposedly live in democracy. Seems like a lot of people are spending their time on finding a way how to "break" their fellow citizens. Can't take it anymore. Television is supposed to take us away from our daily life but the only thing it does is manipulating us. Yes I am fed up today because I relaize that peace on earth will never happen because some mentalities will never change.
June 15th, 2007 3:56 PM
I don't like Isiah outside of Grey's Anatomy becaue of his use of words and the way he treats people. However, the show needs him, the characters need him (mainly Christina), the plots need him, they all need Dr. Burk for Grey's Anatomy to be Grey's Anatomy.
June 15th, 2007 5:18 PM
And yet, the anti-Washington media will continue to write about him because he is selling their papers/watching their shoes. ABC will not let up on the media blitz to talk/refer to this incident because it will keep the network top of the public's mind and sadly,maybe even his former co stars will be instrumental in this prop up ABC/put down Isaiah as exchange deal for perk/salary raises. All these to kick a man further down, whether he deserves it or not, but does the world deserve this unending climate of hard, unyielding, hate. Fine. Don't forgive him. But do you have to use him for your own purpose? Until when?
June 15th, 2007 7:18 PM
What's that old saying. What goes around comes around. It was'nt right what he said. It also is'nt right what they did to him. Some people just try to live by double standards. How sad is that.