Kalinda Sharma
Created by Michelle King and Richard King

Alicia: Are you gay?
Kalinda: I'm private.

No, CBS' The Good Wife is NOT a P.I. show.

One of the 2009-10 television season's most acclaimed new dramas, it stars Julianna Margulies as Alicia Florric, the feisty, principled wife of Peter, a prominent state's attorney (Chris Noth), and the mother of two who stands by her man when he’s arrested and sent to the slammer amidst charges of corruption and a sex scandal.

Humiliated, middle-aged and the focus of unwanted media scrutiny, Alicia’s steely resolve to take the high road as she throws herself back into the work force as a single mom/junior lawyer at a high-priced law firm is almost inspiring. And it’s that dramatic and unexpected moral underpinning that helps raise this one high above most legal TV potboilers.

The real charm of the show lies in its twisty, turny tumble of hidden agendas, lies and conspiracies. Just when you have a character, a plot, a motive pinned down, the writers yank the rug out. Everyone, it seems, has something to hide. The show's a tsunami of secrets.

There is also -- refreshingly -- little black and white on display here, just endless variations of we say/they say, making this one of the few lawyer show that goes beyond mere legal sleight of hand and simplistic fingerpointing to actually explore the true human cost and the vast gray areas of the legal system.

But nobody has more secrets -- or prowls those gray areas better -- than KALINDA SHARMA, the firm’s tough, savvy, leather wrapped private investigator. For my money, she 's not just the most interesting character on the show -- she may just be the best private eye on American television these days. And in a long time.

In fact, despite the numerous modern touches (data banks, computer hacking, cellphone taps and the oh-so-modern nods to her ambiguous sexuality), Kalinda is in many ways a throwback to the genre's roots.

As played by Archie Panjabi (Bend It like Beckham), she presents a tightly wound professionalism rarely seen in the genre these days, never mind on mainstream television. The leather she sports is not the skin-clinging stuff of adolescent centerfold fantasy -- rather, she wears leather it like a thick shell to keep the world at bay.

Her antecedents aren't nice guys like Jim Rockford or Thomas Magnum -- nope, her roots go back much further, back to a time when private eyes weren't automatically expected to be warm and cuddly.

Professionally she's not just cold -- she's Hammett-cold, hard and brassy. Hell, the way she dispassionately works her cases, facing down her enemies without flinching and standing up to violence, she could be The Continental Op's illegitimate daughter.

But she's no one-note character.

A shrewd and clever investigator who'll do whatever and go wherever it takes (from dumpster diving to infiltrating high school locker rooms) to get what she wants, she's a breath of fresh air and surprising complexity in a genre that too often treats even major characters as shallow stick figures whose entire character is delineated by the first commercial break.

The more we're told about Kalinda, it turns out, the less we actually know.

Like much of the show, it's not just her loyalty, ethics, allegiances and motives that are ultimately shaded in ambivalence -- her personal life is also somewhere in the "don't ask, don't tell" area.

Is she a dispassionate hard ass who only lives for the job? Or an anything-goes party girl? Is she a lesbian? Bisexual? Straight as a crooked arrow? Asexual?

It's hard to tell.

But it's that frostiness, coupled with the murkiness of her background and her hard-boiled professionalism that keeps me coming back. In the first season, we learned that she used to work for Peter, and now she seems to be willing to sell him out to his poltical enemies. Or is she?

It's in the second season, however, that Kalinda really came into her own, even as the veneer of her personal life oh-so-slowly started to slip. A mergerbrings Blake (Scott Porter), a professional rival, into the firm, but it's instantly obvious these two are not going to get along, either personally or professionally. And matters are exacerbated when Blake begins to taunt Kalinda, dropping hints that he knows all about her past.

Suffice it to say she does not take it well. Given her buttoned-down aloofness, Kalinda's hands-on attack on Blake's unprotected car with a aluminium baseball bat is shocking and unsettling. But even giving into rage she's still enough of a hard-ass to challenge a witness who stumbles her impulsive act of vandalism in the deserted parking garage. "What the hell are you looking at?" she demands of the awestruck citizen. "Call the police!"

And then, as the citizen scurries off, she continues to destroy the car.

Now that's cold.

Later on this season an old lover, Donna, brilliantly played by Lili Tyler, also shows up, with an unspecified axe to grind, although it has something to do with Kalinda not being "domestic" enough -- whatever that means.

Whether the writers can keep the mystery of Kalinda's past spinning just out of viewers' reach indefinitely is hard to tell, but frankly, I hope they can. I don't want them to turn her into just another soggy-edged weenie carting around more baggage than a bus station. We've had enough of those in the last few years.

Kalinda's absolutely riveting to watch just as she is, the held-in-check ambivalence a facet of her evolving character; not a cookie cutter substitute for actual depth.

Imagine! An old fashioned gumshoe, actually working cases on behalf of a client. No ghostly visitors providing convenient clues, no psychic baloney, no CSI voodoo, no burned spies, no OC cases, no human lie detectors, no personal agendas on every single case – just a hard-boiled dick who gets hired to investigate and actually works cases.

How long has it been since we've seen THAT?

I tell you, if The Good Wife ever tanks, they oughtta spin Kalinda off into her own show. I'd watch it.

THE EVIDENCE

  • "When you pick up a gun, you shoot to kill. Or you don't pick up a gun at all."
    -- Kalinda

  • Kalinda: You can't ask me and I can't tell you but don't conclude from what I'm saying it's what you think.
    Alicia: Okay. Can you be any more specific?

  • "My marriage is none of your F***ING business!"
    --
    Peter takes a stand during a press conference.

  • Alicia: "You sound sarcastic."
    Kalinda: "No, that was me being genuine."

UNDER OATH

  • "Just like Bogie -- and just like Bacall: that's the secret of Kalinda Sharma. She's a mash-up of film noir archetypes (and gender roles), both gumshoe and femme fatale, tough broad and heartbroken sap. The knee-high leather boots get the attention, but it's the luminous brown eyes, always alert, that tell the story. Panjabi takes a genre cliche -- the combination of hard shell and tender interior -- and redeems it by maintaining a constant but perfectly poised intensity, one whose tight control only emphasizes its operatic force. She provides a crucial emotional counterweight to Julianna Margulies's equally powerful performance as AliciaFlorrick, the good and mad wife. Kalinda smolders so that Alicia canburn."
    --
    Mike Hale, The New York Times Magazine, September 18, 2011

  • "Next time someone tells you that only cable can make smart, adult drama successfully, point them here.... going into its second season, it's become so much more: a political thriller, a family drama and a darn good case-of-the-week courtroom show. In each storyline, The Good Wife displays a moral complexity that most big-network drama has given up on, asking what ethical tradeoffs are justifiable for legal success, political gain and personal happiness."
    --Time Magazine, on choosing The Good Wife as #8 of its "Top 10 TV Shows" for 2010.

TELEVISION

  • THE GOOD WIFE ...Buy this DVD
    (1949, United Artists)
    Created by
    Michelle King and Richard King
    Writrs:

    Directors"
    Produced by
    Starring
    Julianna Margulies as Alicia Florrick
    With Chris Noth as Peter Florrick
    Christine Baranski as Diane Lockhart
    Josh Charles as Will Gardner
    Matt Czuchry as Cary Agos
    and Archie Panjabi as KALINDA SHARMA
    Also starring Lili Taylor, Scott Porter, Michael J. Fox, Lou Dobbs, Gary Cole
  • Season 1
  • "Pilot" (September 22, 2009)
  • "Stripped" (September 29, 2009)
  • "You Can't Go Home Again" (October 6, 2009)
  • "Fixed" (October 13, 2009)
  • "Crash" (October 20, 2009)
  • "Conjugal" (November 3, 2009)
  • "Unorthodox" (November 10, 2009)
  • "Unprepared" (November 17, 2009)
  • "Threesome" (November 24, 2009)
  • "Lifeguard" (December 15, 2009)
  • "Infamy" (January 5, 2010)
  • "Painkiller" (January 12, 2010)
  • "Bad" (February 2, 2010)
  • "Hi" (February 9, 2010)
  • "Bang" (March 2, 2010)
  • "Fleas" (March 9, 2010)
  • "Heart" (March 16, 2010)
  • "Doubt" (April 6, 2010)
  • "Boom" (April 27, 2010)
  • "Mock" (May 4, 2010)
  • "Unplugged" (May 11, 2010)
  • "Hybristophilia" (May 18, 2010)
  • "Running" (May 25, 2010)

  • Season 2
  • "Taking Control" (September 28, 2010)
  • "Double Jeopardy" (October 5, 2010)
  • "Breaking Fast" (October 12, 2010)
  • "Cleaning House" (October 19, 2010)
  • "VIP Treatment" (October 26, 2010)
  • "Poisoned Pill" (November 9, 2010)
  • "Bad Girls" (November 16, 2010)
  • "On Tap" (November 23, 2010)
  • "Nine Hours" (December 14, 2010)
  • "Breaking Up" (January 11, 2011)
  • "Two Courts" (January 18, 2011)
  • "Silly Season" (February 1, 2011)
  • "Real Deal" (February 8, 2011)
  • "Net Worth" (February 15, 2011)
  • "Silver Bullet" (February 22, 2011)
  • "Great Firewall" (March 1, 2011)
  • "Ham Sandwich" (March 22, 2011)
  • "Killer Song" (March 29, 2011)
  • "Wrongful Termination" (April 5, 2011)
  • "Foreign Affairs" (April 12, 2011)
  • "In Sickness" (May 3, 2011)

Report respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.


| Home | Detectives A-L M-Z | Film | Radio | Television | Web Comics | Comics | FAQs |
|
Trivia | Authors | Hall of Fame | Mystery Links | Bibliography | Glossary | Search |
|
This Just In... | Word on the Street | Non-Fiction
| Fiction | Staff | The P.I. Poll |

Drop a dime. Your comments, suggestions, corrections and contributions are always welcome.
"...and I'll tell you right out that I'm a man who likes talking to a man that likes to talk."

ÿ