From left: Tyla Harris, Nicholas Pinnock and Joy Bryant star in ABC's "For Life." (ABC/Giovanni Rufino)
From left: Tyla Harris, Nicholas Pinnock and Joy Bryant star in ABC's "For Life." (ABC/Giovanni Rufino)

Billboards in urban areas and a robust ad blitz for a new Tuesday night ABC drama promise something grittier than broadcast networks typically deliver. โ€œFor Lifeโ€ adapts the real-life story of Isaac Wright Jr., a falsely convicted man who studied law in prison and won his own freedom.

Produced by Curtis โ€œ50 Centโ€ Jackson, โ€œFor Lifeโ€ follows Aaron Wallace โ€” the fictionalized Wright โ€” while he navigates prison as an attorney representing fellow inmates as he plots his own freedom. Wallace also must deal with the emotional anguish of being separated from his wife and daughter.

Jackson, whose juggernaut โ€œPowerโ€ just wrapped its series finale Sunday on Starz, is high on โ€œFor Lifeโ€ because of its grounding in Wrightโ€™s real-life journey.

โ€œWhat attracted me to the story is, I almost didnโ€™t believe it when he was explaining to me what his journey was like,โ€ Jackson told Urban News Service in a phone interview. โ€œItโ€™s like a unicorn. Itโ€™s not like one in a million; itโ€™s like thereโ€™s only one. Heโ€™s the first person convicted in the state of New Jersey under the [drug] kingpin act back then and sentenced to 70 years plus life. Thatโ€™s only 30 years more than El Chapo. Itโ€™s extreme.

โ€œItโ€™s a completely different perspective,โ€ he said. โ€œBecause he couldnโ€™t find a lawyer who could see his case from a positive perspective, he ended up representing himself. He spent seven years in prison studying law.โ€

Wright waited nine years after his release to be recognized as an attorney. But before he became a free man, he won cases for more than 20 other inmates โ€” reduced sentences for some, freedom for others.

To bring the series to life, Jackson tapped Hank Steinberg, who created the Emmy Award-winning CBS hit โ€œWithout a Trace.โ€ Eager to capture the storyโ€™s essence, Jackson asked Steinberg to sit down with Wright

โ€œWhen youโ€™re using your imagination to develop the character youโ€™re not identifying with the circumstances, feelings, everything that connects to why, how the personโ€™s temperament would be,โ€ Jackson said. โ€œAnd when you actually talk to the person across from you, you can kind of see how these sort of things developed. It helps give you a more intense perspective of the personโ€™s character and how an experience went.โ€

Steinberg found the meetings helpful.

โ€œI sat with Isaac for long periods of time and just heard all the stories and really learned,โ€ he said. โ€œI mean Iโ€™ve never been to prison before. Iโ€™ve never even visited a prison before this. So, he really explained to me the subcultures and how it works, and this really fascinating relationship with the warden.โ€

Wright, an executive producer on โ€œFor Life,โ€ said Nicholas Pinnockโ€™s portrayal got to him.

โ€œItโ€™s not only been an exciting time for me, but also a roller-coaster in sense that theyโ€™re been great times and thereโ€™s been times when his performance has churned up certain emotions that have never been stirred up in me before. So, heโ€™s done an incredible job,โ€ Wright said.

The British actor connected with Wrightโ€™s story and believes many others will, too.

โ€œI think anyone from anywhere can identify with certain aspects of what a lot of the characters are going through, because itโ€™s not just about prison reform,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s about loss. Itโ€™s about hope, itโ€™s about struggle. Itโ€™s about fighting for something you believe in. Thereโ€™s so many different things that people will identify with.โ€

Joy Bryant, who plays Wallaceโ€™s wife Marie, worked with Jackson on โ€œGet Rich or Die Tryinโ€™,โ€ the rapperโ€™s biopic in which he made his film acting debut playing himself.

โ€œI think one of the reasons why I connected with her is that I have loved ones who are formerly incarcerated,โ€ Bryant said. โ€œI have two great girlfriends who have partners who were formerly incarcerated. I remember what it was like for them doing that bid with their partner, so I had an understanding of what someone like Marie would go through because of those personal connections.โ€

Steinberg believes โ€œFor Lifeโ€ will resonate with audiences and score big because itโ€™s a broadcast series that carries the magic and energy of a cable TV hit.

โ€œWe wanted this show to be as gritty as it could be for network TV,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd I think it feels that way. It feels like a cable show on network TV. And the deeper into it goes, youโ€™ll feel it even more and more.โ€

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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