9-1-1’s Oliver Stark Teases Emotional Season 8 Finale, What’s Next for Buck in Life and Love, More (Exclusive)

Oliver Stark and the rest of the 9-1-1 cast are still adjusting to life on set without Peter Krause — but are proud of the work they’ve done in the wake of their costar’s shocking exit.

“We’ve been up and down on this ride for a time now. But I’m really happy with everything that season 8 turned out to be,” Stark, 33, exclusively told Us Weekly ahead of the season 8 finale. “I think everybody’s really proud of it.”

The beloved ABC procedural left fans reeling with its decision to kill off Krause’s Captain Bobby Nash earlier this season, when the beloved character secretly contracted a deadly virus. With only one anecdote available, Bobby chose to keep his own symptoms a secret so that fellow firefighter Chimney (Kenneth Choi) could survive.

The episodes that followed saw fire station 118 reuniting to honor their longtime leader. As the characters mourned the loss of Bobby on screen, the actors were busy saying goodbye to their IRL friend Krause behind the scenes

While speaking to Us, Stark recalled one emotional day with Krause when the duo, alongside Choi and costar Aisha Hinds (who plays Hen), had a quiet moment together as the original core four firefighters featured since season 1. (Series regulars Ryan Guzman, who portrays Eddie, and Jennifer Love Hewitt, who plays Maddie, both joined the cast in season 2.)

‘We [had] just finished and I went to take my makeup off, or whatever, and Aisha went to get changed. And it just so happened that myself, Kenny, Aisha and Peter were all coming out of our trailers at the same time,” Stark shared. “Ryan wasn’t working that day and [our other costar] Anirudh [Pisharody] was with us and he had left, so it was just the four of us who were the four that started in the 118.  And we hadn’t realized, because the schedule is so hectic and stuff is moving. And Peter said to us, ‘Do you realize that was our last emergency, the four of us?’ And we just had a moment. We all embraced, we all cried a little bit and just said, ‘You know, this was a really cool ride we took together.’”

Here, Stark speaks more about his final days with Krause, what the future holds for season 9 of the hit series and reflects on what portraying a bisexual character on network TV means to him:

Us Weekly: Congratulations on such an amazing season and what a ride it’s been.

Oliver Stark: We’ve been up and down on this ride for a time now. But no, I’m really happy with everything that season 8 turned out to be. So I think everybody’s really proud of it. Really proud of it.

Us: And so many twists and turns, especially with this shocking death. I mean, when you were all at the table read, what was that moment like? Was it just silence, like, “I can’t believe this is actually happening?”

OS: So our show most certainly does not do table reads.

Us: Oh, OK.

OS: But I’m sure that would be the vibe, right? So we were called individually by our showrunner [Tim Minear] and he kind of said, “Listen, I’m gonna kill Bobby.” And I think everybody had differing reactions. I think some of us responded with a loud, “What do you mean?!” I fell to silence. I was pretty stunned by it, and it’s a big swing. Big change for the show.

Us: What was your first conversation with Peter like then after that?

Oliver Stark in Studio 9-1-1:

OS:  I hadn’t seen him [for], like, a week beforehand. I can’t remember what the episode that we shot before was, but we were quite segmented. Then I also didn’t see him for maybe another week afterwards. And in a group text, myself and Aisha [Hinds] reached out and said, “So, um, dot, dot, dot.” And he just said, “Let’s talk when we see each other in person.” And you know, we had a nice embrace. I said, “You good? You OK with it?” And he said, “Absolutely.” You know, this what happens. And he’s doing great. I thank him for all the time that I’ve spent with him over the years and all the things I’ve taken from him. Lessons learned. And I look forward to continuing the friendship, of course,that I know will continue.

Us: Has it hit you yet though?

OS: Yes. I think it has because we’ve made three or four episodes since. [Peter has] popped into them, episodes 16 and 17. He makes an appearance, but it’s not the intensity of which we would usually see each other. You know, I say it’s hit me, [but] I think it will probably hit me again when we come back for season 9. When it’s like, “Oh, he’s not here. He doesn’t come here anymore.” I think that’s when it will maybe really settle in.

Us: Because it feels permanent now, different now.

OS: Exactly. Exactly.

Us: As an actor, does it make you nervous knowing that they killed off such a beloved character? Obviously, your character is like that, too. So now, going into season 9, are you like, “Wait a wait a minute, what’s behind the corner here?”

OS: I think it’s good to not be too complacent. We should always wonder if we can be doing more or working harder. So it doesn’t make me consciously nervous, but it is a new thing that the show has now opened. So make sure you turn up on time. Get your mark, know your lines. [laughs] I’m not screwing this one up, you know?

Us: Seriously! Before Bobby dies, he tells Buck, “They’re going to need you.” Is that a phrase that’s going to stick in his brain now going forward?

OS: Yeah, I think so. I think he feels like this was his dying wish, as it were. He’s charged Buck with this task, and he was such an instrumental character to 118. And [having] such a strong foundation that removing him has resulted in everybody kind of falling away from each other. I think Buck is going to take it very seriously — that I’m the one that has to do some work to bring everybody back together.

OLIVER STARK 9-1-1:

Us: Do you think that he’s ready for the responsibility [of captain] now that Hen kind of turned down the position?

OS: I don’t think Buck is trying to make any move in the sense of professionally being the figurehead. He’s not trying to be the captain. But I think more just in a personal sense. And in actual fact, it’s not gonna be a thing that is only on Buck’s shoulders. This is a family and everybody is gonna step up and play their own role in re-tethering everybody back together.

Us: When you read the script and you saw how well Buck initially took the news, at the funeral and saying, “I went to therapy, I’m OK.” What was your kind of reaction to that?

OS: Well, I don’t think it’s so much, “I went to therapy. I’m OK.” I think it’s more — you are right, that is kind of how it is said — [but] the way that I took it is, we handle grief differently, right? And it comes in waves. And the other thing is, in real life, if somebody close to you dies, it doesn’t necessarily mean that life stops around you. There are still things you have to do. There are things you have to handle. And I think that’s what Buck saw getting through the funeral service [to be]. Like, this is our duty. And we owe this to him as our captain to turn up and be on. It’s fun finding the little moments of the emotion breaking through, but then it’s like, “No, but we are here to play the part as kind of dutiful firefighter.” So I actually really enjoyed the more stoic approach.

Us: Is that challenging, for you as an actor to kind of balance both all those different emotions?

OS: Exciting.

Us: Exciting, isn’t it? Yeah. That’s probably a better word.

OS: You want the complex things and to be able to find those little moments, and this is a show that is a network procedural but it has always given us these opportunities to play complex things and to feel more than one thing at the same time, which is obviously what we as real people do. So it’s nice to get to infuse that into the characters as well.

Us: Out of all the seasons, what’s been your favorite arc for Buck?

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