Bones' original title was Brennan before premise changed

The TV series Bones originally bore the title Brennan and featured a different premise focused on a solo forensic expert. Chemistry between leads Emily Deschanel and David Boreanaz shifted the show toward an ensemble procedural drama. This change, as revealed by creator Hart Hanson, led to the adoption of the more fitting title Bones.

The procedural drama Bones, which aired for 12 seasons, began development with a distinct concept. According to Hart Hanson in Paul Ruditis' book "Bones: The Official Companion," the initial idea centered on Emily Deschanel's character, Temperance Brennan, collaborating with a rotating roster of agencies requiring her forensic expertise. This solo-lead approach prompted the working title "Brennan," following the convention of naming shows after their protagonist.

However, during production, the dynamic between Deschanel and David Boreanaz, who portrayed FBI agent Seeley Booth, altered the direction. Hanson explained the evolution: "We agonized about a title. Initially, we thought it was going to be a single person lead ... Then we saw Emily and David working together and thought, 'Oh, we've got a much better thing to do here.' 'Bones' is her nickname and it's the start of every story; it's the bones. So we thought, 'Yeah, that's good. That's better than just Brennan.' And, this way, it was easier to acknowledge that it was more of an ensemble piece than a single lead character."

The nickname "Bones," given to Brennan by Booth, tied directly to the show's core: a team at the Jeffersonian Institute solving crimes through analysis of human remains. Elements of the original premise persisted in later seasons. After Eric Millegan's character Zack Addy was revealed as a minion of the Gormogon (played by Laurence Todd Rosenthal) at the end of Season 3, Brennan worked with a series of rotating assistants known as "Squinterns."

These characters, drawn from the Jeffersonian Institute, contributed significantly to major plot points and even featured in the series finale, echoing the initial idea of varied collaborators.

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Emily Deschanel portrays psychologist Georgia Ryan, victim-focused FBI profiler, in NBC drama pilot.
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NBC has cast David Boreanaz in the lead role of Jim Rockford for its reboot pilot of the classic detective series The Rockford Files. The project updates the 1970s drama with a contemporary storyline centered on the private investigator's return to work after wrongful imprisonment. Boreanaz, known for roles in Bones and SEAL Team, takes over the part originally played by James Garner.

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