
Chicago Fire, Chicago P.D., and Chicago Med are all coming together for the first time in five years for a crossover extravaganza.
The teaser alone for this TV event will get your heart pumping. In it, you see Stella Kidd (Miranda Rae Mayo) and Adam Ruzek (Patrick John Flueger) in trouble after a subway collapse and an injured Trudy Platt (Amy Morton) crashing in the hospital. What will happen? How will all these worlds combine? Is everyone getting out of the crossover unscathed?
“The only teaser I can provide you is that I’ve been waiting for it myself,” Devin Kawaoka, a.k.a Chicago Med’s Dr. Kai Tanaka-Reed, told NBC Insider. “Five years is a long time, and how exciting for all of us to get to cross over. I’ve heard so much about all the fun that they’re having, and I literally can’t wait to watch myself as a fan.”
NBC Insider chatted with the One Chicago showrunners and several stars across the franchise to get more details on the crossover. Read on, and be sure to tune in Wednesday, January 29 at 8/7c for all the action. Things kick off with Chicago Fire, followed by Med at 9/8c, then P.D. at 10/9c.
Chicago Fire‘s Andrea Newman calls the One Chicago crossover “cinematic, explosive, and thrilling”
Chicago Fire showrunner Andrea Newman reveals the three-part episode will see Firehouse 51 battling one of the most catastrophic fires they’ve ever faced. “Our 51 guys take command of the scene, and they have to rescue people with their own lives on the line as they do it,” she said. “All the danger involved going in—where there’s potential collapse, there’s fire, there’s explosions, there’s gas leaks, there’s air depleting. It’s one thing after the next. A lot of action.”
“You don’t notice when you’re going from one episode to the next,” Newman added. “It’s really all one big episode. It’s one big movie, is what it is. The writing process for these things is quite extensive.”
The episode was a collaboration between Chicago Fire writer Victor Teran, P.D. writer Joe Halpin, and Med‘s Stephen Hotstein. It took them months to write the three-part saga.
“They really kept saying, ‘We really want it to have layers that you just keep peeling back,'” Newman said. “Surprises that keep coming. They made it together: a three-hour movie, essentially.”