If you’ve been following his character’s time in Firehouse 51 from the start, you may have a lot of questions over whether Taylor Kinney is leaving Chicago Fire again and what could happen to Kelly Severide in Season 12.
Chicago Fire is NBC’s drama series following the professional and personal lives of firefighters, rescue personnel and paramedics of the Chicago Fire Department’s fictional Firehouse 51. Kinney made his debut as Lieutenant Kelly Severide, a lieutenant at Firehouse 51 and an officer in charge of Squad 3, in season 1 of Chicago Fire in 2012.
Kinney revealed in an interview with NBC in 2023 that he did’t have any “anxiety” before his audition for Chicago Fire. “I was in the circuit of auditioning a lot, so I was decent at it”, he said. “I remember never having any anxiety. I was excited about it, and then you kind of leave it up to the powers that be.” He continued, “[The audition] went well, and 10 years later I’m still here bugging you through your televisions while you fold laundry.”
He also looked back on his jobs before his acting career, which included carrying golf clubs. “I carried golf clubs for older women who didn’t know how to play golf,” he said. “It was frustrating, but I would make enough money to buy a medium, thin-crust pizza from Pizza Hut and rent a Blockbuster movie for a Saturday night. Thanks, old ladies!”
After more than a decade as Lieutenant Severide in Chicago Fire, news broke that Kinney was temporarily leaving the series in early 2023. He went on to return in Season 12, however, he left again in Episode 3. He returned later in the season, but fans are still left wondering whether Taylor Kinney could still leave Chicago Fire for good and what could to Kelly Severide? Read on for what we know about if Taylor Kinney is leaving Chicago Fire again and whether this time is permanent.
Is Taylor Kinney leaving Chicago Fire again?
No, Kinney isn’t leaving Chicago Fire. At least for now. While Kinney has taken several breaks throughout Chicago Fire Season 12 that sparked speculation he was leaving the show, NBC nor Kinney have confirmed his exit from the series. Chicago Fire recently sparked speculation Kinney in Season 13 when a promo for Episode 3, “All Kinds of Crazy,” showed Chief Dom Pascal telling a member of Firehouse 51: “You’ve broken my trust, now I’m dismissing you from this firehouse.” The promo then showed Severide, his wife Stella Kidd, and his brother Jack Damon as fans were left wondering whether Severide could be the one exiting the series due to his and his family’s issues with Pascal and the conflict of interest between them.
Despite the storyline, fans believe that Chief Wallace Boden (Eamonn Walker)’s exit in the Season 12 finale seemed to confirm Kinney place on the series for a while to come. Boden left Chicago Fire in the Season 12 finale, “Never Say Goodbye,” which saw him step down as chief of Firehouse 51. Given that Boden left Severide in charge of Firehouse 51 while he was out in the episodes before the Season 12 finale, fans speculate that Severide could replace Boden as the new chief of Firehouse 51, which would extend his time on the series and give him a whole new set of storylines to cover. Though Pascal was later written in as Boden’s replacement, there’s still a chance for Severide to be promoted in the future. If Severide becomes chief, that, in turn, would leave his position as lieutenant open, which fans also theorize will go to Joe Cruz, who served as a temporary lieutenant while Severide went to an arson investigation training program in the second half of Season 11.
If Kinney was to leave Chicago Fire, however, he would be the fourth series regular to exit the show recently after Kara Kilmer (who plays Sylvie Brett); Alberto Rosdende (who plays Blake Gallo); and Eamonn Walker (who plays Chief Wallace Boden). Rosende left Chicago Fire in the Season 12 premiere, while Killmer is also left this season following her character’s wedding to Matt Casey (played by original cast member Jesse Spencer, who left Chicago Fire in Season 10.
Why did Taylor Kinney leave Chicago Fire the first time?
Why did Taylor Kinney leave Chicago Fire the first time? Kinney, who played Lieutenant Kelly Severide on Chicago Fire from seasons 1 to 11, starred in his last episode on February 22, 2023. At the end of the episode — season 11, episode 14 “Run Like Hell” — Severide joins his wife, Stella Kidd, at Molly’s Pub, where she asks him about Captain Tom Van Meter, a commander and arson investigator for the Chicago Fire Department’s Office of Fire Investigation, whom Severide has worked with. When Kidd asks Severide about Van Meter, Severide shows her his phone, to which she appears surprised and asks him, “Wow. What are you going to do?”
In the next episode — season 11, episode 15 “Damage Control” — Van Meter tells Deputy District Chief Wallace Boden Jr. that Severide had left Chicago to train at “the best arson investigation training program in the world,” a last-minute opportunity that was too big to pass on. While Boden tells Van Meter that he’s disappointed, he admits that the training will be a positive for firehouse when Severide returns.
So why did Taylor Kinney leave Chicago Fire? A source close to production told Deadline in January 2023, that Kinney was taking a “leave of absence” from Chicago Fire to deal with a “personal matter,” which suggested that he could return. Deadline reported that the cast and crew of Chicago Fire were informed of Kinney’s leave on January 20, 2023, and that future scripts were rewritten to accommodate for Kinney’s absence.
Almost a year after his exit, Kinney returned to Chicago Fire as Severide in Season 12, Episode 1 in January 2024. In an interview with TV Insider in January 2024, Chicago Fire executive producer Andrea Newman explained how Severide’s absence plays a part in his relationship with Kidd throughout Season 12. “Severide’s got some big decisions to make,” she said. “There’s a lot of fun to be had there, and within moments of the [season] starting, you’ll see that although the heat is definitely still there between them, there’s a whole new dynamic that’s been created because of that going MIA that Severide did and there’s some tension and edge between them.”
She continued, “The arson case that Severide throws himself into in the premiere is going to bring up a lot of that stuff. So the audience really hasn’t missed much in terms of what they’ve gone through. We’ll see it all in the premiere, when he agrees to take on this arson case and she isn’t so happy about it. She feels like arson is his drug and he just gets lost in it.”
Newman also hinted that Severide will need to choose between Kidd and his career with the OFI (Office of Fire Investigation.). “That’s the issue at hand [for Severide and Kidd]: How are they going to deal with this going forward and how does it change their relationship?” she said.
She continued, “No couple stays the same forever. But they are deeply in love. They can’t keep their hands off each other. And I think they have to kind of work through this and get to a different place, maybe a better place. So like every couple, it’s real and it has its challenges and it never stays exactly the same.”
Along with Kidd, Newman also explained how Severide’s relationship with other Firehouse 51 members has changed, especially Joe Cruz. “Cruz is really his right-hand man, so there’ll be some lingering issues between Severide and Cruz about that and some stuff to work out there,” Newman said.
Miranda Rae Mayo, who plays Kidd, also told NBC Insider in January 2024 about how Severide and Kidd’s relationship will never be the same after he left her for an arson career. “I imagine that it was quite tenuous. It definitely was, I think, one of the hardest conversations and one of the most emotionally-charged conversations that they’ve had as a couple,” Mayo said of Severide and Kidd’s first conversation since his return to Firehouse 51. “Yeah, I think she has a lot of feelings about him just kind of leaving her in the dark, and he feels really passionately about something, so we’ll see what happens.”
She continued, “Ultimately, these two characters are crazy about each other, they love each other. I think that they both are committed to doing everything they can to make it work.” As for how Severide and Kidd could stay together, Mayo told NBC Insider, “Both have to compromise in ways that are highly uncomfortable in order to have what they want, which is each other.”
What Taylor Kinney thinks of Chicago Fire
In an interview with Us Weekly after the season 10 finale in 2022, Kinney looked back on his decade-plus on Chicago Fire. “It’s never lost on me how special it is to be a part of something with a longevity this has. It’s a testament to Dick Wolf, the team of people he puts together,” he said. He just wrapped season 10. That says something. I’m excited for season 11. I’m not privy to scripts or information of where they’re going with it. No clue, but I’m excited.”
Kinney also reflected on how long he’d been on Chicago Fire in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter ahead of the series’ season 5 finale in 2019. “It’s tough to see the forest through the trees. Maybe over hiatus I can take a good step back and take it all in,” he said. “But to think that we started that long ago, and especially network shows, most of these don’t even see the light of day from the pilot.”
He continued, “So getting that to go, and then getting a pickup for 13 episodes and then you get a little bit of rhythm and then you start airing and then we were finding our sea legs trying to figure out what worked and what didn’t. There’s no guarantees so we didn’t know if we were getting a back-nine pickup. And then we got that. I remember when John Roman, who was our line producer seasons one, two and three, got off the phone and gathered cast and crew and said, ‘You guys, we got picked up for season two,’ and that was one of the prouder moments in my career. It felt like validation that people liked the show and watched it.
Kinney also told The Hollywood Reporter about what it was like to see Chicago Fire, which was the first show in the One Chicago franchise, expand into Chicago P.D., Chicago Med and Chicago Justice, most of which he’s made appearances on. “Going forward with these spinoffs, they get a little hectic but I was looking at a poster the other day on our stages and one of them is the entire cast of Fire, P.D. and Med,” he said. “You see it grow little by little but there’s like 50 characters and it says, ‘One Chicago.’ To see that—and now we have Justice—it’s a lot to take in. I’m really proud and humbled.”
Kinney’s exit came three months after Chicago Fire‘s co-creator and co-showrunner, Derek Haas, announced he was leaving the show at the end of season 10. “Although I am leaving Wolf Entertainment next year to focus on creating new shows, I’m entirely committed to delivering amazing episodes of ‘Chicago Fire’ and ‘FBI: International’ through the end of the current seasons,” Haas said in a statement at the time. “I learned everything I know about storytelling, pace, characters, production values, and hiring the best cast, crews, and staffs from Dick Wolf and Peter Jankowski, and as hard as it is to leave a place you love and have called home for over a decade, including incredible support from Universal Television, NBC and CBS, I look forward to building my own brand in entertainment.”
Jesse Spencer, who played Lieutenant Matthew Casey on Chicago Fire from seasons 1 to 10, also left the show in its 200th episode in October 2021. In the episode, Casey was written off Chicago Fire after he made the “life-altering decision” to move to Oregon with a three-year commitment. At a press call at the time, Haas said that he had “bittersweet feelings — or just bitter feelings” about Spencer’s exit, according to Variety. He also thanked Spencer for “years of amazing friendship and service and acting and making the show credible,” and acknowledged that, though Casey’s last episode turned out well, it was difficult to write.
On the same press call, Spencer explained that he decided to leave Chicago Fire after realizing he’d been on television for 18 years straight and wanted to focus on his family and other career opportunities. “I hate to leave the show because I do love this show, but when the time comes, the time comes,” he said at the time. Spencer explained that, when he called Haas to tell him about his decision to leave, they mutually agreed for Casey’s last episode to be Chicago Fire‘s 200th episode special. “All of us felt that anything past the first 13 episodes was a bonus,” Haas said. “I just feel like we’ve been on borrowed time for a long time and of course I wanted to talk Jesse into staying and coming back and doing all the things for as long as we could, but I was very happy that he gave us five more episodes instead of just leaving at the end of the [last] season, which led us to be able to bring back a storyline from Season 1 — to bring back the Darden boys.” (Though he left in the middle of season 10, Casey made a short cameo in the season 10 finale when Severide and Kidd get married.)