The Final Sunday Dinner Scene Took Nine Hours to Film. By the End, Nobody on Set Was Acting Anymore
Every major television series has a final day of production. The cameras stop rolling. The sets go dark. People who have worked together for years say goodbye in parking lots, in hallways, in makeup chairs.
Most of those goodbyes are private. The cameras aren't rolling when they happen. The audience never sees them.
Blue Bloods ended differently.
The decision to close the series with one final Sunday dinner — the scene that had defined the show from its very first episode — meant that the cast's last moments together were captured on film.
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