As seen in many of its best episodes, “9-1-1” thrives on being unexpected. From the get-go, the crime procedural, from co-creators Ryan Murphy, Tim Minear, and Brad Falchuk, has been as much a week-to-week exploration of what it’s like to be a first responder to emergencies in Los Angeles as it is about the wild and woolly personal lives of these people. One of the show’s stalwart heroes is LAPD officer Athena Grant (played by the majestic Angela Bassett), first glimpsed as the wife of Michael Grant (Rockmond Dunbar) and mother to May and Harry (Corinne Massiah and Marcanthonee Jon Reis, respectively). In the series pilot, as much as Athena is capable and sure-handed when wearing the shield and weapon of an LAPD officer, we learn her personal life is messy when Michael reveals to their kids that while they’re married, he’s gay. That decision would lead to Athena getting divorced, even though Michael stayed close to the family.
In fact, Michael Grant was a longtime part of “9-1-1” despite not being a first responder himself. And yet, few network procedurals are immune to the departure of regular characters, and “9-1-1” is no exception. In the middle of the show’s fifth season, Michael abruptly left to move to Haiti with his partner, to whom he was now engaged. The fact that this departure happened midway through the season, instead of at its conclusion, may make some viewers think it wasn’t entirely planned. And as it turns out, those viewers would be right. When Rockmond Dunbar left “9-1-1” in the middle of season 5, he did so for religious and medical reasons, the latter related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Let’s dig into what caused him to leave this big-deal series, and the legal fallout of his departure.