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Some material of Denny Crane
in the series of Boston Legal
Character biography and personality Denny is a founding partner (and was chief rainmaker of Crane, Poole & Schmidt, along with Shirley Schmidt and Edwin M. Poole. In his prime, he was a legendary litigator; his reputation amongst lawyers is long and fabled; Denny himself insists he is the greatest lawyer in history and has never lost a case, stating that, in his 45 years of practicing law, his record is 6,0430. ("Loose Lips" This record is debatable, however, as Denny shifts the blame away from himself in lost cases he was involved with, saying that it was, in fact, his colleague who lost, not him. Paul Lewiston once observed that Denny is like Muhammad Ali late in his career, relying more on his past reputation than his current skills. Despite his increasing incapacitation Denny is noted to be quite brilliant as an attorney, in the final season of The Practice, Matthew Billings, the lawyer hired to represent Alan Shore against Young, Frutt and Berluti, notes that when Denny steps into court "It's like the plaques on his brain just dissolve". On a case involving seniors and prescription drug prices, Denny forgot the details of the case, and gave an opening statement that resulted in a mistrial to his client's benefit. He then finally took seriously Alan Shore's suggestion that he might have Alzheimer's Disease, and went to get tested for it. Later, Denny admitted to Alan that he had been taking a type of amphetamine drug to help him focus on trial procedures and stopped taking the drug. After trying a case involving the safety of red meat, he came to believe that his condition was due to mad cow disease, which he simply refers to as "mad cow." When Denny received his annual CT scan during the Christmas episode, a doctor revealed that Denny has mild cognitive impairment, which could be the result of normal aging or the early stage of Alzheimer's, and added that, based on MCI patient history, Denny has an 80 percent chance of having Alzheimer's in six years. In the fifth season, Denny begins to believe he is slipping. He makes an illegal bet with Alan over a case Alan has taken, and unintentionally reveals it to the judge's clerk, nearly causing Alan to lose his case as well as his career. Denny is disturbed by his memory lapse, despite Alan's insistence that he is not slipping. At Shirley's Thanksgiving dinner in
"Thanksgiving," his mind slips, with Denny seriously believing for a moment that everyone has gathered to celebrate his birthday[1], demonstrating to his coworkers the progressing severity of his condition. Denny is a staunch conservative Republican. He tells Alan Shore that he voted for Barack Obama in the 2008 election, though it could be just to appease Alan. He feels that elevators "are for Democrats," and states that he only takes the stairs (although he is frequently seen taking the elevator. In one episode, when he is representing the United States in court, Denny refers to the Attorney General by his first name, "Alberto." In the third season episode "Nuts," when Denny finds out that he is on the Transportation Security Administration's No Fly List, Alan tells the lawyer representing Homeland Security that there is no one more patriotic than Denny, stating that he is pro-life, pro-death penalty, uses every possible loophole to get out of paying taxes, and donated to the Jack Abramoff Ball. Earlier in the episode, Alan and Denny discuss who of Denny's friends could come to his aid; names mentioned were Tom DeLay, Bill Frist, Mark Foley and Dick Cheney. Denny is, at times, portrayed as extremely unethical. In one episode, he convinces a judge to drop all charges against his nymphomaniac client by playing on the judge's self-esteem problems stemming from his being a virgin[2] (the judge is later revealed to be homosexual; he had simply never had sex with a woman[3]. During a case where a town attempted to ban meat presided over by the same judge, Denny kept making quiet comments about how the judge was a "nansy-pansy," playing off how the judge still lives with his mother in order to earn a favorable verdict. Denny also once employed a spin doctor to taint the jury pool by flooding the media with sympathetic portrayals of his client. Additionally, he has, at many times, made remarks about sleeping with people's wives, a practice that places him in harm's way in the pilot episode. Denny's expertise and skill in media manipulation, as well as his reputation, have made him the public face of Crane, Poole & Schmidt, far more often than any of the other senior partners would like. His aggressive personality, massive ego, excessive libido and eagerness for the limelight have caused him to lose five wives, the most recent after only three hours of marriage when he was caught having sex with a caterer in the coatroom at his own wedding reception. But as a name partner and the firm's resident rainmaker, Denny cannot be removed from the firm without great economic and reputational risk (as he often points out, "My name's on the door".

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