
’Bosch’s Titus Welliver Reveals the 1 Thing He Can’t Let Go of After Shock Cancellation
“From the time I was a small kid, I’ve been writing on myself, and it’s just never stopped. I think initially it was probably some form of rebellion, because my father, you know, was repelled, had a real e-day fix about tattoos and what he felt. And at that time… people who had tattoos were definitely stigmatized, right? Like a hood or a sailor or whatever. But I always liked tattoos, and it started. And then tattoos are not unlike children and potato chips, you can’t just have one.”
Harry Bosch Lives On
One tattoo, however, is directly tied to Bosch. In Connelly’s novels, Bosch tattooed “Hold Fast” on his knuckles as a teenager — only for a cruel Army drill instructor to make him repeatedly punch a brick wall until his hands were hamburger, leaving behind scars instead of ink. Welliver decided to honor that detail himself.
“In, I think it was between the final episode of Bosch in Season 7 and the first episode of Bosch: Legacy, I got ‘Hold Fast’ tattooed on my arm. You spend a decade playing a character. There’s a kind of kinship that becomes established. And it’s not just a demonstration of my affection for the character and my gratitude for being given the opportunity to play what became this iconic character, but there’s also kind of words to live by, right? I mean, hold fast.”
He admitted he briefly considered tattooing Bosch’s badge number, but ultimately decided this tribute better captured his connection to both the detective and Connelly. “When I showed it to him… when he saw that I tattooed ‘Hold Fast’ on me, I think he was kind of like, okay.” While Bosch gave Welliver one piece of ink, comic books gave him another. Fans often notice a striking tattoo on his arm — John Buscema’s Silver Surfer #1 cover.
“The Silver Surfer for me was always one of my favorite characters. There was a kind of rider of the galaxy and this sort of great freedom — sort of a metaphor for particularly as you get into your teen years, you kind of want to ride your board and go where you want to go, and still be tortured and isolated and all those things. I just always found that the Silver Surfer, despite the fact that he was this character from another galaxy, had all the angst and a lot of human qualities and the human condition, which made him sort of accessible to me.”
For Welliver, Bosch’s journey may have ended on screen, but the character continues to live under his skin — in ways fans will always notice. And if the shock cancellation of Bosch: Legacy taught us anything, it’s that Harry Bosch’s hold on audiences (and on Titus Welliver himself) is far from finished.
