NBC's gritty Baltimore-based cop show "Homicide: Life on the Street" cast Baldwin as wise guy Detective Beau Felton. Although he gained good reviews, he left the show after two seasons (1993-95) and his character was eventually a murder victim in a powerful two-part episode in 1997. TV-movies like HBO's "The Attack of the 50-Foot Woman" (as Daryl Hannah's loutish husband) CBS' "Family of Cops" (1995, playing Charles Bronson's son) and NBC's "Twisted Desire" (1996, opposite significant other Isabella Hofmann) continued to show him in a good light, but his big-screen career failed to ignite, despite nice contributions to Lee Tamahori's "Mulholland Falls" and Steve Buscemi's "Trees Lounge" (both 1996). A string of direct-to-video releases followed before better roles began coming his way. Unfortunately, while in NYC in early 1998 to film the romantic comedy "It Had to Be You", the recovering substance abuser fell off the wagon with an alarming thud, and the tabloid embarrassment that ensued put the actor's career in serious jeopardy. (He was arrested and immediately replaced in the film by Michael Rispoli). Ironically, "John Carpenter's Vampires" (1998, filmed before the incident) was released while Baldwin was undergoing treatment in a rehab center and contained perhaps his best feature work to date. As James Woods' partner in tracking and killing the undead who becomes involved with a victim of a vampire's bite, he displayed not only a tough guy persona but also a more tender side. Nevertheless, he has an uphill battle to dispel people's image of him as "that crazy Baldwin who went nuts at the Plaza Hotel."