Everything about Book of Negroes, eh?

Top 5 reasons to be optimistic about Canadian TV

The days are getting longer, but they’re still pretty damn short. Spring with its warmer weather feels like a distant mirage. And there’s always something to complain about in Canadian television. But there are some hopeful signs this winter season:

  1. CBC is out of the gate this winter with fine ratings. Phew. Their newcomers Schitt’s Creek and The Book of Negroes found an audience, while returning favourites like Murdoch Mysteries continue to earn lots of eyeballs.
  2. Funny ha ha. City has launched two delightfully off-centre comedies in Sunnyside and Young Drunk Punk, and with them and CBC we now have a nice complement of the Canadian comedy old guard on our screens (Eugene Levy, Catherine O’Hara, and Bruce McCulloch) without simply trying to recreate the good old days.
  3. Please sir, can we have some more? Global’s got Remedy, the possibly-in-its-last-season Rookie Blue and … ummm … not a lot else coming up for original series. So they must have an announcement coming sometime soon about what else is up their sleeve. Right?
  4. 101 nights of awards. OK, the Canadian Screen Awards have only four nights of awards, but now that sounds like nothing right? What better than the recently announced nominations to keep us chatting through the winter about who was snubbed, why there’s a separate category for Best International Drama that doesn’t include any international dramas that aren’t Canadian, and why Tatiana Maslany wasn’t just nominated for all five slots under best actress in a drama. The broadcast on March 1 will be hosted by Andrea Martin — another Canadian comedy legend — or at least they will be if she shows up this time.
  5. Jay Baruchel knows how to fix Canadian comedy. He says give CBC more money (yes!) and get rid of the old boys club who “regardless of the quality” keep getting jobs. It’s an uncomfortable position for me, defending old guys, but I’m not entirely sure who he means, or who we can blame when relative newcomers’ shows tank. Canadian TV executives or marketers? Maybe, but I’m not sure how many of them have successful original programming in their job performance plans, and many of them are not boys. Still, it can only help when a homegrown celebrity is passionate about improving our homegrown industry. I mean, it might be better if he wasn’t getting lauded for starring in an American show while advocating for Canadian content, but baby steps.
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Tonight: Young Drunk Punk, Saving Hope, Dragons’ Den, Book of Negroes

Young Drunk Punk, City – series premiere
Young rebels, Ian (Tim Carlson) and Shinky (Atticus Mitchell) decide that instead of going to college or into the work force like their parents want, they must find their great destiny! But when Ian’s sister Belinda (Allie Macdonald) moves back home after a fight with her boyfriend, Ian becomes determined to restore Belinda’s honour, prove his father wrong, and blow some minds with the power of punk!

Saving Hope, CTV – “Trading Places”
Dr. Alex Reid (Erica Durance) and Dr. Maggie Lin (Julia Taylor Ross) are faced with an intricate procedure to save a woman’s child when she and her partner refuse to be seen by Hope Zion Hospital’s top OB/GYN Dr. Sydney Katz (Stacey Farber). Meanwhile, Dr. Joel Goran’s (Daniel Gillies) father is in town to receive an award for stem‐cell research, but Joel has the feeling he’s hiding something. Plus, Dr. Charlie Harris (Michael Shanks) suspects foul‐play when a boy and his grandmother come in. This episode of SAVING HOPE is directed by Gregory Smith (ROOKIE BLUE).

Dragons’ Den, CBC
A musical entrepreneur tries to strike a chord with the Dragons; an honest storeowner lays it all on the table; and university friends want to team up with the Dragons to ice out big industry players. Plus, business partners think there’s an untapped market for their truly Canadian beverage.

The Book of Negroes, CBC – Part 3
When Revolution breaks out in New York, Aminata seizes her chance and escapes to freedom in the haven of Canvas Town.

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The Book of Negroes brings painful past and present together

Lyriq Bent wasn’t familiar with The Book of Negroes, the novel or the historical document, before auditioning for — and winning — the role of Chekura, the love of narrator Aminata’s life. And that, he thinks, is a problem.

“It was a little bit disconcerting,” said the Jamaica-born, Canada-raised, US-resident actor. “You think you know about the history and the culture, and then you find out such a rich story like The Book of Negroes exists and you don’t know about it. This was almost 100 years before the underground railroad. It shows there’s so much of the story to know.”

What drew him in was the incredible love story between two slaves, and that the entire story is seen through the eyes of a woman. Aminata and Chekura bond as children ripped from their families to endure the dangerous voyage overseas and life of slavery in a new land, eventually marrying and having a child who is, in turn, ripped from her family.

Episode three airs tonight and further heartache is in store for the couple who are constantly separated, constantly searching for each other, yet constant in their love.

“That’s love. Love has no discrimination. It has no colour, it has no boundaries,” said Bent. “They are pillars for each other.”

The Book of Negroes gives you an idea of how difficult it was for African-Americans and black people in general to build a relationship, to build a family and nurture it and protect it. There was never an opportunity to do that. It was illegal to be married, it was illegal to have children without the permission of your slave owners.”

“If you were to be brave enough, like Aminata and Chekura, they were ripped apart and sold to different parts of the country. You get a sense of how identity, values, and culture were stripped away for so many centuries and generations.”

While he longs for more positive black stories to be told onscreen, he is full of praise for CBC having brought The Book of Negroes to air, calling it a gauge of how far race relations have come — or not.

“It measures our growth as human beings toward each other. And the growth is almost minimal. Even though the physical chains have been removed, the mental chain is still there and the attitude is very present. That’s where you get Ferguson and New York. People still don’t value human life unless they have the same colour skin –which sounds so ridiculous when you say it out loud, but our behaviour suggests that.”

“No matter what point in time a story like this is dropped it’s going to seem relevant because we haven’t resolved our differences, we haven’t resolved our ignorance,” he added.

“Canada’s done an excellent job of keeping it under the rug but now the rug’s been lifted and we can see the dirt and sweep it out,” he said. “That’s what I laud Canada for, that through actions they’ve said ‘let’s right the wrong.'”

“I think the difference in America is the rug has been lifted a long time ago but there’s no resolution, no resolve.”

The miniseries shot in South Africa and Halifax, and both locations gave him insight into the story. Filming in Nova Scotia in winter shivering even in the luxury of goose down jackets the characters didn’t have, he called it “mind-blowing to try to imagine what they felt, what they thought this new freedom was. How tragic it must have been for them to realize that now they have another battle, not just racism and slavery but battling the elements while living in holes in the ground.”

But it was the shoot in a South Africa 20 years removed from apartheid that lent a surreal touch. “Everyone I met was horrified by the story. It made me question — who were the people in South Africa who were for apartheid if all the people on the set feel this way? I often wonder that about a country: is it the majority of people or the small minority with power who dictate things?”

“It was interesting to see everybody come together – white South Africans, black South Africans, Americans, Canadians and people from other parts of Africa – all these different countries came together to tell this one story that really talked about how cruel we were to a culture. It was interesting to be in that country for that story.”

But The Book of Negroes is also a story about hope, and that bond between Aminata and Chekura. “The idea of having a life gave them hope to survive, and the incredible love was what kept them going. Knowing there was that person out there was enough for them to overcome whatever was thrown at them.”

The Book of Negroes airs Wednesdays at 9 p.m. on CBC.

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CBC: Not dead yet

One of my frequent criticisms of Canadian conventional networks is that they’re so risk averse, they would rather create shows generic enough to sell overseas than stand out with anything that hasn’t worked in the American market — or at least, worked there five years ago. And one of my most frequent criticisms of the CBC has been that they were so busy pursuing the same kind of shows as the private networks, they gave me little reason to find solace in our public broadcaster.

Then came a regime change. And a declaration that they were changing direction to pursue more cable-like series. And some rolling of eyes as some of us recalled the low-rated and swiftly cancelled cable-like Michael: Tuesdays and Thursdays and Intelligence. I could almost hear them say “honest, babe, this time it’ll be different.”

It’s early days in their attempt to shift direction, and a shift can only be judged over time. But with The Book of Negroes and Schitt’s Creek, they’re finally getting rewarded with ratings as well as the critical acclaim of their first bold new-direction show, Strange Empire.

Schitt’s Creek provides the welcome return of Eugene Levy and Catherine O’Hara, so comedically comfortable together, into our homes each week, in a show that mercifully isn’t trying to be either Corner Gas or a Chuck Lorre production.

In an unusual partnership, CBC will air ex-Kid in the Hall Bruce McCulloch’s comedy Young Drunk Punk this fall after its season airs on City, making CBC the new home of edgy comedies from nostalgic favourites.

But it’s the dramas that reveal what the public broadcaster should be able to do but hasn’t done in a while: reveal to Canadians through entertainment a history we often sanitize, from the birth of our country steeped in violence and the sex trade — not just a national railroad — to our unsavory role in the slave trade — not just the underground railroad.  Soon will come X Company, centred around Canada’s little-known role in WWII espionage.

There’s innovation with money too. With The Book of Negroes, the risk to their limited budget was mitigated by partnering with BET for the expensive co-production — not an unusual solution, to be sure. But the partnership with City (which will also have Mr. D air on that Rogers-owned network) gives them more programming for less money.

And given that the CBC debate usually circles around whether they should be chasing ratings or edgier fare, it’s a relief to see their risk rewarded both ways this winter. Schitt’s Creek premiered to 1.3 million viewers, while The Book of Negroes bowed to 1.7, dipping to a still-great 1.4 for the second episode.

In a year where it’s been hard to cheer for our public broadcaster, that’s good news for CBC, for the audience, and for a Canadian industry that could use some incentive to take more risks.

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Link: Women inspired The Book of Negroes author

From Alex Strachan of Postmedia:

Women inspired The Book of Negroes author
In introducing The Book of Negroes novelist Lawrence Hill, filmmaker Clement Virgo, producer Damon D’Oliveira and actors Aunjanue Ellis, Lyriq Bent, Louis Gossett Jr. and Cuba Gooding Jr. at the winter meeting of the Television Critics Association, BET Networks president Charlie Jordan Brookins gave a shout-out to “our friends at eOne” for helping put the miniseries together, but somehow neglected to mention CBC. Continue reading.

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