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TV,eh? What's up in Canadian television

Review: Canada gives a chilly reception in The Book of Negroes

Canada gets her starring turn in the fifth episode of The Book of Negroes, and she’s not ready for her closeup.

Nova Scotia was, at the time of the novel and mini-series events, part of the British Empire and where some United Empire Loyalists settled, including those who were named in the historical book of Negroes. In our fictional world, Aminata lands to find the promised land is instead an inhospitable land, in climate and in temperament.

The new arrivals are cold to the point of taking a coat from a dead man, hungry enough that a dog is led off-screen by a man with an ax, crowded enough that cholera runs through the makeshift Birchtown, where the black inhabitants are segregated, waiting for the land they were promised.

Aminata’s character is shown when she tries to return some potatoes dropped by a white couple, though she’s told to keep them by a woman who ends up nursing her back to health — but she loses her newborn son while still separated from Chekura, whose ship had landed elsewhere.

This episode deviates from the novel significantly, permanently shedding Aminata of a child and reuniting her with supposed-to-be-dead Chekura for the voyage to Sierra Leone. I’m neutral on such changes from the source material — different media have different storytelling needs and strengths — and I can see why they wanted the love story to form a through-line in the mini-series. I  occasionally feel as if the cohesion of the series suffers from the opposite: taking too many incidents from the novel and jaggedly gluing them together.

Louis Gossett, Jr. and Jane Alexander make memorable guest stars in this episode as something of a church and community elder in the former’s case, and something of a racist harpy in the latter’s.

The black residents are segregated and paid less for the same work — if they can find work — and so subject to slavery, indentured servitude or crippling debt.

Aminata remains their storyteller, writing the abolitionists in England for assistance. Her erudite letters earn her a job in the print shop of Maria Witherspoon (Alexander) where she witnesses that woman’s disdain for black people (though she magnanimously calls Aminata “one of the good ones”).

When Aminata is accosted by Witherspoon’s son, Jason kills him in the ensuing struggle, setting off the woman’s rage. The town is unhappy, to say the least, not just by the black presence, but by their ingratitude in making them look bad to the British.

Aminata’s old boss Clarkson (Ben Chaplin) arrives in response to her letters to offer the freed slaves a new promised land: Sierra Leone, where they need a community to stake their empire’s claim. He promises farm land where they can grow food and be free. Reminded that was the promise of Nova Scotia as well, Clarkson says “yeah, my bad.” OK that’s not an exact quote, but a number of the Birchtown residents, including Aminata, choose to believe again and return to the continent from which they were stolen.

Reunited with Chekura thanks to Clarkson — making him a bit too much her saviour in my eyes — the couple sail toward the new hope and the final episode.

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Link: CBC’s Mr. D Regular Naomi Snieckus Is One Funny Lady

From Crave Online:

CBC’s Mr. D Regular Naomi Snieckus Is One Funny Lady
She acts, she writes, she does improv… Naomi Snieckus can do it all! A regular on the hit home-grown series “Mr. D,” airing on CBC, Snieckus is a member of the Second City alum and she and her husband, Matt Baram, founded the The National Theatre of the World, which won five Canadian Comedy Awards. She also won the Canadian Comedy Award for best female improviser in 2010, as well as best female in a TV Series for “Mr.D.” Continue reading.

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Link: Louis Gossett, Jr. On Book Of Negroes, Playing Daddy Moses & The Importance Of Black History

From Huffington Post Canada:

Louis Gossett, Jr. On ‘Book Of Negroes,’ Playing Daddy Moses And The Importance Of Black History
What’s in a name? That’s the theme CBC’s “The Book Of Negroes” tackles in each episode of its six-part miniseries (based on the book by Lawrence Hill). This Wednesday, that theme is revisited when audiences are introduced to the Daddy Moses character, as played by Oscar-winner Louis Gossett, Jr. HuffPost Canada caught up with the Emmy- and Academy Award-winner to get his take on the importance of the “The Book Of Negroes,” Daddy Moses and more. Continue reading.

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Link: Sunnyside sketch comedy show spoofs yuppie universe

From CBC’s Q:

Sunnyside sketch comedy show spoofs yuppie universe
The new sketch comedy show Sunnyside takes a closer look at the various species that populate the modern concrete jungle — from roving gangs of drunk party girls to snarky bearded baristas. The often surreal show, which recently premiered on City TV, has been described as a refreshing critique of contemporary urban life. Actress and writer Kathleen Phillips and co-creator and co-producer Dan Redican join guest host Daniel Richler to discuss the show’s “absurdist take on a neighbourhood in transition”. Listen here.

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