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TV,eh? What's up in Canadian television

Interview: Murdoch Mysteries ties the knot

It took eight seasons, but Murdoch Mysteries fans got the storyline they wanted. After what felt like an endless string of will-they-or-won’t-they moments Dr. Julia Ogden and Det. William Murdoch finally tied the knot in front of friends and family in a ceremony that wasn’t without hiccups. Script writer Paul Aitken threw one more wrinkle at the pair by having them realize who the real culprit in a murder case was while kneeling at the altar. Cracking the case caused the pair to stand up and make ready to depart the proceedings … until Inspector Brackenreid ordered them to say their vows and make the wedding official.

In what I hope will become a weekly column with Murdoch‘s writers for the rest of the season, I spoke to co-executive producer and writer Aitken about Monday’s landmark 100th episode and the wedding we’d all be waiting for.

After teasing fans for so long, it was fun to have that final twist where it looked like William and Julia would forgo their vows one final time to solve a crime.
Paul Aitken: We came up with the wedding idea before we even came up with the central plot. And we wanted them to do exactly that; run away from the altar and then have Brackenreid stop them. We built the rest of the episode kind of around that moment. What we didn’t want to do was what they did on Bones, which was essentially to devote the last act entirely to their kind of gushy wedding. We wanted to basically play a bit with our fans who have been expecting, I think, something to go wrong and immediately set that right.

Was there a point when everyone decided the wedding would happen this season and during the 100th episode, or did it happen that way as a happy coincidence?
PA: It was entirely a happy coincidence. Because the wedding was going to be a special episode and the 100th was going to be a special episode, we had actually planned for two special episodes out of this. The original plan was to have the Murdoch origin episode, which was written by Maureen Jennings, be the 100th episode. But we found it was difficult to work the present mystery into the origin mystery so we couldn’t solve that in time. So we defaulted to the wedding being the 100th episode, and in the end I think it was the right decision.

Did anyone on the team want to wait and perhaps have the wedding at the end of this season or even push it to future seasons. Or have them never get together?
PA: No. Never having them get together was never an option. We’ve been promising the audience pretty much from the get-go that these two belong together and you simply can’t end the series without them ultimately being together. We would have absolutely kept them apart if we could think of a single reason how. Without stretching plausibility to the breaking point. Everyone is a little nervous that they’re married now and there won’t be the same dramatic kind of thrust to the show and we’ll see what the audience thinks. We may lose some audience, but we simply could not maintain it dramatically and have it be at all believable.

Do you have those same fears?
PA: Not too much. Ultimately we’re a murder mystery. We always tell good mysteries and our return audience will always be there. I think those that were in the show only because they were waiting for Murdoch and Ogden to get together, we may lose some of those people. I don’t think they were our main audience base and I don’t think people tune into our show to see a soap opera. They tune in to see a mystery that has elements of soaps and of characters and of continuing storylines.

How did the writing of this script go? Did Peter weigh in with some notes or did you have carte blanche because you’ve been with the show for so long as a writer and producer?
PA: This is true on almost every episode; it’s a room-based story. The writer goes away and does a draft and the writers’ room weighs in with notes and it’s very much a product of several different hands and several different voices. It’s very collaborative and this was no different. We broke the story in the room and then I went away and wrote the script and then I got notes. This is the result of all that.

The audience wanted more Margaret Brackenreid [Arwen Humphreys] and you gave it to them. She was great as the frenetic wedding planner.
PA: Arwen is great and I love the character of Margaret Brackenreid. I’ve written her several times and I take particular pleasure in writing her because she is the only person who tops Brackenreid. Brackenreid is the boss of everybody, but she is definitely the boss of Brackenreid!

Is there anything that you’re particularly proud of, looking back over these past 100 episodes?
PA: I’m very proud of the show. I think we hit the sweet spot right out of the gate. We had great characters and great actors playing those characters. As actors do, they bring something to the role that ignites our interest as writers, so we tend to write to that. That happened very quickly. It’s largely luck as much as anything. I feel an enormous amount of pride about the whole enterprise and am very happy that we’ve kept it going as long as we have. When we first started I said, ‘We can only go two seasons because that’s as many ideas that I can come up with!’ I come into every season with zero ideas and somehow it works. Somehow we come up with the ideas as we go through. As long as the audience sticks with us we’ll come up with ideas.

Murdoch Mysteries airs Mondays at 8 p.m. on CBC.

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Link: Where’s the money in Vice?

From John Doyle of the Globe and Mail:

Hey kids, Vice is nice, but it will cost you
The $100-million joint venture between the companies, Vice Media and Rogers Communications Inc., will, we are told, include a Toronto-based Vice Canada Studio and Vice TV Network to begin operations in 2015. “Essentially we are building a content-creation hub that will generate premium video for a cutting-edge media company that will program – simultaneously – the holy trinity of convergence; mobile, online and TV,” Shane Smith, Vice CEO and founder, said. Continue reading.

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Tonight: Murdoch Mysteries, Strange Empire, Package Deal

Murdoch Mysteries, CBC – “Holy Matrimony Murdoch”
As their wedding day approaches, Murdoch and Ogden intervene in the trial of a woman accused of killing her husband.

Strange Empire, CBC – “Lonely Hearts”
With Jeremiah missing and bounty hunters on her trail, Kat meets a medicine woman who takes her on a journey to help her search.

Package Deal, City – “The Imperfect Storm”
Ryan (Jay Malone) befriends his hero, local celebrity weatherman, Storm Chambers (guest star Jason Priestley, Call Me Fitz). When Storm turns out to be an annoying jerk, Ryan is left looking for ways to shake this new friendship. Meanwhile, Danny (Randal Edwards) uses diplomacy to prevent a robbery at the tea shop and Sheldon’s (Harland Williams) attempt to date an animal shelter employee backfires when he falls in love with “someone” else – a dog.

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Strange Empire’s Melissa Farman on Rebecca’s internal struggle

Strange Empire creator Laurie Finstad Knizhnik mentioned her doubts in finding an attractive young actor with the intelligence, gravitas and humanity to play Rebecca Blithley, and the miracle of finding Melissa Farman for the role.

Tonight’s  episode reveals more about the strange doctor and allows Farman to dig even deeper into the character. I interviewed her last month inside the Blithely’s “crib” on the Aldergrove, BC set that she describes as being like ” theatre troupe in the woods.”

Tell me more about your character. 

My character is a surgeon in training. She’s a prodigy. She was raised between an asylum and a laboratory as an experiment to test female scientific ability. So she’s very much an outsider in terms of Victorian society but also in terms of this new wild west where she’s going to have to discover what autonomy and freedom mean to her for the first time ever.

What was your reaction to getting this role? 

I felt very very honoured and I still do. I felt very excited to be part of a show that I think is a brave step for CBC in terms of showing such strong storytelling and so much integrity in representing people whom history often forgets.

Everyone felt a great responsibility to show the realities of the hardships people had to undergo and overcome to build better lives for themselves and their families, because westerns are very much our myths of original as a nation. They take civilization as a goal but they begin in bloodshed as we develop mainstream morality. We’re looking at the origins of society in no man’s land, a land that’s going to be fought over by anyone and everyone. So there’s a great sense of excitement and responsibility to show this clash of morality as people choose to live and die as individuals but also as a society.

That’s a very long answer [laughs].

It’s a very dark show, isn’t it? How does that affect you, to immerse yourself into that dark territory?

It’s definitely dark and edgy. Were showing people in very extreme circumstances. People who are lost in the middle ground between the expectations of a paradise promised – that’s why people came to the west, people who had nothing and came looking for opportunity – and instead they’re confronted by the reality of a paradise that has not yet come, perhaps a paradise that is lost. The conditions are very adverse and they’re going to have to reinvent themselves in order to survive.

So yes it’s very dark but I think in many ways there’s some light to it because it’s about people who are very lost but have the opportunity to build bonds within themselves and with each other, to build some kind of hope of community.

Behind the scenes we’re all supportive of each other and it’s an environment of support and commitment to tell the story with integrity.

How did you get into acting?

My mother threw me on stage as a child because I was very shy and she believed in shock therapy. It was a very safe environment so she thought it would be a good sanctuary for me to become less shy with people, which it absolutely was. I gravitated to theater as a place I could discover facets of myself without ramifications.

I’d joined a troupe and loved it, and then I took a year off after high school. I was going to go to university on the east coast in Pennsylvania, but I went to LA and did this acting program. I wanted to take this year to explore that before I went to university. My current manager found me in that class and convinced me to go on some auditions, and I did and I got the jobs.

So I was very very fortunate and that made my mind up right away. I went to university in California, I went to USC, so I pursued my academics while at the same time pursuing my career.

What did you study?

I was a double major in political science and literature. I felt it was a very good balance. First of all university gave me structure which I think was very important for me, plus I was studying power dynamics and storytelling . I was inspired by what I was learning in school . I love writing, I love debates, and that fed me.

My interest in political science and literature completely fuels my work as an actor as well. I grew up in a family that loved art, I grew up in Paris (her mother is Canadian and father is French) and I’ve always gone to a lot of exhibits. My mother is in the art world. It’s always fun to look at different mediums of understanding to fuel your own craft and creativity.

There was never really a shift for me between academia and art. It was all about studying human beings. You just bring it to a visceral level when you’re acting. I did Game Change, the HBO film about the McCain-Palin ticket, and I was studying Game Change in my class.

Can you describe Rebecca’s relationship to the other characters?

In terms of the three female leads they’re all on the outskirts of society and I don’t think they’d have ever met if they weren’t on this border frontier town. We have this atypical doctor, a wounded trailblazer in Kat, and a madame in Isabelle. They never would have met and here they are.

Their dynamic is constantly changing. At times they bond and at times they antagonize based on what they need to do in order to survive.

Rebecca is always a bit of an outsider. Certain people understand her and others don’t. You kind of have to get her.

What did it take for you to get her?

What I understood from her was she’s a character that very much struggles between what she wanted and what she was. I saw her as a blank slate in terms of human interactions. Because she was raised in a laboratory and she was raised as an experiment she never got a sense of her own humanity.

She’s come out to this wild west where she’s seen types of people she’s never seen before. That’s what the wild west was, it was this concentration of diversity, of people coming from nothing with everything to win, with no laws to stop them but no laws to protect them. They’re disenfranchised. That’s what our show is about, and I think with Rebecca she suddenly realizes everything she has been brought up to be gets in the way of everything she wants, which is connection. I was very drawn to that internal struggle she has to battle.

Strange Empire airs tonight on CBC, and episodes are available online. 

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