TV, eh? | What's up in Canadian television | Page 734
TV,eh? What's up in Canadian television

Link: Mini-series nicknamed ‘Mennonite Breaking Bad’ wraps up filming in Dartmouth, Windsor

From The Chronicle Herald:

Link: Mini-series nicknamed ‘Mennonite Breaking Bad’ wraps up filming in Dartmouth, Windsor
Pure, the purely Canadian CBC six-part mini-series that has earned the nickname Mennonite Breaking Bad wrapped up local production in Nova Scotia this week.

Airing in January 2017 as part of CBC’s new prime-time lineup, Pure’s story revolves around newly elected Mennonite pastor Noah Funk as he infiltrates a “Menno mob” in an effort to bust up a powerful drug trafficking operation in the community. Continue reading. 

Facebooktwitterredditlinkedinmail

Murdoch Mysteries’ Michelle Ricci scores with “Bend It Like Brackenreid”

With an episode title like “Bend it Like Brackenreid,” it was no surprise Monday’s new episode of Murdoch Mysteries focused on the good Inspector and his favourite game. And the murder of star player Robert Semple meant it was all hands on deck on the soccer pitch, with everyone working together—Rebecca was outside the morgue for the second week in a row!—to solve the crime.

Murdoch dipped back into Canadian history for Monday’s tale, recounting the pivotal match between the University of Toronto and Galt that sent the latter team to St. Louis for the Olympic Games. Once there, the team captured gold, meaning John and Thomas return to Toronto as Olympic medalists. We spoke to the episode’s writer, Michelle Ricci, about the storyline and got a sneak peek at what’s to come next week and the holiday episode, “Once Upon a Murdoch Christmas.”

I really liked “Bend it Like Brackenreid” for a couple of reasons. First, knowing the Inspector would be involved in it and that the game featured was the one that decided the team going to the Olympics in St. Louis that year.
Michelle Ricci: The game was a bit of a fudge because there wasn’t actually a game that decided who was going to the Olympic Games. The way it worked back then was, if you had the money, you could just go and compete. There was no qualifier, which is really funny when you look at it today and that’s why there were only three teams in the 1904 Olympics. It’s awesome to say Galt won the Olympic gold but there weren’t really playing anyone. I think there were something like four Canadian teams that were going to go. Two of them couldn’t raise the funds and the third one was the University of Toronto team. They were going to go and they played Galt in these two exhibition games before the Olympics—one in Toronto and one in Galt—and U of T tied one game and lost the other one. After they lost the second game, they were like, ‘Why should we bother going to the Olympics? We can’t even beat Galt!’ So, they didn’t go.

When I referenced them, I called them the Porridge Eating Galt Invincible’s, and that was really their nickname. They didn’t win another Olympic medal, but they won everything over the course of the next, five or six years.

It’s ironic, with the sponsorship deals teams have now, that Canadian teams couldn’t go back then because they didn’t have the money.
I know. Well, train tickets were expensive then. I think they were $20. When Galt decided to go and enter the competition, Grand Trunk offered a special fare anyone going to specifically watch soccer specifically, and I think it was $8—a huge discount and incentive—and a ton of people went, which is pretty cool. A trip at that time was a pretty monumental undertaking and would have been pretty expensive.

murdoch3

Were you involved in the writing when it came to the actual soccer match on the pitch? How did that work?
I wasn’t there the day they were filming, but I did talk a lot to Cal Coons, the director, and our director of photography about how that would work and they gave very specific directions to the art department about the field, because the lines on the field were a bit different. The 1904 game is very close to our modern game and the guys on the field, including the victim, are actually semi-pro players. That’s why the action looks really good. We didn’t bother with all of the rules because it would only matter to die-hard fans like myself.

Oh, you’re a soccer fan?
I totally am! It was hilarious when the idea for this episode came up because I’ve been pitching a soccer story for years and everyone has said, ‘Soccer is boring!’ And then this year, because Galt won the Olympics, we thought Brackenreid should be in it. I said, ‘Well, I want to do that one.’ And they looked at me and said, ‘You do?!’ I said, ‘How do you guys not know me by now?!’

You must have a blast coming up with tongue-in-cheek references, like John Brackenreid only being able to bend his kicks … which wasn’t a good thing back then.
We had so much fun coming up with something Brackenreid could come up with for the sport. Normally when we do a sports story, Murdoch comes up with some innovation, and when we talked about what did and didn’t exist, the wall came up as the coolest thing to invent. When I looked into it, I couldn’t find any reference to a wall being formed until the 1950s. That doesn’t mean it didn’t happen before that, but before that the rules didn’t call for a need for a wall. And so when we came up with Brackenreid inventing the wall, we came up with the modern way of defeating the wall and playing off Bend It Like Beckham.

Rebecca took another step forward, as she explained the soccer player’s cause of death rather than Julia doing it.
We’re looking to give Rebecca a way forward. She can’t stay Ogden’s mentee forever. We’ve got no great plans for her to take over the morgue anytime soon but we certainly want to keep progressing her and moving her forward and giving her a bit more to do outside the morgue as well.

One part of the storyline dealt with sexual assault, with Robert taking advantage of Harriet. How did you tackle that story?
Doing an episode like that is a little tricky because you want to balance it properly and not short-shrifting the seriousness of the crime, but you also don’t want to short-shrift the fun of the football and Brackenreid’s day in the sun. It was really a question of making sure both stories were given their proper due.

So, Brackenreid returns to Toronto as a gold medal winner?
That’s right! It starts him on a different path altogether and a different sort of idea about what he may want out of life. That will take him on an adventure we have never seen before.

What can you tell me about the holiday special that you co-wrote with Paul Aitken and Carol Hay?
It is a different Christmas adventure for our gang involving the imagination of George Crabtree come to life and how that affects the entire city of Toronto. It all ends at an amazing, gorgeous, sumptuous Christmas banquet that we shot at Casa Loma.

What can you say about Episode 7?
It’s called ‘Painted Ladies,’ and it’s a thrilling and dangerous ride through the world of female beauty.

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

Image courtesy of CBC.

Facebooktwitterredditlinkedinmail

Corner Gas, CTV, Vancouver’s Arts Club Theatre Company and Stratford Festival mourn the death of Janet Wright

From a media release:

The producers and cast of CORNER GAS, CTV, Vancouver’s Arts Club Theatre Company, and Stratford Festival extend its deepest condolences to the family and loved ones of distinguished actress and director Janet Wright.  Wright passed away this morning in Vancouver at the age of 71.

Janet played the beloved role of ‘Emma’ on CORNER GAS,  Canada’s most successful sitcom.  In 1974, Wright co-founded the Persephone Theatre In Saskatoon with Brian Richmond and Susan Wright.  The first dramaturge at Vancouver’s Arts Club Theatre Company, Wright appeared in and directed more than 40 productions for the company.  During her seven seasons at Stratford she shone as a director and in many key roles as an actress.  In 2011, Wright returned to Stratford after more than a decade away, giving an unforgettable performance as ‘Ma’ in the acclaimed production of The Grapes of Wrath and portrayed a hilarious ‘Mistress Quickly’ in the The Merry Wives of Windsor. In 2014, Wright reprised her role as ‘Emma’ in CORNER GAS: THE MOVIE, which reached more than 7 million TV viewers in Canada.

“Janet was like no other person I’ve ever met.  She had a giant wit, a giant heart, and was one of the strongest human beings to ever stride around this planet,” said Brent Butt, Creator and Executive Producer, CORNER GAS. “She was so great to work with.  When you looked at the call sheet in the morning, and saw you were doing scenes with Janet, you knew you’d be laughing that day, and probably at something terribly inappropriate.  We had this running thing, where if there was a scene with just our characters, I’d write it at the kitchen table, with our characters eating macaroni and cheese.  We were both trying to watch our weight, but she said if “our characters” were eating the stuff, it wasn’t really us.  I truly, honestly loved her.  We all did.”

“Both direct and loving, Janet was as honest in life as she was with her characters,” said Scott Henderson, Vice-President, Communications, Bell Media. “As the beloved Emma Leroy, Dog River’s frequent voice of reason on CORNER GAS, she entertained millions of Canadians with Emma’s quick wit and no-nonsense approach. We were blessed to have her as a member of the cast. She will be sorely missed by everyone at CTV and in Canada’s acting community.”

“We are deeply saddened by the loss of actress/director/multi-talented Janet Wright,” said Bill Millerd, Artistic Managing Director, Vancouver’s Arts Club Theatre Company. “She was a powerful actor and inspired director who created intelligent and challenging theatre for our audiences. We will miss her immense talent, her caustic wit, and her incredible strength in facing tragedy. Our love and condolences to the Wright family.”

“Janet was an artist on an uncompromising search for the truth in all its unvarnished beauty,” said Stratford Festival Artistic Director Antoni Cimolino, who directed Ms Wright as Ma Joad in the 2011 production of The Grapes of Wrath. “She was a profoundly talented actress, director and ?champion for the importance of the arts. I will never forget her passion and forever be inspired by her commitment to our work.”

“Janet had a huge heart and an insatiable passion for the arts,” said Alicia Jeffery, Agent with the Characters Agency. “She was a lightning rod for the truth in all her performances and in life and never ceased to mentor younger actors, both as a director and as a fellow performer.  Nothing gave her more joy in our many calls than to sing the praises of a young actor or director she’d recently worked with.  Her loss is a hole in the fabric of our community that will never be truly mended.”

In honour of Janet’s memory, CTV will rebroadcast CORNER GAS: THE MOVIE on Saturday, Nov. 26 at 8 p.m. ET.

Vancouver’s Arts Club Theatre Company will be hosting a Celebration of Life for Wright, with further details to be released.

Facebooktwitterredditlinkedinmail

Link: Award-winning Corner Gas star Janet Wright dies at 71

From the Canadian Press:

Link: Award-winning Corner Gas star Janet Wright dies at 71
Award-winning stage and screen actress Janet Wright, best known for her portrayal of the long-suffering matriarch on “Corner Gas,” has died at age 71.

Wright played Emma Leroy on the hit Canadian sitcom, which ended its six-season run in 2009, and returned with a big-screen adaptation in 2014.

Wright’s character Emma was the wife of Oscar Leroy, played by Eric Peterson, and mother to Brent, portrayed by series creator and star Brent Butt. Continue reading.

Facebooktwitterredditlinkedinmail

CBC announces winter broadcast premiere dates for new and returning series

From a media release:

CBC today announced premiere dates for its winter 2017 television season, featuring distinct, premium storytelling anchored by extraordinary Canadian voices and creative talent. The winter lineup includes five new primetime titles and five returning series spanning comedy, drama, factual and arts programming.

New additions to CBC’s primetime lineup include drama series PURE (6×60), premiering Monday, January 9, which tells the story of a Mennonite pastor battling drug trafficking within his community; Catherine Reitman’s bold new comedy WORKIN’ MOMS (13×30), premiering  Tuesday, January 10, which tests the modern ideal that women really can have it all; acclaimed BBC One drama THE A WORD (6×60), premiering Sunday, January 15, centering on a messy, extended family with an autistic child; docu-series TRUE NORTH CALLING (6×30), premiering Friday, February 17, which offers an intimate look at Canada’s North and young Canadians living in one of the harshest environments in the world; and drama series BELLEVUE (8×60), premiering Monday, February 20, which stars Oscar® and Golden Globe® award-winner Anna Paquin, Allen Leech and Shawn Doyle and unravels the mystery of a missing transgender teen in a small blue-collar town.

January will also bring all-new episodes of returning primetime favourites to viewers. Beginning Tuesday, January 10, Eugene Levy, Daniel Levy, Catherine O’Hara,  Annie Murphy and Chris Elliott are back with a new season of hit comedy series SCHITT’S CREEK(Season 3, 13×30); and World War II espionage drama X COMPANY (Season 3, 10×60) returns on Wednesday, January 11 with a thrilling series finale, as the first group of operatives from Camp X complete their final covert mission.

Picking up five years after the critically acclaimed Michael: Tuesdays & Thursdays, Matt Watts, Bob Martin and Don McKellar return to CBC with MICHAEL: EVERY DAY, (Season 2, 6×30) with weekly back-to-back episodes beginning Sunday, January 15.

Lastly, CBC’s innovative arts programming is back to inspire audiences on Sunday, February 5 with the high-energy, immersive series CRASH GALLERY (Season 2, 5×30) and the 2016 International Emmy® Award-nominated docu-series INTERRUPT THIS PROGRAM(Season 2, 5×30).

Highlights of the CBC 2017 winter television schedule are as follows:

FRIDAY, JANUARY 6
8 p.m. (8:30 NT) — Marketplace (Season 43 continues)
8:30 p.m. (9 NT) — Hello Goodbye (Season 2 continues)
9 p.m. (9:30 NT) — the fifth estate (Season 42 continues)

MONDAY, JANUARY 9
8 p.m. (8:30 NT) – Murdoch Mysteries (Season 10 continues)
9 p.m. (9:30 NT) — Pure *NEW DRAMA SERIES*

TUESDAY, JANUARY 10
8 p.m. (8:30 NT) – Rick Mercer Report (Season 14 continues)
8:30 p.m. (9 NT) – This Hour Has 22 Minutes (Season 24 continues)
9 p.m. (9:30 NT) — Schitt’s Creek *SEASON 3 PREMIERE*
9:30 p.m. (10 NT) – Workin’ Moms *NEW COMEDY SERIES*

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11
8 p.m. (8:30 NT) – Dragons’ Den (Season 11 continues)
9 p.m. (9:30 NT) – X Company *SEASON 3 PREMIERE*

THURSDAY, JANUARY 12
8 p.m. (8:30 NT) — The Nature of Things: The Secret Life of Owls (Season 55 continues)
9 p.m. (9:30 NT) — Firsthand: Once an Immigrant (Season 2 continues)  

SUNDAY, JANUARY 15
4:30 p.m. (5:00 NT) – Exhibitionists (Season 2 continues)
7 p.m. (7:30 NT) — Heartland (Season 10 continues)
8 p.m. (8:30 NT) – The A Word *NEW DRAMA SERIES*
9 p.m. (9:30 NT) – Michael: Every Day *SEASON 2 PREMIERE*
9:30 p.m. (10 NT) – Michael: Every Day (Season 2 continues)

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5
9 p.m. (9:30 NT) – Interrupt This Program *SEASON 2 PREMIERE*
9:30 p.m. (10 NT) – Crash Gallery *SEASON 2 PREMIERE*

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17
8:30 p.m. (9 NT) – True North Calling *NEW FACTUAL SERIES*

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20
9 p.m. (9:30 NT) – Bellevue *NEW DRAMA SERIES*

Facebooktwitterredditlinkedinmail