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Murdoch Mysteries: Introducing Season 11 writer Natalia Guled

It’s not often that you jump from one high-profile television series to another, but that’s exactly what happened to Natalia Guled. She served as a writer’s assistant on Orphan Black before moving into the position of story editor during the award-winning sci-fi series’ last season. Then, just a short time later she had joined the Murdoch Mysteries’ writer’s room.

Guled’s first Murdoch writing credit was Monday’s latest episode, “21 Murdoch Street,” so we got her on the phone to talk about her experiences in the Canadian TV industry and what it’s been like working on two popular shows.

How did you get into television writing in the first place?
Natalia Guled: I graduated from university in 2014 with the intention of getting into TV. I pursued it on and off. I got into various incubators that were informal and crafted my skills through that. I eventually met enough people who began to give me some real insight into this industry and one of them, Deb Nathan, told me to take a screenwriting course, which I did. Deb really took to my work and from that point on championed me. With her recommendation, I got into the Writers Guild of Canada Bell Media Diverse Screenwriters Program. I developed a screenplay that [Murdoch Mysteries showrunner] Peter Mitchell read and he hired me based off that script.

What was the screenplay about?
It was a 1950s con drama set in Birmingham, Alabama. If was the first script where I really figured out how to write. That program really helped guide me and I’d recommend it to anyone. I did apply to the Canadian Film Centre twice in a row before and didn’t get in, and I received my second rejection letter when I was staffed on Orphan Black, which was my first job in the industry. Another mentor of mine is friends with Graeme Manson, the co-creator of Orphan Black, and recommended me for a job there, which I got. The moral of that story is it really comes down to who you know and who connects with your work because that’s all that really matters in this industry. It’s a social, cooperative and collaborative industry and the connections I made are rich.

Let’s talk about Orphan Black a bit. Was it a learning curve to join that show as a story editor?
Oh my god, it was unbelievable. [Laughs.] The writers on that show were in complete command of their craft. I remember the first day that I arrived at work as a writer’s assistant and doing an internship that blossomed into story editor, and it was like learning a new language. There is so much jargon used in the writer’s room and shortcuts that are needed to get a story broken and it was overwhelming. But it was so clear that of all the places to cut your teeth in the industry, that was a fantastic opportunity so I really took it seriously. I really connected with the writers in the room and spent every day trying to learn something new and contribute.

How did you go from Orphan Black to Murdoch Mysteries?
Deb Nathan put my name in the list of people for Pete to meet with. He read my script, we had a nice interview and he hired me. It was pretty fast and I was very surprised to get the job. It was really a dream to join Murdoch Mysteries and work with Pete, who is so calm and masterful a showrunner and running a room in general that it was an easy transition.

This is quite the episode to get your first writer’s credit on. Crabtree and John Brackenreid go undercover in a boy’s school, Nina and Watts were both back. A lot was going on in this episode. There were funny moments and shocking ones too, like when John punched his dad.
[Laughs.] Yeah, that was a great moment.

How did the gambling storyline come about?
That was something that was broken in the room. We knew that we wanted to do a play on 21 Jump Street. I had entered the room about a month after it had convened and the story had already been loosely broken and that it would be two kids who were missing and had been up to no good at the school. It came together quite quickly, it took about two days to break it, and then I took it away to write a beat sheet, get notes on that and then work on an outline.

You dealt with something that continues to be timely regardless of the setting: racism with regard to the Banerjee brothers.
They just wanted to give another layer to these characters. We wanted them to be up to no good but sympathetic at the same time. The idea of two guys who normally would have been ostracized figuring out a way to create a social connection to these boys through gambling was sort of interesting to the room. There was actually a deleted scene between Brackenreid and Mr. Banerjee where they are discussing what it means to be part of the empire. In that scene, Brackenreid is glad to be part of the empire and Mr. Banerjee is like, ‘I’m only part of the empire because I’m trying to learn the master’s tools and gain independence from my country.’ There was more to the story but we had to cut it for time, unfortunately. It was a depiction of what the Commonwealth was at the time and Canada was part of that, so was India and a lot of other nations around the world.

Watts questions John about why he’s a cop. Will John question his decision throughout this season?
I think it was something that we definitely wanted to explore. We’re interested in the concept of walking in your parent’s shoes and if you’re doing it for the right reasons. We’re definitely going to be seeing more of John and more of what it’s like to be cop John.

Let’s talk about Crabtree and how fantastic it was to have him not only be a professor but also to bring in Curse of the Pharaohs as the book to study.
That was a lot of fun and Jonny had fun with it too. He ad-libbed a lot of that. He will always deepen whatever is on the page with another layer of humour or serious moments like when John Brackenreid comes into the room where Crabtree is and is upset he was wrong about Moore. He says to John, ‘Your father would tell you this, as would Detective Murdoch: you’re wrong until you’re right.’ Jonny added that emotive, mentoring attitude to the line. He always makes a great choice and that’s actually the case with all of our actors on the show.

It’s tough to add to a storyline after 11 seasons, but the one Julia is currently on with regard to infertility has been really interesting so far.
That’s something everybody has been really excited about this year. We get to have a deeper depiction of this marriage for sure.

After a season on Murdoch Mysteries writer’s room, what’s your experience been like overall?
It’s such a specific and special room. We come in at 10 and we usually leave and 5 and somehow 18 episodes and a Christmas movie get made. We crack each other up … it’s been a really lovely process for sure and I’m going to miss everyone in the off-season.

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

Images courtesy of CBC.

 

 

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Preview: Murder at a private school haunts Murdoch Mysteries

After a week off for Halloween, some gremlins got into Murdoch Mysteries‘ scheduling at CBC. “The Accident,” originally scheduled to be broadcast this Monday, has been bumped to Nov. 13. Instead, we’ll see “21 Murdoch Street,” on Monday. We’re not sure why the swap occurred, but it puts off the crying showrunner Peter Mitchell has been teasing for another seven days.

As for “21 Murdoch Street,” here’s what the CBC has revealed about the episode written by Natalia Guled and directed by Harvey Crossland:

Crabtree and Constable John Brackenreid go undercover at a prestigious boys’ school to break up a gambling ring and uncover murder.

And here are some non-spoilery additions from us after watching a screener.

John Brackenreid steps up
Inspector Brackenreid may not like it, but the murder case Station No. 4 is investigating means John (Charles Vandervaart) trades his work uniform for a school one. The send-up of 21 Jump Street involves George too, as he takes advantage of the situation to make an impression on some young minds via a certain published novel.

Julia continues her journey
We’re loving Julia’s storyline this season. Her attempting to further the science behind infertility is inspiring and emotional; look for a sweet and all-too-brief moment between Julia and William.

Watts returns
Speaking of too brief, we get a spare few minutes with Det. Watts. Of course, he makes the most of his screen time.

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

 

 

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Murdoch Mysteries: Introducing Season 11 writer-producer Dan Trotta

Season 11 of Murdoch Mysteries marked significant changes in the writers’ room. Dan Trotta, Natalia Guled and Noelle Girard joined the CBC drama after Michelle Ricci and Carol Hay departed to create Frankie Drake Mysteries and the untimely passing of Jordan Christianson.

Trotta, who most recently was a writer and producer on Omni’s Blood and Water drama, penned Monday’s new episode, “Dr. Osler Regrets,” which saw historical figure Dr. William Osler drop by, a sequential killer on the loose and the return of Louise Cherry (Bea Santos). We got Trotta on the line to discuss the episode and introduce him to the Murdoch Mysteries fandom.

Before we talk about tonight’s episode specifically, how did you get into the Canadian TV industry in the first place?
Dan Trotta: I started out in theatre. I took playwriting at university and was in the trenches for a few years and couldn’t make any money. I was broke. I liked the idea of being a starving artist but I didn’t like the reality of it. The romance faded pretty quickly, so I started teaching. I was a teacher at Fanshawe College for a while. I’ve lucked into some pretty amazing jobs and feel like I haven’t been qualified for them at all. I was teaching for awhile but I realized I could do that for 20 years and not even realize it. Teaching was a great job but the time was just sort of floating away and I knew I wanted to write but I didn’t know how to make a living at it.

TV sort of made sense. The first script I ever wrote was accepted into the National Screen Institute. I went through there—it’s a crash course for a week where you rewrite your pilot and have meetings—and it was great. Then I was living in Montreal at the time and offered my time at Muse Entertainment. I asked if I could just hang out and make coffee and find out how the business worked. They were incredible and said, ‘We can’t have you hanging out for free but we have this stack of scripts that need to be read.’ It was amazing. I owe a lot to them. I was there for about a year and read hundreds of scripts. They let me sit in on meetings and were working on The Kennedys at the time. I wrote synopses and materials for some of their other projects; it was awesome. They were the ones who told me I should go to the Canadian Film Centre. I got in and was lucky enough to be there and have Denis McGrath as our showrunner that year. From there, I got an agent and was grinding it out for a couple of years writing Lifetime movies and other stuff and then Blood and Water came along.

How did you come to be on Murdoch Mysteries?
I sort of knew [showrunner] Peter Mitchell through mutual friends and we watched hockey occasionally. When positions opened up he sent me an email and asked if I wanted to come in and interview for it. I never expect to get anything—that’s just how I operate—so went in and the pressure was off. I didn’t really have any procedural samples. I’ve always liked and respected the show, Peter, Simon and Jordan; that was kind of it. It was a very last-minute kind of thing; I think I found out I got the gig on the Friday and I believe they were starting on the Tuesday.

You might have known people involved in the show, but you were still joining a mystery drama going into its 11th season. Were you nervous?
Yeah. I didn’t know the show too well. I had seen Murdoch and knew what it was but I didn’t have a super-solid understanding of the show. I did some major catching up. And then there was the procedural element to the show, the actual mystery was kind of new to me. We had written a procedural at the CFC and I had a couple of pilot procedurals but I didn’t have a lot of experience with it. That was the trickiest for me, figuring out how the mystery works and unfolds and the order with which you reveal things. The real nuts and bolts of it was the hardest thing to pick up and I think I’m still picking it up, quite frankly.

In Monday’s episode, you had a historical figure in Dr. Osler to work into your story as well as Louise Cherry, who fans are very vocal about. There was a lot of pressure going into your first credited episode.
The Osler thing was kind of a gimme in that I found this article about the actual incident. Not the murders, but his speech. And how everything was taken out of context and blown out of proportion. From the interview with Pete and knowing somewhat about the show, I knew they liked it when they could establish a corollary about what happened then and what happens now. This was kind of an early version of now what we call Internet shaming. Osler’s reputation was, essentially, ruined for awhile. Part of the mythology of that story is a couple of older men supposedly committed suicide because of what he’d said. That’s what we ran with. The story was kind of there and we had to build the mystery around it.

As far as Louise Cherry, it’s interesting to see just how much the fans dislike that character based on the incident: she basically said the Murdoch’s were boring. So we turn it up to 100 and have her fabricate these newspaper stories. It was fun, though. She has a laser focus and it’s fun to write for her.

How did you work George’s clock hobby into the story?
We reverse engineered that. We came up with the victim angle first and then thought it might be cool if George had a connection to this somehow. We didn’t actually start with George, we sort of backed it in. I kept wanting to write funny lines and ham it up and everybody in the room said, ‘Keep it simple because Jonny will make it funny. Just don’t overwrite it. Keep it short, keep it tight and he’ll do something.’ These guys are awesome, it’s just second nature to them 10 years in.

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

Images courtesy of CBC.

 

 

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Preview: A sequential killer stalks Toronto on Murdoch Mysteries

There are three new faces in the Murdoch Mysteries writing room this season. Dan Trotta, Natalia Guled and Noelle Girard joined the long-running, high-rated CBC drama after Michelle Ricci and Carol Hay departed to create Frankie Drake Mysteries and the untimely passing of Jordan Christianson.

Tonight, Dan Trotta—who most recently wrote and produced on the Omni drama Blood and Water—gets the spotlight with “Dr. Osler Regrets,” directed by Alison Reid. Here’s the official synopsis from CBC:

A spate of murders staged as suicides leads Murdoch to suspect a sequential killer targeting the elderly.

And here are a few more tidbits we caught after watching a screener.

Louise Cherry returns
I’ve read the comments on the Murdoch Mysteries Facebook pages and fans are pretty clear in their feelings regarding Ms. Cherry: they don’t like her. It will be interesting to see what fans think of Ms. Cherry after this week’s instalment because she’s up to her old tricks again.

Kristopher Turner guest-stars
I’ve missed Kristopher Turner since This Life was cancelled—watch both excellent seasons via the CBC site—so it’s a treat to see him in Detective Murdoch’s world as Jack Borden. Also after appearing on Murdoch Mysteries once before as Dr. Lawrence Abbott in “Buffalo Shuffle,” Stewart Arnott re-appears in the role of Dr. William Osler. You can read up on Osler’s real-life achievements here; among his accolades, Osler was one of the founding professors of Johns Hopkins Hospital. We get a nice little bit of backstory with regard to Julia’s education and how Osler factored into it.

Violet gets her hands dirty
It doesn’t take long for Violet to contribute to the team. Within minutes she’s up to her elbows in guts at the city morgue, helping Julia determine a cause of death in the episode’s first victim.

George reveals a timely hobby
Julia isn’t the only one we learn something about. After 11 seasons Crabtree unveils an interesting hobby.

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

Images courtesy of CBC.

 

 

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