Everything about Murdoch Mysteries, eh?

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.

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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.

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Alex Paxton-Beesley talks Freddie Pink and Murdoch Mysteries fans

Alex Paxton-Beesley has nothing but pure love for fans of Murdoch Mysteries and of Freddie Pink in particular. But, in the beginning, she was very nervous; Murdoch fans are a passionate group and make their feelings known.

“I was very nervous because the fans are incredibly loyal to the established relationships on the show,” Paxton-Beesley says. “If they [had put William and Freddie together as a couple], I would have said, ‘Guys, I’m going to be killed in real life!’ It’s so cool to see a Canadian-made show—with a Canadian cast, written by Canadians and shot in Canada—that is such a massive hit with a global audience. It’s awesome and inspiring and really fun and speaks to the quality of the show.”

The Toronto actress is days away from wrapping production on Pure, CBC’s upcoming six-episode drama about the Mennonite Mob dealing drugs out of Canada, Mexico and the United States. Paxton-Beesley plays Anna Funk, Mennonite wife to Pastor Noah Funk (Ryan Robbins) who sees her quiet life threatened after a mob leader named Eli Voss (Peter Outerbridge) gives Noah an ultimatum, forcing the Funks into the crime world.

“My character has to hold down the home front and make some pretty tough choices,” Paxton-Beesley teases. “It’s fun to play, but emotional.”

After filming wraps in Halifax, she jets back to Toronto where she’ll once again assume the role of Freddie Pink in a Murdoch Mysteries episode to air later this season.

“I don’t know if I can tell you anything,” she says. “But I can say that show is the most fun.”

Season 1 of Pure will air during the winter on CBC.

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

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Link: 5×5 With The Hook: Alex-Paxton Beesley

From You’ve Been Hooked:

Link: 5×5 With The Hook: Alex-Paxton Beesley
“I LOVE Freddie. I’m currently working on another show for the CBC that I’m incredibly proud of, called PURE (premiering early 2017!) — but I’m always thrilled to wear Freddie’s hats. She’s such a strong, interesting woman and I love playing her.” Continue reading.

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Murdoch Mysteries’ Carol Hay breaks down “Jagged Little Pill”

Like many Murdoch Mysteries fans, I’ve been anxious to have some serious storyline time devoted to Rebecca James. Yes, we did get some backstory about her in “Colour Blinded,” but we wanted more. Thankfully Monday’s newest, “Jagged Little Pill,” sated our thirst for Rebecca, as she was front and centre doing a little investigating of her own after a schoolmate at the Ontario Medical College for Women turned up dead.

Though Dr. Ogden and the police considered it a suicide, Rebecca wasn’t sure. Upon more digging, she not only uncovered a secret about her friend Sarah, but her case intersected with Murdoch’s hunt for the killer of a rich man.

We spoke to the episode’s writer, Carol Hay, about the storyline, the real history behind the Ontario Medica College for Women and, well, syphilis. Also? We get a sneak peek into next week’s episode, “Bend it Like Brackenreid.”

How do you walk that line developing a character like Rebecca while staying true to what Murdoch Mysteries is?
Carol Hay: You develop character through story. In the most successful drama you inform who the character is and you explore who the character is by how they act. Rebecca not only took something on, but was going against Dr. Ogden. She was actually in her own way trusting her instincts about her friend and saying, ‘I don’t think she killed herself.’ It’s very interesting because, in my first draft, I had a much stronger scene with Ogden where Ogden basically says, ‘You’re wrong, move on.’ And everybody felt I was being too harsh because Rebecca had obviously lost a friend.

I was very happy we did a story about the Medical College and it was natural to have Rebecca stepping into her own world.

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Rebecca has great enthusiasm when she’s talking about putting McInnis’ liver and kidneys into bottles.
That’s something we did in terms of character development. I liked that we introduced her very tentatively. It was period accurate. I liked that we brought her in as the cleaner in the morgue and Ogden spotting something in her and fought for her to come and work in the morgue. The idea was, when we moved to this season, she feels comfortable and can make jokes. It’s a sign of her maturity and sign of her growing confidence.

After 10 seasons of adding little bits of development to the other cast, it must be fun to create Rebecca because she’s a clean slate.
Yes, absolutely. It’s always difficult to add a new character because it’s another character to serve. It’s finding her a place in the stories that doesn’t take away from Ogden. Rebecca is very ahead of her time. She’s young and has the youthful energy, and that attitude has been really fun to write.

We also got a little bit of a history lesson with regard to the Ontario Medical College for Women and its beginnings as Women’s Medical College and its ties to Dr. Emily Stowe. It was also neat to have Emily’s daughter, Augusta, teaching at the school.
It’s true. Augusta Stowe-Gullen was at the medical college at that time. It was terrific to look into all of that. We take liberties, obviously, with the actual history. That medical college really did exist because it was thought that men and women shouldn’t be taught together. One of the scenes I wanted to explore in this episode was the medical establishment’s attitude toward women and whether they were capable of the challenges of being a doctor.

All the stuff about the coming together of the two cases, the research into syphilis and the sleeping sickness is visually all historically accurate. There was a brilliant scientist in Germany at that time who was researching the sleeping sickness at the same time as other scientists were looking at a cure for syphilis. It really was a coincidental thing.

Before Hemphell is revealed as the killer, he was showing respect to the ladies in his class. He wasn’t talking down to them.
He wasn’t a flirt, but he enjoyed teaching the women. We wanted to show that his sexism was a little more buried. It would have been easy to make him a jerk from the beginning and everyone would know was the villain.

Do you recall where the medical school scenes were filmed?
It was at a medical college in Guelph, Ont.

Julia was offered a teaching position at the college. Can you comment on how that turns out?
It’s something we pick up in a future episode. I’ll leave it at that.

Thank you to whoever added ‘automatic dishwashing cupboard’ and ‘standing bath’ to the script.
[Laughs.] That was likely Paul Aitken.

What can you say about next week’s episode, “Bend it Like Brackenreid”?
It takes place in the world of soccer and features the Brackenreid’s prowess on the soccer field. A friend of Brackenreid’s is coaching the game to decide who represents Canada at the 1904 Olympic Games. It’s between U of T and Galt, which is completely historically accurate.

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

Images courtesy of CBC.

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Once Upon a Murdoch Christmas airs Dec. 12 on CBC

From a media release:

Christmas cheer returns to Station House No. 4 once more with the second annual MURDOCH MYSTERIES holiday special, “Once Upon a Murdoch Christmas,” premiering Monday, December 12 at 8 p.m. (8:30 NT) on CBC with an encore broadcast on Christmas Day, Sunday, December 25, at 5 p.m. (5:30 NT). In the standalone two-hour special, Murdoch (Yannick Bisson) and Brackenreid (Thomas Craig) find their jobs at risk as they investigate a series of brazen robberies targeting Toronto’s wealthiest businessmen just days before Christmas. In keeping with the festive spirit, the special also includes a unique scripted integration with The Salvation Army, featuring the historic brand’s presence and message of giving written into the storyline. Commissioned by CBC and produced by Shaftesbury, “Once Upon a Murdoch Christmas” is written by Paul Aitken, Carol Hay and Michelle Ricci and directed by T.W. Peacocke.

It’s four days ‘til Christmas, and with no snow on the streets of Toronto, spirits are low until two bombastic businessmen barge into Station House No. 4 with a far-fetched story about a train robbery – a bandit is trying to steal Christmas! Murdoch (Bisson) is baffled but soon, more impossible robberies have him giving chase around the city. Crabtree (Jonny Harris) is convinced the bandit is based on his latest fictional hero but Brackenreid (Craig) dismisses this outlandish theory. Meanwhile, Constable Jackson (Kristian Bruun) forms a Station House No. 4 choir, but with only a few days to whip the singing constables into shape he begs Rebecca James (Mouna Traoré) for help. And Ogden (Hélène Joy) finds herself mysteriously spirited away after a family of children who need her help mistake her for a storybook heroine. Stories collide on Christmas Eve – and once again, Murdoch must find a way to pull off a Christmas miracle.

Nearly two million (1.969M) Canadians enjoyed the gift of last year’s inaugural two-hour holiday special, making it the highest-rated MURDOCH MYSTERIES ever. Overall, it reached 3.5 million Canadians – or 10% of the population – over the course of the two-hour broadcast.*

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