All posts by Greg David

Prior to becoming a television critic and owner of TV, Eh?, Greg David was a critic for TV Guide Canada, the country's most trusted source for TV news. He has interviewed television actors, actresses and behind-the-scenes folks from hundreds of television series from Canada, the U.S. and internationally. He is a podcaster, public speaker, weekly radio guest and educator, and past member of the Television Critics Association.

Wynonna Earp showrunner Emily Andras talks Season 2, laundry and Sheriff Nedley

There’s a reason I love chatting with Emily Andras. It’s not just because she’s been a writer and producer on stellar programs like Killjoys and Lost Girl and has created the scintillating sci-fi series Wynonna Earp from Beau Smith’s kick-ass comic. Those are great reasons on their own. No, I love speaking to Andras because she’s witty, self-deprecating and strictly no-bullshit.

With Wynonna Earp roaring back to our TVs this Friday at 10 p.m. ET on Space, I was looking forward to her take on where Wynonna, Waverly, Doc, Dolls and Haught were headed in their sophomore season as well as a peek back at what she learned from Season 1.

Where are you at in the process of Season 2 now?
Emily Andras: The big bulk of my work is done. It was five days a week and now it’s three days a week. Of course, now everyone is talking about Season 3 development and I’m like, ‘Uh, can I just do one load of laundry?’

And, of course, you’ll be live tweeting too.
Yes, I’m increasing my wine intake in preparation for Friday nights. The thing about live tweeting is it’s such a gas. Can I just say, publicly, that if you’re sort of a normal person who I know in the Canadian television industry, mute me now because of the live tweeting. No hard feelings, actual people, if you want to mute my Twitter while I live tweet. We’ve been public about the fact that fan interaction is what made our show and got us a second season. The cast isn’t contractually obligated to live tweet; we do it because we love the show.


At the end of the day, the Earp sisters are the heart of the show. And just winding up Melanie Scrofano and letting her go. Her performance in Season 2 makes her performance in Season 1 look like garbage.


How important were the fans when it came to second season storylines?
I’ve been pretty honest about this. It’s the new conundrum for every showrunner, which is that fan engagement is incredibly important, but at the same time you need to tell a story and not everybody can be involved. It often give the analogy of driving a bus. I’m going to be driving the Wynonna Earp bus and you can get on the bus if you want. You can yell at me while we’re on the bus, you can hoot and holler out the window and you can get off the bus if you don’t like where it’s going. We can’t all grab the wheel of the bus because then we’ll go off a cliff.

As much as I appreciate the fan engagement, my job is to tell a good story and make you feel things. I want to surprise you. I love the fan engagement but I don’t necessarily take fan instruction if that makes any sense. I just can’t. I just try to put that aside when I’m putting together a season with my amazing writers. We just try to think of what we can do to take these people on a ride and make them feel things and, hopefully, feel satisfied at the end of the day.

What was your post-mortem on Season 1? Were there things you wished you’d done differently?
There definitely was. I am not being falsely modest when I say I was genuinely amazed when people got the show. We were running around in the woods in Alberta going, ‘I don’t know if anyone is going to watch this thing.’ I think there was a lot of soul-searching from Syfy, to be honest, and to their credit and some of the things they thought they would tweak—when it came to focus testing some of the things we did in Season 1—were really popular. They said, ‘Throw that out, we want to stick with what is working.’ I think the thing that was personally the most important to me was just keeping the tone of the first season. At the end of the day, the Earp sisters are the heart of the show. And just winding up Melanie Scrofano and letting her go. Her performance in Season 2 makes her performance in Season 1 look like garbage.

There was something in every single episode of Season 1 that I would have done differently. A joke that didn’t work or a special effect that didn’t work, but pace and tone and making more of what worked was what I was most concerned about.

You introduce new characters in Season 2 and as I watched the first episode, “Steel Bars and Stone Walls,” I recalled your reference to Buffy the Vampire, and this being a version of the Scooby Gang. We’re getting that.
One thing that I noticed that Buffy did really well and we didn’t get a chance to do a lot of in Season 1 was, part of the best parts of Buffy was when the team is working together. I wanted to get more of that in Season 2. The more of my amazing cast I can cram into one scene—bickering or yelling or figuring things out—the better the energy was. That’s definitely something you’ll see more of this season.

Were there any milestones you wanted to hit in Season 2?
One of the things we wanted to do, and the network encouraged us to do, was to take on a little bit more of the comic book tradition by Beau Smith—who we all adore—and expand the world from just demon revenants into more supernatural creatures. We wanted to have Wynonna and the team fighting more of those. We had a lot of fun with that. We also wanted to have some more long form storytelling and arcing. It’s still, ultimately, about the curse and Wynonna trying to do this thing that she’s destined to do. There are so many surprises this year and I think something happens at midseason that turns everything on its head that I’m really excited about. All in all, it was about the spirit and fun of the comic book and seeing if we could lean into that, even more, this year.


We are definitely going to find out more about Dolls and what he is. In the grand Lost tradition, as we get answers it sometimes raises more questions. I hope it’s interesting and compelling and satisfying.


When we pick up on Friday, the team is trying to save Dolls. We keep getting peeks that he’s something. Will we find out what he is—or isn’t—by the end of this season?
We are definitely going to find out more about Dolls and what he is. In the grand Lost tradition, as we get answers it sometimes raises more questions. I hope it’s interesting and compelling and satisfying.

What can you say about the Black Badge?
I like the mystery of the Black Badge. The idea of them being a paranormal government agency … how the hell does that happen!? I like the idea that, at the end of the day, they don’t seem as legit. I always like the idea that there’s another big bad.

Will Sheriff Nedley join the team as well?
He’s in and out. I freaking love Greg Lawson. He is so good this year. He is like, #hero. My favourite thing about him, as a character, is he refuses to be impressed by these idiot young people. He just doesn’t care because he’s seen it all. He’s just counting down the days until retirement. He’s nobody’s fool and sees more than you think he does. We just kept going back to the well on Nedley this year because he’s so funny and useful to bring down the rest of the characters and their drama. Greg Lawson is a delight. I think he’s one of the most underrated actors in Canada.

Was he planned to be a short-term character and then you expanded the role?
It was more that I thought he was going to be a dipshit. He was going to be Boss Hogg, a slightly racist, slightly homophobic small-town sheriff, kind of what we saw in the pilot was what we were going to get. But, it wasn’t necessarily the best fit for Greg and I believe it’s good to lean into people’s strengths if you can. So much of the show is about not making assumptions about people—what they look like and what have you—similarly I thought it was much more interesting to have Sheriff Nedley be a little bit more diverse and a smarter guy. He can be a small-town dude that loves hunting and fishing and still be an open-minded, literate gentleman.

Wynonna Earp airs Fridays at 10 p.m. ET on Space.

Images courtesy of Bell Media.

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Former Major League Baseball player Chris Leroux stars on The Bachelor Canada

From a media release:

Get ready to fall in love, Canada! Our country’s bachelor is looking for someone to steal his bases – and his heart. A recently retired Major League Baseball player from Mississauga, ON, Chris Leroux searches for true love when 20 beautiful bachelorettes vie for his heart on W Network’s The Bachelor Canada debuting this fall. Canadian Screen Award nominated television personality and actor Noah Cappe (Carnival Eats, Good Witch) returns as trusted confidant and host of the series. Following each episode, The Bachelor Canada After Show will dish out all the details with returning host and Q107 personality Jennifer Valentyne.

Thirty-three-year-old Leroux grew up with strong family values and an ingrained passion for sports. Introduced to baseball at a young age, Leroux’s hard work and perseverance paid off when he fulfilled his dream of playing Major League Baseball. Throughout his career he has played for the New York Yankees, Florida Marlins and Pittsburgh Pirates. Leroux’s success is matched by his kindness, loyalty and sense of humour, and now he’s looking for someone to share his laidback lifestyle and adventurous spirit with as he enters the next chapter of his life.

In the Canadian version of this smash-hit, romance reality series, Canada’s most eligible bachelor is in search of the woman of his dreams – and hopefully his bride-to-be. The Canadian bachelor will search for love as 20 women do whatever it takes to win his heart. The women compete for the bachelor’s affection via individual and group dates involving romantic encounters and exciting adventures. As the bachelor narrows the field and the number of women dwindles, romance and tensions will rise. Ultimately, he will choose the one woman with whom he wants to spend the rest of his life.

The Bachelor Canada is produced by Good Human Productions Inc.

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Links: Orphan Black

From Michael Schneider of Variety:

Link: Orphan Black cast, crew reflect on genre-bending show’s strange trip
“It was the crazy Canadian clone show that could. But it really has become a pop culture-defining show. [It took] big storytelling swings, but it also had an emotional heart and depth to it…. It’s a rather rare mix of serious things, social provocation and wit. There’s something quite unique and brilliant about that.” Continue reading.

From David Wiegand of the San Francisco Chronicle:

Link: Co-star Garavis’ goodbyes to Orphan Black and all the clones
“It was very strange to leave behind five years of your life. Acting becomes very intimate, and you go through these emotions. So it’s very discombobulating afterwards to find the frequency of your relationships just as people.” Continue reading.

From Sarah Hughes of The Guardian:

Link: Send in the clones: Orphan Black, TV’s smartest show, is back
This clever Canadian import – an addictive blend of revenge drama and sci-fi thriller – is that rare thing on TV these days: a mythology-heavy plot twister with characters so well-crafted, and lines so intelligently written, that you genuinely, deeply care about what happens to them. Continue reading.

From Alicia Lutes of Nerdist:

Link: Orphan Black’s final season is the ending it deserves
Over the course of the previous four seasons, the series has managed to do what, before its premiere, felt largely un-accomplishable on television: make a thrilling, conspiracy-laden science fiction series—populated by a hero’s slate of fully dimensional female characters—that plays foil to the myriad issues facing women in our society today. Continue reading.

From Brian Truitt of USA Today:

Link: Tatiana Maslany looks back on five seasons of her Orphan Black clones
It takes most actresses several projects to get 11 different personalities on their resume. Tatiana Maslany just needed five seasons of a single TV series.

“Got it all done in one show. Now there’s no more characters to do!” the Orphan Black star says, laughing. Continue reading.

From Victoria Ahearn of The Canadian Press:

Link: Orphan Black’s final season caps a landmark show for Canadian TV
When Tatiana Maslany first stepped onto the Toronto set of “Orphan Black” in 2012, doubt crept into her mind.

“I was like, ‘How do we get through a season of this show?'” recalled the Regina native, who’s blown away audiences by playing multiple clones with vastly different personalities. “‘How do we do this, how do we pull this off, how do I embody these characters?’ It was just a moment-to-moment challenge.” Continue reading.

From Hermoine Wilson of The TV Junkies:

Link: Orphan Black: Evelyne Brochu tips her hat to Cophine shippers
“What I was most excited about was getting some answers, and I think the viewers will be super happy because there will be answers. But in terms of my character, I obviously wanted to know how Cosima and Delphine would end up and there’s going to be answers regarding that as well.” Continue reading. 

From Eliza Thompson of Cosmopolitan:

Link: Orphan Black star Tatiana Maslany on what to expect from the show’s final season
“We start on the island right where we left off last season, with Sarah mortally injured and crawling her way to some kind of safety. All of the clones are disparate and separate and trying to come back together. I think the whole story’s really about how individuals are stronger in groups. We’re stronger in communities.” Continue reading.

From Carli Velocci of The Wrap:

Link: Orphan Black showrunner credits Six Feet Under, The Sopranos for show’s existence
“We really dug into the hard cloning, but [also] coalesced the themes of nature vs. nurture and body autonomy and really realizing how deeply feminist the show had to be or else it would be missing a real terrific chance.” Continue reading.

From Jackie Hong of the Toronto Star:

Link: Orphan Black Season promises answers, though not always happy ones
“It’s a heavy show and it’s a heavier season than most, because we’ve got to get to a lot of answers and the answers aren’t necessarily always happy . . . (but) it’s time to get those answers. Like, how long can you string an audience?” Continue reading.

From Jeff Dedekker of the Regina-Leader Post:

Link: Tatiana Maslany will always have Orphan Black
“We’ve definitely explored a lot about identity and the science behind the cloning and that sort of stuff but there’s always more to do and there’s always more we could’ve done. But I’m really happy the series leaves an impact of questions and a legacy of characters and women’s stories that will inspire more. It exists within a bigger conversation about science right now, autonomy and the world.” Continue reading.

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Links: Wynonna Earp

From Daniela Costa of NBC News:

Link: Wynonna Earp star Dominique Provost-Chalkley dishes on new season
Fans of Syfy’s supernatural drama “Wynonna Earp” are in for a treat come the show’s season 2 premiere on June 9, so says fan favorite Dominique Provost-Chalkley.

“If I thought that Waverly had a huge arc in the first season, it doesn’t even compare to what we have in store this season,” she told NBC Out. Continue reading.

From Jen Stayrook of The Workprint:

Wynonna Earp Season 2 review: A hilarious, non-stop adventure and it’s so, so gay
There’s a darkness in Waverly we haven’t seen before. Whether it’s how she truly feels or a consequence of the black goo remains to be seen, but the end result is that Dominique Provost-Chalkey can act her pants off. Continue reading.

From Maureen Ryan of Variety:

TV Review: Wynonna Earp Season 2
That’s a long way of saying that the first four episodes of Season 2 are focused and fun. If you need a weekly treat that takes advantage of every meaning of the word “stakes,” this may be the show for you. And this year, everyone, from the writing staff to the directors to the extremely game cast, has dialed in on exactly how to come at this material. Continue reading. 

From Bridget Liszewski of The TV Junkies:

Link: Wynonna Warp’s Melanie Scrofano says Wynonna must trust her instincts in Season 2
“Season 2 starts off right after Season 1 and she just has to jump right in. She’s just gone through this horrible tragedy again, only this time she’s the cause of it, and now Dolls, her mentor/lover/question mark, has been taken. She’s got to navigate all of this on her own instincts which is really scary for her, but all she can do is forge ahead because if she stops even for a second, she’ll realize how in over her head she is and how much she’s lost.” Continue reading.

From Eric Volmers of Postmedia:

Link: “We really get into a lot of trouble”; Wynonna Earp’s second season debuts Friday on Space
It was just under a year ago that the cast of Wynonna Earp was informed they would be returning to Calgary to shoot a second season. It wasn’t complete surprise. By that point, the supernatural modern western was already earning a devoted fan base. Continue reading. 

From Nivea Serrao of Entertainment Weekly:

Link: Wynonna Earp boss Emily Andras talks “bigger, badder, better” Season 2
“Now Wynonna takes some responsibility and has people in her life who support her, but she also feels responsible for, who she cares for. So it’s about her trying to keep this dysfunctional family together as they really work on becoming a team.” Continue reading.

From Melissa Girimonte of The Televixen:

Link: Melanie Scrofano on higher stakes in Wynonna Earp Season 2
“Anyone in view of the Earp curse and of Wynonna herself is in some way going to be affected, and those bonds are going to be tested with anybody. The curse is pretty high maintenance and I’ll say that it tests Wynonna to her limit. Any time somebody is tested like that, there’s going to be fallout elsewhere.” Continue reading. 

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Orphan Black: The cast and creators say goodbye

This is it, Orphan Black fans. The last dance. The final farewell. Or, as the production sheets said during filming of Season 5: Swan Song. This Saturday at 10 p.m. ET on Space, that beloved club of clones returns to the small screen for the last 10 episodes.

Earlier this year, TV, Eh was among a handful of media who were invited to the set for a super-secret tour guided by co-creator John Fawcett (I’ve included some images in this story) , got up close and personal with the experts on hair, makeup and wardrobe and locked in a few precious moments with Fawcett and Graeme Manson and stars Tatiana Maslany, Kevin Hanchard, Maria Doyle Kennedy, Jordan Gavaris, Evelyne Brochu and Kristian Bruun.

Here are the answers we got to the queries we gave:

Co-creators John Fawcett and Graeme Manson
What are you most proud of when it comes to Orphan Black?
John Fawcett: There are so many things. I think I’m most proud of the fact that this was a show that shouldn’t have gotten made in the first place. Nobody wanted to make it and the show is a bit weird. What Graeme and I had in our brains was a mashup and I don’t think there was a lot of conviction from anyone. It was a ludicrous premise that we somehow made a believable place and garnered enough support from the media and from fans that we could keep the thing going for five seasons. It’s been a really, really wild journey. Graeme and I were new coming into this. Tatiana was new. We had all worked in the industry before but this was kind of our first show. It’s been life-changing.

Graeme Manson: We’re also all very proud of the fact we took this somewhat ludicrous sci-fi conceit, grounded it enough and imbued it with enough character that it became inspirational for so many young people, so many young women and that Tatiana and so many other women who work on the show kept the feminist themes of the show—identity, nature versus nurture, themes of diversity, inclusion—this is the fabric of the show and we were able to say important things on this crazy clone show. That’s something we’re all pretty proud of.

Did you always have the same final scene for the show in your heads from Episode 1 of Season 1?
John Fawcett: Graeme and I have had the same thing in our head from the very beginning. The process of making this show … there has been a very organic nature to it. Sometimes you absolutely know how things are going to go and often it doesn’t and it goes in a different direction. Our collaboration goes beyond just us. We have a much bigger collaboration because we have a very talented group of writers and really talented performers and we have a small family around us from the beginning and we’re very tight. The inspiration comes from all different directions. Things have altered, but have kind of stayed the same.

Season 5 will be a hair-raising ride

Jordan Gavaris and Maria Doyle Kennedy
Jordan, you said you grew up on Orphan Black. What did you learn about yourself as an actor and a person?
Jordan Gavaris: I learned I’m an activist. I learned that, if I wasn’t an actor I’d probably have gone to law school and probably working for the ACLU or in politics. What I learned more than anything is about the intersection between genders. I’ve been watching some very interesting artists over the years and the really, really great ones that everyone seems to celebrate culturally are these people who understood that gender is not real. David Bowie is a really good example. He got the intersection between masculinity and femininity, men and women. He figured out that women are great. And they always have been great. I’ve also learned a lot about leadership watching Tat. She moves through a business that is very much about aesthetic and it can be very oppressive. She is a unique paradigm when it comes to how she leads a set and there is a trickle down effect of her leadership. That perspective is what makes Orphan Black so unique. Her voice is in everything you see. Felix was such

Felix was such an exploration of all my feminine parts and I think it’s important to take the femininity to other characters that aren’t necessarily Felix or look like Felix or sound like Felix. They might be an attorney or doctor or whatever … I can bring what I discovered about my own feminity to them.

Are you taking anything from the set as a souvenir?
Jordan Gavaris: Oh yeah, I’ve gone full klepto. I’ve taken paintings, necklaces, cool pieces of costume. I’m stealing stuff.

Maria Doyle Kennedy: The only thing I want to take aside from my memories is this little wire bracelet. I think it’s the only thing I’ve had since Season 1 and I pretty much never take it off.

Kevin Hanchard
What are these final episodes going to be like for fans?

Kevin Hanchard: I don’t think we’re going for cheesy gotcha moments, it’s about the wonderful base and the wonderful story we’ve built and the tangents we’ve built from that. It’s time for the laser focus. It’s only 10 episodes, so it’s gotta go really quick. It builds to a head. I think fans will be happy.

Tatiana Maslany
Where did you put your Primetime Emmy?

Tatiana Maslany: My mom didn’t know it was in this box and she put a plant on top of it. It’s in a pretty chill zone.

Orphan Black airs Saturdays at 10 p.m. ET on Space.

Want to make Alison’s face lotion? Here’s the recipe!

 

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