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Michelle Ricci discusses “Once Upon a Murdoch Christmas”

Merry Christmas, Murdoch Mysteries fans. I don’t know about you, but I think Michelle Ricci, Paul Aitken and Carol Hay delivered one heck of a present in Monday’s two-hour holiday special.

“Once Upon a Murdoch Christmas” had everything fans love, including a crime (presents being stolen), a mystery (William’s gifts to Julia), technology (Crabtree’s Jumping Jack superhuman man), sumptuous wardrobe (Julia’s dress was incredible), nods to stories of yesteryear (Robin Hood and Hans Christian Andersen’s “The Snow Queen”) and a grand finale setting at Casa Loma that probably put production in the red.

We spoke to Michelle Ricci about what went into Monday’s holiday spectacle, including an interesting tidbit about England.

You guys were firing on all cylinders for this. You really gave something the fans want and love.
Michelle Ricci: It’s so fun.

How did the initial idea for this storyline come about?
It had an interesting evolution. It actually started with the possibility of it partly being shot in England and involving weird haunted houses or creepy English villages, and that’s where The Snow Queen idea came in. Julia was going to walk into this village and be recognized as this mythical being who has some relevance to this weird town that has its own Christmas traditions. We had a lot of fun with that and then learned that we wouldn’t be filming in England. So we brought it back to Toronto and wanted to keep the same spirit because we all really loved the idea of Ogden being The Snow Queen.

We then discovered this storyline with these incredibly adorable children that really embodied the classic movie spirit of Christmas in what we hope is an original way.

Wardrobe knocked it out of the park. Julia’s final dress was simply amazing.
It was so gorgeous and she looks like a fairytale princess.

Did she feel like a princess?
She did. She put it on and came right up to the writers’ room and said, ‘Oh my God!’ This was such a stark contrast to last year’s gown, which was a very traditional Christmas with red and white. This year we were more a blue and silver kind of palette and that made it feel fresh and very different and very fairytale like.

You weren’t aware of any colour palette as you were writing. That’s all wardrobe, set decoration and props.
Exactly. We wrote fairytale and princess like and then [costume designer] Alex [Reda] felt this was the perfect way to go. He did an absolutely fabulous job.

Something I love about these holiday specials is that they’re standalone and have no through lines from the season. All of the major characters are involved with no mention of past storylines. How refreshing is that to start with a clean slate?
There are different constraints. You have to look for a meaningful storyline for each of the characters and we extended that to Higgins and Jackson and Margaret. Although they’re not considered core characters, they’re integral to the show and we wanted to make sure they had their due as well. And then making sure that each of our main characters has something unique and different from last year’s experience and a new way of telling their Christmas perspective.

It was a challenge for sure, but we had no shortage of ideas.

I guess that’s one of the advantages of writing for 90 minutes as opposed to 44 minutes.
Absolutely. And it means we can do different storylines that don’t necessarily have to intersect. The choir story—they all come together in the end—is very much separate and gives Rebecca James her individual piece of the action. And we have Ogden with the children, and that’s not really Murdoch’s story. And then you have Murdoch and Crabtree on the case dealing with their crazy inventions and imagination that is so much a part of the series. And with the 90 minutes, you can just take things up that one extra bit.

I loved the little mystery of the four presents just between Julia and William. Who came up with the Galapagos Islands as being the present?
Paul did. We were all talking about what little romantic storyline there would be for Ogden and Murdoch. We started with the 12 days of Christmas and found that was a little overwhelming. [Laughs.] So we brought it down a little bit. But, of course, how would Julia and Murdoch celebrate Christmas? Of course, he would concoct a little mystery for Ogden to solve and of course she would find that the most delightful thing in the world. And, of course, at the end of it, it would be some great, nerdy, big adventure that the two of them could go off on together. It just seemed to almost write itself in a way.

I enjoyed the return to Crabtree’s wacky ideas and his comic book creation, Jumping Jack. Did the illustrator’s name, Gregory Heckenbush, mean anything?
No, it doesn’t mean anything.

Dammit. You guys work so much real history into the show I have to research everything.
[Laughs.] No, we have a lot of fun with names. We have a few ridiculous names thrown up on the board and we see if we can throw them into the season more for variety and fun and as a tonal thing than anything else. Heckenbush, I don’t even know where that came from … maybe me? It has no meaning.

Robert Carli’s music. I mean…
Paul and I were talking to him at the wrap party and we were complimenting him on his music and he was complimenting us on our scripts. We said to him, ‘Don’t think that we don’t recognize how much you fix our problems.’ Not all scripts are perfect and we can really see when the music comes in, that all of a sudden things work. And you think, ‘Wow, thank you, Rob Carli for saving our bacon.’ And he said, ‘That’s really funny because, to me, your scripts save my music.’ That’s a load of balderdash, but it was very nice of him to say.

Speaking of music, Mouna has a fantastic voice. Did you know that beforehand?
Yeah. We were shooting an episode in Guelph [“Jagged Little Pill”] and apparently there was a karaoke machine and Mouna went up and sang and blew everyone’s mind. We knew that and built it into the script.

It was nice to have that little side story between her and Jackson and the choir. Can Kristian really sing, or is he really a bad singer?
He says he can really sing. I’ve never heard it, so it might not be true. He did say it was really hard to sing badly. It’s nice to give characters who don’t normally interact a chance to do so.

This was filmed in October. I guess it was nice no to have to worry about snow; you just wrote there wasn’t any.
All we could hope for was that the leaves wouldn’t be turning as we shot it. If they’re green, you can hide them. If they’re not there, that’s great too. But if they are turning … this story is a lot more urban than last year and we tried to avoid those scenarios where we’d have to worry about a lot of post work and riffing off the no snow idea because we knew there wouldn’t be any.

Craig Grant … the rotorized aeropack is another example of something that looks like it would totally work.
This is something that Paul and Craig have been talking about for as long as I’ve been on the show, and possibly before, is a helicopter backpack. A long, long time ago I’d wanted to do a story on Spring-heeled Jack, a Victorian quasi-comic hero and Paul really wanted to do Inspector Gadget. The two of us were constantly warring over who was going to write the episode where this happened. And, six years later, it hadn’t happened. Then we get to the Christmas special and we were like, ‘This would be the perfect time to do it. We can have Crabtree write a comic book and it can be Spring-heeled Jack slash Inspector Gadget,’ and it became Jumping Jack. And Paul said, ‘helicopter backpack,’ and it all came together.

It was years of ideas that amalgamated into this one storyline.

How was The Salvation Army incorporated into the story?
The CBC has a whole department where they’re looking for opportunities to partner with people and during the Christmas seasons, it’s nice to partner with a charitable organization. Last year, we did it with Sick Kids and it was really successful. We put a bunch of charities into an early version of the script, ones that we knew were around at the time, and it turned out the CBC had already been talking to The Salvation Army and it all came together.

You also had a little Scrooge moment at the end of the episode. The only thing missing was a goose the size of one of the children.
I know! [Laughs.] There are some things you have to put in a Christmas episode.

Set decoration must have had a field day at Casa Loma.
That set was so spectacular. I hope on-screen does it justice because in-person everyone, after 10 years of working on the show, was blown away. It was absolutely stunning. Casa Loma was the perfect venue and what the art department and the set decoration team did was just outstanding. And then, add to that Alex’s costumes, and you were transported to a fairy land. It was really, really incredible.

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

Images courtesy of CBC.

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Win a copy of Investigating Murdoch Mysteries!

It’s the most wonderful time of the year, when we celebrate family and the spirit of giving. As a thanks to all of the Murdoch Mysteries fans who read our reviews and interviews, we’re giving away one (1) copy of Investigating Murdoch Mysteries: The Official Companion to the Series.

Written by Murdoch Mysteries co-executive producer Michelle Ricci and Mir Bahmanyar, and with a forward by Maureen Jennings, it makes the perfect Christmas gift for any fan.

How can you win this awesome book? Simply comment below, describing your most memorable Christmas ever. It could be a great present you gave or received, or maybe it was just being with your family. Murdoch Mysteries gives us fantastic stories every week, and we’d like to hear yours.

We’ll pick a winner on Friday, Dec. 16, at noon ET and will make the announcement on this page. Good luck!

UPDATE: Congratulations to Peggy Salazar! She’s the random winner of a copy of Investigating Murdoch Mysteries: The Official Companion to the Series. A sincere thank you to everyone who shared their Christmas story on this page.

And don’t forget: Murdoch Mysteries‘ “Once Upon a Murdoch Christmas” airs Monday, Dec. 12, at 8 p.m. on CBC.

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Murdoch Mysteries’ Simon McNabb breaks down “Excitable Chap”

Monday’s new episode of Murdoch Mysteries, “Excitable Chap,” marked the return of two favourites. Thomas Brackenreid was back from St. Louis, sporting a gold medal for soccer that he’d won coaching Galt to victory. Monday also saw James Pendrick back in Station House No. 4, first to hang out with Brackenreid because they’d bonded at the World’s Fair and then because, no surprise, he was suspected of murder in a very Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde storyline.

But rather than fall back into his routine, Brackenreid has been grabbed by wanderlust and excited by the world. No longer content, for the moment at least, being a copper, he’s gone off on an adventure with Pendrick—he was once again exonerated of killing—in pursuit of Ashmi, who’s stolen the inventor’s formula for the fountain of youth.

We spoke to Simon McNabb—who co-wrote the episode with showrunner Peter Mitchell—about Brackenreid’s departure, Nina and Crabtree’s breakup, and a peek at next week’s holiday special.

It was interesting to see Brackenreid return to Toronto with his world view opened up and wanderlust triggered. Could this be the final season for Brackenreid?
Simon McNabb: Well, anything is possible. I can’t speak one way or another about what happens to the character in Season 10 or any possible future seasons but he’s certainly developed a taste for wanderlust as a character. We, as writers, wanted to explore what it would give to him as a character and open some interesting avenues for him in the future.

We thought this was sort of an interesting way to explore with Tom Brackenreid. Maybe this is the 1904 equivalent of buying a sports car; getting back out there and having that sense of adventure.

It was interesting that you referenced Ota Benga in the episode, who was really part of the St. Louis World’s Fair.
That emerged organically from our desire to put in as much as possible from the history of the period and that was one of the headlines of the St. Louis World’s Fair. At the time, they had these pygmies who were essentially on display which is sort of shocking by today’s standards. We were sort of at the end of this tradition by the end of 1904, but it had been going on for years that people had been brought and put on display at world fairs. We saw a little touch of it last year in the Arctic episode when Crabtree meets the Inuit man and thinks, for a moment, that he’s part of the display. One of the headlines from the World’s Fair is that they had these pygmies on display and did keep them locked up. The young man that Brackenreid is obliquely referring to did go on an adventure for awhile and left the fair and wandered about as a free man and then was either recaptured or returned to the group and travelled around parts of the United States as sort of a cause célèbre.

You and Peter Mitchell shared writing credits on this episode. How did that work?
The story itself took awhile to develop in that the very basic notion of a Jekyll and Hyde story was one that has sort of wandered in and out of the writers’ room over and over again. At some point, the notion of doing it with James Pendrick as the Jekyll and Hyde figure stuck around and we were all tickled by it. And then, Pete Mitchell early in the development process for this season had a few ideas about it and broke out most of the story you see there quite quickly on his own and then brought me along to help him write it. We split it up as front half-back half.

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You picked a great character to be Jekyll and Hyde. Peter Stebbings has such an emotive face.
He was such a natural fit. Peter is such a great actor when it comes to emotion and can play all sorts of different angles and elements and if you give him the opportunity he’ll play it right up to the max. I think this was the episode of Murdoch Mysteries that gave him the most room to go a little over the top. We knew he would have fun doing it, and we would have fun watching it.

I enjoyed the tongue-in-cheek reference in the script about Pendrick showing up just in time to be accused of murder.
It’s one of those things where, as a murder mystery, it’s very hard to bring back anyone without them being involved, in some way, with the murder of the episode. Sometimes we come up with a way to just have them around for the week and not accused of murder but sometimes it’s just to much fun to have them as the prime suspect. You have to wink at yourself because, at this point, the audience is pretty convinced Pendrick won’t be the killer by the end of the day.

Nina and George have broken up. What can you say about the demise of their relationship?
George’s relationships have been a roller coaster and I, for one, am in favour of it. I’ve been a sucker, since I first started watching the show, for the troubles of George’s heart. At the start of last season, we tried to challenge Crabtree a little bit when it comes to what he wants out of a relationship and life. Through the years, we have matched him up with women and all of them offered the same sort of future he imagined for himself, getting married and having a family. By introducing Nina Bloom, we forced him to challenge that. He falls for her despite having none of those things and he starts to reconsider how much he values those things or whether this very exciting love affair might be something that he likes and appreciates and wants to explore more than the conventional lifestyle.

As soon as we did that, we realized we’d have to bring in someone who represented the more traditional choice and see if he really was ready throw away the whole notion of settling down and having kids. That’s what we’re trying to explore; where he lands I’m not sure.

I laughed out loud when Julia said, ‘I’ve had better,’ after Pendrick kissed her while he was The Lurker.
That was a line written by Peter Mitchell.

What can you tease about the next episode, the holiday special ‘Once Upon a Murdoch Christmas’?
It focuses more heavily on Crabtree than last year’s special. He is sort of at the centre of the main mystery and story this year. This year he is really in the thick of what is, I think, an exciting and delightful adventure.

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

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Photo gallery: First look at “Once Upon a Murdoch Christmas”

It truly is the most wonderful time of the year, as Murdoch Mysteries‘ two-hour holiday special, “Once Upon a Murdoch Christmas” approaches. Written by Paul Aitken, Carol Hay and Michelle Ricci and directed by T.W. Peacocke, CBC says the following:

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 is baffled but soon, more impossible robberies have him giving chase around the city. Crabtree is convinced the bandit is based on his latest fictional hero but Brackenreid dismisses this outlandish theory. Meanwhile, Constable Jackson forms a Station House No. 4 choir, but with only a few days to whip the singing constables into shape he begs Rebecca James for help. And Ogden 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.

CBC has given us an early Christmas present by revealing the following seven images to get you in the holiday mood! Let me know what you think of the storyline, and images, by commenting below!

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Murdoch Mysteries‘ “Once Upon a Murdoch Christmas” airs Monday, Dec. 12, at 8 p.m. on CBC, with an encore broadcast on Christmas Day, Sunday, December 25, at 5 p.m.

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