Rachel Watson wakes up one morning from a drunken blackout with a gash across her forehead, her hands covered in blood, and no memory of the night before. Adding to the mystery is the unexplained disappearance of Megan Hipwell a woman whose life Rachel has been obsessing over and observing as she travels by train to and from work every day.
Not content to let the police and Detective Inspector Gaskill handle things Rachel begins her own investigation into the mystery while she desperately tries to remember that night and figure out what happened. Add to the mix Megan’s husband Scott Hipwell and Megan’s therapist Kamal Abdic and then throw in Rachel’s own ex husband Tom Watson and his new wife Anna Watson and there are plenty of secrets to be revealed and several suspects to uncover in this exciting and tension-filled thriller.
I sat down with Jack Grinhaus the Artistic Director of Vertigo Theatre and the director of The Girl on the Train to talk with him about the show, the importance of trust in the rehearsal hall, and what Vertigo Theatre has planned for their 2024/25 Theatre Season.
JAMES HUTCHISON
So, Jack, Vertigo Theatre is producing The Girl on the Train adapted for the stage by Rachel Wagstaff and Duncan Abel based on the best-selling novel by Paula Hawkins and the Dreamworks film which came out in 2016. How did this particular play land a spot in your season?
JACK GRINHAUS
It was a great book that I read and adored a number of years back and the play is written very much in the thriller mode – which I really enjoyed. I love the idea of a strong female lead. I love that there’s a truth about women in the world and how they are perceived. I thought the issues around alcoholism and memory were really intriguing subject matter to deal with. And the play is also highly entertaining and challenging because you’re trying to tell this story that’s flipping through different times and spaces. So, to me, it felt like a story audiences would get behind but it’s also the kind of work I’m interested in which is very much that fast-paced thriller that I think Vertigo’s been moving towards.
JAMES
You talked about the novel and the challenge always is how do you tell the story in a different medium. How does the play convey the story but still manage to capture the essence of the novel?
JACK
The novel takes the view of all three women. So, you have chapters from Anna, Megan, and Rachel and each chapter kind of overlaps. So, you’re seeing all three women through their own interpretation of their experiences whereas the play focuses on Rachel’s story and Megan and Anna’s stories are told through the eyes and the memory of the other people telling their version of events.
So, when Megan is confessing to having an affair to her husband Scott, she’s cruel and vicious and mean about it because of how he remembers it. He remembers it in that way and in this way, Megan becomes more of an enigma. There isn’t one version of Megan. We see four to five different versions of Megan. We see her how her therapist Kamal sees her. How Scott sees her. How Tom sees her. And how Rachel sees her as sort of this fantasy character.
Adaptations are really about finding a way to distill the book’s ethos into the play and finding a way so that the important tenants of the book and the story and characters are retained in a way that makes sure the book’s main thrust is still present and existing but in a format that is contracted and shrunk.
JAMES
The film boasts an outstanding cast including one of my favourite actors Emily Blunt who was up for an Oscar this year for her role in Oppenheimer. Your own cast that you’ve assembled for this production is outstanding with many Vertigo favourites bringing the story to life. You’ve got Lauren Brotman playing Rachel Watson, Filsan Dualeh playing Megan Hipwell, Tyrell Crews as Tom Watson, Stafford Perry as Scott Hipwell, Jamie Konchak as Detective Inspector Gaskill, Mike Tan as Kamal Abdic, and Anna Cummer as Anna Watson. Tell me a little bit about this cast and what qualities each actor brings to their roles.
JACK
Lauren who plays Rachel is my wife and we’ve worked together for a number of years and Lauren has an extraordinary facilitation with emotion. She’s able to capture emotion in multiple ways. She can go from screaming to laughing to crying in the span of a second or two. And she’s able to make the character of Rachel much more affable because the Rachel character if not done well can come across as this irritating self-absorbed narcissist who’s getting involved in something she shouldn’t get into. But because Lauren is capable of giving us a much more authentic and nuanced experience, she brings complexity and truth to Rachel.
When it comes to someone like Ty and Stafford, they’re both well-known in the community and they’re both strong male counterparts to Rachel. And in this story, they have the opportunity to support Rachel but they also both provide a bit of danger. Ty has played the bad guy a lot and he’s the sweetest guy so he can play a sweet guy but then flip that switch.
And Stafford is someone who feels almost like a little boy in a man’s body. And Scott is like that. He’s just this guy who gets thrown into this situation and he says, “You know five minutes ago I was just a guy with a mortgage and a wife and suddenly now I’m a circus attraction.” And he’s not good at that.
Anna Cummer who plays Anna in the play is so wonderfully idiosyncratic in the way that she prepares as a human and as an actor and as an artist. She’s a seasoned actor – a strong actor – who can give us that neurosis, jealousy, and fear that the Anna character has.
Jamie and Mike are just excellent rocks. You know whenever you cast a company of actors you need a couple of rocks in the company who hold down the fort because we have Rachel and Anna and Scott all emotionally up here so the key to an ensemble is to have two people that are emotionally down here.
And then Filsan brings this beautiful youth and enigma. She’s the youngest person in the company. The one with the newer experience in theatre comparative to the other actors who have maybe ten or fifteen years on her. So that innocence is kind of Meghan in a way, right?
So, they each have qualities that are really within the characterization and a lot of that came up in the audition process and right away we went, “Ah, you embody this character in this way as a person naturally.” And then as a group I needed really strong actors because of the nuanced performances necessary for it to be a believable piece of theatre.
JAMES
You mentioned that your wife Lauren is in the show and that you’ve worked with your wife over the years and I’m curious to know how do you enjoy that professional relationship and how do you maintain a successful personal relationship?
JACK
I don’t know how it is for other people, but we’ve just always been very similar on how the art is done. We can battle in the rehearsal hall, and I know that she’s going to try and do the best out of what she can get from the character, and she knows that I’m only going to try and get the best out of her. But at the end of the workday, we go home and leave it alone. And if someone starts talking about the work at home the other will say let’s wait for the rehearsal. And because I think we see art in the same way the end game is always the same and, in that way, it means we’ll never actually fight because we know we’re both trying to reach the same goal.
JAMES
From what you’re saying I’m taking that trust is a huge part of your relationship with your wife but let’s expand that out to talk about how important is trust in the rehearsal room and putting on a production.
JACK
It’s critical. I always say as a director I need to win the room in the first five minutes of the first rehearsal. Because if I don’t win the trust of that team – if they don’t believe that I can lead the ship – then I’m going to lose them and once you lose the room it’s very hard to get it back.
And so, I like to come in very well prepared and also come in with a great sensitivity to the understanding of the actor process and let them know that I’m strong and I’m here to support their journey. I’m happy to have discussions about things and if I’m curt or I cut you off it’s only because part of my job is about time management, and I have to keep things moving.
So, I’m very clear upfront about the rules of the game. People know I’m the leader of the team, but it doesn’t mean that your voice is not needed wanted or justified and if there’s time to have conversations we will. So, I’m really clear on my vision and the idea I have for the show so that they can buy in. And the key to building trust in that room is about supporting each other and giving them a place where they feel they can work safely.
JAMES
So, let’s say I have a friend this weekend who says I don’t know what to do and I say there’s Vertigo Theatre’s production The Girl on the Train. What should I tell them? Why should they go see it? What’s the hook?
JACK
I think it’s a gripping, exhilarating, crime thriller experience and we all love that storyline. And because you’re following this journey through the eyes of the unreliable narrator there are red herrings and that’s a bit of a puzzle and it’s also highly theatrical in its presentation. The writing and the acting are naturalistic, but the set and the projections are much more expressionistic and metaphoric, so I think it feels very epic in scope. So, if you want a really great experience, you can come out and have a drink and have a conversation with some of your friends and see something that is not only theatrical it’s cinematic in style and it’s a great thriller with great acting.
JAMES
Since you mentioned cinematic a couple of weeks ago the Oscars came out and I’ve seen a few awesome films that were nominated this year like American Fiction which just blew me away and The Holdovers which I loved. And on the weekend, I saw Past Lives and that devastated me. Which totally surprised me. But for me out of the films I’ve seen so far, I think the one I like best is The Holdovers. Did you have a favourite out of the films that you’ve seen and were nominated this year?
JACK
I loved Oppenheimer. I really did. I found myself really drawn to it. I mean I love Christopher Nolan the director and I love the work that he does. The performances weren’t necessarily very deep emotional experiences but I’m a big history buff and I love the storytelling and the way it was shot and even though it was a longer film it didn’t feel like it. It didn’t drag at any point for me. I was in it the whole time. I just wish I’d seen it in the movie theatre and not at home because it feels so epic and I would have loved to have been in the cinema for that one.
JAMES
I saw an interview with Jeffrey Wright who was in American Fiction, and he said when he’s making the work he doesn’t think about awards but afterwards awards bring recognition to the work and if they’re going to hand out awards anyway why not hand them out to him. And that made me laugh. So, I’m curious about your thoughts. We have the Betty’s coming up which are our local theatre awards. What are your thoughts about placing artists in competition with each other and that whole idea of awarding work?
JACK
There are many layers to that question. With film and TV when you win an award it can actually bolster awareness about the film and the work helping it to grow but usually a play is completed by the time it gets an award so I’ve always felt that awards are really valuable for young artists who are coming up and it can give them some stature. It’s kind of like good reviews. Those things can bolster grant writing potential and maybe even opportunities for work and so I’ve always thought awards are really great for young people.
I’m also curious about the idea that does a work of art only become great if it’s publicly lauded or can a work of art still be great even without that? You think of some of the greatest artists in history people hated for years and years and years and then suddenly twenty, thirty, fifty, a hundred years later their works are being lauded.
I think it’s valuable in it’s a way for communities to get together and to at least acknowledge each other and that’s great but we could also just have a big party at the end of the year – a big theatre party and have a nice dinner together and just celebrate each other in a way without necessarily having to say you’re the best of the best you know.
When Connie Chung was interviewing Marlon Brando she said, “You know you’re considered the greatest actor of all time.” And Brando said, “Why do we always have to deal with absolutes? Why does it always have to be somebody is the best? Somebody is the worst. Can’t you just attune yourself to a thing and be one of the people who does that.”
JAMES
So, last year you gave me a little sneak peak about next season, and I was wondering what do you have planned for the 2024/25 theatre season at Vertigo?
JACK
Well, it’s about turning the page and I always build seasons that are feeling the zeitgeist of the day in a way and trying to understand where we are. And I think even though people would argue the pandemic isn’t over we are certainly past the most fearful stage of it where we just didn’t know anything, and we were all just guessing. And I think we’re in a place now where we have a better understanding that helps us reflect on ourselves and look at that time and think about who we are today.
So, for me – turning the page – are stories about people who are doing exactly that. They’re reflecting on the past and figuring out what are we going to do now in the future. And so, all of the plays live in that ethos a bit. And we also want to provide opportunities for audiences to have a great time next year. It’s still a hard time in the real world so why not enjoy the entertainment that we can provide. And we’ve got four premieres this coming year. So, lots of new plays.
We start the season with The Woman in Black which is a ghost story and just closed in the UK after nearly thirty-five years and over 13,000 performances since 1989. And we were the first phone call to say can we have it because they kept it on moratorium for a number of years – not allowing anyone to produce it. And it’s about Arthur Kipps looking back on his past to try and understand what happened to his family. So, starting off with something like that around Halloween is lots of fun.
Then there’s the Canadian premiere of Murder on the Links which is a new version of a Christie Poirot – which everybody loves with six actors playing thirty roles. That’s exciting. It’s nostalgic with the way we love those chestnuts that time of year. It’s the holiday season. People want nostalgia. They want to look back a little bit and see those things and it’s a great story right.
We have the Canadian premiere of Deadly Murder. Deadly Murder is a dark deep psychological thriller. Very uncomfortable. Very cat and mouse. It’s that thing where you lock two or three people in a room and you see what happens. And it’s the old Hitchcock thing. It’s not scary to find out there’s a bomb in the room. It’s scary to find out there’s a bomb in the room that’s going off in five minutes and now what?
Then we have the world premiere of a new play called A Killing at La Cucina which is about a food critic who dies at a restaurant called Fate where one in a thousand people are fed poison and they go there because of that. And we’re introducing this new super detective who might very well be the next Poirot named Lucia Dante who investigates this fast-paced and intense mystery along with her AI colleague Isabella.
And we close the season with the Canadian premiere of The DaVinci Code which you know is nearing a hundred million copies in sale. It’s been about twenty-odd years since the book came out and I don’t think there’s a person who hasn’t at least heard of it. And I think that audiences are looking for things that they can recognize, and I think DaVinci Code is definitely one that is an exciting piece that is adapted by the same people who did The Girl on a Train, so it’s got that fast pace and that excitement in a treasure hunt adventure that goes all across Europe.
How are we going to do that?
We’re not going to have Europe all over the stage but that’s the beauty of theatre we’re going to use the set design and maybe the projections and the sound and the way that the lighting is set to create those environments where the audience goes – Yes you are in a Piazza in Milan. I see it. I see it all. Right. You’re in the Louvre. I totally take it we’re in Paris. So, I think those challenges – you know a big ten-person or eleven-person cast and a big show to crown the season – are the kinds of things Vertigo is excited about moving into.
“I think actors are always vastly better when they’re moving and when they realize in the course of shooting a scene that because you’ve got the Steadicam following them around they can start to forget the self-conscious side of acting. I do that with kids all the time too. Kids love to move. A Steadicam frees people up. It’s almost like it takes away the fourth wall, because people can do whatever they normally do in life, and I just chase them. I love doing that. And I find definitely the performances are much more real and organic.”
What do cannibals feasting on blood-thirsty vampires in Van Helsing and lonely singles finding love in Hallmark’s A December Bride have in common? They’re just two of the many stories film and television director David Winning has brought to the screen.
Comedy, romance, horror – David Winning does it all. In a career spanning more than 40 years David has worked on 29 different television shows including Are You Afraid of the Dark, Van Helsing, Andromeda, Stargate Atlantis, Todd and the Book of Pure Evil, Breaker High, and Earth Final Conflict. His film work has ranged from thrillers, such as Exception to the Rule starring Kim Cattrall, Sean Young and Eric McCormack, to several romantic Hallmark Channel movies such as Tulips in Spring, A December Bride, and most recently Riddle Me Dead, The 27 Hour Day, and Blake Shelton’s Time for Us to Come Home for Christmas starring Lacey Chabert.
David began his filmmaking journey shooting Super 8 movies in the backyard with his friends when he was 10 years of age. At 18, he shot his first short drama Sequence and expanded the plotline into his first feature film, STORM, produced on a shoestring budget in the summer of 1983. That film led to work on his first television series, Friday the 13th, and three Canadian Emmy Award nominations. Other awards include a national Director’s Guild award for Outstanding Drama, a 2020 Leo Award for best direction in a television movie for A Summer Romance and a 2012 Leo for best direction in a Music, Comedy or Variety Program or Series for Todd and the Book of Pure Evil.
I talked with David about his inspirations, his early days writing, producing, and directing independent features, his transition into working on movies and television shows for other producers, his approach to working with actors, and what type of work environment he creates on set for his cast and crew.
JAMES HUTCHISON
When you were 9 or 10 years old you started out doing magic shows, and then you discovered cinema, and I’m wondering if you see a connection between that initial interest in magic and your decision to start experimenting with film.
DAVID WINNING
When I was 8 we went to Disneyland, and I was begging my parents to buy me a ventriloquist dummy. We went in ’69 for the turn of the new decade – Here Come the Seventies, because I remember being there with my parents on New Year’s Eve and all the fireworks are going off and we went into the magic store – and I swear I bought a ventriloquist dummy from Steve Martin who was working there – I’ve seen pictures of him in his first job working Main Street Magic shop right off Main Street in Disneyland. It was the same guy, and I thought isn’t that weird to think that Steve Martin may have sold me my dummy.
So, I was doing ventriloquist shows and really bad comedy at school and at libraries and I was also kind of doing magic shows. And on my 10th birthday, my dad got me a little Instamatic M 22 Kodak movie camera, and all I wanted to do for the first couple of years after getting that camera was special effects. I did all these double exposure, pixilation and stop-motion films of us driving on the lawn, and animation stuff and that’s all I cared about. I didn’t think about movies as an art form or anything, I just thought about extending the world of magic into movies and photography.
And I loved going to movies, but I never really thought I’d be the kind of person to tell stories. I thought I’d be the special effects guy. You know, I’ll do all the science fiction effects and I’ll make the Starship Enterprise fly on Star Trek. So, magic and ventriloquism and puppetry and all that stuff kind of led into the narrative interest in movies. And after making films for a couple of years I thought, “Wait a minute – maybe there’s a way I can tell stories.”
JAMES
So, what do you think is the magic of movies? What do you think when you hear that term used? How would you define it?
DAVID
When you ask me that question I have to think back to what I thought was magical about movies as a kid, because it’s been so long since I remember sitting in the theatre and just forgetting time. The last time I can remember the audience just kind of fading away and getting lost in the whole experience of movies was when I was a kid and I used to go to all those crappy monster movies that used to run at the Tivoli and the Plaza theatre in Calgary in the ’70s. And then, because you’re a kid, you get so fascinated by that magic that you want to find out how it’s made and in the process of learning how to make movies and spending your life trying to transport others and give them that experience, you ruin it for yourself because you’ve seen behind the curtain.
JAMES
So, I’m wondering if you think back to that time when you were that age can you remember what it was like to sit in that dark cinema for the first time and watch 2001 A Space Odyssey.
DAVID
I must have spent a year and a half – off and on – going to the North Hill Cinerama and seeing 2001 because it was the one Cinerama screen in town. And I used to be in that giant theatre by myself just absorbed and fascinated by 2001. It’s still my favourite movie of all time, but as I’ve gotten older I’ve gotten tired of trying to explain why it’s my favourite movie because it was such a personal thing for me as a kid.
I love Kubrick. I think Kubrick’s a genius. I think that’s one of the last times I can remember feeling transported by a movie, but it’s also because 2001 is such an unusual, bizarre, visual experience that I think it’s something that transports a lot of people, just because it’s so odd and different and strangely paced, you know with beautiful imagery and stuff, but that’s kind of where it started for me – the germ of wanting to make movies and thinking of things in terms of narrative and storytelling.
JAMES
You know I think one of the strengths of 2001 and one of the reasons it still works and still fascinates is that it really tells so much of the story through visuals.
DAVID
Yup.
JAMES
There isn’t dialogue. We watch action. I suspect, because I’ve watched it recently again, that the reason it still holds your attention and still keeps you riveted and keeps you fascinated by what’s going on on-screen is because it has this sort of feeling of simplicity even though it was not necessarily simple to create.
DAVID
It’s a very simple storyline, but it’s about a huge, epic topic – the origin of mankind and the point of our existence. You know just huge, huge subject matter, but told in a very simple linear storyline.
It’s funny when you bring it up because I can remember sitting in this theatre. And it was almost like a private club because I’d go in and get a ticket and just sit there and there’d be nobody else in theatre and I’d just watch a matinee of 2001 and just be glued to it. I think I’ve seen the film sixty or seventy times, and there’s nothing like seeing it at the Cinerama. It’s a beautiful monumental epic film.
And then, strangely enough, when I was 16, I saw Star Wars for the first time in that same theatre. And I’m not the biggest Star Wars fan, but I appreciate the movie, and I remember I was a Star Wars fan from the point of view of being fascinated by George Lucas being this young wunderkind and being on the cover of Time Magazine and basically owning the summer of 1977.
I went with a bunch of my friends and we all sat in the front row and after the movie we came out of the theatre and I asked this friend of mine what did you think? And he said, “Wow, that was great.” And I said, “What other films have you liked?” And he said, “That’s the first time I’ve ever seen a movie in a theatre.”
And do you remember what an explosive kind of visceral experience it was to see Star Wars? Because the effects were so crisp and it was just so different and amazing and fantastical. Can you imagine the very first time you see a movie and it’s that movie? I can’t imagine – I just can’t imagine how much more powerful that would be than it was for the rest of us.
JAMES
We met each other at the University of Calgary on the first day of orientation. We were both in the drama department.
DAVID
This is like forty years ago.
JAMES
Yeah, this is ages ago, and one of the other filmmakers you admire is John Carpenter and I remember we’d sometimes be at the university late at night, and in the music department they had rooms where they had pianos and I remember you playing the theme to Halloween on the piano and hearing it echo down the dark corridors late at night. And that film really permeated the culture. I mean everybody knew the theme, even if they hadn’t seen the film. What do you think it was about that very small budget film that captured the attention of the movie-going public at the time?
DAVID
You see my connection to Halloween is so personal. I don’t know if it affected everybody else as much as it did me, because when Halloween came out in ’78 I was 17 and we hadn’t done Sequence yet, and I was just getting out of high school, and this guy comes along and he makes this little $300,000 movie. Up until very recently, it was the most successful independent movie of all time. It got replaced by Blair Witch Project, I think, in the ’90s and probably something else since, but when Halloween came out – I think he produced it for $320,000 and it made, like, $51 million.
JAMES
In 1978 dollars.
DAVID
Yes, and it was such an incredible inspiration for all of us because we’re thinking about doing things independently and getting things rolling and trying to get Sequence off the ground and then ultimately STORM. I just remember having this kind of brazen attitude, thinking, “If this guy can do it, then I can do it.” And I loved Carpenter, and I still love Carpenter. I think Carpenter’s a genius too.
I’ve always said, “Kubrick and Carpenter are like two ends of the spectrum. Kubrick’s a visual genius and he’s an intelligent filmmaker and Carpenter mastered putting style into bubble-gum horror movies and low budget sci-fi.” I just love his style.
He directed Starman and Escape from New York and The Thing, and I think The Thing is probably one of his greatest movies. I saw it in the theatre as a sneak preview at the Showcase Grand downtown. It was the second movie with Conan the Barbarian, which I watched, and I was really tired and then The Thing came up and just exploded. It’s one of my favourite horror, action, sci-fi movies ever. I just think it’s so well done. And one of the reasons I love it so much is because it’s not CG it’s physical effects, and I just found that so much scarier.
I think what Carpenter probably tapped into with Halloween in ’78 was that he had to hide things because he had no money. It’s like the shark in Jaws. You know there’s a monster there, but you never see it. And so, it’s a memorable scare when you do see it.
I remember you were with me when I saw Psycho for the first time at the Plaza, and I can remember sitting in a packed theatre. I’d never seen the movie before. I’d never seen it on TV. And I remember the moment where the detective is climbing the stairs – you know Martin Balsam – and it cuts to that overhead shot and mama comes rushing out from the door, and I just had this rush of adrenaline, and I was terrified, and the whole crowd’s being absolutely terrified by that movie and going, “Holy crap!”
I think John Carpenter used to do a lot of that with his early stuff. He was really good at visual suspense, and there are famous moments that I love that I’ve stolen from him millions of times. Like the shot with the babysitter in the kitchen – you know – walking from one counter to the other counter and there’s nobody in the background, and then she comes back, and he’s standing in the background, and just the static stillness of that was so scary. And I think when I was doing my first films, Sequence and STORM, I just lifted a lot of that imagery because I loved it so much.
JAMES
Do you think your own work has a certain style?
DAVID
Well, I’d probably have to only look at the films that I produced because there’s two paths to my career. There’s the independent stuff I produced that I had control over and then there’s the entire television career, where you’re making movies for somebody else. And I used to say that making movies is like trying to paint a picture and eight people are holding the paintbrush and helping you pick colours and telling you what’s wrong and what doesn’t work.
If I have a style somebody else will have to look at my work a hundred years after I’m dead and gone and say, “Oh, I see some link between all this,” because I can’t really see it anymore. I always feel like maybe this whole diversion into making other people’s movies for thirty years was supposed to bring me back to where I make my own films and actually have more control over it again.
JAMES
You’ve occasionally mentioned the desire to get back to doing those independent features, but man – that’s a long journey and a hard journey putting all the pieces together.
DAVID
In my 20s – when people are supposed to be starting families and having kids and beginning careers – I spent five years making one film, and then I spent another four years making the next film. And sometimes I think I’d love to get back to that because you have so much control over making your own projects, but at the same time, it’s really hard to raise money, and it’s hard to keep control anyway, because after I finished STORM and wanted to get it distributed I kept turning down offers for two years because people wanted to change stuff in it, and I was so idealistic in my 20s I thought, “No, you can’t change it. This is my film. I’m making this movie.”
And thank God, I held out for a decent offer from Cannon where they didn’t want to change anything but then at the end they wanted to change stuff because they said, “Here’s a quarter of a million bucks. How long is it?” “It’s 78 minutes.” “OK, deal’s off.” And there was this whole flurry of calls and I said, “Well, why don’t you advance me fifty thousand and I’ll go out and shoot more film?” And Golan-Globus and the Cannon people were like, “Yeah, whatever.” So, they advanced me the money and I ended up shooting and adding more to the film. So even with your own films before you can actually get them into the theatre you still have to make changes.
JAMES
I’m going to go back a step to when you graduated high school and you had an interest in pursuing a film career and you initially enrolled in the Drama Department at the University of Calgary – and that wasn’t right for you, and I remember you telling me you looked at the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology, but that wasn’t right for you either.
DAVID
Do you remember the joke, Jim? I did the University of Calgary for three months, I did SAIT for three weeks, and I was going to do the police academy for three days.
After I bombed out at university, I went to the film course at SAIT, and I was there for literally two days. The guy came in to speak to all the new students in the program, and I won’t mention his name because he’s probably still around, but the guy came in and I was like, “I’m going to be a film maker. I’m going to be a film director. I’m coming here to SAIT and I’m going to make movies, and I’m going to be the next Hitchcock.” And the guy came in and said, “Okay, welcome to the Cinema, Television, Stage, and Radio Arts program. If you’re here to make the next great Canadian feature film and win an Oscar you’re in the wrong place. Our goal here is to place you people in television and radio news.”
And I quit. I just said, “I quit.” And I went right to the Student Union Office and the guy came in and said, “David, this is Mr. so and so, and it’s his first day.” And he said, “Hey Dave congratulations! Welcome to SAIT. Come in and we’ll talk. It’s my first day and all I want to do is interact with the students. What can I help you with?” And I said, “I’d like to quit.” And this poor guy’s face just sunk.
JAMES
A memorable first day. Well, that led you to have a conversation with your father about your plans, right?
DAVID
Yeah, I broke his heart.
JAMES
But your Dad was a pretty amazing guy. He supported your dreams, and he was willing to let you follow your path, and I just wonder if you could talk about where do you think that courage came from for you to follow your path and how did your father support that dream?
DAVID
I was 22, and I was raising money, and I was going to go to film school, and my Dad was going to help support me. I had a job as a bouncer and a ticket taker and a waiter and a bartender and all these little odds and ends jobs.
And in 1983 I had this inspiration. It was like a lightning bolt and I think I wrote a note in my diary that said, “I’m going to make my own film. I’m going to take all this money that we’ve saved for film school and buy film stock, and I’m going to go and shoot a really low ratio like three to one, and we’re going to literally force this film into existence.” Which is how I always describe STORM. Because I was so naive. I had no idea.
But I got so excited by the idea of being able to completely control a project that I remember not sleeping for weeks. “Oh my God, I can do this! I’ve had a breakthrough. I’ll write the movie, and I’ll go out and get friends and I’ll get Jim and we’ll get everybody, and we’ll hire a TV news cameraman, and we’ll go shoot the film for four weeks and we’ll shoot from dawn till the sun goes down and it’s completely mine and I make all the choices and it’s all my decisions and if it fails, I’ll just go do something else. I’ll go work in a bookstore or something.”
And that’s what led to STORM and that’s why four or five years of my 20’s was spent trying to gradually raise money to make this little epic movie. And all through that, my Dad was completely supportive, and you know he lent me money, and he charged me interest for it. And then years later when STORM sold and I paid my Dad back – every dime plus all the interest – he gave me all the interest back as a present.
And he lived long enough to see STORM, and he was proud of it. You know, I remember he came to the Uptown Theater when it ran in ’87 – when it opened in theatres, and he was with my Mom and my Mom told me years later that he sat down and he said, “Oh my God, I hope I like this.” Because he spent so much time pushing for it, and by the end he was clapping, and he loved it.
JAMES
That’s great. I know I know your Dad’s been gone a long time.
DAVID
Yeah, thirty years.
JAMES
Thirty years. What would you want him to know about your film career now?
DAVID
You know when my dad was getting sick and towards the end I’d say in my 29-year-old stupid juvenile way, “Dad, you can’t die. You’ve got to stay around. I’ve got to win my Oscar. You’ve got to see that.” And he used to say, “Well, if there’s any truth to what they say, I think I’ll know about it.”
So, I guess I’ve always sort of felt like our parents look down on us and somehow they’re aware of what we’re doing because, really, you know I mean, I had this crazy drive to make movies, but if it hadn’t been for my dad that wouldn’t have happened. And it’s not like most people think that he paid for everything but it was more about him going against the grain, because he grew up in a very academic world, you know, he had a PhD in Chemical Engineering. And my brother was in social work and my mom was a home economics major and dietitian, and so here I come along as the black sheep in the family and I was going to do something different.
And I sometimes think you’d never be able to do what you did in your 20s if you didn’t have this ridiculous bravado confidence and so, getting back to why aren’t I doing independent features now – it’s really hard. And I’m not sure we have enough energy in our 50s and 60s as we had in our 20s. I suppose I could do it, but when other people are raising money and working with corporations and all the distribution is so streamlined and you’re working with great people, you don’t really want to go back to those days where you’re hiring the news crew to make a movie.
JAMES
So, one of the fun things about getting to do STORM and getting it sold is you get to go to a premiere. What was that like?
DAVID
Oh, it was a riot. It was so much fun. It was pretty cool to actually get a movie out there and be seen. And the premiere was fun just because it was lots of family and friends. And it kind of taught me a lot about how the movie business works although everything’s changed now. But back then movies would go through this incredible cycle of a lot of hype and it’s like Barnum and Bailey and they open on Friday and then they’re gone in a week because they don’t do enough business, unless they’re a blockbuster, obviously, and they go on for months and months. STORM lasted, I think, three weeks, which I thought was amazing. But I think they kind of hung onto it because it was Canadian content, so it was playing at Westbrook and at the Showcase downtown and I took a lot of pictures of the marquees.
JAMES
And then twenty years later you did a retrospective and had a celebration and a screening and you brought the cast and crew together and did a Q&A with the audience. What was that like?
DAVID
It was great. One of the reasons I did it was because the older actors in STORM Stan Kane and Harry Freedman and Lawrence Elion were getting on and I thought it was a good reason to get everybody together and have a party, right? So why not? It was like going down memory lane but it’s not a very Canadian thing to do. Part of the reason Canadians have struggles with the film business is that they don’t promote themselves.
I think that if I’d grown up in the States I would have gone a lot further in my career a lot earlier, because it’s kind of an American sensibility to promote yourself and be big and bold, and to get your stuff out there and to ask for more, and to come back and get noticed and to get doors slammed in your face and to keep going back and keep knocking. That doesn’t happen in Canada. And I think when I was growing up I was a little more American in terms of just pushing and not taking no for an answer. And you need that in the beginning when you’re firing up your career. You need that adrenaline when you’re starting out just to get you up the mountain and get these things made.
JAMES
So, STORM led to you doing some television work. You got hired to direct a Friday the 13th episode. So, you’ve made your independent film and now you’re going to be in charge of a much larger crew. And you’re walking onto a show where people know each other. They’re working on the series, and I’m sort of wondering, what were you feeling and doing the night before you walked onto the set? And then what was the reality of actually going to work that day and calling action for the first time on a network television show?
DAVID
Scary. What was I doing the night before? Throwing up. Yeah, STORM got me into the Directors Guild and the Directors Guild had a little booklet and they put like a page for each director and stuff. And in the late ’80s, they were doing Friday the 13th and they were in their first season and one of the directors fell out and J. Miles Dale who’s gone on to produce Shape of Water and stuff, years later was one of the producers and he’s flipping through the book and he sees ‘Winning’ and he goes, “Sounds positive. Let’s hire this guy.”
So, I literally got flown to Toronto, and I was 26. And I got off the plane, got in the studio, and they’re like, “How old are you?” And I think I said, “34.” And they’re like, “Okay. You’ve done this before, right?” No. But you never tell anybody you haven’t done stuff because otherwise why would they hire you?
And I remember walking onto this amazing old house set that, I think, was built by David Cronenberg’s designer Carol Spier for one of his movies, and they had made it into the old Curious Goods store. And I was terrified, and I remember asking the first AD will you walk me around and show me stuff. And it’s a scary experience going from a crew of 20 to a crew of 180 people. And I remember asking the first AD, David McLeod, who I flew out from Toronto to work with me on the second feature Killer Image – and I asked him, “Where have you never put the camera?”
Even then I was thinking, I have to make this different – I have to make whatever I do different. I was so ballsy even then, I was like, “What have you never done here?” He told me where they usually put all the cameras and I made sure I didn’t do anything like that because you have to try to find a way to stand out.
You know, the weird kind of schizophrenic existence of directing television is that you have to stand out, but you also have to fit in. It’s not like you can come in and change the whole storyline of a series. There’s a Bible and a certain way they do things. And they don’t really want you to rock the boat, but at the same time, if you don’t stand out, how are you going to look any different than the other guys?
So that was my big thing. And so, long story short, I did three episodes of Friday the 13th, desperately trying to make them different. And I ended up getting Canadian Emmy nominations for all three episodes so somehow I was able to make those shows stand out. And I remember walking in and they said, “Here’s the script.” And it was about killer bees and the director who left actually quit because he didn’t want to do the script. And the cool thing about when you’re a young guy is you get this stuff and you’re like, “I don’t care what it is I’m going to make an amazing show out of this.”
So, I was really proud of the Friday the 13th episode I did with Art Hindle and Tim Webber. I was thrilled and terrified all at the same time. It was really scary, but one of the coolest moments is when they pay you, because it’s very lucrative and you realize, “Oh, my God I’m 26 years old, and I’m making this much money.”
And I thought, “I’m off to the races. I’m a TV director now.” And then, you know, years go by, and eventually you get to a slump, where it’s like, “Oh, you mean, I’m not just going to be handed money to do these shows?” Because it’s tricky. Every year in my career has been a tricky thing to negotiate. Every year has had its own challenge.
JAMES
So, you’ve directed all types of genres. You’ve done horror, romance, suspense, and comedy. When you look at all those different stories that you’ve brought to the screen are there any particular story elements that you feel every story shares?
DAVID
Well, you know, in one year, I’ll be doing Hallmark Christmas movies at the same time as I’m doing gruesome post-apocalyptic vampires for Netflix. And I always think everything’s the same. Kid shows are the same. Erotic thrillers are the same. The Hallmark Christmas movies, the vampire series, the westerns – they’re all the same and you’re just trying to pull people into a story, so they care about it.
So, the most important part of anything you do is the first ten minutes, because you need to pull people into the stories and make it somehow personal for them, even if it’s science fiction, or running from vampires, something that would never happen to them, you have to make the stories personal to people or else they don’t care.
I’ve spent 30 years leaning really heavily on Steadicams and the roaming process and so if a hundred years from now someone’s looking at my movies, they may notice that the camera never stops moving. So the Steadicam actually becomes like a third actor in a love story. So, for example, you have the characters actually dancing with the camera, and it’s so cool to me how it’s shorthand for me to pull people into a story.
And jumping back to the Psycho reference I was talking about earlier – remember how Hitchcock tried to give everybody this really disturbing point of view of Norman Bates – so that the audience actually felt like the murderer. The audience is spying on Marian in the shower. The audience is seeing Martin Balsam falling backwards with the knife. And that was disturbing in the ’60s, because it’s like, “Oh, my God, I’m seeing this from the perspective of a maniac.” But that’s one of the tricks I’ve always tried to do, is to make the camera kind of a character in the shows.
JAMES
In terms of directing actors does giving them movement help their performance?
DAVID
Totally, I think actors are always vastly better when they’re moving and when they realize in the course of shooting a scene that because you’ve got the Steadicam following them around they can start to forget the self-conscious side of acting. I do that with kids all the time too. Kids love to move. A Steadicam frees people up. It’s almost like it takes away the fourth wall, because people can do whatever they normally do in life, and I just chase them. I love doing that. And I find definitely the performances are much more real and organic.
JAMES
So, I was wondering about the importance of promises and payoffs in terms of putting together a film or a television show? Do you think in terms of promises and payoffs? And if you do, how does that influence things in terms of telling the story and shooting it?
DAVID
I’m not really a writer, right? I’m a director, so I’m basically always interpreting someone else’s writing. But when I read movie of the week scripts, I have to kind of draw on the writer side of me to improve them. One of the revelations I made early in my career was when I realized the bottom line with almost any production company I’ve worked for is, that as long as it doesn’t cost them more money, nobody really cares if you rewrite the scripts. So, then you think, I’ve been given this gift, I can change this. So, I guess I do have to rely on a lot of writing skills.
And in terms of payoffs, what comes to mind when you ask me the question is the structure of the script I’m working on, and if the structure isn’t exciting enough I end up trying to inject elements to make things better in terms of cliff-hangers or story suspense, and just basically trying to find any way to improve and elevate the material, which is always what you try to do.
I’m definitely trying to create builds and payoffs for characters and constantly trying to make the characters less shallow. You try to flesh out the characters and make the characters more interesting so that everybody has some kind of an arc. And the most interesting characters to me are always the villains and you try to give the villain some humanity and some backstory because I think one note villains are pretty boring. Not that there’s a lot of villains in Hallmark movies.
JAMES
There are obstacles.
DAVID
There are obstacles. It’s usually saving the farm or falling in love. That’s always an obstacle.
JAMES
Who’s a favourite villain, then?
DAVID
You know my favourite villain of all time is Laurence Olivier as Szell in Marathon Man. And I like Javier Bardem as the creepy face-shifting Bond villain in Skyfall, and that movie has probably become one of my favourite movies of all time in terms of the action genre. When I saw Skyfall, I thought, that’s it. That’s the perfect three-act structure for a modern epic action film. I just loved it. I thought the whole thing was amazing.
You know, we were talking about my favourite directors, Kubrick and Carpenter, earlier but my other two favorites that we didn’t mention, and I think they’re the best screenwriters in the world – if I may go out on a limb – are the Coen Brothers. I love the Coen Brothers’ movies. Always have loved them. I think they write poetry. And I think they’re screenwriters that actually have so much more respect for the English language and words and I just love their movies.
So, you have opposite ends of the spectrum with Kubrick and Carpenter and now I’ve got the Coen brothers on one end and on the other end of the spectrum, the low end is Tarantino. Who I also think is brilliant, but I also think his style can come off as low class, and incredibly foul-mouthed. But the movies are so visceral. I love his movies. I think his movies are just brilliantly done. And they seem so heartless, but they’re just so energetic that I just get pulled into them.
JAMES
Don’t you think he embraces that B-Movie genre?
DAVID
Well, he’s doing what I thought I was doing. He’s imitating things that he loved. Everything he does is an imitation of something that moved him a lot. So, I can remember in ’92, when I had just finished Killer Image and I thought, “Okay I made this great action film.” And I’ve got it coming out, and I was all geared up and excited, and then out came Reservoir Dogs, and I swear, I almost retired at 29. I almost quit the business when Reservoir Dogs came out because I thought that’s exactly what I’ve been trying to make for 10 years – a really visceral, violent, action-packed, nonstop, funny film. I just love Reservoir Dogs. What an explosive debut.
And the other incredible breakthrough premiere movie from my other guys was Blood Simple. You know, the Coen Brothers first movie, and in the script for Killer Image the senator was described as an Emmet Walsh type. And Emmet Walsh had been in Blood Simple and I’m thinking, “Who can I get to play this guy?” And somebody said, “Well, why don’t you just ask Emmet Walsh?” And I was like, “I can’t go to the guy who did Blood Simple. I wouldn’t even be able to talk to him.” So, you know, we approached him and he said, “Sure I’ll do it.” We had him for four days. We had Michael Ironside for seven days. And the film was twenty days. So, a whole lot of that movie is not either of those two guys. Its body doubles and over-the-shoulder shots and, you know, people running around trying to look like Michael Ironside. That’s how you make low-budget movies.
JAMES
You sent me a note that one of your favourite films of your career is Exception to the Rule, starring Sean Young, Kim Cattrall, and William Devane, and I just want to know why is that one of your favourites? Why does that one standout?
DAVID
I did STORM and Killer Image and then I did Profile for Murder with Lance Henriksen and then Exception to the Rule. Exception to the Rule was the kind of movie that I’ve always wanted to make. I always wanted to make thrillers, you know, and we mentioned, Marathon Man. That was the kind of movie I wanted to do. Thrillers.
But it’s very seldom that you actually end up exactly on the path you want when you’re trying to pay the rent and develop a career. So, you end up doing Christmas movies and vampire shows and kid’s sitcoms and dinosaur shows.
There’s this fantasy that directors are offered things and I take a script and I review it and I go, “I don’t know if I want to direct this. Oh really. How much are they offering?” It just doesn’t happen. I mean, the agent calls and says, “David, they want you for the movie.” And I say, “When?” Boom. “What’s the money?” Boom. And I go, and I do it. I take any job that’s given to me, because otherwise I would starve to death.
So, Exception to the Rule was great, because it was a thriller and it was one of those cases where the script was kind of shallow and kind of misogynistic and I said, “Can I change this?” And again, they say, “We don’t care.” As long as it doesn’t cost money, people don’t care. “Do whatever you want to do you’re the director. Rewrite it.”
So, I was able to do a little rewriting on it and make it a bit more thriller-ish, more kind of Marathon Manish, which is what I always wanted to do. And we had a slightly bigger budget on it and I just kind of felt like I found my mojo on that movie.
And I still like it. I think it still stands up. And a lot of my friends that have seen Exception to the Rule think it’s one of my better movies from those early thrillers. You know I’ve done stuff that I’m really proud of in the last 10 years, but Exception was just a really fun memory because it was shot incredibly quickly, and I was trying so hard because you’re always trying to make small movies look like big features.
And when we finished it, I thought it turned out pretty well and we ended up taking it to the Houston Film Festival and I brought down Michael Bateman who was the film editor. And we showed it to a crowd of like 500 people in the theatre and they all jumped in the right places and they really got into it. And it’s just that kind of group feeling that doesn’t happen very often. And then we talked to the audience for like an hour and a half after the movie. And it just felt like I touched people with it. It was pretty cool. And you know, I got to work with Kim Cattrall and Sean Young in the same movie and I used to brag about getting to work with William Devane from Marathon Man.
JAMES
Did you chat to him at all about Marathon Man? Did you play the fan a little bit?
DAVID
I’m always playing fanboy with these guys. Like I got to ask Emmet Walsh about Blood Simple and I was definitely a fanboy with him and with Devane too. Exception to the Rule turned out pretty well. I thought. It’s not a bad little thriller for what it was, you know.
JAMES
You had an audience of 500 people who are totally engrossed in the film. That’s what you’re trying to do.
DAVID
That’s why you make movies, right? Nowadays it doesn’t happen because there’s no theater experience anymore, but more people watch my directing work now than have ever watched it.
When I do these Hallmark movies, if I’m lucky, I can get three to five million people watching it on the first screening. And then it goes into reruns so you multiply that and you know twenty to thirty million people end up watching your work; same work that people tease me about making, but when you’re shooting them, you feel the weight of the fact that these movies really mean something to people, you know. You have to value and respect the importance of everything you’re creating. It will mean something to someone.
And I just love pushing buttons and playing with emotions and making people cry and I just love doing that in these movies. And Hallmark gives you perfect opportunities for doing that because they’re all about family and Christmas and longing. And so many of the ones I’ve done recently are about heartbreak and dealing with grief.
Like, the Time for Me to Come Home series that I did that was based on a Blake Shelton song and he executive produced for Hallmark. They did three movies. I did the first one and then someone else came in and directed the second one, and then they brought me back for the third one. Which is the one that came out last Christmas and got the biggest ratings of all three, which is great, but they’re all heartbreaking, you know, three Kleenex kind of movies.
And I tear up worse than anybody watching these movies. When you direct something, you really get into it because you’re more invested in it than anyone. You’re the best audience because you know the people and you made the choices and you suggested things that they do. So of course, the big tear-jerky moments are going to hit me the hardest because I’ve choreographed it that way.
JAMES
Well, I want to talk more about the Hallmark stuff but we were talking about being a fanboy and working with a few of the folks that you loved when you were growing up. So, let’s talk a little bit about Swamp Devil and good old Bruce Dern. He’s the guy from Coming Home, Black Sunday,
DAVID
…Silent Running…
JAMES
Yeah, and you know, nominated for an Oscar for Nebraska. What was it like doing Swamp Devil with Bruce Dern?
DAVID
You don’t have enough time to hear my Bruce Dern stories. When I was about 13-14-15, I wandered into Science Theater 148 at the University of Calgary where the Student’s Union used to run Friday Flicks in the ’70s. And Paul Brown, may he rest in peace, and I rode our bikes over to the university and wandered into the Science Theater, and the projectionists were doing a test screening of the movie they were running that night.
And so up comes the opening few minutes of Silent Running, which became one of my favourite movies of all time, because, you know, I was already a kid sucked into Star Trek and all the science fiction stuff and suddenly there’s this outer space movie I’d never heard of, because back in those days movies could be released and Calgary wouldn’t see them for years.
But, of course, with the internet now everything’s just instant, right? Things are released and, boom, you see it or it’s on Netflix, but back then movies would take a while to get around the world and get into people’s psyche and stuff and Silent Running was one of those movies. So, I see Bruce Dern and I’m in love with the movie and then flash forward to the early ’80s and Bruce Dern’s in Calgary shooting that movie with Gordon Lightfoot.
JAMES
The Western, right?
DAVID
Yeah, and it was called Harry Tracy Desperado.
JAMES
Right, and they were shooting at Heritage Park.
DAVID
And they were shooting at Heritage Park and we went a couple of times just to get in on the set – that was back when you could do this. And we just kind of watched them shoot and I ended up sitting down in this director’s chair and they called cut and Bruce Dern walked out of the set and came over and sat right beside me with this Styrofoam coffee cup.
And I looked at him and I wanted to say to him, “You know you’re the reason I got into movies, I love Silent Running.” And he turned and he started to talk to me and then he looked at me and said, “Oh God I’m talking to an extra.” And he got up and walked away. And then I looked down and I see his coffee cup, and there was this 10 second moment where I thought I’m going to take that coffee cup. I could sell it on eBay. This is Bruce Dern’s coffee cup from Harry Tracy.
So anyway, now flash forward years later and I’m shooting monster movies in Montreal. And we did Black Swarm with Robert Englund and then Swamp Devil was right after and we shot them together. It was like an eight-week period – we’d prep and shoot – prep and shoot. And so, this rumour started happening halfway through Black Swarm that they were going to get Bruce Dern to do Swamp Devil. And I just about lost my mind. And believe it or not, I actually did tell him that coffee cup story eventually.
So, they pick Bruce Dern up at the airport and he was coming in for his costume fitting on a Saturday and this cab pulls up and Bruce Dern gets out and he was 72, I think, when we did Swamp Devil, and he got out and I was kind of speechless. I mean I get to direct this movie, and I am in awe of this guy and I really don’t know what to say to him. He was incredible.
And he used to tell me stories all the time about movies that he worked on and things that he’d done and Silent Running and his best friend in the world is Jack Nicholson. And we would be shooting and his cell phone would ring and he’d go, “Can you take that?” Because we’re in the middle of shooting something – “Can you take that? Say hi to Jack.” And I’d take the phone and I’d look down and it would say, Jack Nicholson. He’d always hand me the phone when Nicholson phoned him. And I just never had the guts to say anything. Anyway, it was an incredible experience. Working with your idols. It’s kind of scary.
And speaking about idols in the late ’80s they called me up and said, “We’re doing this series in Toronto called Earth Final Conflict – a Gene Roddenberry series.” And I’m like, “You’re punking me, right?” Like, I’m going to work on a Gene Roddenberry series, because I grew up with Star Trek. And I’ve told millions of people that Star Trek taught me how to make movies when I was 10. And Star Trek the original series is now completely corny, and people make fun of it, but the original series is still my favourite, I remember being 10,11, and 12 and just staring at this black and white TV, trying to figure out how they put it all together and kind of reverse engineering it in terms of drama and structure and choreography and I still do stuff to this day that’s right out of Star Trek. It’s just the way my brain works when I’m trying to block scenes. And then I went out and did Andromeda for four seasons, which was another Roddenberry series.
JAMES
Let’s talk about another series of yours. Todd and the Book of Pure Evil. It’s about a group of high school students and this demonic book that unleashes all these horrendous things into their school, and they have a different adventure each week.
DAVID
You’ve seen those, right?
JAMES
I’ve seen most of that series. I’ve seen the episodes you’ve done. And it’s just one of those shows that pushes the boundaries. It’s wacky and fun and bizarre. What was the creation of that like?
DAVID
Well, it was completely politically incorrect. The guy behind that series is Craig David Wallace, who created the series as kind of a thesis project when he was at the Norman Jewison Film Center. It was his graduation project. So, they did a short film called Todd and the Book of Pure Evil which is their version of the pilot episode. And then they used the short film as the springboard to try to get the rest of the series made and Space Channel and some other companies got involved. And they ended up shooting it in Winnipeg of all places, covering various empty high schools with blood and all sorts of gruesome things.
And they wrote the first 13 episodes over seven years because they were trying to get them perfect. And I remember sitting down with Craig and he said, “Okay, we’ve got you,” and they had four directors, I think – and he said, “We want all the directors to read all the episodes.” So, I sat down, and I read the first 13 episodes, and I laughed. It was some of the best, funniest, most bizarre writing I’d ever read. And it’s a really weird combination of absolute gruesome horror and hysterical comedy and completely off base.
And when we got the green light and I went down and shot them and I had to shoot people saying some of the most horrible lines and I said to Craig, “Do you want an alternate on this line?” And Craig was, “No, absolutely not. It’s as written.” Because they were kind of like the Coen Brothers in a way. It was all so brilliantly written. And the wording was so biting and sharp and the descriptions and everything, he didn’t want any alternates. He didn’t want anything softened, and I realized that he was such a rebel kind of producer, that they wanted to go out and do exactly what they wanted to do and have everyone be so shocked that maybe it would be cancelled.
I thought, okay, that’s pretty bold, because you know, you’re never going to have a chance to come back and do this line, if you want to soften it and it was something just politically incorrect. But it was a very free series to do because nobody came out unscathed in that show. They made fun of everybody. And everything was just super violent, and I just had a blast making that show.
And then the weird thing that happened is it became a hit, and they went to Craig and said, “Okay, we’re going to do another season, so start writing some scripts.” And so, they didn’t really know what to do for the second season. The first season took seven years to write, and the second season took about three and a half months to write. It was a great series to work on; maybe the first season eclipsed the second season but the second season had a lot of really fun stuff in it and I had a blast working on it. Brave creative producers.
JAMES
You’ve worked on Earth Final Conflict, Andromeda, ABC’s Dinotopia, and you’ve done Stargate Atlantis, and I just wanted to touch on the Stargate Atlantis episode, you did called “Childhood’s End.” I watched it last year and again this week.
DAVID
That episode is one of my favorite things I’ve ever done. I was really proud of that episode.
JAMES
It had a lot of kids in it. It moves along really nice. And you mentioned Star Trek, and it has a little bit of the feeling of that episode of Star Trek, where the kids are growing up and they die when they reach puberty because of this disease. Remember that episode?
DAVID
It’s called “Miri.” With Kim Darby.
JAMES
It’s about a kid-based society.
DAVID
It’s funny you mentioned Star Trek, because when you work on those kind of shows and when you work on Andromeda with Kevin Sorbo, I go right back to being the kid watching the black and white TV in the basement. And I think, “Jeez, I’m actually here now. I’m creating this world. And even though I’m standing inside a fake spaceship, this is going to be so real for some 10-year-old somewhere in the world.”
And as people have told me, whenever you do anything, even if you’re not sure it’s going to be great, it always ends up being somebody’s favourite movie, or somebody’s favourite episode of the show. That’s what I take really seriously when I’m working on shows. Because I know it’s going to mean something to somebody and I can still tap into the 10-year-old in my head when I’m making these movies and try to see it from that perspective when I’m trying to tell the story.
And you know it was a great cast. And it was a really fascinating little story about these poor kids on this planet killing themselves at 25 because they think they can’t live to adulthood, because the Wraith will come and take them out. The kids were great. And you know we had a ton of fun, like, burying that little shuttlecraft that crashes in the opening sequences. It was a great episode to do and they had some really great directors on that show. Peter DeLuise was super nice to me and I just went in and I worked so hard to try to make this just a great episode. I’ve always been proud of that show and it won three international awards for directing. I’ve always been into the promotion factor of the career and I like to celebrate the work and hopefully people see it because you’re trying to keep the momentum of your career going.
JAMES
Let’s talk a little bit about Van Helsing and your involvement with that. I mean that’s a pretty bloody and effects rich show. How did that come about?
DAVID
Chad Oakes started out as a talent agent in Edmonton and then he moved down to Calgary and started Nomadic Pictures with Mike Frislev and they ended up hitting it big with Hell on Wheels, and in 2016 they asked me to direct Mutant World for them with Kim Coates and Amber Marshall for SyFy. That led to Chad getting Van Helsing and so SyFy and Netflix co-produced Van Helsing and they did the first season without me but then they called me second season and said, “We have a couple of episodes for you in a block.” And I said, “Great.”
So, I sat down and watched the whole first season. And the very first episode of Van Helsing is incredibly gory, and just blood splatter and violent. It had a little bit of that Tarantino visceral kind of punch to it that I just loved. And so, I ended up getting hooked on this thing and binge watched the entire first season. The first season’s amazing. It had a beautiful arc to the story, and there was a major change that happened in one of the characters in the series, about eight episodes in, that just completely knocked you off your chair and took the character in a whole different direction.
And when I got offered it, I said, “Can we do some Steadicam?” And they’re like, “Yeah, we’ve been waiting for somebody who knows how to use it properly.” So, I came in with an episode about cannibals called “Big Mama,” and if you get rid of all the politics and all the BS in the film business, you really end up being like a kid in a candy store. Because you get all these actors and these really cool scripts and this vampire apocalypse world that they created for you that’s brilliantly set-designed and you wake up sometimes and you think, “Was there an apocalypse, because this is so realistic.” And I’m just so proud of those episodes. I ended up doing six of them. I did two a season. And in the third season they called me and said, “We want you to do the finale.” Which, as you can imagine, is this golden position for a director. Everybody wants to do either the pilot or the finale where all the stories get wrapped up.
And if you said to me, that’s the only thing you get to do for the rest of your life, is this little weird vampire series, I would be thrilled because it was like playing cops and robbers when you’re a kid. You know, like chasing bad guys and stuff. And I just loved the whole good and evil battle with Van Helsing. It was so blunt and obvious. And with vampire characters you can do anything. And if you watch the series, they would take their favourite actors and they would make them not vampires for a few episodes, or the villains would become heroes and be humanized for a few episodes. It was just a blast. And it was a great cast to work with.
Aleks Paunovic played Julius and was amazing. And I ended up through a weird series of circumstances not working with the star Kelly Overton the first season I was there. She wasn’t in either of my two episodes. I didn’t end up working with her until the finale of the third season. So, she came to me and said, “I’ve heard a lot of good things about you. I liked your episodes but isn’t it weird that we haven’t even met until, you know, three seasons into this series.” She was great.
JAMES
So, since we’ve been talking about Van Helsing – lots of times you contrast your Van Helsing work with your Hallmark work – and you’ve directed other shows, I think that have a lot of heart, like Twice in a Lifetime, so it’s not something completely new. And you’ve done what? Twenty projects for Hallmark now?
DAVID
I’ve done 17 movies for Hallmark. Ten of them have been Christmas movies. Seven of them have been seasonal like summer/spring movies.
JAMES
I’ve got a list here: Marrying Father Christmas, Unleashing Mr. Darcy, Tulips in Spring, A December Bride, Falling for Vermont. And then you did as you mentioned Time for Us to Come Home for Christmas, which aired last December. Why do you think people have an appetite for these movies? And what draws you to the story as well?
DAVID
What draws me to them is just the challenge of making anything entertainment. I mean, anything you’re given. I mean, like I said with the killer bee show I started my television career with on Friday the 13th, I like being challenged to take stuff and make it better and elevate it. And with the Hallmark movies, it’s not as hard because it’s got a built-in audience and predictable storylines and people just love the comfort of that.
And I think in dark times, people just flock to Hallmark movies because there’s a comfort level and a feeling of safety and a security. And some of my best childhood memories were wrapped up in Christmas and that kind of magical fantasy feeling about, you know, the world loves each other, and everything’s great, and it’s all wonderful. That’s a beautiful feeling, and that really is Christmas when you’re a kid.
I think 85 million people watched these movies last year because there’s a huge need for safe entertainment in the world right now. Especially with so much upheaval going on politically and spiritually with people that I think people just want to pour themselves a glass of wine and sit down with some popcorn and watch these really safe wholesome stories because it has memories from their childhood.
JAMES
You recently directed Riddle Me Dead a Crossword Mystery for Hallmark, right?
DAVID
My 40th feature.
JAMES
So, what are the Crossword Mysteries and what is Riddle Me Dead about?
DAVID
What Hallmark smartly decided to do is they took their favourite stars like Candace Cameron Bure and Lacey Chabert and the people that they’ve done the Christmas movies with, and they started to develop spin-off mystery series with each of them. And so Lacey was doing Christmas movies and she wanted to branch off and do a mystery collection. So, the New York Times crossword puzzle editor, whose name is Will Shortz pitched an idea to Hallmark about doing a mystery series about a girl who basically does what he does – she creates crossword puzzles, but she also hooks up with a police detective and she ends up helping the police department solve murders.
And they’re lightweight mysteries. They’re not super violent, obviously, because it’s a Hallmark thing. They’ve done five of them now to great success and everybody loves Lacey. And the cop in the series is played by Brennan Elliott, who coincidentally went to my high school in Calgary but in the ’90s. And we’re shooting the first day and he said, “Well, I grew up in Calgary.” And I said, “What high school did you go to? And he said, “Aberhart, how about you?” And it was one of those weird moments where you kind of whittle it down and gradually realize that you’re neighbours. Anyway, so Brennan Elliott and Lacey Chabert started these movies and I directed number five, which premiered in April and it’s called Crosswords Mysteries: Riddle me Dead.
DAVID
And the plot is kind of fascinating. It’s about a game show. You know, all the scandals about the game shows in the ’50s. And people cheating on game shows. It’s kind of like that, and I can’t give too much of it away, but, Lane Edwards plays the game show host on this fictional game show called Riddle Me This and at the end of the first act he gets murdered on the set. And so Lacey Chabert has, of course, attended this taping and she gets embroiled in the whole mystery. And it was so much fun to do. We basically built a Jeopardy-like set inside a soundstage, complete with working cameras and I pulled things out of the script and moved them onto the game show set because I knew the stage was going to be fantastic. So much of what happens in the story actually ends up happening on the stage in you know, the dark hours.
It was a ton of fun and I’ve got a really good relationship with Lacey Chabert. I did a movie about seven years ago called The Tree That Saved Christmas with her. It was for Uptv and we shot it in eleven days and it ended up on the top five list of The New York Times for best Christmas movies of 2014. I don’t know how that happens, it’s like winning the lottery, right? So, I definitely advertise the fact that that happened, because I was really proud of it.
And Lacey’s famous to people from Mean Girls, and she was the little girl in Party of Five, the series. And The Tree that Saved Christmas kind of introduced her to Hallmark and now she’s done like 26 Hallmark movies. Mostly in Vancouver. So, when we did Time for Us to Come Home for Christmas together it was great to reunite with her and then while we were shooting she said, “Do you do mystery movies?” And I’m like, “I do everything. Vampires. Spaceships. Kid shows. What do you want?”
JAMES
Right, and so you did Crossword Mysteries, and you did the Christmas movie and you shot out in Vancouver with COVID protocols. How do you get a movie put together during COVID and keep it safe for everyone?
DAVID
This Saturday will be the first anniversary since the film business shut down. We called it Black Friday because the whole film business shut down on March 13. And slowly in July and August the industries in Vancouver, the IATSE Union and the Directors Guild and the various film production centers were trying to develop protocols as to how the heck are we going to get back to work?
And basically, film sets hired COVID departments. People that come in and are just specifically there to make sure that everyone is wearing masks. And we wear masks all day, obviously like anywhere else, but it’s still a hundred people working in very close proximity. Temperature checks are done every day. The actors on the show are tested for COVID once a week, or in some cases more than once a week, sometimes three times a week on some of the bigger shows. But as you can imagine, the worst thing to happen to the film business is something to slow down production because it’s just so hard to physically get these movies made.
And now we’ve got another whole element of safety and we have to just take everything even slower. So, it’s been a real learning curve. Obviously, the actors take the masks off just before they shoot and then pop them back on at the end and a lot of actors are wearing face shields. These kinds of plastic visors that come over their heads. And you know people are going around spritzing your hands all day long. And when you sign-in in the morning, when you arrive at set you have to go through a whole COVID protocol where you do a checklist, and they do the forehead temperature checks and everything and it’s really well regulated. One of the other things they’ve done is kind of divided into pods, you know. We get these wristbands when we go to work. And if you’re in the red zone, the hot zone, you’re in a small group of people that can be around the cast. And the extras, for example, are all separated from us and they come in at the last minute.
And I’m really proud of the fact that I’ve done three productions now with nobody getting sick. But I will say that I felt kind of guilty in some ways getting back to work when so many other people are struggling. I think things are starting to fire back up, but, I mean, I feel for the restaurant industries and all the companies that have shut down and closed. But I think the film business is one of the safer businesses right now, just because you can’t afford to get someone sick, it’s just such bad publicity and obviously you don’t want people ill for any reason. So, I have been proud of the fact that we’ve been able to keep people safe.
JAMES
So, you mentioned Riddle Me Dead and Time for Us to Come Home for Christmas and Lacey Chabert and I know I read some other interviews with her and she’s not the only one, but a lot of actors talk about how much they like to work with you, and they enjoy your approach on set. I wonder what type of work and creative experience do you try to create for the cast and crew?
DAVID
When I started out, I used to work as a PA for Access TV and I used to get yelled at by directors and they used to do a lot of screaming and had tempers. And I thought, “I don’t know if I want to be in this business if this is the way it’s going to be.” I worked for a lot of hotheads when I started out in my early twenties and so I thought, “If I was doing this job I’m going to treat people better.” And I always think people do their best work when they’re relaxed and happy and my parents ingrained in me that you have to create a world where people are happy.
And so I’ve spent a lot of time trying to be a party host when making movies because I have never lost that childhood love of movies. People I work with say, “You seem so excited making this that I got reinvigorated working with you.” Which is kind of why I’m there. I’m supposed to be a cheerleader. And I’m supposed to try to remind people about why they’re in the business. Because a lot of people forget. It’s got to be more than a paycheck. So, I think if I have a good reputation, it’s because I try to make people as relaxed and to let them have as much fun as possible. And I have great respect for actors. I love working with actors. It’s hard enough just physically getting movies to happen so why not try to make it as comfortable an experience for people as possible.
JAMES
What does an actor need most from his director?
DAVID
They need to feel safe. And I end up becoming the only critic that matters for their performance. It’s just the actor and me. You know, like Lacey and I have a great relationship. You work with people who trust you. And it’s about trying to guide their performance and trying to elevate the material because if they look good – I look good.
So, I’m always trying to make people feel like they have the best playground to work in. And then what’s always fun, a lot of times, even in comedies I always try to do a third take where you let people just do whatever they want to do. And you’d be surprised how often that material ends up in the show. When I was doing Breaker High years ago for Saban, Ryan Gosling, who went on to some success, and Tyler Labine used to be just hysterical together. They were playing the two kids and we would always do what we called a Jimmy and Sean take where we would just let them go and do whatever they wanted and some of the funniest moments from Breaker High were because you created a comfortable enough place so that people could spread their wings and just experiment.
And I don’t know if you’ve been on set in a while but because of the nature of the digital stuff, you don’t usually cut. You’ll shoot a scene and I do it all the time – still rolling – still rolling – still rolling – take it back, take it back, let’s try it again. And I’ll direct live you know. Just try it with this and try it with that and you don’t get this rigid “Cut” and the scene is over. You just keep rolling. Sometimes you do three or four takes without ever cutting the camera. Or you can drag cameras around and reposition stuff while we’re rolling because you have the freedom to do that. Because it’s digital. It’s not like back in the STORM days, I mentioned earlier, where you’re on a three to one shooting ratio, and I only have so much film. Then everything had to be very specific and perfect. But there’s so much more freedom now with the digital technology.
JAMES
Well maybe talk a little bit about that 40-year career what are some of the big changes you’ve seen over that span of time?
DAVID
Well, actually, I’m proud of the fact that I worked on the very first high-definition television series in the late ’90s. For a long time people used to say, ER, you know the George Clooney TV series, was the first series to shoot HD digital, but actually Earth Final Conflict was the very first series that used Sony 900 cameras and was exploring this whole technology and all the cameras were cabled up. There were cables everywhere. And now of course, it’s completely freeform, which is great. But I was very proud of the fact that I was really in on the ground floor when digital came along.
I miss film because when you used to shoot film, even on a TV show like Andromeda, there’s a comfort to sitting beside the camera and hearing the film churning through the magazine. That was the old days and we’re making movies, you know. But now it’s all so electronic. It’s all “ones” and “zeros”. “Stand by for data capture!”
I remember having my whole world kind of rocked years ago when I went to a Pantages Theatre in Los Angeles which was a designated testing ground for George Lucas’s 8k projection systems and I remember going and watching some digital stuff that had been shot at night on a 4k system and then projected in 8k, and I thought, “Film’s dead.” And in the last ten to fifteen years incredible strides have been made in digital photography and I realized, “Oh, you won’t have to ship film prints to theatres all over the country anymore. Now it’s just a little HD drive and eventually they’ll just be beaming the signal out from some central location to all the theatres.”
JAMES
And boy, did it happen fast. And you’re right you don’t have to do prints and you know 40 years ago even with a big film, they might only make 100 or 200 prints. And it starts in New York and LA and it goes to the A markets and then it goes to the B markets and like you say, it could be six months to a year before it gets to a theatre in Calgary because they only have so many prints. And then the funny thing is the print arrives in Calgary after it’s been on the road for a year and then the projection you see is full of scratches. And it might even have a film splice in it. It was such a totally different experience. We forget because what we see now is so clean.
DAVID
And to connect back to something we talked about earlier. That’s why John Carpenter’s career happened. It happened because Halloween was released city by city by city. And it started to do this gradual build. It was released in October in LA and into small little markets. And it was brushed off as a little shocker movie and then it eventually worked its way to New York, and he got a Village Voice review, where it basically compared him to Alfred Hitchcock, “This is incredible suspense.” And then his career exploded. But that kind of thing doesn’t happen anymore, where you get this kind of slow-release. In the old days, somebody would just take a print and drive it around the country and rent a theatre and show it in all these little markets and try to build up interest all over the country. That’s just not a concept that occurs anymore. Nowadays, you get Netflix dropping an entire series in one day.
JAMES
So you’ve had a career that has lasted 40 years. It’s a tough business. You grew up in Calgary so you’re used to the boom and bust cycle because Alberta’s economy is oil and gas, and film and television is very much boom and bust for a lot of artists. So, I’m just curious, what strategies have you used in your career to help you ride the ups and downs working in the film and television biz.
DAVID
I’ve been on a good run for the last four or five years. I don’t want to jinx it but Hallmark Channel has been very good to me, obviously, and with the Van Helsing stuff it’s been a pretty steady run. I’ve spent probably all of my 40 years being like a promo guy. You know, I’m just trying to promote stuff and I always thought that you’d eventually get to a stage where you wouldn’t have to do this anymore. You just arrive, and you’d be the famous director and people just hand you your projects. That just doesn’t happen. And it doesn’t happen more now than it ever did in the past because there’s so much product, and there are so many channels and potential places for things to be produced.
You know, when we were growing up, it was three networks, and then it became three networks and Super Channel, and then it became satellite channels and now there’s 400 channels that need product to fill them. So, I don’t know how you don’t get lost in the mix. I just think I’ve been really lucky. I’ve always been sustained by an existing industry and I got the reputation of being kind of like a go-to guy. I can’t tell you how many shows I’ve taken over where the director has been either fired or got sick or got COVID or something happened and they fly me in. They call me on the Sunday and fly me in on the Monday and we start shooting, and I’m walking onto set reading the script and going, “Okay, you’re married to who? And you’re going to kill him in this scene.” I’ve done that a million times.
And that’s part of the reason it’s so much fun. I’ve done work on 29 different television series. And television is completely about the clock. They don’t care who you are or who the director is and film is the same way. “This movie has to happen today, in this amount of time, and if you don’t do it, there’ll be somebody different here tomorrow that’ll do it.”
One of my things I’m most proud of is that I’m incredibly prepped on the shows I direct, like you direct them in your head a million times before you ever get close to the actors or the sets. And so you can see all the shortcuts in advance. We could do this together and combine this scene and do this and that. And television taught me to have this incredible eye on the clock all the time, right. So, I always know where we are in the day and the first ADs are coming to you and saying, “You only have so much time.” I know exactly where we are in the day. I know exactly how much time I have. I know what tricks I’m going to pull out at the last minute to finish this undoable day. Because in television, you’re shooting 12-page days. It’s just ridiculous. The pace is ridiculous. But I think because I’ve faced all of the scary stuff I feel more relaxed directing now because I don’t get surprised by too much. I know how to fix things when things go wrong.
And I’ve always felt like I still maintain the excitement about trying to make everything different and exciting, but I’ve definitely had ups and downs. I remember very clearly 2008/2009 when the bottom kind of fell out of the industry and they stopped making TV movies, and I didn’t work for two and a half years. Not one booking in two and a half years. And I had come off a fairly steady bit of work so I had you know some money backed up but I started selling property and I have no nest egg left and I honestly thought, “I guess I’m retired. I guess that was it.” I’ve had a couple of little plateaus like that. You just never know where the next job is coming from. I have no idea what I’m doing next week. I could get a call today and be in Budapest the following week.
JAMES
You mentioned World Fest Houston and you’ve had a chance to go to some conventions and do some panels and things like that and I’m just curious, what’s it like to go and be a part of that and talk to the fans from the shows?
DAVID
I love doing that. I used to do it a lot when I was doing Andromeda and Stargate: Atlantis I went all over the states to all these little science fiction conventions, and they asked you to come and sign things and so you take a whole bunch of pictures of you working on different shows with various people and the science fiction fans are the best. In Springfield, Missouri, years back, this guy rolled up to me in a wheelchair, and he was in a full Klingon outfit. And I said, “Hey, how are ya?” And he would only speak in Klingon. Sci-fi fans are so much fun. And I’ve done Comic-Con San Diego a couple of times, with 130,000 people, which has been very bizarre. Sometimes nobody comes and talks to you because nobody knows who the directors are but, when they see you have a connection to various science fiction shows they feel like they know you. And there’s a lot of seven-year-old Power Ranger fans in the world that think I’m a superstar because I directed the Turbo: A Power Rangers Movie sequel in ’97 some 25 years ago. I still get invited to the MorphiCons in Pasadena every year.
JAMES
It’s fantasy time Dave. So, what television series from the past would you go back in time and take a shot at directing and why?
DAVID
Star Trek. The original series. I have fantasized for years about going back in time and being on that set. I would love to have done that. I would have loved to have directed 24. I loved 24. It was one of my favourite action series. I would love to have directed some of the Night Gallery episodes or Twilight Zone even back in the ’60s you know. But probably Star Trek TOS would be the thing I’d go back to direct. I’ve walked around stage 31 at Paramount in Hollywood and had exactly this thought many times. It was the original Desilu Studios Stage 9 until they merged with Paramount in 1967. This soundstage housed all the sets that represented the interior of the Enterprise. Hung out there while they were shooting Ted Danson’s sitcom Becker.
JAMES
You’ve done a lot of interviews over the years and I’m wondering is there anything that you would like to talk about that you just don’t get asked? You know, any subject, any stories, anything that you go gee I wish they’d asked me about that?
DAVID
You know, I always like to come back to my parents and the fact that I was so lucky I got the parents I had because, you know, I was adopted. I really wish my Dad was able to have seen more of my career, because as we talked about he stayed supportive even when he didn’t really understand it because he knew it was making me happy. So, I always try to honour my parents. And the temperament that I have is really completely from them. I was nurtured in a very supportive environment when I grew up. And I love the fact that that extends into whatever I do as a career in entertainment and the fact that I have a reputation for being a good guy to work with. And I’m proud of that and I think my Dad would be proud of that if he knew about it.
And sure, the hair gets gray, and you get older, but inside, I’m still this 15-year-old kid making movies in the backyard. And I never want to get rid of that, and the thing I don’t say enough is how incredibly lucky I’ve been to have survived 40 plus years in a business where people just drop out. I’ve been incredibly lucky. I would love for you to put that in because that’s what I feel is the thing that I never get to say, because I was lucky to land with the parents I landed with and you know, obviously I’ve worked very hard, but I’m just very lucky to have been able to sustain a 40-year career because if you knew the politics I’ve had to negotiate and all the competition that’s whizzing by me you’d be surprised that I’m still standing upright making movies.
And people think, “Did you design this career?” No, I wanted to pay the rent. I just wanted to keep working. So, I’m happy that they still call me. I go where the work is. I’ve never turned down a job. I’ve done 17 movies for the Hallmark Channel, but I have no idea what I’m doing six months from now. That’s the way it is. People think, “Oh, he must have it all set out so he does four a year and you start this one and then you prep the next one and then this month you have a little vacation, and it’s never been like that. I just wait for the phone to ring every Monday and most Mondays it doesn’t ring.
“I guess the other thing that I love so much about our industry is the amazing people who have all, for better or for worse, made this decision to become a part of this crazy thing that we do. And they give their hearts, and their souls, and their blood, and their sweat, and their tears, and we all have our crazy stories about the crazy hours and the hard work and all of the things that go into making theatre, but at the end of the day we get each other, and we come together in this almost spiritual way and support each other and make something beautiful – and then it’s gone. It’s like poof, and it’s gone, and I just love that – I love the temporary nature of what we do. And sometimes it’s heartbreaking, but it’s a big part of what I love about theatre.”
Samantha MacDonald has been a part of the Canadian theatre scene for thirty years and has spent a substantial part of that time as both a director and theatre administrator. She was the Co-Founder and Co-Artistic Producer of Project X Theatre Productions in Kamloops BC from 2004 to 2010 and was the Artistic Producer of Theatre North West in Prince George BC from 2010 to 2014, and for the last five years she’s been a vital part of the Lunchbox Theatre team. MacDonald joined Lunchbox in 2014 as the Production and Operations Manager and then became the Associate Artistic Producer from 2015 to 2017 and for the last two years she’s been leading the company as the Artistic Producer.
In addition to her administrative and arts leadership work, she’s an accomplished director having directed several Shakespeare plays including, Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Tempest, and Hamlet for Project X and more recently As You Like It for Shakespeare by the Bow. She’s also directed several contemporary plays including To Dream Again for Storybook Theatre and several productions for Lunchbox Theatre including the very touching and poignant Flight Risk by Meg Braem, the smart and complex In On It by Daniel MacIvor and the very funny and successful Guttenberg! The Musical! which was the final play in the 2018/19 Lunchbox Theatre season.
I sat down with Samantha to talk with her about her love of theatre, Lunchbox, and her plans for the future.
JAMES HUTCHISON
So, I’ve listened to and read other interviews with you and sometimes you’ll say, “Oh dear, I’ve gotten on my soapbox about theatre.” But I want to hear you on your soapbox. I want to hear what it is you love about theatre. What is it?
SAMANTHA MACDONALD
Oh God, how long do you have? (Laughs) There are a number of things, but I think the first thing I fell in love with about this medium and what we do is just telling a great story. It’s the opportunity to put a bunch of people together in a room and touch them emotionally and to allow them all to feel something and to connect to something in a way you can not do in any other medium. Live theatre is the one place where we all share something so visceral and engaging in one space and we all experience it together at the same time, and part of that experience is how we respond together in a dark space to whatever we’re watching. And I love that.
SAMANTHA
Two weekends ago I had the great pleasure of adjudicating the Provincial High School Drama Festival in Red Deer, and my partner in crime was designer Anton de Groot, and one of the things he talked a lot about in his adjudications was exactly that and how on stage you are able to do things that you can’t do on film in terms of engaging an audience. So, you can take a piece of fabric that was once a parachute and turn it into waves or into a mountain or whatever, and the audience goes with you on that journey, and I love how you can tell a story in such an incredible way that maybe you would never have imagined.
And I guess the other thing that I love so much about our industry is the amazing people who have all, for better or for worse, made this decision to become a part of this crazy thing that we do. And they give their hearts, and their souls, and their blood, and their sweat, and their tears, and we all have our crazy stories about the crazy hours and the hard work and all of the things that go into making theatre, but at the end of the day we get each other, and we come together in this almost spiritual way and support each other and make something beautiful – and then it’s gone. It’s like poof, and it’s gone, and I just love that – I love the temporary nature of what we do. And sometimes it’s heartbreaking, but it’s a big part of what I love about theatre.
JAMES
When did you decide to go into this profession?
SAMANTHA
When I was in elementary school I was an actor, and I’m not an actor now, and I never ever will be, but I was an actor in elementary school and I loved it. I loved being on stage. I was Sir Joseph Porter in H.M.S. Pinafore. I was Tiny Tim in Christmas Carol. I did all these things and as I got a little older I used to see shows whether it was my sister in a high school production or whatever, and when I would watch theatre there was always this hole in my chest that I could never explain and that I never understood, but I would watch theatre, and I would just have this kind of pain.
After high school I decided I was going to be a corporate lawyer and work for Coca Cola, and because I’d worked on a couple of theatre productions in high school I took a technical theatre class my first year of college, and the second day of this class we went to the Sagebrush Theatre, which is where we would do most of our learning in Kamloops, and I walked into the theatre, and I stood on the stage, and that hole I had been feeling went fwump. And I went, “I’m never going to be a corporate lawyer.” (Laughs) And that was it. The joy of this medium just filled that empty space in me and I was in love. And you know, here we are thirty years later and I still love it. I still absolutely love it. And whatever that hole in me was it never reopened. It went away that day and it’s never come back.
JAMES
Let’s talk a little bit about the unique story of Lunchbox because lunch-time theatre was a big thing in the seventies. I was doing a little research about it and I was reading that in London you could see great actors like Bob Hoskins on stage, and interestingly enough there does seem to be a bit of a resurgence of lunchtime theatre going on now, but a lot of the original theatres have disappeared. So, what do you think it is about Lunchbox – because Lunchbox has had good times and tough times and it’s still here – what do you think it is about this theatre company that has made it possible to last for forty-five years?
SAMANTHA
I think there are a few things. I think the organization has always been very good at listening to its audience, and I think we’ve done very well over that large span of time of making sure that we are growing and changing with what our audience needs and wants. And our audience as a result of that has trusted us, and so even when we offer them something that’s maybe a little more challenging or a little different than they’re used to they will go on that journey with us because they trust us and what we’re giving them.
SAMANTHA
And I think there’s something really lovely in terms of being able to come for an hour and eat your lunch and watch great entertainment and then go away again. You know it’s a great story, but it’s not a huge commitment, and I think that’s something – particularly in our day and age – that a bite-sized bit of theatre is a great way for people to connect. It’s also, if you’re new to theatre, a really nice way to check it out without a huge commitment.
JAMES
Looking at this last season what have been some of the highlights for you at Lunchbox?
SAMANTHA
One of the big highlights for us was the opportunity to premiere a brand-new musical which we commissioned from a young local playwright. Emily Dallas is incredibly talented and a lovely young woman and so to have an opportunity to say to her, “I want you to write a piece of theatre and these are the parameters I need you to write within,” and then for her to come back with a piece like Brave Girl, which was our Remembrance show was really exciting, and our hope is she’ll be able to take it and expand it beyond a one act.
JAMES
How did you two connect?
SAMANTHA
I directed Emily in As You Like It for Shakespeare by the Bow a couple of summers ago, and for one of her audition pieces she sat down at the piano in the Theatre Calgary rehearsal hall and played this beautiful song she’d written about a young person’s struggle in high school and about being your own hero. And by the end of the song, both Susan McNair Reid and I were in tears and then having worked with her all summer long I had a strong sense of both her ideals as a theatre creator and also her talents as an artist. I mean, I would say I took a risk, but it wasn’t really a risk, because I knew she would come up with the goods.
JAMES
Brave Girl is, as you mentioned, a one-act play and Lunchbox does one-act plays. What is it you’re looking for when you select a one-act play for your season? What jumps out at you?
SAMANTHA
It has to have heart. The content and story arch can be about anything, but at the end of the day what we know is that our audiences really connect with and are engaged with stories that have heart. And by that I mean it has to be a piece that connects to our audience in a positive emotional way so whether it’s something that affirms their beliefs, or something that reminds them that there is good in the world, or something that takes them on a journey – at the end of their sixty minutes with us – even if it’s a dark piece – even if it’s a piece that takes them to a place that’s more challenging – it still, at the end of the day, leaves them feeling better off than they did when they arrived.
So, for example, I directed In on It by Daniel MacIvor which was a challenging piece for our audience because it was nonlinear, and it was darker, and there was a character who died in it, and it was about dealing with grief and death, but I think our audience really liked being engaged in those ways. And in Brave Girl there’s the story of these two sisters and their struggles and how it tears them apart, and then of course at the end it puts them back together again, and it’s also the story of the mother who loses her spouse, and then she watches this rift develop between her two children, and it’s her journey as well, and so Brave Girl has lots and lots of heart in it.
JAMES
Let’s talk a little bit about the season coming up. I’m curious, as an artistic producer, how do you balance your artistic vision with the business realities of running a theatre?
SAMANTHA
Well I mean obviously, as you know, financially it’s always a huge challenge, so when I was programming the 18/19 season, which is just wrapping up, part of what I was really aware of was that we needed to try and find a way to balance things financially in order for us to survive. So part of that was bringing in some shows because they tend to cost a little less, but I was really adamant that moving forward we were going to find a way to get back to producing more local work and hiring more local artists for our 45th season.
And in terms of programming, I always listen to the kinds of things my audience is saying, and I’m always looking at the things that do well for us and what people are talking about. And I suspect over the years we’ve lessened the number of actors over the course of our season so for us a big show is six. It’s a Wonderful Life was a six-person show and that was massive for us, but we also knew that show would sell really well so at the end of the day it wasn’t a risk. People really love the Remembrance show and the Christmas show, and so it is a bit of a challenge in terms of continuing to find new works that fit into both of those two categories.
JAMES
You’re doing Last Christmas by Neil Fleming next year and I was wondering how you arrived at that play as the right choice for next season?
SAMANTHA
I was looking for a Christmas show, and I went back over our history, and we had decided as a team that for our 45th season we wanted to look back in order to look forward a little bit. So with the Remembrance show and the Christmas show we said, “Okay, let’s look back at some of the stuff we’ve done in the past.” And Last Christmas had gone through our Stage One Festival, and it had an original production that had done very well for us, and now here we are ten years later and I think it’s a relevant family story with heart.
JAMES
And it’s funny. Even though it deals with some very serious issues like cancer it’s actually very humourous.
SAMANTHA
It is yeah. And it has that family connection between grandkids and grandparents which I think is relevant, and that’s a connection we don’t see a lot on stage. So, it’s nice to have that multi-generational story. And then similarly we picked Flanders Fields for this year’s Remembrance show because it was our very first Remembrance show that we did and it did really well for us. It also came through Stage One and it has a very clear affiliation with us as an organization, and it’s another moment of looking back to look forward.
JAMES
You’ve also got a world premiere coming up called Old Man the Napi Project can you tell me a little bit about that?
SAMANTHA
Yes, and that won’t be the real title that’s just the working title. So, Justin Many Fingers and I connected about this time last year, and we started to talk about what we can do and one of the things we’re going to do is have an artist in residence program. So, the intention is to take an Indigenous artist and offer them the opportunity to devise a brand-new show under Justin’s mentorship under the auspices of Justin’s company and Making Treaty 7 with Lunchbox as the production side of things. And Justin has now chosen that artist and it’s going to be Zachary Running Coyote, and he will create a show. And the intention is to take the trickster character Napi from the Blackfoot and to look at the trickster character from a variety of different nations perspectives and legends. I’m super excited that it’s going to be Zach because he is a super talented young guy and just a lovely – lovely human and a great storyteller.
JAMES
You’re ending your season with Nashville Hurricane with Chase Padgett who came here a couple of years ago to do his Six Guitars show. And for anybody who hasn’t seen him, he is the most amazing talented performer you’re ever going to see. I even went up to the Fringe in Edmonton last summer just to see Six Guitars, so I’m thrilled to see him coming back to Lunchbox.
SAMANTHA
Our season catchphrase is Together. The whole season is really about togetherness and acceptance and it’s about being all in this together and from the first show to the last show in the season that’s the message. And so in that last moment in Nashville Hurricane where he talks about his epiphany and realizing that we’re all here together and we’re all a miracle – that was for me – a beautiful way to wrap up this season which is really an encapsulation of who we are as Lunchbox Theatre and who we want to be in our community so yeah, it was the perfect show.
JAMES
So, after five years at Lunchbox you’ve made a decision to say goodbye and when it was announced that you were leaving I had this little moment of, “Oh, no not again.” Because you’ve brought Lunchbox to such a good point, and it’s healthy, and the seasons are good and they’re entertaining, and I was like who are they going to get?
SAMANTHA
When I announced to my team that Shari Wattling was my replacement and they cheered I went, “Yeah, okay we’re good. I can leave you guys and you’re in good hands and you’re happy so that’s what matters to me.” And Shari is such a smart lady, and she has really great ideas about where Lunchbox is going, and she has a significant history with the company. Her first professional gig was here. She’s directed for us. She’s dramaturged for us. She’s acted on our stages a number of times, and she was in the office for a period of time, so she has a really good love and understanding of the organization, and I think that’s super important.
JAMES
So then, what brought you to this point in your life? Why did you make the decision to leave?
SAMANTHA
There are a couple of things. I should be super clear that I am not leaving Lunchbox. It has nothing to do with this organization. I love this company, and I love the work that we’re doing, and my team is amazing, and if it were ten years ago and I still had the energy and the space in my life that I had then – then I would stay.
But I have been running companies solo essentially for about seventeen years without a break, and I just turned forty-seven, and what I became very aware of in the last couple of years is – that as much as I love the work that we do and as much as I love this industry – my own well has begun to run dry, and I needed to take steps to do a little self-care to refill that well before I started getting bitter and before I started getting angry. Before I stop loving what I do.
And another part that plays into that is when I was twenty-two my mom died of cancer at forty-eight and as I approach that milestone I am aware that in her forty-eight years she lived a vast life, and she raised five children, and she volunteered and studied and had a very rich life. She was an exceptional human. And as I look at my own life in my forty-seven years I’m aware that there’s something a bit lacking for me, because all I’ve done is work and that’s meant the end of a marriage of fifteen years and a lot of stress. So, I made a commitment to myself that I’m going to do something different and see if I can figure out how to live a little bit of life for the next little while. So it’s not about leaving Lunchbox, or even necessarily leaving theatre, it’s about finding a way and a space for me to have a life with a capital L and to re-evaluate things and then move forward from there, and I don’t know what that will look like but that’s the plan. And I’ve been saying for years, “I’m going to get a life one of these days,” and I finally just went, “No I actually have to do something in order to make that happen. No one’s going to hand it to you.” And I always say the Universe provides, and it always has in my thirty years in this industry. I’ve never been without a job, and there are lots of opportunities sort of floating around out there, and I’m just waiting to see what the next thing is that the Universe offers.
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You can check out the entire 2019/20 Lunchbox Theatre season below. Individual tickets to Lunchbox shows are just $25.00 or save some money and purchase a play pass which gives you seven flexible admissions for the price of six. Complete season details and ticket information can be found at LunchboxTheatre.com.
Lunchbox Theatre 2019/20 Theatre Season
The Pink Unicorn By Elise Forier Edie September 14 to October 5
Some battles only a mother can fight. When Trisha Lee’s daughter announces that she is genderqueer, the small-town Texas widow’s world is upended. Suddenly at odds with her faith and her family, Trisha must struggle to understand and accept her daughter’s truth. Hilarious and heartfelt, The Pink Unicorn explores a mother’s boundless love for her child.
In Flanders Fields By Rober Gontier & Nicky Phillips October 19 to November 9
This stunning work was our inaugural Remembrance play in 2010, when it received a Betty Mitchell Award nomination for Outstanding Production of a Musical. Based on the extraordinary life of Lt.-Col John McCrae, In Flanders Fields sweeps from rural Ontario to the mud of the French trenches, revealing the brotherhood, love, and true humanity of one of Canada’s most famous poets.
Last Christmas By Neil Flemming November 23rd to December 21st
Last Christmas, Jake’s wife Marge was still alive and every ritual was observed. This year, between two feuding daughters and a delinquent grandson, Jake’s holidays will be anything but traditional. This heartwarming comedy offers a contemporary look at the joys and challenges of the season, and reminds us that family just might be the greatest gift of all.
Good Morning Viet Mom Created and Performed by Franco Nguyen January 11 to January 25
Filmmaker Franco Nguyen travels to Vietnam seeking inspiration for his first feature film and finds an unexpected subject – his mother. Good Morning, Viet Mom is a comedic and bittersweet gem from a first-generation Canadian raised by his single immigrant mother. Nguyen shares stories about childhood; his relationship with his mother; and their emotional trip to Vietnam.
Old Man: The NAPI PROJECT A Partnership with Making Treaty 7 Cultural Society
The culmination of a co-operative Artist in Residence program with Making Treaty 7 Cultural Society, this project will explore the tradition of Trickster, and stories that examine our morals and the choices we face. The project will be an exploration of what this cultural character evokes and inspires in an Indigenous artist.
A Tender Thing By Ben Power March 21 to April 11
What if Romeo and Juliet had lived? This is the question Ben Power poses in this delicate and profound “remix” of the greatest love story ever told. The premise is simple – rather than taking their own lives, the young lovers have grown old together, their dazzling love undimmed, to endure a more commonplace tragedy. Shakespeare’s timeless poetry creates a new, deeply romantic and powerful play, and a strikingly different love story.
Nashville Hurricane Written by Chase Padgett & Jay Hopkins April 18 to May 09
Forty years ago a mysterious guitarist appeared from nowhere, conquered the music industry, and then vanished without a trace… until now.
Hot on the heels of his smash hit 6 Guitars, virtuoso actor and musician Chase Padgett becomes a manager, a mother, a mentor, and the guitar prodigy himself as each one tells their side of the rise, demise, and resurrection of the best damn guitar player you’ve never heard of: the Nashville Hurricane.
509 By Justin Many Fingers October 3 to October 12 Season add on in Partnership with Making Treaty 7
Still in creation, 509 is an examination of a young man’s connection to his Blackfoot ancestors, a connection he only discovers as he lays dying. The show will be a dance theatre piece, mostly in the Blackfoot tongue. This piece is part of a triptych created by Justin Many Fingers, supported by Making Treaty 7 Cultural Society and Lunchbox Theatre. This show is an add on to the 2019/2020 season, presented at The GRAND Theatre.
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LUNCHBOX THEATRE: Lunchbox Theatre is one of the most successful noon hour theatre companies in the world. It aims to provide patrons with a unique theatre experience by producing one-act plays that engage and entertain audiences. Lunchbox Theatre produces six plays per season, as well as the Stage One Festival of New Canadian Work and the RBC Emerging Director’s Program. It is one of Calgary’s longest-running professional theatre companies and is located in the heart of downtown at the base of the Calgary Tower.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder by Robert L. Freedman and Steven Lutvak at Stage West Calgary is one of the most entertaining and fun shows I’ve seen on a Calgary stage. This production is outstanding, and I guarantee you’ll be delighted and amused and laughing at the exploits of Monty Navarro as he plots and murders his way into high society.
The Tony Award winning A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder tells the story of Monty Navarro whose mother was cast out and disinherited by the D’Ysquith family when she married for love. Monty and his mother are forced to live in poverty as the D’Ysquith family remains unmoved by his mother’s appeals for reconciliation. When Monty’s mother dies and Monty learns the truth of his birth and that he’s eighth in line for an earldom he sets about to avenge his mother’s death and take his rightful place as head of the family.
The book, songs, and music from a Gentleman’s Guide are smart, fun, and witty, but having great source material only works if you have an exceptionally talented cast to pull it off, and director Mark Bellamy’s production has assembled a stellar cast that works seamlessly together. Kate Blackburn as Sibella and Ellen Denny as Phoebe are pitch perfect and hilarious as the women in Monty’s life who tempt him, tease him, and manipulate him based on their own desires and ambitions. Tyler Murree shows he has a real gift for farce as he portrays every member of the D’Ysquith family with an air of comic pomposity and entitlement. And Sayer Roberts plays Monty Navarro with all the charm of Cary Grant and the elegance of Fred Astaire making Monty one of the most gracious and likeable rogues you’ll ever meet.
The play is filled with memorable and smart songs including, I Don’t Understand the Poor, Better With a Man, and I Will Marry You as Monty knocks off his relatives one by one on his quest to become the Ninth Earl of Highhurst. Will Monty succeed or will he get caught? Will fate lend a hand? Will he marry Phoebe? Will he always love Sibella? You’ll have to see it in order to find out.
This is easily a five-star production and worthy of two thumbs up. In fact, it’s so good I’m seeing it again, and I’d highly recommend you see it before it closes, because you’ll have a darn good time, and this production won’t be available on demand. Theatre and live performance is the ultimate “here for a limited time” experience.
I sat down with the director of the show Mark Bellamy and actor Sayer Roberts who plays Monty, the Wednesday before the finale of Game of Thrones, to talk with them about the play, musical theatre, and our predictions of who will sit on the Iron Throne.
JAMES HUTCHISON
How did you both get involved in the Canadian premiere of A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder here at Stage West?
MARK BELLAMY
I’ve loved this show from the minute I’d heard about it. I love the music and I’m a huge fan of this style of musical theatre. There’s a lot of old school techniques that have been put into the writing and the structure of it. So, I learned they were doing it while I was here directing Baskerville last year, and they announced their season, and I was like, “Ah you’re doing Gentleman’s Guide.” And Kira Campbell who’s the Artistic Associate said, “Yeah we’ll get you for Gentleman’s Guide or for this other show, and I’m not sure which one to put you on.” And I was like, “Oh God, please put me on Gentleman’s Guide.” And they did.
SAYER ROBERTS
I saw it ages ago when they did the performance on the Tony Awards, and for a lot of Canada that was the first time any of us had seen or heard anything about the show. And I remember watching it and asking, “What is this amazing show?” And then I got a chance to see the show a couple of years later on Broadway, and I instantly knew that this was one show that I would very much like to do. And the fellow doing it too – he wasn’t the original – he was a replacement – but he was incredible, and I thought, “That’s what I aspire to be as a performer.” So, when the audition posting came out that Stage West was doing this I know that myself and almost every other Canadian was, “What? They’re doing this. I have to be a part of it.”
JAMES
The stars aligned.
SAYER
Exactly.
MARK
Yeah, they sure did.
SAYER
So, I went into the audition with a healthy dose of the cynicism that you always have to have as an actor, “This isn’t my show yet. I’m just going to lay down what I can do and show them what I would bring to the role, and if it happens, it happens, and if it doesn’t you move on.” But as soon as I walked into the room and Mark was there and Kira and Konrad Pluta, the musical director, and we started working on material I really felt like Mark gets this show, and I really wanted to work on it. It was a really fun audition, and I just felt good about it regardless of if I got the part or not, and as an actor you have to take that as a win. It doesn’t matter if you get the show or not. That’s not in your control. So, I left the audition going, “That was really fun, and I had a good time, and I feel like I established a good relationship with the people who are in the room and if that gets me the job that remains to be seen.” It was just one of those things where I felt this could work really well.
JAMES
Mark, I’m curious about how much you look at the individual and how much you look at the chemistry between the actors when you’re casting a show?
MARK
That’s hugely important to me. I’ve always said that one of my superpowers as a director is that I cast really well. And you don’t just cast the individual roles. You have to cast the rehearsal hall. You have to cast people that are going to work well together and especially in a show like this that has a long run you have to cast people who are going to get along well, and after many years of doing this I have a pretty good sense of who a person is and how they’re going to fit the room. Like Sayer said, so many people were excited to do the show – we had over seven hundred submissions between Toronto, Calgary, and the West Coast, and we saw probably two-hundred of those people either in person or via video because everyone wanted to be in this show. So, I was really fortunate that I got to pick from an incredible pool of talent.
JAMES
Have you ever had that amount of choice before?
MARK
Never.
JAMES
Are you spoiled now?
MARK
Yes. (Laughs) I’m really spoiled. Especially after working with these guys because there are some really distinct requirements for this show. You have to have people who have legitimately trained voices. Who can sing without a pop sound and these guys all can – as you’ve heard. Especially Sayer, Kate, and El – that trio of voices has to be so clean and they’re extraordinary. And I can’t actually think of anybody else in Canada I’d want to do this show with other than these people. I’ve been saying this – even before rehearsals started – that I have the best cast in the country, and this will be the cast that you will have to beat from now on.
JAMES
This needs to go on tour.
MARK
I would put this production on any stage in Canada.
JAMES
This is one of my favourite shows I’ve seen at Stage West in the last ten years.
MARK
I think it’s one of the best things I’ve ever seen here. And not that I’m biased because I directed it – but I am. (Laughs) I love the show, and because it was the Canadian premiere we worked really hard, and I was able to get these incredible performers. I was like, “We have to make this good. We can’t compromise anywhere. We have to push and push and push to make it as good as we possibly can.”
JAMES
I’ve been telling people about it and saying you’re going to like it – young or old you’re going to like this show. What do you think are the elements in this play that make it work so well?
MARK
I think there is something about a charming villain that we love. He’s like the antihero. But he is supremely charming, and we root for him. It helps that all of the people he offs, for the most part, have a slightly despicable edge to them or are deserving of their deaths in some way. But I think we love to see someone who’s an underdog and a bit of an outsider succeed in spite of all the odds, and it satisfies that part of our soul that goes, “I know he should get caught but he’s not going to and that’s so great!”
SAYER
The writing is why it appeals to me. It’s the book and the lyrics and the melodies. And it’s like a mixture of Oscar Wilde and Noel Coward and Noises Off and the classic British farce and Gilbert and Sullivan. It’s just such a perfect marriage of all of the mediums coming together to create such an exquisitely written piece. And I think, just like Mark was saying, the antihero charmingness – the fun farce side of it – he’s murdering people and yet this is fun, and there’s the underdog story, and it’s all bouncy and light from the beginning. It’s an entertaining show.
MARK
And there’s a lot of great humour in it. So, there’s that aspect and also the aspect that we have one actor, Tyler Murree, playing all of the D’Ysquith family. That’s a fun little tour de force. And it plays into that theatrical convention, and it gives the audience a bit of that, “Oh we know what’s going on. We’re in on the joke.”
SAYER
As if the show isn’t funny enough already it just bumps it up so much more once the audience starts to catch on that that’s the same guy…
JAMES
…and he’s playing all the parts…
MARK
…and it’s really clever, and it starts out really slowly, and as you escalate towards the end of act one you just suddenly start to rip through these people. Like literally in scene eleven – which is the ultimate finale of act one – there are four times where he changes characters and comes in and out.
JAMES
Well, on a show like this just how vital is that backstage crew for you?
SAYER
This show would not be possible without a dynamite costume crew and running crew.
MARK
There are two crew members who are dedicated to doing nothing but changing Tyler Murree into all the D’Ysquiths. And all of those costumes had to be constructed.
SAYER
So, he might be wearing a full suit, but it’s all connected with a zipper in the back.
MARK
So, shirt, tie, vest, jacket it’s all one thing.
JAMES
One piece that he can step into and out of.
MARK
Because for some of his costume changes he’s literally got fifteen seconds.
JAMES
That’s part of the magic for the audience. Didn’t he just leave and then he comes back.
MARK
I think we’re so good at it that sometimes people don’t realize what just happened, because it’s so seamless and he’s coming out so calmly that sometimes you don’t realize he’s just made an immense costume change.
JAMES
So, in terms of the production, how do the costumes and the set add to the overall experience of seeing the play.
SAYER
Well for me as an actor whenever I put on a costume it instantly amps up by twenty percent whatever the character was before in rehearsal and that’s particularly true when you’re doing period dramas. Costumes give you the aesthetic, and it definitely adds to the British sensibility of the show, and it changes how you move, how you sit, how you stand. I know for the women wearing those kinds of dresses and with their trains behind them it completely changes things for them. I didn’t have to deal with that as much because I simply wear high waisted suspender pants which I could live the rest of my life in very comfortably. (Laughs) And Monty goes from poor to slowly getting richer and the changing of the jackets really helped with that. That’s a real juxtaposition from starting with a rather old well-loved jacket that literally has pockets that are falling apart to ultimately finishing in a tux.
MARK
I think the set and the costumes are so vital to this show which was another challenge for Stage West because we need these Edwardian costumes, and that’s not something Stage West has a ton of sitting in their storage room, because they don’t do a lot of shows like this. So, a lot of this had to be created. Leslie Robison-Greene who is our costume designer is a genius. It was just incredible what she came with, what she was able to construct while she was here, and what she was able to adapt.
JAMES
Are there any particular songs that you just love and why?
MARK
I’ve Decided to Marry You, I think, is the pinnacle of the show.
JAMES
Is that the one with the two doors where he has Sibella in one room and Phoebe in the other room and he’s trying to keep them apart?
SAYER
Yes. I think with the exception of the bench scene from Carousel between Billy and Julie there’s no better example of musical theatre than the doors. I shouldn’t say of any musical theatre because there are lots of different genres but going for musical comedy there’s nothing better than that door scene.
MARK
It so hits the peak of the farce that the show is and that kind of encapsulates the whole thing. I think one of the things that’s beautiful about the music is that even though it echoes the British Music Hall and it echoes Gilbert and Sullivan it does it in such a way that it’s a homage that doesn’t copy it, and it doesn’t feel antiquated.
SAYER
It’s accessible.
MARK
It’s accessible and very modern and every single song carries the story forward and that to me is the hallmark of a really good musical.
JAMES
It reminds me a lot of My Fair Lady.
MARK
Yeah.
SAYER
It’s very Lerner and Loewe.
JAMES
I Don’t Understand the Poor really reminds me of…
SAYER
Why Can’t the English
JAMES
Yes, but it feels fresh and original.
MARK
I’m a huge fan of the Golden Age Musicals of the late fifties to mid-sixties, and this really does echo back to that era when all the great American musicals were being produced.
JAMES
So, what is it about musical theatre that adds to a theatrical experience? What does the music bring?
SAYER
Well, there’s an old saying, or a piece of wisdom, or whatever you want to call it, that says, “When you have something to express you speak it. If you can’t speak it – you sing it. If you can’t sing it – you dance it.” And the progression of that so perfectly encapsulates what musical theatre is. And in good musical theatre there is a reason the character is singing. I love speaking Shakespeare. I love speaking monologues and straight plays, but there is nothing quite as deep as you can get into, in my experience, as you can in musical theatre when you sing words that are accompanied with some kind of soaring melody that is an expression of the turmoil or the joy or whatever is going on inside the character. Scientifically music evokes a different part of our brain so the audience tunes into it on a different level. So when you mix the emotion that you can gain from poetry and the emotion you can get from a piece of orchestral music and you put that together that’s double the amount of emotion you could have alone by itself.
MARK
Music is visceral. It just is. It affects you in a different place, and I think it carries emotion in a way that a scene – I mean not that scenes can’t – but it just heightens everything, right? Which is what I think that saying is about. As you continue to heighten and heighten and heighten – the song heightens the scene and the dance heightens the song. And I think it’s thrilling to watch, and I think it’s also thrilling to watch really talented performers who can sing the way that these guys sing, and when you hear these voices it’s stunning, and it’s beautiful. So, I think that’s part of it because I started my career as a performer doing musicals, so they hold a special place in my heart because I think you can move an audience in a way with a musical that you can’t with a straight play.
JAMES
Well speaking of moving an audience, why should an audience come see this show?
SAYER
I think it’s probably because they’ve never seen a show like this before. And if you like British Farce, if you like musicals, if you like comedy and drama – you’ll like this.
MARK
It’s got a bit of everything. And I think it’s probably one of the most entertaining evenings you’ll spend in a theatre for a very long time. It’s ridiculously fun. It’s ridiculously entertaining.
JAMES
Okay, quick question for both of you – off topic – do either of you watch Game of Thrones?
MARK
Oh, God yes.
SAYER
I haven’t started yet.
MARK
Not any of it?
SAYER
No.
JAMES
I’m interviewing you now, but by the time this gets published the finale will have aired this coming Sunday. So, Mark who do you think is going to end up on the Iron Throne?
MARK
Oh, God.
JAMES
I’ll tell you who I think.
MARK
I don’t know. If you asked me that two weeks ago I would have had a different answer, but now after seeing what just happened…I think it’s going to be Arya.
JAMES
Oh, interesting.
MARK
I think she’s the only one who isn’t conflicted in some way who can actually do it.
JAMES
Interesting choice. My choice is Tyrion in the South, Sansa in the North, and Jon goes back to his direwolf.
MARK
I read a whole article comparing it to Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings and how you know Frodo doesn’t stay – he ends up going to the Gray Havens and that Jon Snow is Frodo and he won’t stay. He wouldn’t be happy on the throne. But that’s an interesting theory – that it splits. That might be it.
JAMES
Who knows? I’ve been wrong about so much.
MARK
Who saw any of this coming? Who saw that last episode coming? It will be interesting to see what happens. I had this random thought the other day that the only other person it could possibly be is Gendry because he’s actually been legitimized.
JAMES
Oh yeah.
MARK
She made him a Lord. He’s actually been acknowledged as a Baratheon. Spoiler! He’s the last and technically the Baratheons are kind of still on the throne. Anyway…
JAMES
…we shall see.
SAYER
I just love that.
MARK
People are so invested.
SAYER
And it just shows you that people need this stuff in their lives so much so that here we are talking about something fictitious and completely meaningless in the rest of the trajectory of our life and our world and politics and everything and yet it matters so much to us what happens to these characters and that’s why we’re engaged, and that’s why entertainment is not frivolous.
A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder
Book and Lyrics by Robert L. Freedman Music and Lyrics by Steven Lutvak Based on the novel by Roy Horniman
CAST
Mark Allan – Ensemble, The Magistrate, Mr. Gorby & others Alicia Barban – Ensemble, Miss Evangeline Barley & others Understudy for Phoebe D’Ysquith Kate Blackburn – Sibella Hallward Emily Dallas – Ensemble, Tour Guide, Pub Owner’s Wife & others Understudy for Sibella Hallward Ellen Denny – Phoebe D’Ysquith Katherine Fadum – Ensemble, Lady Eugenia D’Ysquith & others Understudy for Miss Shingle Sarah Gibbons – Ensemble, Understudy for Female Ensemble roles Jeremy LaPalme – Ensemble, Understudy for The D’Ysquith Family Luke Marty – Ensemble, Tom Copley, Dr. Pettibone, Guard & others Understudy for Monty Navarro Tyler McKinnon – Ensemble, Detective Pinckney, Pub Owner & others Tyler Murree – The D’Ysquith Family Sayer Roberts – Monty Navarro Elizabeth Stepkowski-Tarhan – Miss Shingle
THE BAND
Konrad Pluta – Musical Director/Keyboards Rob Hutchinson – Bass sub Jonathan D. Lewis – Violin Jim Murray – Trumpet sub Keith O’Rourke – Clarinet Sean Perrin – Clarinet sub Jason Valleau – Bass Andre Wickenheiser – Trumpet
CREATIVE TEAM
Mark Bellamy – Director & Musical Staging Konrad Pluta – Musical Director Howard Pechet – Executive Producer David Fraser – Set Designer Leslie Robison-Greene – Costume Designer Norman Macdonald – Wig Designer Anton de Groot – Lighting Designer Michael Gesy – Sound Designer/Head of Audio Shane Ellis – Scenic Artist Kira Campbell – Production Manager Artistic Associate Sean D. Ellis – Technical Director Ashley Rees – Stage Manager Darcy Foggo – Assistant Stage Manager Jennifer Yeung – Apprentice Stage Manager Taisa Chernichko – Dresser Chris Cooper – Followspot Operator
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.