5 October 1998 (1998-10-05) – 20 June 2003 (2003-06-20)[1]
Made in Canada is a Canadian television comedy which aired on CBC Television from 1998 to 2003. Rick Mercer starred as Richard Strong, an ambitious and amoral television producer working for a company which makes bad (but profitable) television shows. A dark satire about the Canadian television industry, the programme shifted into an episodic situation comedy format after its first season.
It was created by Mercer, Gerald Lunz and Michael Donovan, produced by Salter Street Films and Island Edge, and filmed in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The programme was broadcast with Salter Street's satirical newsmagazine, This Hour Has 22 Minutes, and drew its creators, writing staff, and much of its production staff from that programme; Made in Canada was filmed during the summer, and 22 Minutes during the fall. Mercer starred on both until he left 22 Minutes in 2001.
The programme received critical and popular recognition. It was particularly well-received by the industry it lampooned, attracting many guest stars. The programme received 23 national awards during its five-season run, including multiple Gemini, Writers Guild of Canada, and Canadian Comedy Awards. In the United States, Australia and Latin America, the show was syndicated as The Industry. In France, it was syndicated as La loi du Show-Biz.
Plot
A satire of film and television production, the series revolves around fictional Pyramid Productions – a company where greed and backstabbing thrive.[2] Pyramid produces lucrative (but terrible) television and films for the domestic and international markets,[3] with creative decisions made by non-creative people.[4]
Company head Alan Roy is obsessed with appearances and staying ahead of trends, whether this means owning his own cable channel or having the largest yacht at Cannes. His often-idiotic decisions lead to extra work for his employees, who must fulfill his wishes or deal with the consequences.[5] The employees – Richard, Victor, Veronica and Wanda – manipulate each other and sabotage each other's projects to earn more money, gain promotions or work on better projects. None of them appear to have issues with breaking the law, and they seem to have no sense of morality. They generally only cooperate when they have an opportunity to destroy another company or a mutual enemy. Each episode deals with one major problem (or event), which normally does not carry over to the next episode.
Pyramid projects also provide storylines for the series, as the company's staff try to manage the inevitable complications created by the casts and crews of their film and television productions. Its cash cows are two series: The Sword of Damacles [sic], a parody of mythological adventure series such as Xena: Warrior Princess and Hercules: The Legendary Journeys,[2] and Beaver Creek, a parody of Canadian period dramas such as Anne of Green Gables and Road to Avonlea.[2] The staff also face complications with their low-budget, poorly-made films, such as Vigilante's Vengeance.[2] Many of their movies fail; they are not produced, or go direct-to-video in foreign countries.
Characters
Richard Strong (Rick Mercer), the central character, is an ambitious, machiavellian employee trying to navigate, scheme and backstab his way to the CEO's chair; in the first episode, he makes his way from junior script reader to television producer by having his boss (and brother-in-law) Ray Drodge fired. Ruthless and amoral, he is better at his job than most of his colleagues. Richard has had relationships with Veronica Miller, Lisa Sutton and Siobhan Roy, but generally as an opportunity to manipulate rather than out of love. The character was partially inspired by Ian McKellen's performance in the 1995 film adaptation of Shakespeare'sRichard III.[2][6] He personifies human vice, unfettered by ethics.[4]
Alan Roy (Peter Keleghan), the firm's CEO, is a charismatic but intellectually-questionable womanizer who often succeeds more by accident than skill and, much more often, fails miserably. He is frequently mystified that his management style – a combination of bad production ideas, offbeat health fads and half-understood slogans from management books – does not rouse office morale. Alan's career was launched with his first film, Prom Night at Horny High, which was a commercial success despite being lowbrow and indecent. (Keleghan had an early starring role in the 1983 sex comedy, Screwballs.) Keleghan described the character as a cross between Alliance Communications head Robert Lantos and The Simpsons'Mr. Burns.[3] Producer Michael Donovan joked that Alan reflected the showrunners' impression of him.[7]
Veronica Miller (Leah Pinsent) is the firm's chief operating officer.[3] Although she is generally overworked, doing the jobs of several other employees, she is still forced to do idiotic and degrading tasks for Alan.[8] Veronica occasionally becomes fed up with her poor treatment and sabotages a project or event, which usually spurs Alan to improve her working conditions and meet her demands.[9] The office problem-solver, she is generally an ally of Richard's in making the best of Alan's decisions but will double-cross him if necessary.
Victor Sela (Dan Lett) is head of Pyramid's film division[3] and a general office sycophant,[10] willing to do almost anything Alan asks of him (no matter how demeaning). He is usually very positive about Alan's schemes. In a test, however, Victor is the least loyal.
Wanda Mattice (Jackie Torrens), Alan's assistant,[3] uses her influence in the day-to-day workings of the office to obtain power beyond her role in the corporate hierarchy[5] and knows when it is to her advantage to act less intelligent. Although she frequently dresses strangely and appears frumpy, Alan is attracted to her and they frequently have sex in the office.
Lisa Sutton (Janet Kidder) is a producer[3] and Victor's girlfriend. Richard considers her a threat to his power, and Alan dislikes her for ignoring (or spurning) his attempts to seduce her.
Raymond Drodge (Ron James) is a producer. Formerly the head of television development, he is fired in the pilot after Richard and Siobhan frame him for sexually harassing Siobhan. He is later rehired in a much lower position[11] after Richard gets his old job. Due to Richard's manipulation, Raymond's marriage falls apart and he begins to believe that he is an alcoholic.
Michael Rushton (Alex Carter) is the dimwitted, egotistical star of The Sword of Damacles.[11]
Siobhan Roy (Emily Hampshire), Alan's daughter,[11] is one of the stars of Beaver Creek.[9] Fully aware that being the boss's daughter gives her job security, she freely schemes and manipulates to get whatever she wants.
Brian Switzer (Chas Lawther), nicknamed "Network Brian", is an executive with the television network which airs Beaver Creek and its main liaison with Pyramid.
Notable guest stars
Most people employed in Canadian television enjoyed the programme,[12] which created a stir in the industry and attracted a number of guest stars:[9]
Gordon Pinsent as Walter Franklyn, star of Beaver Creek and "Canada's most beloved actor".[3][13] Pinsent returns in the last episode as a dairy mogul who buys the company.[12] Mercer considered Pinsent's work to be a major influence on his career,[14] and was extremely pleased to have him in the cast;[3] during the series' production, Mercer narrated a biography of Pinsent.[10]
Peter Blais as Geoff, an actor who comes out and subsequently wants Parson Hubbard (his character on Beaver Creek) to be gay[11]
Andrew Bush as a young method actor who plays Blind Jimmy on Beaver Creek
Megan Follows (the real-life star of Anne of Green Gables) as Mandy Forward, the former "Adele of Beaver Creek", who returned for a reunion movie[15] and discovered that after her previous Beaver Creek movie, Alan kept the sets up to produce a pornographic knockoff.
Mark McKinney as Dean Sutherland, a released convict who wants to sell his story[15]
Don McKellar as Adam Kalilieh, an independent art film director[15]
Joe Flaherty as a mayoral candidate who hires Pyramid to smear his opponent[15]
Colin Mochrie[1] as Frank Roy: Alan's mentally-handicapped brother who, as part of an elaborate tax dodge orchestrated by Alan, is revealed as the actual Pyramid CEO.
The series was conceived by Mercer, executive producer Gerald Lunz and Salter Street Films co-chair Michael Donovan[17] in 1994.[16] Lunz had launched Mercer's career, producing his one-man shows and This Hour Has 22 Minutes[13] (the latter of which was made by Salter Street).[3] Mercer and Lunz formed Island Edge to co-produce Made in Canada and develop other projects for Mercer.[18][19]
Donovon, Lunz and Mercer wanted to satirize office politics, starring Mercer as an ambitious man manipulating his way to the top in a parody of Shakespeare'sRichard III. Instead of killing his rivals, the programme's Richard would kill their careers by ruining their reputations and seizing their power.[13] Richard would address the audience directly, breaking the fourth wall to share his plans and ambitions. Although they realized this was a risk, they felt that Mercer could connect with the audience as he had in his monologues.[20][13][21] Mercer had established himself as the first mainstream Canadian satirist to make scathing criticisms directly, without a comedic mask.[22]: 230–232
They had considered setting the satire in the federal bureaucracy in line with Mercer's political criticism (known as the country's "unofficial opposition party"),[4] but Mercer was not sufficiently knowledgeable about the government's inner workings. Believing that satire required a firm understanding of its targets, they set the programme in a television and film production office; this would be understood by the audience and provide many egos to lampoon. Mercer described the programme in a later interview as having a "Dilbert reality" of an office, in which some have a "suck-up kick-down philosophy".[13] In April 1998, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) approved a six-part series without seeing a script.[13]
The first season was cowritten by Mercer and Mark Farrell[23] over a two-month period.[16] They had both written for 22 Minutes[3] and had written sketches for several years, but neither had written episodic television before.[3] Lunz, a self-described "Shakespeare nut", guided the theme and style.[3] Farrell, Lunz and Mercer remained the show's creative force throughout its five seasons.[24] Other writers for the series included Paul Bellini, Alex Ganetakos and Edward Riche.[1]
The programme shifted from a dark satire to an episodic sitcom after its first season, and addressed the audience less frequently.[12][11] This was often limited to the closing line – "I think that went well" or "This is not good" – which might be given to a character other than Richard, depending on who was behind that episode's schemes.[11] The series' working title was The Industry,[25] which was changed to The Casting Couch and then Made in Canada.[3]
Production
CBC executive George Anthony, who had convinced Lunz and Mercer to come to the network years previously, recognized their talent and was firmly supportive of the production.[26] The programme went from network approval to broadcast in a record six months.[13] Executives ordered a thirteen-episode second season after viewing the first episode,[16] which was unprecedented for the public broadcaster.[17] Casting was done while scripts were still being written,[13] and episodes were filmed out of sequence to accommodate the actors' schedules.[3]
Filmed in Halifax, Nova Scotia, the programme was produced by (and a parody of) Salter Street Films.[27] It used Salter Street's real offices as its main office set during the first season, shooting primarily on evenings and weekends[2][3] from 17 July to 24 August 1998.[16]
The first season was directed by Henry Sarwer-Foner (also of 22 Minutes), who had his hand in the programme's editing, scripting, and overall design. He shot with a long lens to achieve a film-like quality, and sought to give it a distinctive look.[28] Sarwer-Foner directed 22 of the series' 65 episodes.[5] Other directors included Michael Kennedy and Stephen Reynolds.[1]
Although Mercer took time off from 22 Minutes in January 1999[16] to concentrate on the second season of Made in Canada,[17] he continued to appear in most episodes until he retired from 22 Minutes in 2001.[14][35]
The programme continued to film during the summer, with 22 Minutes filming in the fall.[36] The second season began filming in June 1999 at Electropolis Studios in Halifax.[37]CHUM Limited vice-president Moses Znaimer allowed scenes for the second-season finale to be filmed at the CHUM-City Building in Toronto for authenticity.[9] Season four began filming on 18 June 2001.[19]
While the first season of the series was in production, two Canadian film and television studios (Alliance Communications and Atlantis Communications) merged to create Alliance Atlantis.[2] This merger was parodied in Made in Canada's second-season premiere, when Pyramid merges with a company called Prodigy and becomes Pyramid Prodigy.[38] Two years later, Alliance Atlantis purchased Salter Street Films.[39]
The first two seasons were sold to PBS in 1999 for distribution in the United States as The Industry.[25] The series was also syndicated in France, Australia and Latin America;[41] the French name was La loi du Show-Biz.[42]
In 2000, DVD and home-video rights to seasons one and two were acquired by Koch International.[43]Entertainment One released the first season on DVD in Region 1 in 2002; it is currently out of print.[44] The series was telecast on the Canadian cable channel BiteTV from 2010 to 2015.[45][46]
The first and second seasons began streaming on the CBC Gem platform on 12 March 2020.[47][48] In October 2022, it was announced that additional seasons would become available,[49] with all five seasons streaming on Gem as of 2023.
Reception
The series was popular and critically praised in Canada and the United States.[10][15] The programme's 5 October 1998 premiere had 1,002,000 viewers, holding 75 percent of the audience from the lead-in This Hour Has 22 Minutes.[50]
Critical response
Shannon Hawkins of the Ottawa Sun wrote during its first season that Made in Canada had "all the makings of a hit", with clever dialogue, plausible characters and a storyline for anyone who fantasized about ruining their boss.[17] Antonia Zerbisias of the Toronto Star described the programme as "scary, cynical and biting", and felt that the production took huge risks in satirizing its producers and industry moguls and its choice of title in a country which looked down on domestic productions.[8] According to Stephen Cole of The National Post, the first season was well-scripted, funny and clever with solid performances but never found a target worthy of its "savage and cutting" satire. Cole was disappointed that the series remained a sitcom instead of taking on more compelling issues specific to the Canadian industry.[6] Rating the first episode 9 out of 10, a TV Guide reviewer said that the programme centred on Mercer's fresh and deeply-biting "satire with a smirk" complemented with an able cast; although the audience might miss some inside jokes, it was felt that the show should hold the 22 Minutes audience.[20] For Saturday Night, comedy critic Andrew Clark wrote that the programme created an eerily-believable universe with its casting, filming location and fictitious shows, and appreciated Mercer's ability to find a satirical line and hone it to a cutting edge.[4]
At the beginning of its fourth season, John Doyle of The Globe and Mail called the show "addictive", switching from absurdity to brutal satire accessible to every viewer.[51] At the end of the series, Doyle wrote that most in the industry had enjoyed its "twisted, vague versions" of real stories and scandals.[12]
Made in Canada has been compared to Ken Finkleman's satire, The Newsroom,[7][20] in which Farrell, Keleghan, and Pinsent had roles.[13][3][4] Although they share a documentary feel and were shot in real offices, Clark noted that their lead characters are distinctly different; Richard's ambition is all-consuming, and he wages "intergenerational warfare" against the likes of Finkleman's ineffective George Findlay.[4]
A 15th-anniversary Made in Canada reunion, attended by Mercer, Keleghan, Pinsent, Lett, Torrens, Lunz, Sarwer-Foner, Riche and Farrell, was held at the Canadian International Television Festival (CITF) on 16 November 2013. The reunion included a screening, followed by a question-and-answer session.[5]
References
^ abcdWedge, Pip (April 2011). "Made in Canada". History of Canadian Broadcasting. Canadian Communications Foundation. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
^ abcdefgh
Adilman, Sid (28 September 1998). "Rick Mercer's razor wit cuts his bread and butter". Toronto Star. Toronto Star Newspapers Limited. p. E5–E6.
^ abcdefghijklmnopqrLee, Pat (27 August 1998). "Salter Street's Satire : Made in Canada, the six-part series about the film and television industry wrapped production in Halifax and is ready to air on the CBC this coming season". The Halifax Herald.
^ abcdefClark, Andrew (October 1998). "King Jeer: With his nasty new show Made In Canada, comedian Rick Mercer bites the hand that made him". Saturday Night Magazine.
^ abCole, Stephen (11 November 1998). "A Right Heartless Failure: Made in canada: Rick Mercer's second season will need depth, life". The National Post. Toronto, Ontario: Postmedia Network Inc. p. B5.
^ abSaunders, Doug (3 October 1998). "Biting the hand that feeds him RICK MERCER The star of Made in Canada uses a TV show about the TV industry to take a swipe at the business and the culture that helped make him a household name in this country". The Globe and Mail. Toronto, Ontario: The Globe and Mail Inc. p. C20.
^ abZerbisias, Antonia (5 October 1998). "At last, a Canadian sitcom that just might be a hit". The Toronto Star. Toronto, Ontario: Toronto Star Newspapers Limited. p. E4.
^ abcdefghBickley, Claire (5 October 1999). "Mercer's Success Made in Canada". The Toronto Sun.
^ abcO'Donoghue, Darren (2 December 2000). "Mercer-less Humor". TV Guide.
^ abcdefgSt. Germain, Pat (4 October 1999). "Mercilessly Wicked...". The Winnipeg Sun.
^ abcdefghijAtherton, Tony (3 October 1998). "Rick's New Place – Rick Mercer drops his anti-Ottawa rhetoric for pyramid scheme". Ottawa Citizen. Ottawa, Ontario: Postmedia Network Inc. p. E1.
^ abOuzounian, Richard (24 February 2012). "Rick Mercer: The Big Interview". The Toronto Star. Toronto Star Newspapers Limited. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 14 February 2019.
^ abKlassen, Carmen. "Rick Mercer's Made in Canada sold to PBS". CBC Radio Arts – Infoculture. Halifax: Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
^
Godkin, David (2013). "Hall of Fame – George Anthony"(PDF). Playback. Brunico Communiations. p. 38. Archived(PDF) from the original on 6 September 2018. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
^Saunders, Doug (10 September 1998). "Mercer leaving CBC show". The Globe and Mail. Toronto, Ontario: The Globe and Mail Inc.
^
Hoffman, Andy (19 October 1998). "Sarwer-Foner gets his due". Playback. Brunico Communications. Archived from the original on 7 September 2018. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
^
Colangelo, Paul (25 August 2016). "The Great Canadian Hip Trip". The Walrus. The Walrus Foundation. Archived from the original on 29 October 2016. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
^Helm, Richard (4 October 1999). "Biting satire? It's Made in Canada: Rick Mercer's fine series unveils sophomore season". Edmonton Journal. Edmonton, Alberta: Southam Publications Inc. p. B4.
^"Salter Street Films sold for $63 million". Peterborough Examiner. Peterborough, Ontario: Toronto Star Newspapers Limited. The Canadian Press. 13 February 2001.
^Bailey, Katie (19 October 2010). "BiteTV rebrands with comedy focus". Media in Canada. Brunico Communications. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
^"Updated – Streaming This March on CBC Gem". CBC Media Centre (Press release). Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 26 February 2020. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
^"New to CBC Gem in November 2022". CBC Media Centre (Press release). Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 27 October 2022. Retrieved 1 March 2023.
^
Mathur, Meg (19 October 1998). "CBC coy about preem ratings". Playback. Brunico Communications. Archived from the original on 8 September 2018. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
^ ab
MacDonald, Gayle (5 November 2002). "Host Cullen shines at Geminis gala". The Globe and Mail. The Globe and Mail Inc. Archived from the original on 10 May 2017. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
^"Gemini Awards: the winners". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia: Postmedia Network Inc. 8 November 1999. p. B10.
^"Da Vinci's Inquest, Nuremberg big winners after three-night Gemini fest". Whitehorse Star. Whitehorse, Yukon Territory: Postmedia Network Inc. The Canadian Press. 30 October 2001. p. 14.
^ abPosner, Michael (30 October 2001). "Da Vinci wins third Gemini". The Globe and Mail. The Globe and Mail, Inc. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
^ abDixon, Guy (14 December 2004). "CBC miniseries takes seven Geminis". The Globe and Mail. The Globe and Mail, Inc. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
^
MacDonald, Gayle (25 September 2002). "Made in Canada leads Gemini pack". The Globe and Mail. The Globe and Mail Inc. Archived from the original on 20 October 2016. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
^
Dinoff, Distin (15 September 2003). "Eleventh Hour leads Gemini noms". Playback. Brunico Communications. Archived from the original on 7 September 2018. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
^Dunfield, Allison (9 September 2003). "Eleventh Hour leads the Gemini pack". The Globe and Mail. The Globe and Mail, Inc. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
^McKay, John (13 December 2004). "Geminis honour CBC's Human Cargo". The Globe and Mail. The Globe and Mail Inc. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
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