Edmonton Journal

Roomies pose as psychics in series

Innovative Canadian duo delivers CLAIREvoya­nt to YouTube channel

- VICTORIA AHEARN

Representa­tion was top of mind for Natasha Negovanlis and Annie Briggs as they created the new Canadian web series CLAIREvoya­nt, about best friends who pose as online psychics.

After all, the other digital show they ’re known for, the wildly popular Carmilla, has been heralded by fans and critics for its queer and female representa­tion. Negovanlis plays a lesbian vampire alongside Elise Bauman as her dorm roommate in the series that’s won them both audience/fans’ choice trophies at the Canadian Screen Awards.

And CLAIREvoya­nt, now streaming on the YouTube channel KindaTV, was partially funded by fans through an Indiegogo campaign.

“So when we were writing, we definitely had our fans in mind in the sense of wanting to create realistic women onscreen, wanting to create positive role models, wanting to continue to show positive queer representa­tion onscreen,” Negovanlis, who was born in Toronto, said in a recent interview.

“With that being said, we also created the type of show that we would want to watch and our friends would want to watch. We’re in our later 20s, early 30s, and so is the cast.

“So we wanted to create something that was almost, in a way, a Canadian Broad City but with a supernatur­al twist — an absurdist comedy that still had heart.”

Negovanlis and Briggs play roommates who pretend to be online psychics to make rent money. Their plan takes an unexpected turn when Claire, played by Negovanlis, turns out to have real clairvoyan­t abilities.

The stars say Claire is openly queer and there is a queer love story in the series, which has 14 episodes, ranging from five to seven minutes in length. The episodes will be released on KindaTV in blocks of three.

“I’m really interested as an artist right now in seeing a greater form of representa­tion on camera — whether it be racially, different body types, different looking people, telling stories of people from different background­s, sexuality, how they identify, you name it,” said Briggs, who hails from Halifax.

“We’re coming out of a phase of entertainm­ent being pretty streamline­d into focusing on just a particular group of people and I think audiences are bored.

“The great thing about working in the digital world is that there’s a more immediate feedback loop in terms of the audiences. In relation to Carmilla, they ’ve made it pretty clear in terms of what they’re interested in and what resonates with them. So we’re just trying to speak to that.”

The cast also includes Jsin Sasha as the francophon­e boyfriend of Ruby (Briggs), Sabryn Rock as “Claire’s dream girl,” and Theresa Tova as a famous online fortune teller.

The seed for CLAIREvoya­nt was planted when Negovanlis went to a tarot card reader and saw the same woman months later getting a manicure in a nail salon.

“I thought, ‘This is so interestin­g. Like, what do psychics do in their spare time? Do they have other jobs?’” she said.

“Because I have a background in comedy, there was a stock character, a call-in psychic, that I created for myself years ago. So we started spitballin­g and sharing ideas one night while hanging out and it just grew from there.”

Negovanlis and Briggs said they’re both fascinated with psychics, fortune tellers and the occult, and know how to read tarot cards.

They based the show off that as well as their friendship­s and experience of “being starving artists.”

“It’s very much inspired by Annie’s time living in New York and my time living in Montreal when we were students and doing theatre,” Negovanlis said.

“They say write what you know, and in many ways we did that — but we put it in an absurdist universe.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Natasha Negovanlis, left, and Annie Briggs, creators of the popular Carmilla, debut a new absurdist web series, which drew on many of their experience­s of friendship and being starving artists.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Natasha Negovanlis, left, and Annie Briggs, creators of the popular Carmilla, debut a new absurdist web series, which drew on many of their experience­s of friendship and being starving artists.

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