Montreal Gazette

HER SIDE OF THE STORY

Anne of Green Gables among female protagonis­ts who resonate with contempora­ry audiences

- BILL BRIOUX

The “female gaze” has become a hot topic in television.

The explosion in scripted content has opened the door to a new generation of female stars and showrunner­s, and as a result, gender has become an increasing­ly important factor in storytelli­ng’s point of view.

Series such as the female prison drama Orange Is the New Black, created by Jenji Kohan and returning for a fifth season next month on Netflix, have led the way. So has Lena Dunham’s Girls, as well as writer-director Jill Soloway’s Amazon dramas Transparen­t and the new I Love Dick. The Handmaid’s Tale, based on Margaret Atwood’s bestseller, and comedies Crazy ExGirlfrie­nd and Fleabag have also been part of the conversati­on.

Moira Walley-Beckett suggests it can actually be traced back nearly 110 years.

Walley-Beckett is the executive producer and screenwrit­er behind Anne, the recent CBC series based on the beloved Anne of Green Gables novels from Canadian author Lucy Maud Montgomery. The first of the books was published in 1908.

“There’s so much conversati­on in the world right now about feminism, bullying, gender parity, equality and prejudice against people who come from away and these are all themes that are built right into L.M. Montgomery’s stories,” says Walley-Beckett, who was in New York recently to promote the series, renamed Anne with an E for its internatio­nal release on Netflix.

In adapting Montgomery’s prose, Walley-Beckett says “it felt really exciting to be part of that conversati­on right now. That was a huge impetus for wanting to tell this story.”

She says she first read Montgomery’s Anne books when she was about 12 years old.

“I grew up in Canada where it was almost required reading,” says the Vancouver native. “I just devoured that entire series. I didn’t think anybody saw me for days.”

Re-reading the books as an adult in preparatio­n for adapting the series was a completely different experience, she says. For one thing, she found that Anne was “an accidental feminist before the term was even coined.

“She’s outspoken, she’s opinionate­d, she’s fiery fierce and brave. I really wanted to highlight her feminist traits because it is the moment right now.”

The first season of the show consists of eight episodes — will there be more? Anne was well received critically in Canada but the ratings did not quite live up to expectatio­ns, despite a massive promotiona­l campaign. The series premièred to close to a million viewers on CBC, with the following episodes in the 700,000 to 800,000 range. CBC has yet to officially renew the series.

Both Walley-Beckett and young star Amybeth McNulty say they hope to do more Anne.

“I think it would be pretty fun,” says Walley-Beckett. “We’re not even anywhere near through the first book.”

Part of the challenge for Anne was living up to the high ratings expectatio­ns set by the 1985 CBC version created by Kevin Sullivan. That Anne of Green Gables miniseries was Canada’s version of Roots, opening to close to five million viewers. Sundays, however, were far less cluttered back then (and ratings-gathering far less precise).

Sullivan’s Anne was much more romanticiz­ed than the new version. Walley-Beckett, whose Breaking Bad scripts won acclaim, sought to explore Anne’s abused orphan backstory.

“I’m really drawn to wounded people and human stories,” she says, “and really excited about this current conversati­on in the world.”

The “E” in the show’s new title could stand for export. Netflix enjoys close to 100 million subscriber­s worldwide, with nearly half in the United States. The Anne of Green Gables stories are popular there (Sullivan’s series was a hit in the ’80s on PBS), but also elsewhere. Japanese tourists, for example, regularly visit the Anne of Green Gables museum in Prince Edward Island.

“I’ve seen a couple of Instagram postings where people have tagged me in drawings,” says 15-year-old Irish actress McNulty of the foreign interest. “I thought, ‘You haven’t even seen it yet and already you’re making drawings!’ They’re obviously excited.”

(Anne is) outspoken, she’s opinionate­d, she’s fiery fierce and brave. I really wanted to highlight her feminist traits because it is the moment right now.

 ?? NORTHWOOD ENTERTAINM­ENT/CBC/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Amybeth McNulty landed the lead in Anne. The title character was “an accidental feminist before the term was even coined,” says screenwrit­er Moira Walley-Beckett.
NORTHWOOD ENTERTAINM­ENT/CBC/THE CANADIAN PRESS Amybeth McNulty landed the lead in Anne. The title character was “an accidental feminist before the term was even coined,” says screenwrit­er Moira Walley-Beckett.
 ?? NETFLIX ?? Danielle Brooks stars as Taystee in Orange Is the New Black, one of many shows that sees the world through female eyes.
NETFLIX Danielle Brooks stars as Taystee in Orange Is the New Black, one of many shows that sees the world through female eyes.

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