The Peterborough Examiner

Hard to keep track of Episodes

- BILL BRIOUX THE CANADIAN PRESS Bill Brioux is a freelance TV columnist based in Brampton, Ont.

With so many shows packed into “peak TV” schedules, even the most ardent viewer can lose track of episodes — or even an entire series named Episodes.

The comedy starring Matt LeBlanc — who won a Golden Globe for essentiall­y spoofing himself — returns for a fifth and final season Sunday night on CraveTV.

This cheeky send-up of Hollywood is an example of the new borderless business of TV. The series is set in Los Angeles, shot in London, and commission­ed by both the US and the U.K.

“I have an American career and I didn’t have to go to America to do it,” says Stephen Mangan, who plays mop-haired British writerprod­ucer Sean Lincoln on the series.

The London-born, Cambridgee­ducated Mangan says he has nothing against America. “I just have a young family and it’s very hard to ship them all out.”

Prior to Episodes, the 49-year-old was a familiar face on the British telly thanks to a string of popular,

short-run comedies, including I’m Alan Partridge and Green Wing. The final seven episodes of Episodes were shot more than a year ago.

In fact, so much time has passed since the fourth season of Episodes aired that Mangan was able to shoot a whole other series that has since come and gone: Houdini & Doyle.

The historical drama had a threecount­ry production connection: Canada’s Shaftesbur­y, as well as British and American producers. Episodes of Houdini & Doyle were shot in the north of England as well as in Toronto.

Mangan is paired on Episodes with fellow British actor Tamsin Greig, who portrays Beverly Lincoln, Sean’s wife and writing partner.

When Episodes began, their characters came to America to adapt their British hit about a school headmaster, only to see American network executives twist it into a series about a hockey coach (played by LeBlanc). That show-within-ashow was called Pucks.

Mangan says he’d never even seen hockey until he attended

a Maple Leafs game in Toronto about a year ago while shooting Houdini & Doyle.

“There were people fighting and punching each other so I assume it was a hockey game.”

As the final season of Episodes begins, LeBlanc has found a new career as a game show host. The bad news is he can probably kiss his acting career goodbye.

His former sitcom writers, the Lincolns, are still stuck in America, this time working for a British rival who is destroying a new show they created, The Opposite of Us.

“The real strength of the show is the writing,” says Mangan, giving full credit to former Friends cocreator David Crane and his writing partner Jeffrey Klarik (Mad About You).

LeBlanc, who worked in a cohosting gig on the British motoring series Top Gear between seasons of Episodes, has already moved on to his next series.

The second season of LeBlanc’s family sitcom Man with a Plan is scheduled to return in midseason.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Matt LeBlanc arrives at a premiere for the final season of Episodes at The Paley Center for Media in Beverly Hills, Calif. Stephen Mangan, who portrays Sean Lincoln on the show, says its real strength is the writing.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Matt LeBlanc arrives at a premiere for the final season of Episodes at The Paley Center for Media in Beverly Hills, Calif. Stephen Mangan, who portrays Sean Lincoln on the show, says its real strength is the writing.

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