Times Colonist

Dieppe overwhelms crew in X Company series

- BILL BRIOUX

Stephanie Morgenster­n stood on one of Dieppe’s steep, stony beaches in the north of France and — surprising­ly for a TV screenwrit­er — found herself at a loss for words.

Morgenster­n and her husband, Mark Ellis, are the creative team behind X Company, a CBC drama returning for a second season in January.

The series is based on an actual, top-secret Second World War spy-training facility that was located about an hour east of Toronto on the north shore of Lake Ontario.

The second season finds the fictional spy camp recruits immersed in one of the most savage battles of the war: the ill-fated Allied invasion at Dieppe.

“It’s quite overwhelmi­ng, actually, to be where such an extraor- dinary event happened,” Morgenster­n says on the phone. “To be standing on this beach takes your breath away. You feel so small and insignific­ant compared to the scale of courage.” Morgenster­n’s voice trails off. In a matter of hours, Canadian forces suffered more than 900 casualties at Dieppe on the morning of Aug. 19, 1942, with 2,000 more taken prisoner. The coastal town has never forgotten, and marks every anniversar­y with monuments, pageantry and hundreds of Canadian flags.

“Being there really re-inspired me and re-energized me,” Ellis says. “You feel ghosts there, you feel proud of your country. It makes you really want to do justice to those men who were actu- ally there 70-plus years ago now.”

The show’s second season, according to Morgenster­n, will be more serialized than season 1, with Dieppe “the culminatin­g event of the season,” spread over two episodes.

The Dieppe invasion was a way to, as Ellis says, “reference such a quintessen­tial story of Canadian loss and sacrifice. We wanted to honour [the soldiers], but also tell it from an angle that hadn’t been told before.”

In the past few years — thanks in part to the work of Canadian military historian David O’Keefe and the 2012 documentar­y Dieppe Uncovered — evidence has emerged to suggest the doomed dawn raid had a purpose and a complexity that went far beyond its legacy as a military failure. The savage battles along the beaches may have been a diversion tactic designed to allow special forces to raid German command posts and capture code-carrying Enigma machines.

Will there be any losses among the core group of characters who make up the X Company?

“I don’t want to give too many spoilers away,” Morgenster­n says. “I’ll just say the weight of the tragedy hits the gang personally. I think it is realistic and fitting that we do face mortality.”

 ??  ?? X Company series is based on a Second World War spy-training facility.
X Company series is based on a Second World War spy-training facility.

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