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Using teen humour to tackle cancer

TV shows like ‘Alexa & Katie’, with cancer as a major story element, have proliferat­ed in recent years

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Alexa Mendoza has cancer. But she doesn’t want anyone to know that. “Instead of seeing me, everybody is going to see cancer,” the 14-yearold says a few days before starting high school, as tufts of hair begin falling when she combs her hands through her hair. “Everybody is going to know me as the sick girl. And I am so much more than that.”

“Hey, they’ll figure it out, OK?” Mendoza’s best friend, Katie Cooper, responds sympatheti­cally, and then teases, “You’ll do something crazy and really dumb and they’ll all get to see exactly who you are.”

Moments later, the two friends shave one fat strip of hair, right down the middle of their heads.

It’s a pivotal scene in Alexa & Katie, a show that, true to its genre, captures teens grappling with typical high school dramas while Alexa also contends with cancer.

Creator Heather Wordham (Hannah Montana) intended to make a show about friendship. But when she saw a news segment about how a teen shaved her hair to support her cancer-stricken best friend, she reflected on her own experience with her mother and sister, who both battled cancer, and was inspired to focus on a character diagnosed with leukaemia.

Films and TV shows with cancer as a major element in the story have proliferat­ed in recent years. The Fault in Our Stars followed the love story of terminally-ill cancer patients. ABC Family’s Chasing Life drama, which was cancelled in 2015, portrayed a young woman’s life as she battled the illness. More recently, the CW’s Life Sentence explores life after cancer.

Alexa & Katie, which launched on Netflix, follows a different script, illuminati­ng the unexpected humour patients and loved ones stumble across as they fight the illness daily.

Alexa (Paris Berelc), who most likely just finished the more intense phase of her treatment, is an energetic and feisty teen. She is eager to start her first day of high school, get back on the basketball court and plot her revenge for longtime rival, Gwenny Thompson (Kerri Medders). Katie (Isabel May) is the perfect sidekick, cheering up Alexa in vulnerable moments with her pure, quirky awkwardnes­s.

“Yes, she’s dealing with cancer and yes, it’s talked about a tonne because she’s living it daily,” says Tiffani Thiessen, who plays Alexa’s mum, Lori, in the show (and came of age in Hollywood on Saved by the Bell and Beverly Hills, 90210). “But they’re also talking about what are they going to wear to high school for the first day, and boys.”

Wordham knows there are risks in making a comedy about a teen with cancer.

That’s why she had the crew film the same scenes multiple times in different tones, some more serious and some lighter, so they had choices when they edited the show. Wordham also interviewe­d social workers, physicians and patients at the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center and asked a test audience about the types of moments they would like portrayed in the show.

“The balance we always had to find was how real and dark do we go?” Wordham says. She adds that it was important for the lead actresses to never plead for pity in their performanc­es.

Berelc said she hopes people walk away from the show with a positive outlook and an appreciati­on for the people who support you in difficult times.

 ?? Photos courtesy Netflix ?? Isabel May (Katie), Paris Berelc (Alexa ) and Tiffany Theisen, who plays Alexa’s mother in ‘Alexa & Katie’.
Photos courtesy Netflix Isabel May (Katie), Paris Berelc (Alexa ) and Tiffany Theisen, who plays Alexa’s mother in ‘Alexa & Katie’.
 ??  ?? The show illuminate­s the unexpected humour patients encounter in bleak situations
The show illuminate­s the unexpected humour patients encounter in bleak situations
 ??  ?? Tiffany Theisen, Paris Berelc and Eddie Shin who play’s Alexa’s father.
Tiffany Theisen, Paris Berelc and Eddie Shin who play’s Alexa’s father.
 ??  ?? The dark subject matter is treated lightly to appeal to teens.
The dark subject matter is treated lightly to appeal to teens.

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