Daily Press

Hunt guides jump from page to screen of ‘Amber Brown’

- By Lynn Elber

Bonnie Hunt’s approach to comedy deserves a patent. She’s drolly forthright but reliably goodhearte­d, and gives viewers credit for their intelligen­ce as demonstrat­ed by pretty much everything she has acted in, written or both.

What Hunt has done for adults in projects such as “Jerry Maguire,” “Dave” and TV’s “Life with Bonnie,” she now generously extends to children — and the grownups who love them — with “Amber Brown.”

Based on the moptopped character created by Paula Danziger in a bestsellin­g line of books, the 10-episode Apple TV+ series, now streaming, was written and directed by Hunt, who’s also in charge as the showrunner.

While she has acted and voiced parts in kid-oriented movies, including “Jumanji” and the “Toy Story” and “Cars” franchises, “Amber Brown” is the first such project that’s hers. But Hunt says she has always envisioned a family audience when she writes and considers storytelli­ng a privilege.

“I grew up on TV and movies, and I know how powerful it can be as a child,” she said. “When I would see my parents watch something like ‘The Mary Tyler Moore Show’ or ‘The Dick Van Dyke Show’ ... they were just in those moments, free of stress and worry and just laughing.”

Hunt had begun writing a series about an eccentric aunt when she ran into an executive with a production company that had the rights to the “Amber Brown” books. They joined forces, and Hunt was introduced to the family of the late author, who died in 2004 at age 59.

“When we met, Bonnie seemed like a great fit to fill Paula’s very large (and sequined) shoes,” Carrie Danziger, the author’s niece and inspiratio­n for the Amber books, said in an email. “Just like Paula, Bonnie is a very dedicated and loving aunt” and has the comedy knowhow to capture the books’ spirit.

Hunt made changes (with the family’s blessing, she notes) that soften some of the harsher edges of Amber’s life. The youngster still yearns for her divorced parents to reunite, but their relationsh­ip is less bitter than on the page, and they’re somewhat more attuned to their daughter’s feelings.

Amber is two years older then her 9-year-old book version and is starting middle school. She’s also a budding artist, “almost a savant,” as Hunt puts it, expressing her deepest feelings in vibrant sketches that come to animated life and show what she can’t tell.

“But she also has a video diary, so we have what she can say out loud and what she can’t,” Hunt said. The combinatio­n gives the show a fresh look, but there’s a deliberate effort to avoid the overly hip and

hyper tone of many tween programs.

“I wanted a little bit of that ‘Andy Griffith’ quality that I can still watch today over and over again, the timelessne­ss of it, the pacing of it, the heart and soul, and the humor that comes from the truth,” she said.

Race isn’t a theme in the series, but Amber’s family is multiethni­c and the cast is diverse. Her dad is played by Michael Yo, who is of Black and Asian ancestry, with Sarah Drew as her mom. Carsyn Rose, who boasts an exuberant crown of curls, stars as Amber, who in the books is depicted as a freckle-faced, white kid with a mass of red hair.

When the casting call went out to agents, Hunt said, the characters were identified only as “mom, dad, friend” and without further descriptio­n. In Rose’s audition, she showed “such a beautiful quality, very authentic,” and Hunt was later impressed by Drew and Yo.

“They became the family,” Hunt said.

With the entertainm­ent industry finally opening up to diversity and inclusion, “now I just want to show it. I don’t want to tell it,” Hunt said. “It just is, because it’s beautiful, and it’s part of us.”

 ?? APPLE TV+ ?? Carsyn Rose stars in “Amber Brown.”
APPLE TV+ Carsyn Rose stars in “Amber Brown.”
 ?? ?? Hunt
Hunt

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