Dayton Daily News

CREATORS OF ‘MARVEL’S RUNAWAYS’ STRIKE BALANCE

High school drama blends with superhero stakes.

- By Meredith Woerner

A teenage PASADENA, CALIF. — witch, an alien, a jock, a child genius and a girl who can telepathic­ally talk to a dinosaur are all about to be late for class.

On a sun-soaked fall day in Pasadena, the cast of “Marvel’s Runaways” looks more like a revamped version of “The Breakfast Club” than the latest superhero squad.

Just off camera, the brain trust behind “The O.C.” and “Gossip Girl” — Stephanie Savage and Josh Schwartz — watch as their new series nears the end of filming its first season, which finished up on Hulu two weeks ago. The duo closely monitors its young cast silently. The superheroe­s are struggling with a betrayal and debating dissolving the gang.

“We can’t disband the group! We never even gave ourselves a cool nickname!” pleads purple-haired, dinosaur-whisperer Gert Yorkes (Ariela Barer).

“How about ‘The Runaways’?” suggests brainiac Alex Wilder (Rhenzy Feliz). “For all the kids we couldn’t save or avenge?”

“Too dark,” replies extraterre­strial Karolina Dean (Virginia Gardner).

Cheekily dismissing their own title demonstrat­es exactly how “Runaways” managed to carve out something new, balancing teen melodrama with sunny irreverenc­e and offering a young, colorful alternativ­e in an oversatura­ted comic book world.

Taking a break from the shadowy streets of New York that Netflix fashioned for its Marvel series “Daredevil” and “The Punisher,” Savage says that shooting outside was a priority. “This is a ‘blue sky’ show,” she explains. “That was a part of our pitch. It’s like the Marvel L.A. Universe.”

“Even their school, you step out here and it’s quintessen­tially California. It’s beautiful,” says Schwartz, gesturing to the walls of the fancy, fictional Atlas Academy (a sly nod to the previous Marvel Comics moniker before it was rebranded). “It has that thing that L.A. has, which is everything looks beautiful, the blue sky and the sun, but what’s the darkness that’s lurking underneath?”

The series, which was recently renewed for a second season, chronicles the adventures of a group of affluent teens: the aforementi­oned Gert, Alex and Karolina plus witch Nico Minoru (Lyrica Okano), jock Chase Stein (Gregg Sulkin) and super-strong tween Molly Hernandez (Allegra Acosta). The sextet discovers that their parents are members of a super-villain team called the Pride.

Even with that premise, the showrunner­s are hesitant to call it a genre show outright.

“We really view it as a coming-of-age drama, as a family drama,” says Schwartz, “and we’re telling that story inside of a Marvel show.”

The closest thing the audience got to a Captain America-like insignia are the enamel pins on Gert’s jean jacket. That said, the finale didn’t stint on sci-fi antics. The cosmic showdown between Karolina and Jonah ( Julian McMahon) — the mysterious leader of the Pride who is slowly making the parents regret their pact — felt ripped straight from a comic panel. And the cliffhange­r, with the kids officially running away from their parents, was typically Marvel-esque.

So how do you balance the drama of a high school dance hookup with a doomsday discovery? Taking cues from the comic cocreator, Brian K. Vaughan, also known for his work on the comic “Saga,” and TV’s “Lost,” certainly helped.

The showrunner­s sought Vaughan’s OK before proceeding, but they got much more after inviting him to meet the writers.

“The first day he came for lunch, then he came back the next day, on the third day, he put his stuff in an office,” says Savage.

“We’re like, ‘We got him!’ Which was important to us,” says Schwartz. “Not only to have his blessing as we were making changes, but also to have his incredible brain pitching ideas.”

The first big change was to flesh out the parents’ back story: Almost every diabolical act committed by the Pride was (loosely) rooted in good intentions. Schwartz admits that examining the older generation came from his personal experience. When he read the comic back in 2003, he was closer to the kids’ age, but, reflecting on the work 15 years later as a parent, things looked a bit different.

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 ?? PATRICK WYMORE/HULU ?? Gregg Sulkin, Virginia Gardner, Lyrica Okano and Rhenzy Feliz on “Marvel’s Runaways.”
PATRICK WYMORE/HULU Gregg Sulkin, Virginia Gardner, Lyrica Okano and Rhenzy Feliz on “Marvel’s Runaways.”

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