Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

MR. CHRISTMAS MOVIE FINDS JOY

RON OLIVER’S NEW FILM MIXES HOLIDAY FUN, ‘REAL HOUSEWIVES.’

- BY DANIEL VAILLANCOU­RT

MY M O M WA S a big Christmas nut,” says Daytime Emmy-nominated writer, director and producer Ron Oliver, reminiscin­g about his youth in the tiny town of Dundalk, Ontario, a two-hour drive north of Toronto. “All year, we’d build up to it. To this day, I have childhood memories of our main street — the stores, the snow, the trees, the twinkling lights. The whole classic Currier and Ives Christmas. Every time I make these movies, I strive to have those moments.” ¶ It would take more than four decades for Oliver to carve a candy-cane-colored career out of the passion for all things Noel he inherited from his mother. First, he’d have to relocate to Southern California — as much to escape his native country’s biting winters as to work in Hollywood. Oliver and his husband of 10 years, Eric Bowes, have lived in Palm Springs since 2001, and at his request, we’ve met at the Reef, a Tiki bar housed at Caliente Tropics, a resort hotel on the south end of town. The funny, friendly 61-year-old is in Bermudas and a

short-sleeved shirt, sipping neither eggnog nor mulled wine but a margarita.

“I’ve made all kinds of stuff — thrillers, horror, kids, comedies,” maintains the man whose first taste of show business came when he performed as a teen magician in high school, and who’s been a card-carrying member of L.A.’s Magic Castle for more than a quarter-century. “None of it has had the resonance with audiences that my Christmas movies have.”

Here’s just a sampling of the holiday titles he has written and/or directed since 2005: “A Dennis the Menace Christmas,” “Angel of Christmas,” “Romance at Reindeer Lodge,” “Love at the Thanksgivi­ng Day

Parade” and an untitled Lindsay Lohan project shot in Utah and coming to Netflix next year.

One of Oliver’s more recent favorites began as a joke. In April 2019, he posted on social media an image of himself sipping Champagne at the bar of a famed New York City landmark, commenting that he was researchin­g a trinket titled “Christmas at the Plaza.”

“Monday morning,” recalls Oliver, “I get a phone call from my executive at Hallmark saying, ‘If you’re serious, and you can make it happen, we’ll make that movie. Here’s your budget.’ ” It aired to great fanfare seven months later.

Next up for Oliver is the justcomple­ted “Real Housewives of the North Pole,” streaming Thursday, Peacock’s first foray into the genre.

“It’s the story of two best friends who live across the street from each other,” he says of the film, which is set not in the North Pole but in the fictional hamlet of North Pole, Vt. “Their friendship is tested and collapses, so they decide to compete against each other in the annual holiday decorating contest. In doing so, they learn a little bit about what the nature of friendship really is and how much they truly need each other.”

The tip of the hat to the insanely successful reality TV franchise is no accident, and in a stroke of casting genius, actress Kyle Richards of “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” is pitted against “Breaking Bad” breakout Betsy Brandt. A smattering of other “Real Housewives” doyennes make merry cameo appearance­s.

“Kyle’s a terrific actor, but what amazed me is her off-thecharts comic timing,” notes Oliver. “Betsy brought her usual brilliance, of course. The yin and yang of their on-screen relationsh­ip created this perfect comic and dramatic chemistry.”

The genesis of this “Housewives” goes back to a dinner producer Brad Krevoy — CEO and chairman of Motion Picture

Corporatio­n of America, maker of more than 50 such confection­s for various networks, cablers and streamers since 2013 — had with veteran holiday picture scribes Neal H. Dobrofsky, Tippi Dobrofsky and their son, Spyder, all of whom share a writing credit on the new film.

“It was a no-brainer,” Krevoy says of the team’s pitch. Having worked previously with Oliver on “A Christmas Detour” and “Every Christmas Has a Story” — two titles that were No. 1s for Hallmark — he knew he had the perfect helmer for the project. “Ron was my first call because he loves these movies, understand­s them,” says Krevoy. “Every day, he comes to set dressed to the nines in Christmas attire, which sets the mood.”

“My husband’s a huge ‘Real Housewives’ fan,” adds Oliver, who admits he instantly found the concept brilliant. “When I told him this was in the offing, the very first words out of his mouth were ‘Yes,’ ‘yes’ and ‘Yes.’ ”

Knowing the entire package was tailor-made for NBCUnivers­al — owner of the Bravo network (home to “The Real Housewives”) and of Peacock — Krevoy took it there first. The rest is holiday history.

“Peacock didn’t give me any mandate,” says Oliver. “They were terrific. They just wanted a good-looking movie that was funny and had heart. If anything, the rules were a little bit looser. For instance, here we have Santa Claus doing something you’d never expect him to do at Hallmark. Peacock wasn’t so beholden to tradition. Irreverenc­e is the perfect word for it. They had an irreverenc­e for Christmas movie tropes.”

No matter which outlet his work will air on, Oliver remains steadfast in his yuletide TV philosophy: “Make it beautiful, make it nostalgic, make it romantic, and give ’em a little love at the end.”

Speaking of love, one would think a man who’s been out his entire career — and whose wedding anniversar­y quite purposely falls on Dec. 25 — would want to make the samesex holiday film to end all samesex holiday films. One would be wrong.

“Honestly, I don’t,” Oliver confesses. “I wish I did. Part of me feels bad about it, but I can’t speak for every gay man, and sometimes, when you’re making a movie like that, you’re charged with that idea. You’re suddenly responsibl­e for being the spokesmode­l for all LGBTQ people.”

That said, Oliver’s next project does prominentl­y feature a queer couple as the male protagonis­t’s best friends. “I prefer the notion — and we’re seeing more and more of it — that gay people are just part of the mix,” he says. “What’s interestin­g with this one is that, as I was writing it, I was thinking, ‘I need the friend at work and the friend’s significan­t other.’ My first reaction was not husband and wife. It was two husbands, because that’s exactly how it would be.”

As the sun starts to set over the desert, I ask Oliver why he’s so good at this genre. “I think it’s because I understand that, underneath all of the ridiculous­ly commercial­ized nonsense, the bright colors and the sparkling lights we wrap the holidays in, it’s always about heart. Every Christmas story boils down to somebody telling somebody else they love them.”

If MPCA’s Krevoy is correct in his reading of the mistletoe leaves, Oliver can keep crafting his enchanting season’s greetings for the foreseeabl­e future. “We’re in this cycle for at least the next five years,” opines Krevoy. “With the explosion of streamers, opportunit­ies are here because everybody wants to be in this space. It’s a very good time for content creators.”

“I’m just a kid from a small Canadian village,” concludes Oliver, polishing off his cocktail. “The very fact I get to make anything at all in Hollywood is still a Christmas miracle to me.”

 ?? Fred Hayes Peacock ?? RON OLIVER, prolific director of TV movies, sees his success as a “Christmas miracle.”
Fred Hayes Peacock RON OLIVER, prolific director of TV movies, sees his success as a “Christmas miracle.”

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