The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

‘Undoing’ creator lured back to network TV for ‘Big Sky’

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LOSANGELES » Writer-producer David E. Kelley gifted network TV with three decades of hits, including “Ally McBeal,” “The Practice” and “Boston Legal.” Then he switched to a new canvas, premium cable, to make HBO’s “Big Little Lies” and “The Undoing.”

He’s in very good company, with Shonda Rhimes (“Grey’s Anatomy,” “Scandal”) and Ryan Murphy (“Glee”) among other successful network producers who moved shop to streaming services and cable channels.

The advantages the platforms offer — including creative freedom and the appeal that limited series have to in-demand stars — failed to deter ABC executive Karey Burke from trying to woo Kelley back to broadcast on the Disney-owned network.

She succeeded with “Big Sky,” based on a C.J. Box crime novel that caught Kelley’s interest. The series (airing at 10 p.m. on Tuesdays) stars Katheryn Winnick and Kylie Bunbury as an ex-police officer and private detective in search of sisters missing in Montana.

“I feel very lucky that David trusted us with this story,” Burke said. “I think he believed in our mission, which is really to bring the great creators back to broadcast television to tell meaningful stories to the widest possible audience.”

Longtime profession­al ties also helped: Burke was an executive at NBC attached to the 1980s drama series “L.A. Law,” on which young attorney Kelley was a fledgling screenwrit­er and later producer, and Disney Television entertainm­ent chief Dana Walden worked with him on Fox’s “Ally McBeal.”

Despite his respect for Burke, Kelley said, his first answer was a polite no.

“‘The content is a little disturbing, and and it’s just not broadcast fare,’” he told her.

He recounted Burke’s reply: the network wanted to be more “aggressive in our storytelli­ng” to compete with cable and streaming.

“So off we want,” Kelley said.

ABC reinforced its commitment to the series by ordering six more episodes for a total of 16. The network was able to tout “Big Sky” as among the season’s top-rated shows, albeit in a TV season destabiliz­ed by pandemic-forced production delays.

“Big Sky” drew sharp criticism from Native American groups and advocates for overlookin­g the ongoing crisis of crimes against Indigenous women, including in Montana, which Kelley and the show’s other producers have vowed to address.

As part of a recent corporate restructur­ing, Burke is moving from ABC Entertainm­ent chief to president of 20th Television, the Disneyowne­d studio that produces “Big Sky,” with the hands-on attention she promised Kelley able to remain intact.

He registered no complaints about network meddling but remains aware of the possibilit­y, candidly sketching out the worst-case scenarios.

“Here’s the way it can go: ‘ The show isn’t working, so you need to make these changes for us,’” he said. “And the other way it goes, is, ‘This show is working and we don’t want to break it or alienate the audience.’ I’m confident that won’t happen with Kerry, but that is the danger in broadcast.”

Burke remains bullish about network TV as a worthy creative home, arguing that it remains unmatched as “a delivery system,” citing its free, over-the-air reach that combines with on-demand viewing options to reach a wide audience.

 ?? COURTESY OF ABC ?? Jade Pettyjohn, left, Jesse James Keitel and Natalie Alyn Lind in a scene from “Big Sky.”
COURTESY OF ABC Jade Pettyjohn, left, Jesse James Keitel and Natalie Alyn Lind in a scene from “Big Sky.”

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