Calgary Herald

DIVERSITY HELPING ANNE GROW

Season 2 sees addition of first black character, LGBTQ storyline

- VICTORIA AHEARN Anne with an E

TORONTO As Anne with an E’s plucky protagonis­t embarks on more Prince Edward Island adventures in season 2, some new faces enter the picture, adding a sense of inclusivit­y and diversity to her world of wonder.

In the new batch of episodes that begin Sunday on CBC-TV as well as its streaming app and cbc.ca/watch, fans will see the show ’s first black character as well as an LGBTQ storyline.

Such elements were never a part of the Canadian novel Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery, which inspired the show.

But as showrunner/creator Moira Walley-Beckett notes, the CBC/ Netflix series has always strayed from the source material while still staying true to the essence of Anne.

“It’s always been a concern to me that L.M. Montgomery’s world of Avonlea is such a white world when in fact it doesn’t really accurately reflect the diversity that Canada was and is,” Walley-Beckett, a three-time Emmy Award winner, said in a recent interview.

“So my master plan from the beginning when I first conceived this series was to find a way to genuinely and legitimate­ly reflect the diversity of the nation.”

Season 2 will further explore the queer storyline surroundin­g Aunt Josephine Barry that was lightly touched on in season 1 and will introduce Anne’s new friend Cole, played by Cory Gruter-Andrew.

Cole, who is questionin­g his identity and bullied at school, bonds with Anne over feeling like an outsider.

“I added the character of Cole because so many kids are exploring their identity and it’s such a ripe time of confusion and difficulty and isolation in school,” WalleyBeck­ett said.

“And I wanted to represent that, that which is true — in the world, in that time period or any time period.”

Gruter-Andrew feels the Cole storyline is “pushing some really important messages with it.”

“Playing a character like Cole, it means so much to me. There’s an amazing sense of nervous responsibi­lity in a very good way,” said Gruter-Andrew, 17, who lives in Vancouver.

“It just feels really good to be able to represent those who feel like they might not be heard or who are going through the same things that Cole is going through and being able to relate to Cole.”

Meanwhile, Anne’s schoolmate Gilbert is working on a steamship alongside Sebastian, a Trinidadia­n sailor, played by Canadian actor Dalmar Abuzeid.

Walley-Beckett said she wanted to put Gilbert on the steamship in order for him to have a bigger perspectiv­e of the world.

In researchin­g about Canada and P.E.I. in the Victorian era, WalleyBeck­ett and her team discovered the Bog, which was a community just outside of Charlottet­own mostly populated by freed slaves and immigrants.

“It’s not really taught in schools and most people don’t know about it and we determined that we absolutely wanted to make it part of our story,” she said, “and it’s been really relevant to our story and really cool to bring it to life with historical accuracy.”

Walley-Beckett said she tried to make the Sebastian storyline as historical­ly accurate as possible and hired Shernold Edwards, whose family is from Trinidad, to help write it.

“There’s an opportunit­y to provide a platform for greater conversati­ons,” said Walley-Beckett, who has an all-female writers room that is diverse in terms of race and sexuality.

“It’s exciting to me to think that multi-generation­s of families are going to sit down and discuss this subject matter, and that it’s being presented in an accessible way full of kindness and forgivenes­s and empathy and compassion.”

 ?? STEVE SMITH/CBC ?? Cory Gruter-Andrew, left, with Amybeth McNulty and Dalila Bela, plays a boy who is exploring his identity while enduring bullying in Anne with an E. The show is making an effort to “legitimate­ly reflect the diversity of the nation,” says showrunner/creator Moira Walley-Beckett.
STEVE SMITH/CBC Cory Gruter-Andrew, left, with Amybeth McNulty and Dalila Bela, plays a boy who is exploring his identity while enduring bullying in Anne with an E. The show is making an effort to “legitimate­ly reflect the diversity of the nation,” says showrunner/creator Moira Walley-Beckett.

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