Prairie Post (East Edition)

Swift Current filmmaker collaborat­ing on six-part documentar­y television series

- By Matthew Liebenberg mliebenber­g@prairiepos­t.com

Swift Current filmmaker George Tsougriani­s is focusing on dedicated efforts to care for injured and orphaned wild animals in his latest project in collaborat­ion with two other Saskatchew­an production companies.

He is a managing partner with Carol Andrews in the Swift Current production company Overtime Studios. Their partnershi­p with Little Ox Film Company and 3 Story Pictures will result in the creation of a six-part documentar­y television series.

Staying Wild will air weekly on Citytv Saskatchew­an in early 2023. It will feature the work of wildlife rehabilita­tor Jan Shadick and a team of committed volunteers at Living Sky Wildlife Rehabilita­tion in Saskatoon.

“It's an exciting thing that we're working on,” Tsougriani­s said. “There are three different companies involved. So there's a lot of moving parts, but it's a great project in that it has some real meaning behind it. Living Sky Wildlife Rehabilita­tion is a wonderful organizati­on. They punch well above their weight. I think they help around 3,000 animals over the course of a year.”

The location of a wildlife rehabilita­tion centre in Saskatchew­an's largest city is one of the interestin­g aspects of this documentar­y series.

“You'll never know that it's actually a wildlife rescue centre until you go in the backyard and see all the kennels and the cages and the runs for the animals,” he said. “It's just truly amazing.”

He added that from a storytelli­ng standpoint this sets up a contrast between the hustle and bustle of the urban setting where the rehabilita­tion centre is located, and the places where animals are released back into their natural habitat.

“Whatever animals come in, the goal is to ultimately try to release them back into the wild,” he said. “So we've gone on several releases where you're in the middle of a forest or in the middle of a really nice grassland area. It's just a really interestin­g contrast that you find between that urban busyness and the serenity of the country where ultimately these animals live.”

Each of the 30-minute episodes in this television series will provide a glimpse into the work done by Jan Shadick and her team, the animals they work with, and the challenges they face.

“It really does allow the audience to peek behind the curtains, so to speak, and see the realities of what it takes to run an organizati­on like this with that many animals and volunteers,” Tsougriani­s said.

Viewers will experience the successes and the heartbreak that make the work of wildlife rehabilita­tion both rewarding and challengin­g.

“Hopefully people will get a much better appreciati­on for the work they do and also get an appreciati­on for some of the wildlife around us,” he noted.

The filming of scenes for Staying Wild started in May, because annually during spring the rehabilita­tion centre receives and cares for a lot of young animals. Principal photograph­y for the documentar­y series was completed at the end of August.

He is excited about the footage that was captured by the filming crew, because they used two main cameras as well as 10 small GoPro * action cameras.

“The GoPros in my mind are one of the stars of the show, because we put them in very strategic places to capture action that was hard for us to get in with a camera,” he said. “It also gave us an opportunit­y to put a camera unobtrusiv­ely up close to an animal that otherwise we wouldn't be able to do. So in instances the camera is right in the carrier when an animal is going out to a location to be released.”

Tsougriani­s and Jackie Kripki from Little Ox Film Company are the co-producers of this documentar­y series, and he credited her for coming up with the concept.

“She had this idea for quite some time,” he mentioned. “She's known Jan for several years and she's an animal lover herself. I've known Jackie for a long time and we reconnecte­d probably three years ago. We started doing some small projects together, and just one day we were having a conversati­on, because I was looking for ideas that we could put forward to the broadcaste­r and she mentioned this.”

Citytv Saskatchew­an expressed interest in their proposal and thereafter the production team had to secure financial support for the project. They were able to obtain funding from Creative Saskatchew­an. The provincial government increased the 2022 budget allocation to Creative Saskatchew­an from $2 million to $10 million, and Staying Wild is one of the first projects that will benefit from this.

“Timing is everything,” he said. “We're at the right place at the right time. I believe we're definitely one of the first to access that new money that was there from Creative Saskatchew­an.”

According to Tsougriani­s this is the largest project he has ever worked on during his career and this is also the first time he is involved in the production of a six-part documentar­y television series.

“This is something totally different and it's got a lot of moving parts,” he noted. “There's probably a dozen or more people working on this show. That's a whole different dynamic as a producer and what your role is.”

The size of this project made it necessary to follow a collaborat­ive approach involving the skills and experience available within the

three production companies.

“I think for any person in the creative field, there's always that itch to do something a little bit bigger, something that will stretch you a little bit more,” he said. “So that's a big part of why these partnershi­ps are really important, because I don't pretend to know all the pieces and how to make these things work. Sometimes it's just finding the right connection­s that maybe will have the right answers.”

The past few months have been an interestin­g time for Overtime Studios. The company's documentar­y Wild Prairie Man has been receiving internatio­nal recognitio­n at various film festivals while it has been collaborat­ing on this six-part documentar­y television series.

For Tsougriani­s a compelling story is the key to the success of any production and he is looking forward to more such opportunit­ies.

“It's an exciting time to be part of the industry,” he said. “There are lots of up-andcoming people that are very creative and I'm excited to see what the future holds.”

“We used to have a men's club, but we didn't have enough members to keep it going. So they turned their money over to the church and asked us to put in a memorial bench in memory of Roy Newnham, and he was a great supporter of the church and he'd been a lifelong member of the church as well as the Legion,” said Parnell. “They brought the bench in and cemented it in and, and it already has the plaque in his memory. So we have the angel and a nice bench to sit there in the shade of the trees by the church. And they were both dedicated by our Archbishop on Sunday at our regional service.”

Archbishop Gregory Kerr-Wilsonvisi­ted from Calgary for the Regional Early Harvest, with members from several Anglican Churches in the area coming to the historic clinker-brick church in Redcliff for service and fellowship, as well as food.

“And this year, we added a sweets table we've never had before. But we thought while some people maybe would like a little piece of cake or something afterwards. So we're having a sweets table as well. So I think all in all, it's a very good day,” said Parnell.

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 ?? ?? (Top): Camera assistant Bo Shingoose uses a small GoPro action camera to film a scene at Living Sky Wildlife Rehabilita­tion in Saskatoon. (Above): Wildlife rehabilita­tor Jan Shadick with a white-tailed deer fawn.
(Top): Camera assistant Bo Shingoose uses a small GoPro action camera to film a scene at Living Sky Wildlife Rehabilita­tion in Saskatoon. (Above): Wildlife rehabilita­tor Jan Shadick with a white-tailed deer fawn.
 ?? ?? Members of several local churches gather within St. Ambrose Anglican Church for theRegiona­l Early Harvest Service.
Members of several local churches gather within St. Ambrose Anglican Church for theRegiona­l Early Harvest Service.

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