Regina Leader-Post

Actors rough it for Horses of Mcbride

- ERIC VOLMERS

Aidan Quinn is hardly a delicate flower.

One of the stars of TV film The Horses of McBride, the American actor has been a movie tough guy for years. He lives in the country. He loves the wilderness.

But even he has his limits.

Moose Mountain in Alberta, for instance.

“When the wind is blowing and it’s 10 below and you’re up there at night and the wind chill is 30 below, it’s pretty rough,” says Quinn, sitting in the relative warmth of his trailer near Turner Valley, Alta. “It’s a challenge to just literally get your words out without your teeth chattering or your mouth freezing. You don’t really have to worry about faking that or acting too much. You think about surviving.”

It’s early March and Quinn is not-so-fondly recalling his experience­s a few days earlier, which found him shivering in Alberta’s Kananaskis Country.

Airing Sunday on CTV, the fact-based Horses of McBride seems perfect for the Christmas season, telling the tale of the family who led efforts to free two starving horses that had been abandoned by their owner and had become trapped deep within the Canadian Rockies.

It unites the citizens of McBride, B.C., who eventually drop everything to help the family dig a mile-long trench to free the starving equines. It’s all very heartwarmi­ng, even if the conditions during the four-week shoot earlier this year often weren’t.

Quinn, 53, plays Matt Davidson, the patriarch of the family. While the actor says there are limits to the sort of forced method acting he engaged in on Moose Mountain, he acknowledg­es the conditions certainly helped him find the rugged centre of his character.

A cowboy-outfitter who has fallen on hard times, Davidson is in the midst of his own crisis when his strongwill­ed teenage daughter Nicki, played by MacKenzie Porter, insists the two horses be saved.

“There isn’t any profit in the type of outfitting he does, which is more traditiona­l with horses,” says Quinn, who currently stars as the exasperate­d Capt. Toby Gregson in the TV Sherlock Holmes reboot Elementary.

“It’s not quads and SkiDoos and heated cabins and warm showers, it’s more roughing it. He’s a real straightfo­rward guy, but he’s fallen on hard times and decided he’s going to have to sell the ranch and get a job in the city. That’s what he’s up against when this whole thing happens.”

Horses of McBride is inspired by the Jeck family, who were at the centre of the real horse-saving efforts by the McBride community in December of 2008. The family — father David, daughter Toni and son Logan — showed up on the Alberta set for a few days and ended up giving the film their approval.

Porter had never played a character based on a real person before. So meeting the real thing was thrilling if more than a little daunting for the 22-year-old actress. While the Medicine Hat native also grew up on a ranch, Porter admits to being decidedly more “girlie” than the character she was playing.

The Jeck family was watching when Porter shot the climactic scene where the rescuers break through the snowy wall and help the starving horses begin their descent down the mountain. It was appropriat­ely chaotic, and Porter feared Toni Jeck might have questioned her horse-handling abilities.

“I was extremely nervous when (Toni) came out because I didn’t want to be telling her story wrong,” says Porter.

While Horses of McBride takes place in B.C., its Alberta connection­s go beyond the locations used during the four-week shoot.

Former Calgarian Paul Gross, one of the executive producers of the movie, got the ball rolling after reading about the McBride tale in the newspaper at the airport. He immediatel­y called producing partner Frank Siracusa, who just happened to be reading the same article. Eventually, they met with the Jeck family about turning their story into a movie.

Anne Wheeler, the veteran Edmonton filmmaker behind 1989’s Bye Bye Blues and 1993’s The Diviners, was enlisted to write the screenplay and direct.

Wheeler grew up in Edmonton, but spent most summers in a small town near Wainwright, where she helped raise horses. She said the communal spirit of the story touched her.

“I felt like I knew these folks,” says the director, bundled up during a break from shooting. “There was this sense that this community slowly but thoughtful­ly learned about this dilemma and did the right thing. I just thought it was a terrific true story. I found it inspired me.”

 ?? CTV ?? American actor Aidan Quinn stars in Horses of McBride, airing Sunday on CTV.
CTV American actor Aidan Quinn stars in Horses of McBride, airing Sunday on CTV.

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