Regina Leader-Post

The Fosters tackles the big issues

Show focuses on lesbian couple, family

- LYNN ELBER

BURBANK, Calif. — The Fosters is a study in unlikely bedfellows.

The new ABC Family drama pairs mainstream star Jennifer Lopez and Peter Paige, who played bubbly Emmett in the cult favourite series Queer as Folk, as executive producers. It brings to television a rare depiction of a lesbian couple as heads of a household.

And The Fosters, airing its second episode Monday, combines a focus on the generally ignored lives of foster children with the challenges of an ethnically diverse home — a big reach for an hour-long series aimed at teenagers and young adults.

“YOU CAN’T KEEP SPOONFEEDI­NG THE IDEA OF WHAT THE PERFECT FAMILY IS. IT JUST DOESN’T EXIST.”

JENNIFER LOPEZ

“I think in every time we have to kind of push that envelope and really be a reflection of what’s going on in society and ... this show does that and in a smart, edgy, funny, heartfelt way,” said Lopez, who’s producing it with co-creators Paige and Bradley Bredeweg.

The 43-year-old actresssin­ger-dancer candidly cites her life as an example of the changing nature of family.

“You can’t keep spoonfeedi­ng the idea of what the perfect family is. It just doesn’t exist,” she said. “Even myself, I have two kids, their dad (Marc Anthony) doesn’t live at home with us. I’m divorced. They have four stepbrothe­rs and sisters from two other moms. It’s not traditiona­l.”

“We all wish we had that fairy-tale thing in our heads,” Lopez said. “But when it doesn’t come true for children they shouldn’t have to think, ‘Oh, I don’t have the mom and the dad, the perfect three kids and a dog. There’s something wrong with me,’” she added.

The Fosters stars Teri Polo (Meet the Parents) and Sherri Saum as Stef Foster and Lena Adams, the couple whose family includes Stef ’s biological son (David Lambert) from a former marriage, adopted twins (Cierra Ramirez, Jake T. Austin) and a newly arrived foster teenager (Maia Mitchell) whose difficult past has left her wary. Oh, and Stef is a police officer who works with her ex-husband.

It makes for a tangled web that’s rich in storytelli­ng possibilit­ies, not just messages, its creators said.

“Draw a line between any two of these characters and there’s a relationsh­ip that hasn’t been explored before,” Paige said. “What’s it like to be the adopted brother whose best friend is the biological brother? What’s it like to be a foster child who’s come in the house and finds herself drawn to one of the boys?

“What’s it like to have your ex-husband, your son’s biological father who you work with, around, and does he have a role with your other kids?”

Quipped Bredeweg: “My God, I created the show and I’m so lost right now.”

An expert on the foster system consults with the show to help with accuracy. But Paige said liberties are being taken to serve the stories. Most foster children, for example, get their own bedroom; that’s dispensed with in The Fosters to up the drama ante.

“We are not pretending to, nor would we be interested in, doing a docu-series about the foster system. We’re after a family story where some people are chosen, where everybody has come in through a different door and finds themselves in the same room,” he said.

ABC Family is used to taking chances with such shows as Switched at Birth, which features deaf characters and subtitles. But how does it determine that its young audience is ready for The Fosters, including its lesbian couple and the challenges they face?

“It’s really a gut check,” said Kate Juergens, executive vice-president in charge of programmin­g and developmen­t for the channel. “The millennial generation is so much more colour-blind than the generation before them. And gay is so not an issue for them. ... They’re so much more used to people being out.”

Cast member Lambert, who’s 19, agrees: “Even if it’s an unconventi­onal family, at the end of the day it’s really just a family.”

A total of 10 episodes will air, and Paige and Bredeweg hope for many more to come. Lopez’s involvemen­t was key to getting the show green-lighted and, they hope, keeping it alive. “You want to get a relationsh­ip drama made, you attach a superstar,” Paige observed — and she and her Nuyorican Production­s continue as active partners.

“They weigh in on story and casting. ... She’s not just hands-off over in the corner, being gorgeous and glamorous,” Paige said.

“Casting is her passion,” Bredeweg added: Lopez is keen on finding new talent, and it was her call that the twins be Latino.

Will she be involved in the show?

“Music for sure. We’re looking for the right moment. There’s something in the works now we’re not at liberty to discuss. On camera, you never know,” said Paige, who has pushed his own acting career aside in favour of writing and producing TV shows and films with Bredeweg.

Lopez strikes a more cautious note about inserting herself into the drama unless it’s done in what she deems an “organic” way that’s not distractin­g.

“I feel like sometimes when you have somebody like me who’s in the public eye and you produce something, they always want to put you on and it feels ‘stunt-y’ to me sometimes. ... I believe this show stands on its own,” said Lopez, the former American Idol judge whose company’s other TV projects include music show Q’Viva!: The Chosen.

As Lopez sees it, The Fosters stands for what she’s learned “are the important things in life, which are family equals love. It’s a place where you go for unconditio­nal love, to be accepted, to feel safe. And at the end of the day, that there’s no real ‘normal.’ That there’s no set thing of what a family is at this moment in time in our lives.”

 ?? BOB D’AMICO/ABC Family ?? From left, Maia Mitchell, executive producer Jennifer Lopez, Cierra Ramirez, from back left, David Lambert and Jake T.
Austin star in The Fosters, premiering June 3 on ABC Family.
BOB D’AMICO/ABC Family From left, Maia Mitchell, executive producer Jennifer Lopez, Cierra Ramirez, from back left, David Lambert and Jake T. Austin star in The Fosters, premiering June 3 on ABC Family.
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 ?? TIM P. WHITBY/GETTY Images ?? Jennifer Lopez is one of the executive producers
behind The Fosters.
TIM P. WHITBY/GETTY Images Jennifer Lopez is one of the executive producers behind The Fosters.

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