Times Colonist

CBC boosts lineup with foreign TV shows

-

TORONTO — CBC-TV is turning to British, Australian and U.S. series to bolster its summer, fall and winter lineups.

The public broadcaste­r will be airing a slew of foreign shows including the Hallmark Channel period drama When Calls the Heart, the recently cancelled BBC2 drama Banished, the British comedy Raised by Wolves and the British drama Jekyll and Hyde, starring Richard E. Grant.

Australian pickups include the ’60s-set drama Love Child and the comedy Please Like Me.

CBC programmin­g boss Sally Catto says it’s part of a bid to showcase series viewers won’t see on the private networks.

The slate also features 11 original production­s, including previously announced serialized dramas Romeo Factor and This Life, and 14 returning shows including Schitt’s Creek, X Company, Mr. D and Murdoch Mysteries, with a guest appearance by William Shatner.

Bell Media, Shaw Media and Rogers Media are set to announce their TV schedules next week.

Catto says the CBC is focusing on character-driven serialized dramas and more single-camera comedies. She says the imports fit well within the broadcaste­r’s mandate and don’t detract from its mission to serve Canadians.

“Our focus is really best of the world,” she said.

The CBC’s new lineups were built without the backing of NHL broadcast revenues.

Rogers Media paid $5.2 billion for exclusive national rights to all NHL games for 12 years. CBC still has the right to air Hockey Night in Canada but Rogers collects all the advertisin­g revenue.

Despite the financial hit, Catto says the programmin­g budget has been preserved.

“You can tell by how much we’re ordering that it hasn’t been an issue in terms of our programmin­g budgets. Content has been made the absolute priority.” A look at the foreign buys: When Calls the Heart (premières June 28) — Based on the novel by Canadian writer Janette Oke, this series follows teacher Elizabeth Thatcher (Erin Krakow), who has just arrived in a 19th century coal mining town.

Banished (July 27) — Cracker creator Jimmy McGovern is behind this period drama set in 1787 when Britain banished its unwanted citizens — orphans, petty thieves, prostitute­s and highwaymen — to Sydney, Australia. The exiled include close friends Elizabeth Quinn (My Anna Buring), Tommy Barrett (Julian Rhind-Tutt) and James Freeman (Russell Tovey).

Please Like Me (July 31) — Created by and starring Australian comic Josh Thomas, the series follows Josh as he approaches his birthday with his life finally coming together. Until he’s dumped by his girlfriend and introduced to an attractive man, Geoffrey (Wade Briggs), which leads him to realize he’s gay.

Raised by Wolves (Oct. 6) — This series follows six socially isolated, home-schooled siblings and their acerbic mother Della Garry (Rebekah Staton).

Love Child (Aug. 8) — Set in a Sydney boarding house and hospital in the 1960s, where young, unwed mothers are sent to live for during pregnancy. Midwife Joan Millar (Jessica Marais) comes to work for the hospital during the throes of a cultural revolution.

Jekyll and Hyde (winter 2016) — Tom Bateman and Richard E. Grant star in this account of a sensitive young man in London in the 1930s who begins to feel himself coming under the power of a darkness he cannot control.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada