Add COVID-19 to the Conners’ burdens
Star Sara Gilbert says their show can’t ‘pretend this isn’t happening’
When “The Conners” returned to set in mid-August after a lengthy pandemic delay, John Goodman had no doubt that every safety precaution had been taken. But his heart still fluttered a bit when it came time to finally get to work.
“That moment before the first mask came off, I held my breath,” said the 68-year-old actor, who plays patriarch Dan Conner in the ABC sitcom.
Sara Gilbert, who stars as Dan’s daughter Darlene was also anxious, even though, as an executive producer, she was well aware of the measures the show takes to keep everyone safe. The Los Angeles set is patrolled by two COVID compliance supervisors, and the actors are tested five times a week, with everyone else tested at least three times a week.
Even so, “when they say ‘Rolling,’ I wait until after the sound cue,” Gilbert said. “And then — at the very last second — my mask comes off.”
When the coronavirus pandemic intensified in March, it forced Hollywood to shut down production for months. Most shows interrupted by the pandemic were back on set, with coronavirus protocols, by September, though some didn’t survive the break: Series including ABC’s “Stumptown,” Netflix’s “GLOW” and Showtime’s “On Becoming a God in Central Florida,” which all had new seasons planned or in the works, were cancelled by their networks. Those that did return to production had a choice to make: Should they pick up where they left off and resume pandemic-free storytelling? Or should they deal with the coronavirus and its disruptions within their narratives?
For “The Conners,” which from its earliest days as “Roseanne” has dealt with everyday difficulties like depression, divorce and job loss, it was never even a question.
“We’ve always tried to represent blue-collar, middleclass families,” Gilbert said. “To pretend this isn’t happening seems out of touch.”
“Life-and-death stories are familiar territory for us,” she added. (The show’s original matriarch, Roseanne Conner, was killed off via an opioid overdose after Roseanne Barr was fired for comparing a former Obama adviser to an ape on Twitter. The show title was subsequently changed from “Roseanne” to “The Conners.”)
When the series returns Wednesday for its third season, viewers will watch the family grapple with the same issues as the rest of the country: Dan is on the verge of losing the family home. His sister-in-law, Jackie (Laurie Metcalf ), is trying to keep the family restaurant alive by making deliveries on her bike (complete with a blinding neon yellow helmet, gloves and face mask). Darlene and her boyfriend, Ben (Jay R. Ferguson), are wondering whether to shutter their startup magazine. Dan’s oldest daughter, Becky (Lecy Goranson), is navigating the return of her unauthorized immigrant husband, Emilio (Rene Rosado), who is caring for her baby while hiding from immigration authorities.
Of course, it’s hard to avoid incorporating the pandemic when it seeps into every aspect of life on set. Like every other returning series, “The Conners,” led by showrunner Bruce Helford and executive producers Dave Caplan and Bruce Rasmussen, has had to radically reconfigure nearly every element of its production for pandemic safety.
Before the cast and crew members set foot onstage, they have passed two temperature checks, filled out a symptoms questionnaire and passed a COVID test within, at minimum, the last two days. Hair and makeup are done with masks and visors — Gilbert said she finishes the area around her mouth herself. Props are sanitized between each take, and the show is filmed without an audience and with a limited crew.
And enforcement, Gilbert said, is rigorous. “You can’t eat or drink onstage,” she said. “Not even water. You have to go up to your dressing room.”
Gilbert said the series will not dwell on the darkest parts of the pandemic — “People get that on the news every day,” she said — but will reflect real-world events. The second episode of the season airs Oct. 28, six nights before Election Day and three nights before Halloween. She said the Conners will celebrate their favourite holiday with some in-home trick-ortreating — and that politics may come up.
“But it’s not through the lens of ‘I’m for this guy!’ ” she said. “It’s ‘How does what’s going on affect my family economically?’ ”
Helford said they wanted to spotlight the struggles of smallbusiness owners through Jackie’s battle to save her restaurant, the Lanford Lunch Box, as well as address the increased anxiety the pandemic has created among kids.
“Mark, the youngest boy, is definitely bothered by this the worst,” he said, referring to Darlene’s son (Ames McNamara). “He’s the one standing outside the door checking everyone’s temperatures, making everyone crazy.”