Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

NICK’S NASTY PAST

In documentar­y, former Nickelodeo­n actors and writers recall bad behavior backstage

- BY RICHARD ROEPER, MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

Millions of Americans of a certain age no doubt have fond childhood memories of watching Nickelodeo­n programmin­g such as “The Amanda Show,” “All That,” “Sam & Cat” and “Drake & Josh” — comedy and sketch programs that were created for kids and tweens, starring kids and tweens, and often featured silly, outlandish, slapstick humor.

At the time, virtually nobody on the outside raised any objections about certain scenes that had clearly sexualized overtones, nor did we know about the allegedly unacceptab­le behavior behind the scenes, most notably from

Dan Schneider, the actor turned producer who was the primary creative force on a dozen popular Nickelodeo­n shows.

In recent years, certain clips have been re-examined, e.g., a young Ariana Grande on “Victorious,” dousing herself with a water bottle while upside down in bed.

We’ve also heard stories of an allegedly toxic workplace environmen­t from “iCarly” star Jennette McCurdy in her memoir and in a Business Insider article in which former actors and staff members on Nickelodeo­n shows described traumatizi­ng experience­s on sets.

Now comes the four-part Investigat­ion Discovery documentar­y series “Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV,” which expands on Business Insider’s reporting and delivers a journalist­ically solid, straightfo­rward and at times heartbreak­ing expose, with a number of former actors and behindthe-scenes personnel coming forward to tell their stories. Directed by Mary Robertson and Emma Schwartz, “Quiet on Set” will have you thinking about all those wildly popular children’s TV shows in a whole different light.

Relying on archival clips, a bounty of behind-the-scenes video footage and present-day interviews with former cast members, parents and journalist­s, “Quiet on Set” follows a mostly chronologi­cal timeline, reminding us that in the 1990s, there was no Internet for consumers, no TikTok, no viral videos; if you were a kid, it was pretty much the Disney Channel or Nickelodeo­n.

Schneider, who was best known at the time for starring on the ABC sitcom “Head of the Class,” segued into writing and producing, penning the pilot for “All That” in 1994 and quickly demonstrat­ing a keen acumen for finding young talent while playing a major part in the creation of “Drake & Josh,” “Kenan & Kal,” “The Amanda Show,” “Victorious,” “What I Like About You” and “Zoey 101,” among others.

Schneider was widely recognized as the most powerful presence at Nickelodeo­n — and according to former staffers and actors, he often abused that status, telling off-color jokes on set and in writers’ rooms, consistent­ly demanding makeup artists and others give him massages and overseeing shows with sometimes questionab­le elements, e.g., giving a character on “The Amanda Show” a last name that referenced a certain part of the anatomy.

Jenny Kilgen, a writer on “The Amanda Show,” talks of Schneider saying to her in front of group of her peers, out of the blue, “Didn’t you used to do phone sex?” (Kilgen eventually sued Schneider’s production company for gender discrimina­tion, settling for an undisclose­d amount.)

Former child actors Katrina Johnson, Kyle Sullivan, Giovonnie Samuels and Alexa Nikolas share sobering insights and memories. Bryan Hearne recalls being traumatize­d by a stunt in which he was covered by peanut butter that was licked off his body by dogs.

In Episode 3, titled “The Darkest Secret,” Drake Bell goes public for the first time and tells of actor and dialogue coach Brian Peck assaulting him on numerous occasions when Drake was 15.

“It just became this secret that I held onto,” says Bell. “It just got worse and worse and worse. … I was just trapped, and there was no way out.”

In 2004, Peck pleaded no contest to two charges of sexual abuse of a minor and was sentenced to 16 months in prison.

In March of 2018, Nickelodeo­n reportedly severed all ties with Schneider after an internal investigat­ion found evidence of Schneider verbally abusing colleagues. Three years later, in an interview with the New York Times, Schneider denied he exited Nickelodeo­n under cloudy circumstan­ces, said the comedy on his shows “was totally innocent,” and denied acting inappropri­ately with colleagues.

Everyone has their truth, as the modern saying goes. Watching “Quiet on Set,” there’s little doubt that for many of the interview subjects who worked on those beloved shows back in the day, the truth is their experience­s ranged from a mixed bag to unpleasant to awful to unspeakabl­y horrific.

 ?? JEAN-MARC BOUJU/AP FILES ?? Giovonne Samuels (from left), Shane Lyons, Bryan Hearne and Lisa Renee Foiles appear on “All That” in 2002. Samuels and Hearne speak out on “Quiet on Set” about their unsettling experience­s on the show.
JEAN-MARC BOUJU/AP FILES Giovonne Samuels (from left), Shane Lyons, Bryan Hearne and Lisa Renee Foiles appear on “All That” in 2002. Samuels and Hearne speak out on “Quiet on Set” about their unsettling experience­s on the show.
 ?? ?? Dan Schneider
Dan Schneider

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