The Guardian (USA)

High School review – it’s Tegan and Sara: the grungy teenage years

- Lucy Mangan

High School, an Amazon Freevee adaptation of the memoir by twin sisters Tegan and Sara Quin, concentrat­es on the pair’s 90s adolescenc­e before they became the indie-pop duo Tegan and Sara. The first episode is about as boring as those of us who also went through a 90s adolescenc­e remember it being. The girls are played by twins Railey and Seazynn Gilliland, who are TikTok creators in their first acting roles (but don’t let that put you off: they are not bad and get better as the series goes on). They moon morosely as they make their way through their first day at their new high school in suburban Calgary. There is festering resentment between them based on Sara having “stolen” Phoebe, a formerly shared best friend. There is the boredom of lessons, an annoying bully of a boy called Tyler, and lonely canteen lunches, all filmed in a constant grey gloaming. The only spots of – metaphoric­al – brightness are an approach from a potential friend for Tegan towards the end, and a silent rapprochem­ent between the sisters in the final scenes, as Sara helps remove the gum Tyler has stuck in Tegan’s hair.

But stick with it. Things improve, for the sisters and for the viewers.

Friendship­s take root and flourish, although Sara’s do so with the help of drugs. It becomes clear that she and Phoebe are girlfriend­s, but not out to anyone. Tegan’s growing closeness with new friend Maya (Amanda Fix, who lifts all the scenes she shares with Railey) involves another navigation of a young, gay relationsh­ip. The first episode alternates between the two sisters with timelines frequently overlappin­g, so we see the same events from two sides. But after that, the focus broadens to include other characters, including Phoebe (Olivia Rouyre, another relative newcomer – she got her start on YouTube – who acquits herself well in a storyline that includes coming to terms with her sexuality within a homophobic family) and the twins’ mother Simone (Cobie Smulders). Though the series is clearly aimed at and has greatest sympathy for a younger, queer demographi­c, Simone’s experience­s – as a social worker with tremendous responsibi­lities, as a mother of troublesom­e teens, as a wife and as a woman – are given space to unfurl.

High School also avoids rushing headlong into the hows, whys and wherefores of Sara and Tegan’s musical evolution and success. Like everything else in this unhurried evocation of a particular era and a particular time in life, it is a slow burn. By the end of the first three episodes we have not seen them do much more than any teenager might do: writing some lyrics in a dull lesson, singing a song to a girlfriend, begging for permission to attend a concert, and going to piano lessons (where they don’t even fare that well).

You don’t have to be a fan – or even to have heard of – Tegan and Sara to enjoy High School (though I imagine it would help you get through the exceptiona­lly downbeat start). It’s a heartfelt, eventually rather touching portrait of sisterhood – the actual and broader kinds – and of the power of friendship, the vexed business of negotiatin­g the complexiti­es of a queer adolescenc­e, finding yourself, and the joys of uncovering a voice and a talent you can make your own. But I will also take a Simone-based spin-off anytime as well. She too has much to teach us, I suspect.

 ?? ?? Touching … Railey and Seazynn Gilliland as Tegan and Sara in High School. Photograph: Michelle Faye/Amazon Freevee
Touching … Railey and Seazynn Gilliland as Tegan and Sara in High School. Photograph: Michelle Faye/Amazon Freevee

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