From the CBC:
“Burnt out
but booming: Canada's TV and film sector plows ahead during the pandemic”
For Debi
Drennan, the film business is a family affair. The Toronto-based makeup artist
has been working in the industry before the days of The Littlest Hobo. Her
sons, Christian and Tyler, followed her into the business, and despite the
COVID-19 pandemic, they're all as busy as ever. Christian, a key grip, just
wrapped The Man from Toronto starring Kevin Hart. Key rigger Tyler recently
jumped from working on Netflix's Sex and Lies and is now on Station Eleven. Drennan
herself was one of the first to return to work after Ontario's first
coronavirus lockdown, as part of CBC's Murdoch Mysteries. She says that with
all of the precautions in place, she wasn't worried about safety. "We're
not allowed on the property until we have a correct temperature and we've done
a screening. We all had apps on our phone, and we would have to answer those
apps every morning." With surging coronavirus rates shutting down
production in parts of California, Canadian crews such as the ones the Drennans
worked on are competing with an influx of American productions. In both British
Columbia and Ontario, the industry isn't just busy — it's booming.
Switching
face shields for safety glasses Virus or not, Drennan and her colleagues in
the makeup trailer still had to make the cast look picture perfect. For
starters, she procured a high-end UV sterilization machine to prevent
cross-contamination. But applying makeup while wearing masks and face shields
turned out to be a challenge. The solution was safety glasses with prescription
lenses, which became standard on set. As both the face of and a director
on the 14th season of Murdoch Mysteries, Yannick Bisson says he was all too
cognizant of the risks. "There was pressure, we were going to be
one of the first shows out of the gate," he said. "So the potential
for failure was there." Drennan
says the cast and crew quickly became accustomed to the new rhythms of work,
but what she didn't anticipate was how worn out she would become. "It's
exhausting.... I just felt like halfway through the day, they couldn't call
lunch fast enough. I just needed to get in my car, pull my mask off, take my
goggles off and just sit." Headaches were common, and Drennan says
she thinks dehydration may have played a role: Taking off all the layers of
personal protective equipment for a sip of water or a snack was such an ordeal
that the temptation was just to tough it out.
Pandemic
keeps productions on edge Jason Jallet, a producer from Sudbury, Ont., completed
two independent films during the fall and ran into trouble getting makeup and
hair trailers, which had already been reserved for foreign productions.
"They are all on a lot somewhere held until somebody needed them, so they
were being paid for and unused." Jallet says he was forced to send
drivers to Quebec from Sudbury for trailers, costing more time and money. He
estimates COVID-19 precautions ate up about five per cent of his already
precious budget. On-screen, life on the CBC sitcom Kim's Convenience
looks the same as it did before the pandemic. But behind the scenes, the fifth
season was shot under COVID-19 measures that were so strict, even Paul
Sun-Hyung Lee, who plays Appa, struggled to adjust. "I remember
really wanting to push back at the absurdity of having to wear a mask because I
knew I didn't have COVID and then realizing that I was making life hell for our
COVID protocol officer." Eventually, Lee says, he decided to lean
in and embrace the rules. Jean Yoon, who plays his on-screen wife, Umma, says
she missed the faces of the crew. "Being in the same building with so many
people we've worked with for all these years and not be able to see them."
The strain of adapting to the regime of rules was so onerous that Jallet
created a new position — a COVID-19 mental health officer — to give his crew
someone to vent to. Jallet completed two films in northern Ontario last fall,
Boathouse and Delia's Gone, starring Marisa Tomei and Canadian actor Stephan
James. Jallet was also dealing with his own anxiety due to the lack of
insurance for COVID-19 outbreaks. While the federal government eventually
created a program to act as a backstop for Canadian productions, it wasn't
available in time for Jallet, leaving him on the hook for any potential
outbreak. "Every time the phone rang, I was like, 'Is there a COVID
incident? Is somebody sick? Are we going to have to shut down?'"
A surge in
demand for studio space While the rush for resources has taxed Canadian
productions, it's been a boon for companies offering studio space. Near
Toronto's Pearson International Airport, the sound of jets overhead has been
replaced by a fleet of film trucks supporting the newest location for TriBro
Studios. What was once an airport hangar is now a soundstage, home to upcoming
Netflix production Nightbooks. TriBro president Peter Apostolopoulos
says it can't build studio space fast enough. "The phone hasn't stopped
ringing. There's a tremendous amount of calls coming in for studio space.
That's why we expanded to the airport facilities. We needed more space."
In Vancouver, independent producer Mark Miller says he is also seeing a
scramble for space, with old warehouses being transformed into soundstages. The
producer, who's worked with Great Pacific Media and Thunderbird Entertainment,
is bullish on the future. "We're
preparing for a big boom — actually, we think that once the pandemic comes to
an end, there's a lot of pent-up demand for new content." At the
same time, Miller says he's worried who will buy his shows. Aggressive
tax credits and the low dollar continue to make Canada an attractive location
to serve American shows, such as Star Trek: Discovery or Chilling Adventures of
Sabrina. But Miller says the pandemic is changing the broadcasting landscape
here at home. "COVID-19 has been very hard on our broadcasters. I
know it's been hard on the CBC. I know it's been hard at CTV," he says.
"Global advertising revenues are down throughout traditional television,
which up until eight years ago was 100 per cent of my business." While
COVID-19 has changed how stories are being captured, Yannick Bisson of Murdoch
Mysteries says one thing remains the same: "The need for something to
watch, the need for content. We want to watch our voices on our screen."
In Ontario alone, there are an estimated 30,000 full-time jobs connected to
the film and television sector. But as the pandemic stretches on, choosing
whether to work or wait has producer Jason Jallet facing some tough choices.
"Do we go come up here to northern Ontario to make films? So if I'm
bringing actors up from Toronto on a weekly basis to be on screen, am I putting
my community here in northern Ontario at risk?"
^ This is an
interesting behind-the-scenes look at how most of our American TV shows and
movies are filmed in Canada during Covid. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/canada-film-tv-covid-19-pandemic-1.5888902
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