Hope your Thanksgiving is pleasant and that it gives you pause to dwell on being thankful. Personally, I give thanks for Erica Strange.
Oh it’s so true. Every year about this time I return to gaze at Erica Strange (
You know, so much attention has been paid to all the female-centric shows on the new U.S. TV season that Being Erica has been forgotten. An unkind failing, I think.
Being Erica was created by a woman,
Then Erica went a bit silly. More teenager than woman, she got all tangled up over that guy Ethan (
Well now. What a thing it is to see Erica these days. She’s “a doctor in training.” That’s what CBC says, anyway. It means, I think, that Erica is going to be like Dr. Tom – a shrink-type who sends people back in time to become better people in the present. On the work front, things are going swimmingly. She’s, like, running this publishing house and friends with old enemies.
More important, she’s with Adam (Adam Fergus), who is dreamy and talks with a soft Irish lilt. (No actual Irishman talks like him, I can assure you, but a vast army of Irish actors have had great careers from speaking like that.) He’s so nice.
Tonight, mind you, things might be going a little awry. Erica’s sister Samantha (
One thing leads to another and we find Erica back in 1969. To the sound of the Monkees and Sugar, Sugar by the Archies, Erica hangs out with her mom, before Erica was born. Great secrets are revealed and an emotional turmoil unfolds.
These segments are nicely done, evocative, good-humoured and full of life. This no masterpiece of TV drama. It tends a tad toward the mushy. But it sings. Frankly, if the same material appeared as part of one of those U.S. network shows now dwelling so much on women characters, it would cause a considerable amount of commentary and, mostly, praise. Well done, Being Erica.
Me, I still have such mixed feels about Erica Strange. But that is how it should be. The show is not a one-note trick, not easily classified or even described. (It’s airing in more than 100 countries, which means a lot of people have feelings about Erica Strange.) Erin Karpluk continues to be outrageously good in the lead role. This woman she plays is a creation with so much physical and emotional gusto.
Being Erica is so vastly superior to those U.S. shows that proclaim their concentration on women, female empowerment and breaking down stereotypes. Erica Strange is adorable, a doll and all that, but utterly unique. I’m sorry I was a cad to her.
Also airing tonight The War of 1812 (
