Post by The Ultimate Nullifier on Apr 12, 2018 19:58:24 GMT -6
www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/martin-scorsese-direct-sctv-reunion-documentary-netflix-1101710
Martin Scorsese to Direct 'SCTV' Reunion Documentary for Netflix
Jimmy Kimmel will host an 'SCTV' cast reunion in May in Toronto, footage from which will anchor the doc.
Netflix has ordered an untitled SCTV reunion special, with Martin Scorsese to direct.
Scorsese will reunite former SCTV co-stars Joe Flaherty, Eugene Levy, Andrea Martin, Catherine O’Hara, Martin Short and Dave Thomas in front of a live audience for An Afternoon With SCTV on May 13 in Toronto, to be hosted by Jimmy Kimmel.
The reunion will anchor the documentary about the cult TV series featuring members of Canada’s Second City comedy troupe, to be shot over three days next month in Toronto, with Andrew Alexander, John Brunton and Lindsay Cox producing.
Scorsese, with 12 Oscar nominations and a directing win for The Departed (2006), held long conversations with SCTV alums about their character-driven TV satire series that ran from 1976 to 1984 as he developed his documentary about the famed comedy troupe, most of whom were Canadian artists.
These included Levy as smarmy comic Bobby Bittman and broadcaster Earl Camembert, the late John Candy as smooth-talking Johnny LaRue, the late Harold Ramis as game show host Moe Green, Martin as leopard-clad programming boss Edith Prickley, O'Hara as platinum blond singer Lola Heatherton, Dave Thomas as drama critic Bill Needles, Rick Moranis as one of the 5 Neat Guys and Joe Flaherty as station manager Guy Cabellero.
Most of the original SCTV cast moved from the Canadian touchstone comedy to successful careers in Hollywood movies and TV shows, including Short, who brought many of his SCTV characters to his eventual star turn on Saturday Night Live.
SCTV premiered in 1976, a year after Saturday Night Live debuted stateside, as a satire of TV programming conveyed as a broadcast day from a low-budget TV station in the fictional town of Melonville, with backstage machinations included.
The latest SCTV reunion follows Moranis and Thomas, who played SCTV's and SNL's beer-loving McKenzie brothers during the 1980s, last year reuniting for a Toronto benefit concert. Other Canadian comedy legends on the Second City concert bill included Ghostbusters star Dan Aykroyd, O'Hara, Levy, Short and Flaherty.
The satirical series continued on air to 1984, before being syndicated across North America. SCTV alums Levy and O'Hara currently co-star in the Canadian comedy Schitt's Creek, which airs on Pop stateside, and the duo have appeared in films like Waiting for Guffman, For Your Consideration, Best in Show and A Mighty Wind.
Martin Scorsese to Direct 'SCTV' Reunion Documentary for Netflix
Jimmy Kimmel will host an 'SCTV' cast reunion in May in Toronto, footage from which will anchor the doc.
Netflix has ordered an untitled SCTV reunion special, with Martin Scorsese to direct.
Scorsese will reunite former SCTV co-stars Joe Flaherty, Eugene Levy, Andrea Martin, Catherine O’Hara, Martin Short and Dave Thomas in front of a live audience for An Afternoon With SCTV on May 13 in Toronto, to be hosted by Jimmy Kimmel.
The reunion will anchor the documentary about the cult TV series featuring members of Canada’s Second City comedy troupe, to be shot over three days next month in Toronto, with Andrew Alexander, John Brunton and Lindsay Cox producing.
Scorsese, with 12 Oscar nominations and a directing win for The Departed (2006), held long conversations with SCTV alums about their character-driven TV satire series that ran from 1976 to 1984 as he developed his documentary about the famed comedy troupe, most of whom were Canadian artists.
These included Levy as smarmy comic Bobby Bittman and broadcaster Earl Camembert, the late John Candy as smooth-talking Johnny LaRue, the late Harold Ramis as game show host Moe Green, Martin as leopard-clad programming boss Edith Prickley, O'Hara as platinum blond singer Lola Heatherton, Dave Thomas as drama critic Bill Needles, Rick Moranis as one of the 5 Neat Guys and Joe Flaherty as station manager Guy Cabellero.
Most of the original SCTV cast moved from the Canadian touchstone comedy to successful careers in Hollywood movies and TV shows, including Short, who brought many of his SCTV characters to his eventual star turn on Saturday Night Live.
SCTV premiered in 1976, a year after Saturday Night Live debuted stateside, as a satire of TV programming conveyed as a broadcast day from a low-budget TV station in the fictional town of Melonville, with backstage machinations included.
The latest SCTV reunion follows Moranis and Thomas, who played SCTV's and SNL's beer-loving McKenzie brothers during the 1980s, last year reuniting for a Toronto benefit concert. Other Canadian comedy legends on the Second City concert bill included Ghostbusters star Dan Aykroyd, O'Hara, Levy, Short and Flaherty.
The satirical series continued on air to 1984, before being syndicated across North America. SCTV alums Levy and O'Hara currently co-star in the Canadian comedy Schitt's Creek, which airs on Pop stateside, and the duo have appeared in films like Waiting for Guffman, For Your Consideration, Best in Show and A Mighty Wind.