Did you know or already knew...

  • Backstreet Boys are the best selling boy band of all time with selling more than 100 million records
  • Brian Littrell did a song called In Christ Alone in 2004 and it became #1 on billboard Christian charts
  • Brian Littrell's Album Welcome Home was #3 on Christian Album charts for billboard in 2006
  • Hilary Duff is known as being a singer, but she is also a producer as well
  • Hilary Duff won six awards for her role in the movie Cinderella Story
  • Hilary Duff won ten awards for her tv role in Lizzie McGuire
  • Il Volo had performances on a italian show and their debut album became platinum in Italy with no single release of air play
  • Kara DioGuardi and Regis Philbin are cousins
  • Kara DioGuardi has written over fifty songs for more than fifty people
  • Kara DioGuardi sung Now You know for Cinderella Story but Hilary Duff sung it for the soundtrack
  • When Calls the Heart has two creators not just one, Michael Landon Jr. and Brian Bird
  • When Calls the Heart is the best rated program for their network Hallmark

Saturday, August 2, 2014

Interview with Brian Bird (producer of When Calls the Heart on Hallmark Channel)

           On January 11, 2014 When Calls the Heart premiered on Hallmark Channel. When Calls the Heart based on the book series When Calls the Heart written by Janette Oke. The series is directed by Michael Landon Jr. The show is about Elizabeth Thatcher (Erin Krakow), a young teacher accustomed to her high society life, who receives her first classroom assignment in Coal Valley, a small coal mining town where life is simple, but often fraught with challenges. Elizabeth charms most everyone in Coal Valley, except Constable Jack Thornton (Daniel Lissing) who believes Thatcher’s wealthy father has doomed the lawman's career by insisting he be assigned in town to protect the shipping magnate’s daughter. Living in a 19th-century coal town, Elizabeth will have to learn the ways of the frontier if she wishes to thrive in the rural west on her own. Lori Loughlin plays Abigail Stanton, a wife and mother whose husband, the foreman of the mine, along with a dozen other miners, has just been killed in an explosion. The newly widowed women find their faith is tested when they must go to work in the mines to keep a roof over their heads.
         When the series first premiered it got high ratings and when the first season finished the ratings were higher than when it first premiered. I like the story telling and the people and that it is a family show. A lot of families shows came on when I was growing up and now to see a family show on when I am an adult it just makes me feel happy. A few years ago I got started in reading Janette Oke's books with the Love Comes Softly series which became so popular that Hallmark made movies out of her books which Michael Landon Jr. wrote and directed and produced but not all of them.
         I was so excited when Brian Bird one of the producers of When Calls the Heart said that he would be glad to be interviewed by me. I have full respect for this show and everyone who works so hard on it to make it an amazing show. Before this show I had a number one favorite show on TV now but since watching this show its become my number one favorite show. When Calls the Heart was renewed for a second season. All the fans of the show call themselves the Hearties and its so good to call yourself a heartie because it means you are a true fan of the show.

Here is the interview with Brian Bird:

WTCH Q & A for Kristina Chen

1. What is the best thing about working on WCTH?

For me, and I think for Michael Landon, the best part of doing this show is that we feel we are serving a far-underserved audience.  Fifteen years ago, all the networks competed for a family audience, but today nobody but the Hallmark Channel and the Up network are even trying.  While we've all been sleeping (or hypnotized by all the edgy programming), there is virtually no family friendly programming anywhere to be found.  There are kids' shows and adult shows everywhere, but family TV is on life support, almost extinct.  Some of my best memories growing up were watching TV with my family.  That's not even possible anymore, but with When Calls the Heart, it still is.  We're very proud of that and feel we are doing something very radical because everybody else is following the HBOs of the world, like lemmings, over the cliff into dark and depraved.

2. How long did it take to build the buildings?

When we found the Jamestown movie facility, the town was about two-thirds there already, but we felt we needed to fill it out some to make it a full “Coal Valley.”  Most of the interior locations, such as the Saloon, the jailhouse, Abigail's Cafe, the Mercantile and Gowen's office also had to be built or finished.  We also built three row-houses and the exterior and interior of the mine.  All told, all of those locations took three construction crews working full time about six weeks.  

 3. Was Coal Valley an actual place from Janette's books?

This is the interesting part about Coal Valley.  It did not exist in Janette Oke's Canadian West series of books, but Janette always told us she wanted to write about a coal mining town in her novels because, growing up in Alberta, she always new coal mining was a big part of the province.  So when we were trying to figure out how to do a multi-generational series involving both the original Elizabeth Thatcher and this new branch of the Thatcher family, represented by her niece and namesake, young Elizabeth, we decided to make Coal Valley the world of the show.  And Janette loved it, so much that she decided to write a new series of When Calls the Heart novels following the events in Coal Valley and young Elizabeth's journey and love story with Jack Thornton/  

 4. When you first starting working on WCTH did you research 1910 and Janette Oke?

Michael Landon had already made a series of movies for the Hallmark Channel based on Janette's “Love Come Softly” series of books, so he was well-versed in how to do period drama.  I've always been a journalist first in everything I write, so this an opportunity for me do to a bunch of homework.  Plus we had Janette's great novels to glean a lot of ideas from.

5. How long does it take to make a whole season?

Season 1 and 12 episodes took a year to make.  Usually, you could do 12 episodes from start to finish in about 8-9 months, but we wanted to get it just right, so we took our time creating the first several scripts to try to get the world and the voices just right.  It is always a process of trial and error, trying to find the heart and soul of a new series, and creating a place where audiences want to come back to week after week.    That's why when you look back at successful series earlier seasons, you'll often notice that they evolve over time and that the first several episodes sometimes don't feel consistent with the world the show later becomes as it matures and finds itself.  We hope that process didn't take too many episodes before people felt the world was all making sense.

 6. I know you said the soundtrack for the show will be out soon but what kind of music will be on the soundtrack?  At this point, we will likely wait until after Season 2 to make a best- of soundtrack with all the best beautiful music cues. 

7. Do you know when the whole season will be out on DVD?

Out understanding is that a full Season 1 set will be available sometime in the 4th quarter of 2014, my guess in November sometime.

8. Will there be any bible lessons on the show?

There are no firm plans yet for Bible lessons, but we have discussed it with a few organizations, and will probably try to do something as Season 2 unfolds.

9. Is it difficult to find lessons from 1910 for Elizabeth to teach?

No, that's the fun part of doing homework for a show set in 1910, and one of the real bonuses of a rich, vibrant internet.  Doing that amount of research before internet databases, would have required a lot of time and digging.  Some science lessons, gravity and inertia, are the same now as they would have been in 1910, as they were during Isaac Newton's day.   We tried to do be consistent with research of how children were taught back in 1910, such as recreate grade school primary readers that would have been used during those days.  The intelligence test she gave to Beau (and Jack) had questions from an IQ test back in the early 1900s.   Also, her initial research into Beau's “swimming words” was consistent with very early research on dyslexia.  

10. Can you tell me the proccess you go through to making an episode?

First comes the story-breaking process, which consists of writers sitting in a room together exploring themes and ideas.  Most story lines come from free-form associations are are batted around the room like a hockey puck until they begin to resemble a storyline.  Other ideas come from real life experiences, as was the case with the Beau Grady storyline.  Our writer for that episode, Kim Byer-Johnson, is the mother of a dyslexic son, and she wrote that storyline from the heart.   Then a 10-page outline is written and has to be approved by executives at the network.  After that a first draft of the script is written, and then brought back to the head writer (me) and I do a polish on the script to keep it consistent with the world we are created.  Then that version of the script goes to the network for another set of notes.  After that, we try to finalize the script and get it ready for production, although it will usually go through a few more revision once the director of the episode, and our lead actors, give their thoughts.  That whole process takes about a month to perfect the script.  Then it delivered to production where the art department begins prepping any special needs such as new sets or props required for that episode.  That process takes a week to two weeks before we're ready to film.  After seven days of filming, the episode, as we say is now “in the can,” and then goes into our preproduction process.  That includes sound design, visual effects, music scoring and color correction, all of which takes an additional 3-4 weeks.  You might ask how we were able to accomplish 12 episodes in nine months if they each take approximately 2.5 months to finish?  The answer to that is we are working on multiple episodes simultaneously.  While one director is filming one, the art department is prepping the next one.  When that one goes into production, the previous few are going through the post-production process simultaneously.  It's a business of creative logistics.

11. #hearties might want to know but How did Janette like the letters and cards from Operation Oke?

She only received them recently and is preparing her response, so I'm waiting with baited breath like the rest of the hearties!

12. How many retakes are there for one episode?

There's no set number, and there's rarely anything that is actually a “retake.”  That would mean we go back and reshoot a scene that was already shot.  This is not to say that never happens (because we did go back and reshoot scenes in Season 1), but the goal is to try to minimize reshooting.  During the production cycle, the script is broken down by the assistant director into a shooting schedule, so that for instance, we shoot all the saloon scenes in a day or two, and stay in that location until all the pages are shot.  Each scene, depending on its length and how complicated it is to film, is budgeted for a certain number of hours (they usually average about two hours).  During that filming process, we may do 4-6 takes of each set up, which is basically each camera angle.  Most scenes are shot from 4-5 different angles, so we're saying “action about 15-20 times for each scene. 

13. Do you know how much film it takes to make an episode?

We shoot the show on high-end digital cameras, and no on film cameras, so it's not a function of how much film, but  how much digital media we need.  It's usually going to be about 20, 10-gigabyte hard drives per episode.  
 
14. How do you determine the title of the episodes?

 Some TV series take a different approach.  “Friends” always titled their episodes starting with the phrase “The One With...” so it would become something like “The One With the Pile of Cash” or “The One With the Proctologist.”  That sort of thing just seemed like the writers were trying to be too cool for school, so we decided not to do anything that silly.  For us, we just tried to look for a thematic element, common phrase, euphemism, play on words or a derivation of some other famous title of a book or a movie.  So for instance the final episode became “Prelude to a Kiss” because that's the title of a famous movie and it was a good description of what we were trying to accomplish in that storyline.

I wanna thank Brian Bird for answering these questions and giving great answers that will make Hearties fall more in love with When Calls the Heart! 

To find out more about  When Calls the Heart click here!

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