Lord Have Mercy: Reviews
Archived Reviews
  • Frances-Anne Solomon: Reviews
    (2 Articles)
    • Siege of the Scriptwriters

      (Article added: Nov-09-04)
      By Frances-Anne Solomon Ariel June 8, 1993 How did we get here, knee-deep in 600 scripts, in an office like a box, scribbled sheets of paper the size of my desk spread precariously over all the walls, cigarette smoke so...

    • Beating the System

      (Article added: Nov-09-04)
      By Bruce Paddington Bruce Paddington on a young Caribbean film-maker who has been making waves in London. When she directed Peggy Su in 1996, Frances-Anne Solomon became one of the few Trinidadians to have directed or produced a feature film....

  • Leda Serene Films Reviews
      • Cop Killers: Reviews
        (2 Articles)
        • Leonie Forbes Gets Role In Cop Killers

          (Article added: May-05-05)
          Gemini nominated actress Leonie Forbes will play a social worker Leda Serene Films' next project, Cop Killers, scheduled to go before the lens next summer. The script for the low-budget feature film - a fictional story inspired by newspaper reports...

        • Lord Have Mercy Creator Has New Film

          (Article added: Nov-04-04)
          By Gerald V. Paul The Caribbean Camera December 18, 2003 Solomon told the Camera that the mainstream media made much of the fact that the women were not only lesbians, but also drug addicts, and sex trade workers. Solomon has...

      • I Is A Long-Memoried Woman: Reviews
        (4 Articles)
        • Feature

          (Article added: Nov-04-04)
          'From de pout of mih mouth, To de treacherous calm of mih smile, You can tell...' Grace Nichols' first published collection of poems tells the story of a young African woman uprooted from her homeland and transported to slavery in...

        • Nanny in Europe

          (Article added: Nov-04-04)
          By Tony Hall I Is A Long-Memoried Woman, directed by Frances-Anne Solomon, is a video on the poems of Grace Nichols. Both Grace Nichols and Frances-Anne are CARIBBEAN immigrants living in Britain (Frances-Anne is from Trinidad and Tobago and Ms....

        • Shit, Filth & Video Tape

          (Article added: Nov-04-04)
          By Martina Attille I is a Long Memoried Woman, the 1983 collection of poems by Grace Nichols has been the inspiration of a new fifty-minute video, which goes by the same name. Financially assisted by the Arts Council of Great...

        • I Will Enter Into You

          (Article added: Nov-04-04)
          By Gwyneth Cumberbatch I have by now lost count of the times I have absorbed myself in Frances-Anne Solomon's 1990 video 'I Is A Long-Memoried Woman'. At first I thought I was drawn simply to the two dominant faces of...
      • Lord Have Mercy: Reviews
        (3 Articles)
        • LORD HAVE MERCY: Is Canada Ready'

          (Article added: Jan-17-06)
          By Aileen Santos  It's not Friends or  Survivor. It's called Lord Have Mercy and it's getting very positive feedback from The Globe and Mail, My Bindi.com and studio audience viewers alike. Canadian viewers have yet to experience anything like it ...

        • Caribbean Sitcom Breaks New Ground in Canada

          (Article added: Jan-09-06)
          Posted by: international, Arts & Entertainment, www.onlinedemocracy.ca A television sitcom centered on Canada's Caribbean community that started very small has won plaudits, built an audience and picked up two nominations for Gemini Awards, Canada's version of the Emmys. 'Lord Have...

        • VisionTV's Lord Have Mercy! and Carry Me Home Receive Gemini nominations

          (Article added: Jan-09-06)
          Release Date: September 12, 2003 The groundbreaking series Lord Have Mercy!, VisionTV's first foray into situation comedy, has received two nominations for the 18th Annual Gemini Awards. In addition, a nomination went to the documentary Carry Me Home: The Story...

      • Peggy Su!: Reviews
        (2 Articles)
        • Peggy Su!

          (Article added: Nov-09-04)
          Ormskirk Advertiser 13 June 1996 LATHOM Park Chapel has never seen a wedding like it... There were guests galore... even an international film star or two. But there was no vicar! Well, not a real vicar. The wedding was a...

        • At last, a Film Where the City Can Play Itself

          (Article added: Nov-09-04)
          By Ian Kirby Daily Post May 5 1996 THE city that has stood in for Cairo, Moscow, Dublin and London got to play itself yesterday. The city has so many landmarks which cry out Liverpool that it is fast developing...

      • Reunion: Reviews
        (2 Articles)
        • From a Black Perspective

          (Article added: Nov-04-04)
          By Leone Ross The Voice June 29, 1993 The latest of Birthrights shows Black British documentary makers at their best. [The] career of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, the immensely prolific Black classical composer who was packing the Albert Hall in 1904. "He...

        • Tv Review from the EVENING STANDARD

          (Article added: Nov-04-04)
          By Mathew Norman EVENING STANDARD July 6, 1993 THE link between money and religious faith is no preserve of Catholicism, as we saw at the beginning of Birthrights: The Reunion (BBC2), a series returning to look at the contribution made...

      • Siren Spirits (Bideshi): Reviews
        (4 Articles)
        • Ghostly Offerings to Challenge Expectations

          (Article added: Nov-09-04)
          By Elizabeth Cowley Daily Telegram December 12, 1994 DEFIANTLY enthusiastic, independent series producer Ingrid Lewis almost dares us not to like the four 20-minute plays we are about to see. She needn't worry'BBC2's Siren Spirits ' two on Christmas Day(9:45...

        • Tv Offerings From All-Woman Black Indepedent

          (Article added: Nov-09-04)
          The Times December 12, 1994 FOUR films of "magic and mystery" will be broadcast on BBC2 over Christmas in a new series, Siren Spirits. Bideshi, Get Me to the Crematorium on Time, White Men are Cracking up, and Memsahib Rita...

        • Dreaming of a Black Christmas

          (Article added: Nov-09-04)
          By Ellen Cranitch December 12, 1994 This Christmas, at a time of night when viewers habitually become sacrificial victims to the televisions set, BBC 2 plans to stimulate them into some degree of mental alertness. The channel is launching Siren...

        • Tales of the Unexpected

          (Article added: Nov-09-04)
          Fact can often be spookier than fiction, and this is proved by Siren Spirits, four ghost stories base on personal experiences' HUNGRY for original drama by Asian and Black writers, Siren Spirits was conceived to showcase the wealth of non-white...

      • What My Mother Told Me: Reviews
        (1 Articles)
        • Female Safari

          (Article added: Nov-04-04)
          Talk of Trinidad with The Humming Bird The movie 'What my mother told me" is unique in that it is one of the few works produced by a Trinidadian woman about the paradoxes and survival strategies of Caribbean women. Written...

  • Other Reviews
      • Flight: Reviews
        (2 Articles)
        • Crew on the Front Lawn

          (Article added: Nov-09-04)
          By Mike Ribbeck Laurashire Evening Telegraph September 25, 1995 Residents in a quiet Accrington Street woke to find a film crew camped out on their doorsteps. The technicians took over Carter Street for the day to film scenes for a...

        • BBC Produces Black Screen

          (Article added: Nov-09-04)
          Production: Flight Media: Televisual December 1995 A '500k film from Hindi Pictures is the first to be produced for Screen Two's 1996 Black Screen season. Flight is set in the Bengali community of Accrington, and is the story of a...

      • Love is the Devil: Reviews
        (2 Articles)
        • Jacobi Takes on a Meaty Role in Film About Bacon

          (Article added: Nov-09-04)
          By Matthew Brace BBC Drama Publicity April 29, 1997 Sir Derek Jacobi has stepped in to play the artist Francis Bacon in a controversial new film about his life called Love Is The Devil, it was confirmed yesterday. The star...

        • Bacon Film Hit By Dispute Over Who Own's Artist's Words

          (Article added: Nov-09-04)
          By Dalya Alberge BBC Television Drama Publicity Production: Love is the Devil Media: The Times A film being made about the artist Fancis Bacon, starring Derek Jacobi, may be halted by the administers of his estate. The film's director says...

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  • Lord Have Mercy

    In 2002, Leda Serene Films produced Lord Have Mercy!, Canada's first multicultural sitcom, broadcast on Vision TV, Toronto One, Showcase Television, and the Aboriginal People's Television Network. It's a zany ensemble sitcom set in a Caribbean storefront church.

Caribbean Sitcom Breaks New Ground in Canada

Posted by: international, Arts & Entertainment, www.onlinedemocracy.ca

A television sitcom centered on Canada's Caribbean community that started very small has won plaudits, built an audience and picked up two nominations for Gemini Awards, Canada's version of the Emmys.

'Lord Have Mercy' received nods in the categories of Best Individual Performance in a Comedy Programme or Series, by veteran Jamaican actress Leonie Forbes, and Best Comedy Programme or Series, for the awards to be handed out Oct. 20.

The recognition by the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television (ACCT) is vindication of sorts for producers Frances-Anne Solomon, Vanz Chapman and Claire Printo. 'Lord Have Mercy' went on the air in February on Vision TV, one of Canada's smaller cable channels, which aired all 13 episodes of the comedy. As its audience grew, the show was also picked up by the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network (APTN) and the Showcase channel.

For Forbes, who plays Sister Hope, perseverance paid off for the producers and cast of the comedy. "Usually people are sceptical when it comes to shows like these and it goes no further, but this one we really pressed on," she said recently from Toronto.

"When we were doing the pilot we crossed our fingers and bruised our knees wondering if someone would pick it up and it worked." Solomon and her team are still in the dark about the future of the show. Though it has been a relative success, they are still unsure
if it will be picked up for a second season.

But even if it does not return, there is a sense that 'Lord Have Mercy' has broken new ground in Canadian television. 'Lord Have Mercy' is based on the Mount Zion Church in the heart of Toronto's Caribbean community. Though it stars Canadian actors such as Arnold Pinnock in the lead role as Pastor Gooding, Gary Farmer and Shawn "Singlefoot" Singleton, the cast has a strong Caribbean flavour.

Rachel Price, who plays Pinnock's wife, is Trinidadian, as is Dennis "Sprangalang" Hall, who has the role of Pastor Cuthbert Stevens. Debbie Young, who plays Forbes' granddaughter, was born and raised in Toronto.

Solomon was born in Trinidad and Tobago but grew up in London where she worked with the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and produced the award-winning television comedy, 'Peggy Su!'. Solomon is also strongly influenced by shows like 'The Desmonds', a popular Caribbean sitcom that had a long run on British TV during the 1980s.
Solomon relocated her Lady Serene Films company from London to Toronto three years ago and one of her first moves was to assemble a team to produce a sitcom projecting life in Canada's Caribbean communities.

Bermudan Vanz Chapman, who had worked on a 22-part series titled 'Hip Hop', was one of the original crew and eventually became the main writer of 'Lord Have Mercy'. Forbes, with whom Solomon first worked in the 1980s, was called in from Kingston to start shooting the pilot in the summer of 2001.

In an interview with Toronto's 'Caribbean Camera', Solomon stressed the need for more diversity on Canadian television. "Until now there has never been anything like this attempted in Canada, where every character comes from the Caribbean community."

"We wanted to showcase the wide spectrum of what the Caribbean is all about," she said. When 'Lord Have Mercy' was first aired in February, writers like John McKay hoped it would mark a new day in Canadian media. "Hopefully, it will set a trend and these small broadcasters will be willing to produce Canadian stuff rather than just simply be a viaduct for syndicated programming from the States," McKay wrote in the Canadian Press.

With a production budget of 1.5 million dollars ($1.1 million U.S. dollars), the programme was filmed before a live audience, a nerve-racking experience for some cast members, including the seasoned Forbes who has acted in numerous theatre productions in Jamaica since the late 1950s.

"There was a lot of butterflies but through a lot of research by the writers and improvisation from the cast, we got through," she said.

All Lord Have Mercy: Reviews