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| url =http://www.hbo.com/apps/schedule/ScheduleServlet?ACTION_DATE=UpdateCalendar&DATE=6/11/2007
| url =http://www.hbo.com/apps/schedule/ScheduleServlet?ACTION_DATE=UpdateCalendar&DATE=6/11/2007
| accessdate=2007-05-01
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}} </ref> The show has been renewed for a third season which begins January 18, 2009. In Canada, sseason three will premiere on [[HBO Canada]] day-and-date with HBO in the U.S.
}} </ref> The show has been renewed for a third season which begins January 18, 2009. In Canada, season three will premiere on [[HBO Canada]] day-and-date with HBO in the U.S.


The show was co-created by [[Mark V. Olsen]] and [[Will Scheffer]] who also serve as executive producers. Olsen and Scheffer spent almost three years researching the premise of the show,<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/28/arts/television/28poly.html?ei=5090&en=f5a8a1639b304daf&ex=1301202000&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss&pagewanted=all 'Big Love': Real Polygamists Look at HBO Polygamists and Find Sex]</ref> with the intent of creating a fair portrayal of polygamy in America without being judgmental. The series [[theme song]] is "[[God Only Knows]]" by [[The Beach Boys]]; musical score for the series is composed by [[David Byrne (musician)|David Byrne]]. The score for the first season was composed by [[Mark Mothersbaugh]].
The show was co-created by [[Mark V. Olsen]] and [[Will Scheffer]] who also serve as executive producers. Olsen and Scheffer spent almost three years researching the premise of the show,<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/28/arts/television/28poly.html?ei=5090&en=f5a8a1639b304daf&ex=1301202000&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss&pagewanted=all 'Big Love': Real Polygamists Look at HBO Polygamists and Find Sex]</ref> with the intent of creating a fair portrayal of polygamy in America without being judgmental. The series [[theme song]] is "[[God Only Knows]]" by [[The Beach Boys]]; musical score for the series is composed by [[David Byrne (musician)|David Byrne]]. The score for the first season was composed by [[Mark Mothersbaugh]].

Revision as of 19:33, 5 January 2009

Template:Otheruses2

Big Love
Created byMark V. Olsen
Will Scheffer
StarringBill Paxton
Jeanne Tripplehorn
Chloë Sevigny
Ginnifer Goodwin
Amanda Seyfried
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes24 (list of episodes)
Production
Running timeapprox. 50 min
Original release
NetworkHBO
ReleaseMarch 12, 2006 –
present

Big Love is an HBO television drama about a Mormon fundamentalist[1][2][3] family in Utah that practices polygamy. Big Love stars Bill Paxton, Chloë Sevigny, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Ginnifer Goodwin, Harry Dean Stanton and Amanda Seyfried. It premiered in the United States on March 12, 2006 following the sixth season premiere of the popular HBO series The Sopranos. The second season began on Monday, June 11, 2007.[4] The show has been renewed for a third season which begins January 18, 2009. In Canada, season three will premiere on HBO Canada day-and-date with HBO in the U.S.

The show was co-created by Mark V. Olsen and Will Scheffer who also serve as executive producers. Olsen and Scheffer spent almost three years researching the premise of the show,[5] with the intent of creating a fair portrayal of polygamy in America without being judgmental. The series theme song is "God Only Knows" by The Beach Boys; musical score for the series is composed by David Byrne. The score for the first season was composed by Mark Mothersbaugh.

Plot

The series revolves around Bill Henrickson, his three wives Barb (legal wife/first wife), Nicki (second wife) and Margene (third wife), and their combined family of eight children. Henrickson lives with his family in three neighboring houses in Sandy, Utah, a suburb of Salt Lake City.

Season 1

Season 1 introduces the main characters and revolves around the family's struggles to live their polygamous lifestyle while keeping it a secret from the outside world. While Bill goes about expanding his chain of home improvement stores ("Henrickson’s Home Plus"), he struggles to balance his three wives and his strained relationship with Nicki's father, Church prophet Roman Grant. From his compound on Juniper Creek, Roman seeks to gain a greater share of the profits from Bill's business ventures. Bill, who is resentful towards Roman for expelling him from Juniper Creek as a teenager, opposes this and joins with his brother Joey, a former NFL player who returned to Juniper Creek after drug addiction, to gain a seat on the church's board of directors, in order to undercut Roman's considerable influence and to maintain a level of autonomy from his controlling grasp.

Bill's first wife Barb is shown to be the anchor for the plural Henrickson family, but as the show progresses it is revealed that Barb has mixed feelings about the concept of polygamy and only her love for Bill makes her stay. Meanwhile, second wife Nicki (daughter of Roman) struggles to fit in with modern life outside the compound and her own desire for power within the family dynamic. Nicki compensates for her isolation by developing an addiction to shopping, leading her to become $60,000 in debt via credit card charges. Third wife Margene, 23 years old, meanwhile struggles to find her place within the family, as both Barb and Nicki look down upon her due to her youth and fertility, having given birth to two children via Bill and being pregnant with her third child.

Most of season one focuses on the family's struggle to keep their family's secret from their friends, neighbors, and co-workers. However, things come to a head when Barb is nominated for a "Mother of the Year" Award, resulting in her and Bill being outed as a polygamist couple. Meanwhile Joey's mentally unstable wife Wanda poisons Alby Grant (Roman's son and chief minion) when Alby discovers that Bill is using Joey as a pawn in his scheme to undermine Roman's power within the church and threatens the two.

Season 2

Season 2 picks up two weeks after the end of season one, as Barb temporarily leaves home before coming back. Though the outing does not damage the family's reputation and the Henrickson business, it causes Bill to decide to take steps to ensure his family's financial security by trying to buy an electronic gambling company called Weber Gaming.

The second season also expands upon the political battles at Juniper Creek. When Roman and his wife inform Alby that they are willing to allow Wanda and Joey to get away with their attempt on his life in exchange for using them as leverage against Bill, Alby alerts outside authorities who arrest Joey (who claims credit for poisoning Alby in order to protect Wanda) and ultimately leads to a raid of the compound.

Meanwhile Roman's newest intended bride, the fifteen year old Rhonda Volmer secretly leaves the compound to live with the Henricksons. The family is quick to take Rhonda in, thinking that she is an innocent trying to escape being forced to marry the elderly Roman. However, it is quickly revealed that Rhonda is a pathological liar and sociopath, who left the compound only to exploit Roman's legal troubles in order to get herself on TV.

The departure of Rhonda and Alby's actions lead to Bill manipulating Roman and the Greens (a renegade polygamist sect that operates on the fringes of society) against each other in order to claim Weber Gaming. Roman is shot by the Greens when the police finally try and arrest the Greens, forcing them to flee. With Roman hospitalized, Alby quickly seizes power and thanks to Rhonda's statements to the police, Roman is arrested by the police for violating the Mann Act. Alby's power is ultimately secured when he forces his mother to flee Juniper Creek (after realizing that she planned on using him as a puppet to secure her own power base at Juniper Creek) and Bill's refusal to challenge Alby's claim of prophethood in order to claim the position for himself.

In his family life, Nicki and Barb fall out as the two wage war against the other for the "head wife" position, culminating in Margene encouraging Bill to bring a Serbian waitress, Ana, into the family as Bill's fourth wife. Margene befriended Ana after seeing Bill flirting with her.

Barb, after a tearful reunion with her estranged mother and a pep talk with Roman's wife, reasserts herself as first wife by outing the family as polygamist to her nosey neighbors and informing Bill that she will finally leave him once and for all if he tries to bring a fourth wife into the family.

Meanwhile, Sarah is seeking help in dealing with her family's lifestyle through a support group for ex-Mormons, leading to her falling for a man ten years her senior. While Sarah ultimately gives up her virginity to her new boyfriend (mainly to spite her father, who is indifferent towards Sarah's growing disdain for him and polygamy), Ben gives himself over to his father's views on polygamy. At the close of the season, Ben is dating twin girls from Juniper Creek whose goal is to marry one man between them, causing Barb to consider sending him away to live with her (non-polygamist) sister.

Season 3

In the third season of Big Love, Bill tries to find a partner for a Mormon-friendly casino and attempts to woo a fourth-wife prospect through unorthodox group-dating rituals, all while dealing with escalating hostilities between his parents.

HBO Canada will premiere this series day-and-date with HBO in the U.S. on January 18, 2009 at 9 p.m. ET.[6]

In November 2008, [1], the show's official site, launched a massive ad campaign for the third season of Big Love, including a preview of the new season, a behind-the-scenes look at the new season, and four background videos of Bill Henrickson, Barbara Dutton-Henrickson, Nicollette Grant and Margene Heffman. In the behind-the-scenes video, Ginnifer Goodwin says "Anything you thought could happen happens." Bill Paxton states, "I thought Season 2 was vamped up but Season 3 is even more explosive." On her character, Chloe Sevigny says, "There is definitely a power struggle that goes on between the wives. You see Bill and Barb find out about some things Nicki has been hiding from them."

Cast and characters

Main Cast:

Actor Role
Bill Paxton Bill Henrickson
Jeanne Tripplehorn Barbara Henrickson
Chloë Sevigny Nicolette Grant
Ginnifer Goodwin Margene Heffman
Amanda Seyfried Sarah Henrickson
Douglas Smith Ben Henrickson
Joel McKinnon Miller Don Embry
Jolean Wejbe Tancy Henrickson
Grace Zabriskie Lois Henrickson
Harry Dean Stanton Roman Grant
Daveigh Chase Rhonda Volmer
Melora Walters Wanda Henrickson
Matt Ross Alby Grant
Keegan Holst Wayne Henrickson
Mary Kay Place Adaleen Grant
Bruce Dern Frank Harlow
Shawn Doyle Joey Henrickson
Brian Kerwin Eddie Henrickson
Tina Majorino Heather Tuttle
Branka Katic Ana

Recurring:

Family tree

Orville HenricksonUnnamed woman
Lois HenricksonEddie HenricksonUnnamed Dutton manNancy Davis DuttonUnnamed Heffman manVirginia "Ginger" Heffman
{{{#}}}{{{#}}}{{{#}}}{{{#}}}
Barbara "Barb" Dutton HenricksonCindy Dutton
Joey Jr. HenricksonSarah HenricksonBenjamin "Ben" HenricksonTancy "Teenie" HenricksonWayne HenricksonRaymond HenricksonAaron HenricksonLester Henrickson

The United Effort Brotherhood

The show's fictional fundamentalist group, the "United Effort Brotherhood", or UEB, is similar to and was inspired by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS) whose financial and legal wing is called the "United Effort Plan".[citation needed] The FLDS is one of the most prolific and well-known polygamist groups[citation needed] which regard themselves as the legitimate successor of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.[citation needed] Creators Olsen and Scheffer included a drive through the twin FLDS towns of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Arizona, as part of their research for the show.[9] The raid on Juniper Creek is reminiscent of the Short Creek raid, an actual historic event from 1953 where Arizona state police and National Guard troops took action against polygamists in Colorado City.

Production and crew

Although set in Utah, the series is primarily filmed at the Santa Clarita Studios in Valencia, California. The location used for filming "Henrickson’s Home Plus" scenes is The All American Home Center in Downey, California.

The mall scenes from Season one were filmed in the Fox Hills Mall, in Culver City, California. Other exterior shots are filmed in Downtown Salt Lake City, Utah and Sandy, Utah, as well as northeast Los Angeles, California.[10]

The head writers for the series are the co-creators: Mark V. Olsen and Will Scheffer. The writing staff includes staff writers: Dustin Lance Black, Doug Jung, Eileen Myers, Jennifer Schuur, Doug Stockstill, Jeanette Collins & Mimi Friedman.

Directors of the series include many veteran directors from other programs on HBO and many with backgrounds with independent films include Rodrigo Garcia, Charles McDougall, Sarah Pia Anderson, Dan Attias, Burr Steers, Michael Spiller, Alan Taylor, Mary Harron, Steve Shill, Julian Farino, Michael Lehmann and Alan Poul (former executive producer of Six Feet Under).

The show's producers are Ann Holm, Ron Binkowski, Bernadette Caulfield, Jeanette Collins & Mimi Friedman, and Shane Keller. David Knoller. Executive producers are Olsen and Scheffer as well as Gary Goetzman and actor/writer/director Tom Hanks.

Episodes

Season No. of episodes First Airdate Last Airdate
Season 1 12 March 12, 2006 June 4, 2006
Season 2 12 June 11, 2007 August 26, 2007

Soundtrack

The theme song to the series is The Beach Boys' "God Only Knows". In addition, David Byrne has recorded an entire soundtrack to the second season, which will be released as Big Love: Hymnal on 2008-08-19.

DVD releases

DVD Name Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
Season 1 October 17, 2006 April 27, 2007 September 5, 2007
Season 2 December 11, 2007 TBA July 2, 2008

Reception

Metacritic rated the show a 72 out of 100, indicating favorable reviews. [11]

Heather Havrilesky of Salon.com said of Big Love, "There are elements of this new series that have a quirkiness that might seem deliberate or overly clever against a different backdrop, but that feels natural in its own gracefully odd environment." [12]

Time magazine's James Poniewozik named it one of the Top 10 Returning Series of 2007, ranking it at #5.[13]

Awards

The second season was nominated for the Golden Globe for Best Drama Series in 2007. Bill Paxton was also nominated for the Best Actor in a Television Drama Golden Globe for his role as Bill Henrickson.[14]

International broadcasting

Country Alternate title/Translation TV Network(s) Series Premiere Weekly Schedule
United States United States HBO March 12, 2006 Sundays at 9:00pm (ET)
Canada Canada HBO Canada January 18, 2009 Sundays at 9:00 p.m. (ET/MT)
Argentina Argentina HBO
Australia Australia SBS TV June 3, 2007 Saturdays at 8:35pm
Belgium Belgium Canvas (First run), BeTV (Reruns) September 2006
Brazil Brazil Amor Imenso HBO October 1, 2006
Chile Chile HBO
Colombia Colombia HBO
Czech Republic Czech Republic HBO
Denmark Denmark Kanal 4 Mondays - Thursdays 20.00
Finland Finland Nelonen February 19, 2007 Mondays at 9.00pm
France France Canal+ September 13, 2007 Thursdays at 10:15pm
Guatemala Guatemala HBO September 9, 2007 Sundays at 9.00pm
Hungary Hungary Hármastársak HBO/HBO2 January 5, 2007
India India HBO August 4, 2008 Mondays at 11:30pm
Israel Israel YES+
Hot VOD
Italy Italy Fox Life
Mexico Mexico HBO
Netherlands Netherlands NET 5 May 28, 2007 Mondays at 9.30pm
New Zealand New Zealand TV ONE Tuesdays at 9:35pm
Norway Norway FEM September 3, 2007 Mondays at 9.30pm
Peru Peru HBO
Poland Poland Trzy na jednego (Three To One) HBO, HBO2
Portugal Portugal FX 2007 Season 2 Saturdays at 9:05pm and Wednesdays at 10:00pm

(Season 1 reruns every day except Sundays and Saturdays at 1:00am, 11:35am and 3:25pm)

Romania Romania Dragoste mare HBO
Scandinavia Canal+
South Africa South Africa M-Net
Spain Spain Canal+
Sweden Sweden SVT April 16, 2008 Wednesdays at 10.00pm
Thailand Thailand HBO
HBO Signature
October 22, 2007
October 8, 2007
Turkey Turkey Foxlife
United Kingdom United Kingdom Channel Five (First run), Five Life (reruns) June 2006 Mondays 22.00
Uruguay Uruguay HBO

See also

References

  1. ^ Vince Horiuchi, "Dern turns to Utah's 21st governor for HBO role", Salt Lake Tribune, 2006-04-14.
  2. ^ Gayle Fee and Laura Raposa, "Mitt takes hit on 'Big Love'", Boston Herald, 2007-08-29.
  3. ^ Rebecca Dana, "Raise the Red-State Lantern", New York Observer, 2006-03-12.
  4. ^ "HBO sets new date for Second Series". HBO.com. Retrieved 2007-05-01.
  5. ^ 'Big Love': Real Polygamists Look at HBO Polygamists and Find Sex
  6. ^ http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/December2008/17/c2670.html
  7. ^ a b "Big Love Episode Guide Viagra Blue". HBO.com. Retrieved 2006-07-30.
  8. ^ "Episodes Cast for "Big Love"". imdb.com. Retrieved 2006-07-30.
  9. ^ Adams, Brooke (2006-03-08). "The real sources behind Big Love". The Polygamy Files: The Tribune's blog on the plural life. The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved 2006-08-12. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  10. ^ San Fernando Road: As Seen on TV, Atwater Village Newbie, June 13, 2007
  11. ^ Big Love (HBO) - Reviews from Metacritic
  12. ^ Salon.com Arts & Entertainment | I Like to Watch
  13. ^ Poniewozik, James; Top 10 New TV Series; time.com
  14. ^ "Hollywood Foreign Press Association 2008 Golden Globe Awards For The Year Ended December 31, 2007". HFPA. 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-13.