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Reign (TV series)

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Reign
GenreHistorical fantasy
Romance
Created byLaurie McCarthy
Stephanie SenGupta
Starring
Opening theme"Scotland" by The Lumineers
ComposerTrevor Morris
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes54 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
Running time42 minutes
Production companies
Original release
NetworkThe CW
ReleaseOctober 17, 2013 (2013-10-17) –
present

Reign is an American historical fantasy romance television series following the early years of Mary, Queen of Scots living in France.[1] The series, created by Stephanie SenGupta and Laurie McCarthy, airs on The CW and premiered as part of the 2013–14 American television season.[2][3][4] The leading roles are played by a combination of Australian, Canadian, English, and New Zealand actors. Despite the show's subject matter, there are no Scottish or French actors in the main cast. Although the show has yet to air on British television, it has been acquired by Netflix for the UK and Mexico.

On February 13, 2014, The CW renewed the series for a second season,[5] which premiered on October 2, 2014. On January 11, 2015, The CW renewed the series for a third season that premiered on October 9, 2015.[6]

The show deviated from history by focusing on development of the characters in a fictional manner. In real life, Queen Mary lived for a while then was caught by the English after fleeing Loch Leven Castle and crossed into England, she was then was put in jail and executed but in the show that didn’t happen. Furthermore the story also focuses on the role of religion by showing the influence of the Vatican over most of the Catholic nations of Europe. This role of the Vatican is depicted through the fear individuals had of converting to Protestantism. The Vatican had a say in almost everyone's’ lives. This was illustrated when King Henry tried to nullify his marriage to Catherine de’ Medici to make his mistress’s son, Bash, his successor and heir to the throne. Even though he was the king, The Vatican had the power to deny his request to make Bash his successor.

Series overview

The highly fictionalized series follows the early exploits of Mary, Queen of Scots during her years living in France. The first season takes place in 1557, with Mary living in French court and awaiting her marriage to Prince Francis, to whom she has been engaged since they were six. Mary has to contend with changing politics and power plays, as well as her burgeoning feelings for Francis and the romantic attentions of Francis's bastard half-brother, Bash. Francis's mother, Catherine de' Medici, secretly tries to prevent the marriage following Nostradamus's confidential prediction that the marriage will lead to Francis's death. The series also follows the affairs of Mary's Scottish handmaidens Kenna, Aylee, Lola, and Greer, who are searching for husbands of their own at court.

Opening narration for Season 1 (episodes 2-11):

Since Mary, Queen of Scotland, was a child the English have wanted her country and her crown. She is sent to France to wed its next king, to save herself and her people – a bond that should protect her, but there are forces that conspire: forces of darkness; forces of the heart. Long may she reign.

The second season opens after the death of King Henry II, and follows the rise of Francis and Mary as King and Queen of France and Scotland. Together they have to balance their marriage with their roles as monarchs, and deal with the rising religious conflict between Catholics and Protestants, as well as the ambitions of the rival House of Bourbon for the throne of France.

The third season follows Francis's declining health and eventual death, leaving Mary a widow. Mary and Francis make the most of their last weeks together in closeness, as well as planning the passing of power to Francis's brother Charles as the new king and Francis's mother, Catherine, as the future regent. Following Francis's death partway through the season, Mary has to cope with no longer being tied to France as its Queen, and decide how best to protect Scotland's interests. The third season also introduces the court of Queen Elizabeth of England, who plots against Mary, fends off marital prospects, and deals with her secret love affair with Robert Dudley.

Episodes

Cast and characters

Main cast

Actor Role Seasons
1 2 3
Adelaide Kane Mary, Queen of Scots Main
Megan Follows Catherine de' Medici Main
Torrance Coombs Sebastian "Bash" Main
Toby Regbo Francis II of France Main[Note 1]
Celina Sinden Greer Main
Anna Popplewell Lola Main
Caitlin Stasey Kenna Main
Alan van Sprang Henry II of France Main Recurring
Jenessa Grant Aylee Main[Note 2]
Jonathan Keltz Leith Bayard Recurring Main
Craig Parker Stéphane Narcisse Main[Note 3]
Rose Williams Claude of France Main[Note 4]
Sean Teale Louis, Prince of Condé Main
Rachel Skarsten Elizabeth I of England Guest Main
Charlie Carrick Robert Dudley Main[Note 5]
Ben Geurens Gideon Blackburn Main[Note 6]

1. Main cast from episodes 1x01 to 3x05.
2. Main cast from episodes 1x01 to 1x08.
3. Recurring cast from episodes 2x02 to 2x05. Main cast from episode 2x06 onward.
4. Recurring cast from episodes 2x07 to 2x09. Main cast from episode 2x10 onward.
5. Recurring cast from episodes 3x01 to 3x04. Main cast from episode 3x05 onward.
6. Recurring cast from episodes 3x06 to 3x08. Main cast from episode 3x09 onward.

Recurring cast

Actor Role Seasons
1 2 3
Rossif Sutherland Nostradamus Recurring
Amy Brenneman Marie de Guise Recurring
Michael Therriault Aloysius Castleroy Recurring
Anna Walton Diane de Poitiers Recurring Guest
Katie Boland Clarissa Recurring Guest
Gil Darnell Christian, Duke of Guise Recurring Guest
Yael Grobglas Olivia D'Amencourt Recurring
Kathryn Prescott Penelope Recurring
Giacomo Gianniotti "Lord Julien"/Remy Recurring
Alexandra Ordolis Delphine Recurring
Ben Aldridge Antoine of Navarre Recurring Guest
Vince Nappo Renaude Recurring
Spencer MacPherson Charles of France Recurring[Note 7]
Clara Pasieka Amy Dudley Recurring
Tom Everett Scott William Recurring
Nick Lee Nicholas Recurring
Mark Ghanimé Don Carlos of Spain Recurring

7. Role previously portrayed by Peter DaCunha in 1x02.

Notable guests

Development and production

Conception

In February 2013, The CW announced its order of a pilot for a TV series based on the life of Mary, Queen of Scots, created by Stephanie Sengupta and Laurie McCarthy, and produced by CBS Studios.[7] Part of the reason McCarthy chose Mary Stuart as the subject is because of her life history and multiple husbands, which makes her story "sexier".[8] The pilot was directed by Brad Silberling, with Sengupta and McCarthy as the writers and executive directors; Sengupta left the team in May 2013, leaving Laurie McCarthy as the sole showrunner.[9] On February 9, 2013, it was announced that Australian actress Adelaide Kane would be playing the main character.[10]

In interviews preceding the premiere, showrunner McCarthy described the show as deliberately taking liberties with history, and that it's more "entertainment" than history,[11] while actress Anna Popplewell referred to the show as "fantasy history", exploring the characters in hypothetical situations.[12] Actress Megan Follows described the show as "24 for the pre-Renaissance", as the show tends to extend historical events over a longer period of time.[13] McCarthy added that the show is designed to be interesting to a contemporary audience, so viewers who aren't familiar with history will be able to watch and relate to the characters.[14] Among the creative choices is the use of modern music in the show soundtrack, and its costumes.[14] The show's costumes are designed by Meredith Markworth-Pollack, who worked on the CW's other shows Hart of Dixie and Gossip Girl, who created different looks for Mary and her ladies, each to complement their differing personalities.[15] The ladies: Lola, Kenna, Greer, and Aylee, are loosely based on Mary Beaton, Mary Seton, Mary Fleming, and Mary Livingston who were ladies-in-waiting to Mary, Queen of Scots.

Casting

Kane auditioned when she was filming a recurring role on the third season of MTV TV series Teen Wolf. When Kane got the part, the Teen Wolf writers wrote her character off the show.[16] Kane is part Scottish on her mother's side, and did research on the historical Mary Stuart in preparing for the role.[11] Torrance Coombs was announced as having been cast as Sebastian, one of the leading characters, in March 2013.[17] Sebastian is an original character created for the show, so Coombs didn't have as much research in preparation for the role, though he faced the challenge of changing his performance from that in The Tudors, another historical TV series he'd been involved in.[18][19] Alan Van Sprang, who was cast as Henry II of France, modeled his performance after Bill Clinton.[20] In November 2013, Amy Brenneman was announced as having been cast as Mary Stuart's mother, Mary de Guise, a role that initially went to Brenneman's Private Practice co-star Kate Walsh, who was unable to commit due to conflicting filming commitments.[21][22] Toby Regbo was cast as Dauphin Francis in March 2013. On March 10, 2015, it was announced that Rachel Skarsten has been cast as Queen Elizabeth, a role that is planned to debut in finale of season two and become a regular in season three.[23] Showrunner McCarthy described the addition of Elizabeth expands the scope of the series, and that she will be part of season three's focus on the show's three queens.[23]

Filming

A large part of the filming for the first season took place in Toronto, Canada and Ireland.[20][24][25]

Editing for sexual content

The show's pilot was distributed on May 20, 2013 to advertisers and critics for promotion and to generate hype.[26] The pilot was edited before its final airing on October 13, trimming the sexual content of the scene where Kenna masturbates after witnessing a bedding ceremony.[27][28] A later episode of the season, 1.13 "The Consummation", has two versions: an on-air cut for television broadcast, and an online streaming version with additional sexual content that was made available on the CW's website a few hours later.[29] This action was criticized by the Parents Television Council for putting sexual content online "where presumably children will be able to watch them with no rating or blocking capability".[30]

Broadcasts

Reign was announced on The CW's 2013 autumn line-up on May 10, 2013, placing it in the Thursday timeslot following The Vampire Diaries, its biggest hit in young women demographic.[2] The show had its series premiere on October 17, 2013, in the U.S.[31] In Canada, the series airs a day earlier on M3,[32] in simulcast with The CW on CTV Two, and in reruns on E! Canada.[33] Beginning with season three, the show will move to the latter network.[34]

In New Zealand, Prime premiered the show Thursdays at 9:30 p.m., starting November 21, 2013. In the Philippines, Reign premiered on ETC last May 30, 2014 and from season two onwards, new episodes will premiere the same week as the US. In Croatia, Reign is scheduled for Sunday evening on HRT 1 at 10:00 pm.[35] In Australia, Reign was originally scheduled to premiere on Eleven,[36] but premiered on Fox8 on August 5, 2014.[37] In the Middle East, it is aired on MBC4 at 10:00pm every Friday. Reign started to air in Romania in Fall 2014, on AXN Spin. Reign has yet to be broadcast in the United Kingdom.

In the Republic of Ireland the show broadcasts in the early mornings on RTÉ2 each Thursday at 02:15.[38]

The first two seasons of Reign are available for online streaming on Netflix.

Reception

Response to the show has been mixed, with various critics highlighting the show's focus on romance and teenage drama instead of historical accuracy. A number of reviewers have compared it to Gossip Girl, with similar emphasis on fashion, drama, and soap opera antics.[39][40][41][42] The review of the pilot by The New York Times described Reign a strong candidate as a "camp classic", calling it fun and acknowledging its historical inaccuracies.[43] The reviewer of The A.V. Club described the show as "an alternate-universe fanfiction than anything pretending to approach history", calling the show camp and fun.[39] The Miami Herald describes the show's opening episodes as "surprisingly entertaining", with Adelaide Kane's portrayal of Mary as "a teenager with a dawning realization that her royal caprices can have unexpectedly grim consequences offers an interesting take on the traditional coming-of-age story".[40] The review of Flavorwire described the show as "fantastical princess wish-fulfilment", a guilty pleasure that is relaxing to watch, and that its historical inaccuracy is to its advantage: "There is something about abandoning all pretense of authenticity that gives this story a lightness it badly needs; dead-seriousness just isn’t something that plays all that well at the moment."[44] Community Voices highlighted Reign as an interesting departure from The CW's other shows, but describes it as stuck in a rut, making it difficult to sustain a show that's "built on a binary premise: either Mary and Francis are coming together or they are drifting apart."[42] A review by a The Los Angeles Times critic is more critical, saying that the "sexed-up version of high school with horses" show "does not deserve" its main character, who is described as a "The Princess Diaries knock-off", but acknowledges that the show is self-aware of its position as a guilty pleasure.[45] USA Today is also critical, describing the show as anachronistic and "dumbing down" history for the sake of entertainment.[41]

Awards and accolades

Awards and accolades for Reign
Year Result Award Category Recipients
2016 Pending Canadian Screen Awards Best Production Design or Art Direction in a Fiction Program or Series Acts of War
Phillip Barker, Robert Hepburn, Brad Milburn
Pending Canadian Screen Awards[46] Shaw Media Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Continuing Leading Dramatic Role Three Queens
Megan Follows
2015 Nominated Golden Maple Awards[47] Best Actor in a TV series broadcast in US Torrance Coombs & Jonathan Keltz
Nominated Canadian Screen Awards Best Achievement in Make-Up Consummation
Jenny Arbour, Linda Preston
Nominated Canadian Screen Awards[48] Shaw Media Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Continuing Leading Dramatic Role Megan Follows
2014 Won Hollywood Post Alliance Awards[49] Outstanding Color Grading – Television Pilot
David Cole - Modern VideoFilm
Nominated The Joey Awards[50] Young Actress age 9 or younger in a TV Series Drama or Comedy Guest Starring or Principal Role Vanessa Carter
Nominated Teen Choice Awards[51] Choice TV: Breakout Show Reign
Nominated Choice TV: Female Breakout Star Adelaide Kane
Nominated Choice TV: Male Breakout Star Toby Regbo
Nominated Monte-Carlo Television Festival Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series Torrance Coombs
Nominated Outstanding Actress in a Drama Series Adelaide Kane
Won People's Choice Awards Favorite New TV Drama Reign

Ratings

Season Timeslot (ET) No. of
episodes
Premiered Ended TV season Rank Viewers
(in millions)
18–49
rating
(average)
Date Premiere viewers
(in millions)
Date Finale viewers
(in millions)
1 Thursday 9:00 PM 22 October 17, 2013 (2013-10-17) 1.98[52] May 15, 2014 (2014-05-15) 1.24[53] 2013–2014 #158[54] 1.94 0.9/3
2 22 October 2, 2014 (2014-10-02) 1.01[55] May 14, 2015 (2015-05-14) 0.83[56] 2014–2015 #164[57] 1.72[57] 0.7/2
3 Friday 8:00 PM
(episodes 1–10)
Monday 8:00 PM
(episodes 11–)
18 October 9, 2015 (2015-10-09) 0.95[58] TBA 2015–2016

Home media releases

Complete Season DVD/Blu-ray Release dates Additional info
Region 1/A Region 2/B Region 4/C
1 September 23, 2014[59] TBA January 14, 2015[60] Deleted Scenes
Two featurettes:
- The Making of a Queen
- The Authenticity of Reign: Recreating the 16th Century
2 October 6, 2015[61] TBA October 7, 2015[62] Deleted Scenes
Featurette: Playing By Her Rules: A Day on Set with a Queen and Her Court[63]

Other media

Novels

Novels based on the series authored by Lily Blake have been published by Little, Brown Books for Young Readers.

Title Published Type ISBN
Darkness Rises[64] May 20, 2014 Digital Short Story ISBN 978-0-31-629611-3
The Prophecy[65] September 23, 2014 Novel ISBN 978-0-31-633459-4
The Haunting[66] December 9, 2014 E-Novella ISBN 978-0-31-633455-6
Hysteria[67] May 12, 2015 Novel ISBN 978-0-31-633462-4
TBA[68] November 3, 2015 Novel ISBN 978-0-31-633464-8

References

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  4. ^ Cynthia Littleton (May 9, 2013). "CW Orders 4 Dramas; Renews 'Carrie Diaries,' 'Nikita'". Variety. Retrieved May 10, 2013.
  5. ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (February 13, 2014). "'Reign', 'Arrow', 'Supernatural', 'The Originals' & 'The Vampire Diaries' Renewed by The CW". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved February 13, 2014.
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  12. ^ Swift, Andy (October 18, 2013). "Mary Queen Of Scots: 'Reign' Stars Separate Historical Fact From Fiction". Hollywood Life. Retrieved December 9, 2013.
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  24. ^ CW 'Reign': Canada's Whizbang Films and Take 5 Productions to Co-Produce
  25. ^ M3 - Details
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  62. ^ "Reign: The Complete Second Season". JB Hi-Fi. Retrieved 2016-01-17.
  63. ^ "REIGN Season 2 DVD Release Details". Seat42F. Retrieved 2015-07-02.
  64. ^ "Reign: Darkness Rises". hachettebookgroup.com. Retrieved 2014-06-16.
  65. ^ "Reign: The Prophecy". hachettebookgroup.com. Retrieved 2014-06-16.
  66. ^ "Reign: The Haunting". hachettebookgroup.com. Retrieved 2014-12-05.
  67. ^ "Reign: Hysteria". hachettebookgroup.com. Retrieved 2014-12-05.
  68. ^ "Reign YA novel 3". hachettebookgroup.com. Retrieved 2015-05-09.