The Switch (TV series)
The Switch | |
---|---|
Genre | Comedy |
Written by | Amy Fox Wren Handman Shevon Singh |
Starring | Nyla Rose Amy Fox Andrea Menard |
Opening theme | "Tear Down the Wall" by Kieran Strange[1] |
Country of origin | Canada |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 6 |
Production | |
Producers | Amy Fox, Ingo Lou |
Production locations | Vancouver, British Columbia |
Production company | The Trembling Void High Deaf Productions |
Original release | |
Network | OutTV |
Release | July 25 August 22, 2016 | –
The Switch is a
The series originally had American trans actress Domaine Javier starring as Sü.[6] According to the show’s creators, Javier blew everyone away with her audition after submitting via an open casting call. Javier was officially cast and filmed the first official teaser trailer in Canada in 2012. But due to certain changes within the Canadian conservative government at the time, the local actor’s union making it nearly impossible to work with paid actors from outside the country, and Javier’s nursing education, the production had no choice but to recast the role.[7]
The role was subsequently recast and Julie Vu was slated to star as Sü, but she was dropped from the production in 2014 and the role was recast once again.[8]
The show's cast also includes Amy Fox, Vincent Viezzer, Lindsay Coryne, Andrea Menard, Kent S. Leung, Chance Kingsmyth and Raugi Yu.
Plot
The Switch tells the story of Sü, a Native American programmer who moves to Canada in order to transition from male to female without judgment from her previous community. But in quick succession, she is fired for coming out as a transgender woman, loses her apartment to demolition, and ends up sleeping on the couch of an old ex, Chris. Sü finds a new job with a snarky trans coworker, Phil, and avoids deportation.
Chris, meanwhile, is an
As the show progresses, the characters manage to find community and acceptance from each other if not the rest of the world.
Cast
- Nyla Rose as Sü:
Sü is smart, nerdy, reckless—she has a thousand ideas, and the only way to tell the good ones from the bad is to try them out, hope for the best, and then awkwardly apologize to anyone caught in the blast area. Sü has been out to herself for years, and moved to Vancouver from
- Amy Fox as Chris:
Chris is the last ex Sü calls in her hour of need, Chris is Sü's reluctant roommate. Ze's an exile from the northern rural interior, displaced by a mix of transphobia and a ruined economy. Ze met Antonia at the Eris Organics vegetable delivery co-op... which somehow led them into their current scheme of killing climate criminals and selling the carbon offsets. A hospitable hermit, someone who can find or fix anything - except human contact. While awkward and socially alien, ze's a good friend you can always count on.
- Vincent Viezzer as Zoey:
Zoey is a perpetual outsider eager to be accepted. But once the popular kids look past Zoey's oddness and gender variance, what they find underneath is a morbid weirdo. An athletic savant with poor social skills, they come on strong, having discarded any sense of other people's privacy. Their birth mother died in a car accident three years ago, leaving them in care of their godmother, Sandra. Zoey craves the intimacy of friendship, but has only found online acquaintances. They have Chris (and now Sü).
- Lindsay Coryne as Antonia:
Fun, criminally versatile, and menacing, Antonia comes across as a
- Andrea Menard as Sandra:
A
- Kent Leung as Russell:
Sü's love interest, a loan officer with plans for a stable career, elegant house, and a wife (who is deeply-closeted and transgender) to complete the package.
- Chance Kingsmyth as Phil:
Phil is one of Sü's new coworkers at Atlantis. Having transitioned from female to be a gay man, he is trying to fit into the affluent club scene by being catty and generally unpleasant. Sick of people not liking him for reasons beyond his control, Phil has decided to give people clear and specific reasons to hate him and boy, it feels great.
- Raugi Yo as Nate:
Sü and Phil's friendly, incompetent, and awkwardly-insecure boss at Atlantis. Every one of his subordinates has either quit or been promoted over his head, which only makes him cling harder to his increasingly resentful staff. His desperation to be “hip” and “easygoing” interferes with his daily social interactions.
- Gigi Saul Guerrero as Isabelle:
Isabelle is Antonia's seriously dysfunctional, Wednesday Addams-like cousin. Turns out she and Chris have two interests in common: women and their choice of careers. The two meet in a rough contact sport and hit it off immediately.
Production
The series is produced in Vancouver, British Columbia by Trembling Void Studios,[9] a firm headed by writer, producer and actress Amy Fox.[9]
The series was originally planned to air as a web series,[10] but was picked up for broadcast by OutTV, which aired the pilot as a one-off special in February 2014.[11]
The show's production company subsequently conducted a crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter to fund the production of further episodes, and reached its $50,000 goal in July 2014.[12]
References
- ^ "Amy Fox's 'The Switch' May Start the Transgender TV Revolution". Bustle, June 18, 2014.
- ^ "Vancouver-produced sitcom takes on TV transgender representation". CBC News, July 17, 2017.
- NewNowNext, July 16, 2017.
- ^ "The Switch: First Scripted TV Show with a Trans Lead". Out, June 27, 2017.
- ^ Daily Xtra, June 2, 2015.
- Huffington Post, March 25, 2013.
- ^ "What to Watch: The Switch". Vada Magazine, July 19, 2014.
- Huffington Post, November 6, 2014.
- ^ a b "Canada Flicks On 'The Switch,' TV's First Transgender Comedy". The Hollywood Reporter, July 21, 2014.
- Huffington Post, March 25, 2013.
- ^ "Coming Soon To A TV Near You: ‘The Switch,’ A New Transgender Sitcom". George Stroumboulopoulos Tonight, July 16, 2014.
- ^ "'The Switch' transgender comedy a first for TV". CBC News, July 14, 2014.
External links
- The Switch at IMDb