|
Having seen Love,
Simon at least a half-dozen times since its release – it has become
one of those films that, if I happen to come across it on TV or even on screen
in a bar, I just drop everything, settle in and watch it to the end – I was
both excited and maybe even a little nervous to hear that the film was being
further adapted into a television series, Love, Victor.
Now, after viewing all
ten episodes of Love, Victor’s first season (which drops on Hulu this Wednesday,
June 17), I am not just pleasantly surprised, but thrilled by this
expansion of the Simonverse. The show has all the film’s best DNA,
including literal links to the Simon characters we fell in
love with, and yet expands the world of Creekwood with new, endearing, and more
diverse characters.
Actually, I didn’t just
“view” all ten episodes of Love, Victor; that word is way too
casual for what my husband, Frank DeCaro, and I did that night last
week. We binged Love, Victor. We devoured
it. And days and days later, we can’t stop thinking about
it. The show may be more literally aimed at a teen audience, to
match its mostly teen characters; but for older viewers as well, gay or
straight, it brilliantly brings you back to those moments in high school when
decisions were tough, when the stakes were high, and when abject humiliation
seemed imminent.
So if you’re like me,
and immediately binge all ten roughly half-hour episodes in one sitting and are
left in its particularly satisfying, cliffhanging end moments, you’ll be
googling to find out what’s next for Victor and the entire Salazar family in
Atlanta. That’s why, in my interview with Love, Victor’s
executive producer and showrunner Brian Tanen below, I start
with mention of season two, and work my way back.
Love, Victor showrunner Brian Tanen |
Brian Tanen: We have been at it for a few weeks.
We're in the early to middle part of the season, coming up with ideas for what
we might be headed, and it's really exciting. [With season one] it was
incredibly exciting and meaningful experience to get to work on a show and a
season about a kid really figuring out who he is and, and as we do within the
LGBT community, having to come to terms with it and stop being afraid of it,
start embracing it and eventually even feel pride for who you are.
That's really the
journey of season one. So season two is exciting, because it's all
those things that happen next. Once you have figured out who you are, you have
a whole range of experiences that you've been denying yourself. And so it's really
wonderful to get to have a character who has figured things out and gets to
experience first, love first heartbreaks, first sexual experiences --
all the rich experiences that everyone has.
Must-Hear TV: Yes, and I won’t give away the
season one cliffhanger, but boy, did you leave us on a cliff!
Brian Tanen: It's a cliffhanger but it is also a
really important, conclusive ending to the story of season one.
Must-Hear TV: When you wrote that last scene of the first season, did you write beyond it, or even shoot further into the scene to use it in season 2?
Brian Tanen: I think our feeling was that it was
Victor's [Michael Cimino] journey. And we knew that we didn't want
to go past that. In the opening moments of the show, Victor tells the audience
that his story is nothing like Simon's. And while we know [Victor’s parents]
Isabel and Armando [Ana Ortiz and James Martinez] at
this point of the season, and we know that they're crazy about their kid, we
also know that they're more conservative, they're deeply religious, and we just
know that it's going to be a more complicated journey ahead for Victor.
Must-Hear TV: What was your first experience with
the “Simonverse” or the Creekwood universe? Did you read the book? Had you seen the movie? How did you get involved with Love, Victor?
|
Must-Hear TV: In the structure of the show,
Victor writes to Simon in each episode for advice. In season two, will we
see Victor pay it forward to someone else?
Brian Tanen: I won't give any spoilers for
season two, but I know on the writers’ room wish list we would love for Victor
to not be alone as an LGBT student at Creekwood. I know we'd love to be more
queer characters to populate our world.
Must-Hear TV: When you start with a movie, how do
you expand its world to add in more story for secondary characters? Love,
Simon had some great moments for supporting characters, but obviously
with a series you have more time for that. What were some of the
conscious ways that you made Victor's world a little bigger than Simon’s had
been?
Rachel Hilson as Victor's girlfriend, Mia |
Isabella Ferreira as Victor's sister, Pilar |
Brian Tanen: Yeah, I think that's exactly right.
Even the parents are somewhat “closeted” about the things that are happening in
their lives. The parents have this big secret, too, and that sort of explodes
in the early to middle part of the season.
Must-Hear TV: What was the thought process behind
Victor's ethnicity? How did his family come to be Latinx?
Brian Tanen: I think there was a concerted
effort to tell a different story than Simon's from the film. In
queer representation, there’s often a focus on young, white men. And
we felt that a coming-out journey would be different through the lens of a
non-white character. And we were lucky to have a wonderful writing
staff that was highly LGBT-forward and Latinx-forward, and as a result, we were
able to pull from people's individual experiences so that the stories would be
as authentic as they could be.
Anthony
Turpel as Felix and Michael Cimino
as Victor -- or is this
"Velix?" |
Mason
Gooding as jock and part-time
antagonist, Andrew |
George
Sear as Creekwood's resident
out student/barista/guitarist, Benji |
Must-Hear TV: What would this show have meant to you when
you were a teenager? And turn that into a pitch for why teenagers should watch,
and why adults should watch.
Brian Tanen: I can't think of another show on
television that has a young gay protagonist. So, for any teenager seeing this
story, which has so much heart and affirmation and joy – well it’s funny that I
get emotional thinking about it again, but you use it. We would tell
these stories in the writers’ room about things that happened to us in high
school or, or what we wish had happened, and then we would get to put them in
the show. So I think for any teenager who is struggling with these issues, to
be able to see themselves represented on screen and represented in a way with
heart and joy will just be an absolute breath of fresh air. And for
parents and really anyone else, the show is just incredibly charming and
inclusive, and it will cure your summertime blues. We're going
through really turbulent times right now. The show has a message of
love. I feel like it’s kind of right what the doctor ordered right
now.
Must-Hear TV: I know it was obviously deliberate
that the show would debut in June for Pride month, but who knew that we’d also
be going through such turmoil as a country, and that the show could be a balm.
Brian Tanen: We talk a lot in the writers’ room
about how LGBTQ rights as we know them were largely born out of the Stonewall
riots, and how that movement was championed and led by black trans
activists. So we feel a great deal of solidarity with what's happening
in the country right now. And I think the show hopefully feels like
a show about inclusivity and equality and wanting to make the world a better
place.
Must-Hear TV: What I like about Victor is that he
takes action to make his world better. So many of the protagonists
from the teen movies I knew were more passive, like Molly Ringwald waiting in
the window for Jake to show up. But there are a few moments in this
season where Victor really takes a chance.
Brian Tanen: Who amongst us hasn't been in a
situation where you are close to the person you have a crush on? And
it feels like something might happen, but neither person is brave enough to
make that move. But in our wish-fulfillment version, Victor goes for
it. For the writers, there was a lot of feeling like, “if only we
could rewrite our own histories, and be braver.” And even though it
takes him a while, Victor does become a brave character.
Must-Hear TV: Speaking of wish-fulfillment in
looking back, do you think you will hear from older LGBT people who say, “If
only I’d been more like Victor?”
Bebe Wood as Creekwood classmate Lake |
Must-Hear TV: What can you tell us about Season
Two? Because I'm sure there are going to be a lot of people like me
who devour season one within one day and want to know more.
Brian Tanen: Well, one thing I think I can say
is that I think people are aware that the show had originally been written for
Disney+, and then was eventually moved over to Hulu. And now the
reality of having our season two on Hulu provides so many opportunities to see
these characters grow up. The writers on our staff, especially the gay writers,
knew that one of the major problems with the representation of LGBTQ characters
in media is that we're allowed to exist as long as we are not very sexual, if
we're the funny friend, or the sidekick, but you rarely see narratives centered
around characters who are have their own desires and crushes and sex lives. And
so, now that we're on Hulu, that's something that I know we are all excited to
write about, teenagers going through their first sexual
experiences. And what that looks like in 2020 when you're an LGBTQ
teen.
Must-Hear TV: So basically, thanks to Hulu, now
you can be a little more risqué?
Brian Tanen: I think we could be. I
think season two will be even sexier.
Love, Victor season 1 (10 episodes) premieres on Hulu
on Wednesday, June 17.