Orphan Black (TV Series)

From Iwe

Orphan Black
Genre Science fiction
Biopunk
Drama
Thriller
Created by Graeme Manson
John Fawcett
Starring Tatiana Maslany
Dylan Bruce
Jordan Gavaris
Kevin Hanchard
Michael Mando
Maria Doyle Kennedy
Évelyne Brochu
Ari Millen
Kristian Bruun
Josh Vokey
Theme music composer Two Fingers
Composer(s) Trevor Yuile
Country of origin Canada
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 5
No. of episodes 41 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive
producer(s)
Ivan Schneeberg
David Fortier
Graeme Manson
John Fawcett
Producer(s) Alex Levine
Claire Welland
Tatiana Maslany
Aubrey Nealon
Location Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Cinematography Aaron Morton
Editor(s) Bob Murawski
Camera setup Single-camera
Running time 43 minutes
Production
company(s)
Temple Street Productions
BBC America
Bell Media
Release
Original network Space (Canada)
BBC America (US)
Original release March 30, 2013 –
August 12, 2017
External links
Orphan Black: Echoes

Orphan Black is a Canadian science fiction thriller television series created by screenwriter Graeme Manson and director John Fawcett, starring Tatiana Maslany as several identical people who are clones. The series focuses on Sarah Manning, a woman who assumes the identity of one of her fellow clones, Elizabeth Childs, after witnessing Childs' suicide. The series raises issues about the moral and ethical implications of human cloning, and its effect on issues of personal identity.

The series is produced by Temple Street Productions, in association with BBC America and Bell Media's Space. It premiered on March 30, 2013, on Space in Canada and on BBC America in the United States. On May 7, 2015, a 10-episode fourth season was ordered, which premiered on April 14, 2016. On June 16, 2016, the series was renewed for a fifth and final 10-episode season, which premiered on June 10, 2017. An aftershow, After the Black, began airing in the third season on Space and was acquired by BBC America for the fourth season.

Contents

[edit] Plot

[edit] Cast and characters

Main article: List of Orphan Black characters

[edit] Main

File:Orphan Black Clones.jpg
The five main clone characters all played by Tatiana Maslany (from left to right, top to bottom: Sarah, Alison, Helena, Cosima, and Rachel).
File:Orphan black 0001.jpg
Orphan Black cast members, from left to right: Ari Millen, Kristian Bruun, Maria Doyle Kennedy, Dylan Bruce, Jordan Gavaris, and Tatiana Maslany.
  • Tatiana Maslany as Sarah Manning, and a number of clones (see below), all born in 1984 to various women by in vitro fertilization.
  • Dylan Bruce as Paul Dierden, an ex-military mercenary, who is Beth's monitor and boyfriend.
  • Jordan Gavaris as Felix ("Fe") Dawkins, Sarah's foster brother and confidant. He identifies as a modern artist and moonlights as a prostitute. He is the first person Sarah confides in about the existence of clones.
  • Kevin Hanchard as Detective Arthur "Art" Bell, Beth's police partner.
  • Michael Mando as Victor "Vic" Schmidt, Sarah's abusive, drug-dealing ex-boyfriend.
  • Maria Doyle Kennedy as Siobhan Sadler, Sarah and Felix's Irish foster mother. They call her "Mrs. S." She acts as guardian to Sarah's daughter Kira while Sarah is away.
  • Évelyne Brochu as Dr. Delphine Cormier, Cosima's monitor, girlfriend, and fellow scientist.
  • Ari Millen as Mark Rollins, a homicidal Prolethean, Ira, Susan Duncan's adopted son and a number of other male clones.
  • Kristian Bruun as Donnie Hendrix, Alison's husband.
  • Josh Vokey as Scott Smith, a fellow student of Cosima at the University of Minnesota, who later joins her and Delphine at the Dyad Institute.

[edit] Recurring

  • Skyler Wexler as Kira Manning, Sarah and Cal's biological, naturally-conceived, daughter. The only child of a clone, she has inherited the apparent accelerated healing ability demonstrated by Sarah and Helena, and has shown the ability to tell the clones apart even when they are posing as each other.
  • Inga Cadranel as Detective Angela "Angie" Deangelis, Art's new partner, trying to uncover the clone conspiracy behind Art's back.
  • Matt Frewer as Dr. Aldous Leekie, frontman of the Institute and the face of the Neolution movement.
  • Matthew Bennett as Daniel Rosen, a Dyad associated lawyer, assigned to do Rachel's shady work. He had a sexual relationship with Rachel and also acted as her monitor with her knowledge.
  • Daniel Kash as Tomas, responsible for the kidnapping, training and subsequent psychological and physical abuse of Helena.
  • Michiel Huisman as Cal Morrison, one of Sarah's past con-victims and Kira's father.
  • Michelle Forbes as Marion Bowles, a high-ranking official within Topside–a group controlling Dyad–who outranks both Leekie and Rachel. She contacts Cal and Mrs. S to free Sarah and Kira from Dyad. It is revealed that she is raising the youngest Leda clone, Charlotte, and is battling the military and their male clones of Project Castor, holding one of the male clones in her home. As Charlotte is shown to be in the care of Dr. Susan Duncan (Rachel's adoptive mother and one of the lead scientists of Project Leda), Marion was presumed dead.
  • Cynthia Galant as Charlotte Bowles, the youngest of the Leda clones.
  • Natalie Lisinska as Aynsley Norris, Alison's neighbor who is also suspected of being her monitor.
  • Peter Outerbridge as Henrik "Hank" Johanssen, a Prolethean leader, attempting to revalue their view on science and forcibly proliferate Helena's miraculous genes at the expense of everyone closest to him.
  • Zoé de Grand'Maison as Grace "Gracie" Johanssen, Henrik and Bonnie's teenage daughter, who eventually rebels against the Prolethean way of life. She marries Mark in an official ceremony after running away from the Prolethean farm.
  • Andrew Gillies as Ethan Duncan, the adoptive father of Rachel Duncan and one of the original geneticists of the cloning experiment. He expresses disappointment in how Rachel turned out after he faked his death and left her to be raised by Aldous Leekie.
  • Amanda Brugel as Marci Coates, a woman against whom Alison is running in Bailey Downes's school trustee election.
  • Kyra Harper as Dr. Virginia Coady, a military doctor who is investigating the Castor sickness and illegally sterilizing ordinary women in order to gather data.
  • James Frain as Ferdinand Chevalier, a cleaner for Topside who sides with Sarah against Neolution in season 4, becoming her major Dyad ally. He was, in the comic book series, apparently in a sexual relationship with Rachel Duncan and spearheaded the Helsinki extermination. Later, in season 4, he meets Veera Suominen, a survivor of Helsinki who resents him for his murder of her closest friend, Niki. Veera leads him into a trap in an attempt to kill him but instead takes 3.7 million from his bank account and flees, leaving him strapped to a bomb after Sarah urges her not to kill him, as he is seen to be a powerful ally for the clones. Mrs. S defuses the bomb, and Sarah sets him free, only for him to take Mrs. S and her daughter Kira hostage at Rachel's behest
  • Ksenia Solo as Shay Davydov, a holistic healer whom Cosima meets through a dating app called Sapphire. Delphine begins spying on the relationship, taking photographs and video footage of the two individuals during their dates.
  • Justin Chatwin as Jason Kellerman, Alison's ex-boyfriend from high school and now hers and Donnie's new boss and supplier in the drug trade.
  • Alison Steadman as Kendall Malone, the original genetic subject that both the Leda and Castor factions were cloned from, due to her being a chimera, an individual with both male and female DNA. She is revealed to be Mrs. S's biological mother and the one who murdered Mrs. S's husband John decades earlier. She is tracked down by the Leda clones through Ethan Duncan's encoded edition of The Island of Doctor Moreau, translated by Rachel. Despite Cosima's attempts at creating a gene therapy for the Leda disease with her blood, Kendall was shot and incinerated by Detective Duko on the orders of Evie Cho.
  • Rosemary Dunsmore as Susan Duncan, Rachel's adoptive mother, and one of the original geneticists of the Leda and Castor cloning experiments, having faked her death the same way her partner Ethan Duncan had, and, like him, is disappointed the way Rachel has turned out, despite her abandonment of her daughter and the resulting isolation and purely clinical upbringing of Rachel by Aldous Leekie.
  • Gord Rand as Detective Marty Duko, a detective at Beth's precinct who represents the police union in the investigation of her shooting of Maggie Chen; he was one of the contributing factors in Beth's suicide and is also associated with Neolution.
  • Jessalyn Wanlim as Evie Cho, a woman who works under Dr. Leekie at the Dyad Institute, specializing in Neolution. She is the CEO of the BrightBorn corporation, a Neolution-driven fertility company with dubious intentions.

[edit] Known clones

Main article: List of Orphan Black characters#Clones

[edit] Production

[edit] Filming

[edit] Location

[edit] Episodes

Main article: List of Orphan Black episodes

Season Episodes Originally aired
First aired Last aired
1 10 March 30, 2013 June 1, 2013
2 10 April 19, 2014 June 21, 2014
3 10 April 18, 2015 June 20, 2015
4 10 April 14, 2016 June 16, 2016
5 10 June 10, 2017 August 12, 2017

[edit] Critical reception

File:Tatiana Maslany by Gage Skidmore 2.jpg
Tatiana Maslany has received broad acclaim for her performance portraying several different characters who are clones.

[edit] Season 1

[edit] Season 2

[edit] Season 3

[edit] Season 4

[edit] Awards and accolades

Maslany's failure to receive a nomination for Lead Actress in a Drama Series at both the 65th Primetime Emmy Awards and 66th Primetime Emmy Awards was seen as a snub by critics. Goodman called it an "outrageous oversight". However, Maslany received a nomination for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series in 2015 and won the category in 2016.

Awards and accolades for Orphan Black
Year Award Category Nominee(s) Result

[edit] Broadcast

[edit] Comic books

Main article: Orphan Black (comic book)

[edit] Soundtracks

Main articles: Orphan Black (Original Television Soundtrack) and Orphan Black (Original Television Score)

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Template:Orphan Black Template:Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form

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