North of 60
Canadian television series / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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North of 60 is a 1990s Canadian television drama depicting life in the sub-Arctic northern boreal forest (north of 60° north latitude, hence the title). It first aired on CBC Television in 1992 and was syndicated around the world. It is set in the fictional community of Lynx River, a Canadian Indigenous community depicted as being in the Dehcho Region, Northwest Territories.
North of 60 | |
---|---|
Created by | Barbara Samuels Wayne Grigsby |
Starring | Tina Keeper Tracey Cook Tom Jackson Robert Bockstael Gordon Tootoosis Jimmy Herman |
Country of origin | Canada |
No. of seasons | 6 |
No. of episodes | 90 plus 5 made for TV movies between 1999 and 2005 |
Production | |
Running time | 45 minutes per episode |
Production company | Alberta Filmworks |
Original release | |
Network | CBC Television |
Release | 3 December 1992 (1992-12-03) – 18 December 1997 (1997-12-18) |
Most of the characters were Dene. Some non-native characters had important roles: the restaurant/motel owner (a Ukrainian immigrant), the band manager, the nurse (a white Canadian woman) and (during the show's first season) the town's RCMP Detachment Commander. The show explored themes of Native poverty, alcoholism, cultural preservation, conflict over land settlements, and natural resource exploitation.
Originally somewhat light-hearted (a CBC response to the very successful Northern Exposure on CBS), it quickly became a more sombre dramatic series which explored subplots including murder, band corruption, economic depression, mental health and the death of a child (owing to actress Selina Hanuse, who played Hannah Kenidi, leaving the show to pursue her education in Season 3). There were also romantic and sexual subplots between unlikely characters, giving the show a distinctive soap opera-like atmosphere not hugely common in Canadian government-sponsored media at the time. This included scenes depicting brief sex, nudity and profanity, as well as discussion in one episode about HIV/AIDS and the social stigma faced by a young boy who was a male prostitute with the disease.