Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

Hotel Manager

Behind Ken Finkleman’s ambitious new series, At the Hotel

Giving orders: Ken Finkleman on the set of At the Hotel.
Giving orders: Ken Finkleman on the set of At the Hotel.

Screenwriters Ellen Vanstone and Morwyn Brebner lounge on a bed at Toronto’s Fairmont Royal York hotel, swirling drinks in hand, discussing their involvement in Ken Finkleman’s new CBC miniseries, At the Hotel. The filmmaker himself paces nearby, concerned.

“Ken had a hotel story,” Vanstone offers. “Kind of a Love Boat crossed with Twin Peaks: strange characters coming and going, music, comedy, a murder…”

“Adultery,” Brebner adds, laughing, moments before a bellhop arrives, bearing a silver tray of baby hamburgers.

In addition to the writers and the director, there are another hundred people or so circulating in the Royal York Imperial Room’s honeymoon suite set. It’s the launch party for the series. At the Hotel’s musical director, Robert Carli, is as giddy as a truant schoolboy; he tells me of the joy he experienced conspiring with Finkleman to re-create the series’ musical numbers, which range from opera to Broadway show tunes to the Ink Spots’ classic single That Cat is High.

Everyone in the room seems happy except for Finkleman, the Winnipeg-born, ex-Hollywood plot mechanic who got Airplane II: The Sequel off the ground before returning to Canada to produce, create and star in the international Emmy award-winning TV saga, The Newsroom (1996-2005). There’s a reason the filmmaker seems jumpy. In minutes, he will pull an Edward R. Murrow from Good Night, and Good Luck, publicly scolding the CBC for “paying too much attention to ratings.”

As if anticipating the filibuster, Vanstone explains, “Ken works best when he’s embattled. He loves it on set, managing chaos.” When I advise the screenwriter that Finkleman has a reputation for filling the answering machines of unappreciative critics, she laughs. “He goes after TV executives, too.”

One of Finkleman’s gifts is his ability to shield colleagues from the business side of show business. When I visited the set of Finkleman’s Foolish Hearts in 1999, I encountered a grip who exclaimed, “working on this show doesn’t feel like a job, it’s fun.” Of course, the trick in producing successful television is permitting the audience to share in the excitement of creative activity. Viewers who thought Finkleman phoned in the last instalment of The Newsroom should be heartened by At the Hotel: it’s Finkleman’s most fanciful and ambitious project to date.

Hired help: Natalie Lisinska stars in At the Hotel.
Hired help: Natalie Lisinska stars in At the Hotel.

The show features a number of eccentrics — “chambermaids, show-business types, murderers, detectives,” according to Vanstone — who pass through the fictional Chateau Rousseau. The characters, played by an inspired cast that includes Maury Chaykin, Alberta Watson, Tom McCamus and Martha Henry, first had to go through what Vanstone calls “the Ken filter.” That is, “his twisted Winnipeg-law school-Hollywood-CBC way of telling a story. Ask him about the filter.”

I do just that. Twelve hours later, we cut from the bustle of the Royal York to Finkleman’s Toronto office, an under-decorated seventh-floor space a short stroll from Chinatown. Like most writers, Finkleman seems glad to be interrupted from work on a Friday afternoon. That said, he reacts to my first question as if he’s bitten into bad seafood.

“Twisted Winnipeg-law school…?” He tries to get Vanstone on the phone. She isn’t home. He decides not to leave a blistering message.

As it turns out, the filmmaker is more than happy to talk about how he quit law school to follow brother Danny Finkleman, then a popular CBC radio correspondent, to Toronto in the early ’70s, landing a writing job along with Dan Aykroyd on a show featuring Norm Crosby, a well-known comedian, as a deaf talk-show host who read lips. After winning a Gemini writing for King of Kensington, Finkleman went to Hollywood, where he says, “I learned leverage. The second I signed a deal with Paramount, I pitched Warner Brothers over the phone, saying, ‘I can’t do anything for you now, I’m working for Paramount.’ In Hollywood, everyone wants what they can’t have.”

Finkleman eventually soured on assembly-line writing. (For him, the only glad reminders of his work on Grease 2 and the Madonna vehicle Who’s That Girl? are the residuals.) Finkleman’s career changed forever in the early ’90s, when he got the filmmaking equivalent of religion, discovering the European art films of people like Jean-Luc Godard, Federico Fellini and Michelangelo Antonioni. Returning to Canada, he created the acid satires The Newsroom, More Tears and Foolish Hearts.

Finkleman’s Newsroom alter ego, George Findlay, never checks into At the Hotel. “There was no place for me; I can only play myself,” he shrugs. Still, there is reason to believe Vanstone when she says that the Chateau Rousseau is all in Finkleman’s head. The characters are all showbiz people (like Don McKellar’s rock video director) or theatrical types — hotel owner Martha Henry and faithful butler Hrant Alianak do a sly take on Gloria Swanson and Eric von Stroheim in Sunset Boulevard.

Chateau Finkleman, on the other hand, is a curiously circumscribed world. The director doesn’t watch television, finish many books, or pay attention to Hollywood movies. Nevertheless, he understands his own career. “Ken’s filter” is particularly evident in an interlude in the second episode of At the Hotel. A long-separated comedy team, wonderfully played by Maury Chaykin and Kathleen Laskey, reconvene at the hotel to rehearse for a TV special.

“That was fun,” Finkleman beams. “I saw Maury’s part as Fred in Ginger & Fred. You know, the Fellini movie. He’s a hack who drinks too much, but has come to terms with himself. Maury was great. I played him Nichols and May albums, and then Shelley Berman — brilliant comedian — to help him get the rhythm of stand-up. Anne, [the character’s] partner, I modelled her after a TV writer I knew, very correct, never married.” Finkleman writes the name of a recognizable figure on paper, holding it aloft without speaking into my tape recorder.

While the filmmaker exhibits a contagious, child-like enthusiasm talking about the creative challenge of television, as a producer, he will always be tilting at executives and critics. Fighting seems an essential part of Finkleman’s job description. “I can’t deliver [large audience] numbers,” he admits. “I can only try to do good television. You try, you hope it works. Sometimes it does.”

At the Hotel debuts Tuesday, March 7 at 9 p.m. on CBC-TV.

Stephen Cole writes about the arts for CBC.ca.

CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window.

More from this Author

Stephen Cole

Cosmo confessions
On the couch with Cosmopolitan TV
Francks for the memories
The delightfully offbeat career of singer Don Francks
In the mood for love
Canadian jazz pianist Renee Rosnes explores a new partnership
Street wise
Actor relishes role in St. Urbain's Horseman miniseries
Homeward bound
The Duhks migrate back to the Winnipeg Folk Festival
Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

World »

Whitney Houston's family calls loss a 'tragedy' video
The family of Whitney Houston, who died suddenly this weekend, has issued a statement calling her death an"unimaginable tragedy," as fans rush to buy her albums and download her hit singles.
Athens burns as Greece bailout passed video
Riots engulfed central Athens and at least 10 buildings went up in flames in mass protests late Sunday as lawmakers prepared for a parliamentary vote on harsh austerity measures aimed at keeping the country solvent.
Child rescued from Kosovo avalanche that killed 9
Rescuers have pulled a child alive from the rubble of a house flattened by a massive avalanche that killed both her parents and at least seven of her relatives in a remote mountain village in southern Kosovo.
more »

Canada »

Quebec town 'heartbroken' after killing of woman, sisters
A small Quebec town is in mourning Sunday after a Quebec man was charged with killing his nieces and his mother, who were found dead in their family home.
NDP leadership hopefuls face off in Quebec City video
Federal NDP leadership candidates argued over Canada's global standing, climate change and language during a French-only debate in Quebec City on Sunday.
Manitoba man dies after falling off moving SUV
A 23-year-old man from Elie, Man., has died from injuries he sustained after falling off the outside of a vehicle as it was driving down a highway, according to RCMP.
more »

Politics »

NDP leadership hopefuls face off in Quebec City video
Federal NDP leadership candidates argued over Canada's global standing, climate change and language during a French-only debate in Quebec City on Sunday.
Tibet PM sees human-rights 'tragedy' unfolding
In an exclusive interview Saturday on CBC Radio's The House, the prime minister of the Tibetan government-in-exile, Lobsang Sangay, sounded the alarm on the "tragedy" unfolding in Tibet and called on Canada to take action.
Attawapiskat receives first modular home
The first of 22 modular homes promised by the federal government to Attawapiskat has arrived to the remote northern Ontario First Nations community, the Aboriginal Affairs minister's office has confirmed.
more »

Health »

Chronic fatigue may be reversed with exercise
Taking it easy is not the best treatment for chronic fatigue syndrome, rather exercise and behaviour therapy are, a large study finds.
AT&T buys T-Mobile USA for $39B US
AT&T Inc. said Sunday it will buy T-Mobile USA from Deutsche Telekom AG in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $39 billion US, becoming the largest cellphone company in the U.S.
Milky Way home to 50 billion planets: NASA
Scientists have compiled the first cosmic census of planets in our galaxy: at least 50 billion planets are estimated to call the Milky Way home.
more »

Arts & Entertainment»

updated Grammy artists remember Whitney Houston
Music artists paid tribute to the late Whitney Houston as they walked the red carpet for the Grammy Awards in Los Angeles Sunday evening.
Britain's BAFTAs honours The Artist
Silent movie The Artist dominated the British Academy Film awards, the U.K. equivalent of the Oscars, winning seven awards, including best picture.
Whitney Houston's family calls loss a 'tragedy' video
The family of Whitney Houston, who died suddenly this weekend, has issued a statement calling her death an"unimaginable tragedy," as fans rush to buy her albums and download her hit singles.
more »

Technology & Science »

NASA to scale back Mars exploration
Scientists say NASA is about to propose major cuts in its exploration of other planets, especially Mars, with the space agency's former science chief calling the plan irrational.
Ancient Antarctic lake may harbour microbial life
If scientists find microbes in a frigid lake 3.2 kilometres beneath the thick ice of Antarctica, it will illustrate once again that somehow life finds a way to survive in the strangest and harshest places, and it will offer hope that life exists beyond Earth.
B.C. killer whale habitat protection ruled a legal duty
The federal minister of fisheries has no discretion when it comes to protecting the critical habitat of B.C.'s southern resident killer whales, the Federal Court of Appeal has ruled.
more »

Money »

Athens burns as Greece bailout passed video
Riots engulfed central Athens and at least 10 buildings went up in flames in mass protests late Sunday as lawmakers prepared for a parliamentary vote on harsh austerity measures aimed at keeping the country solvent.
Air Canada reaches tentative deal with dispatchers
Air Canada has reached a tentative collective agreement with the Canadian Airline Dispatchers Association, representing the airline's 74 flight dispatchers.
Old Age Security untouched until 2020, Flaherty says video
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty says Canadians should expect no changes to Old Age Security benefits before 2020 or 2025, and details about reform would be outlined over more than one budget.
more »

Consumer Life »

Honda recalls Fit subcompacts
Honda Canada says it will recall 14,640 of its 2009 and 2010 Fit subcompact cars to replace lost motion springs.
U.S. travel fee proposal criticized by Harper
Prime Minister Stephen Harper says he doesn't think much of a new border tax that's being proposed by the United States, calling it a cash grab designed to help a budget crisis.
Bell class action suit approved by Que. court
A Quebec Superior Court judge has authorized a class action lawsuit to go ahead against Bell Mobility.
more »

Sports »

Scores: NHL NBA

Duhamel, Radford finish 4th at Four Continents
China's Sui Wenjing and Han Cong won the pairs title with a sharp and powerful free skate program at the Four Continents Championships. Canada's Meagan Duhamel and Eric Radford finished fourth.
Raptors' comeback falls short in loss to Lakers
Kobe Bryant poured in 27 points, including a long fadeaway jumper with four seconds to play, to lift the Los Angeles Lakers to a 94-92 victory over the Toronto Raptors on Sunday.
blog PEI hockey players are proud and inspire each other
Gerard Gallant had Errol Thompson. Brad Richards had Gallant. Mark Flood and Adam McQuaid had Richards. Somewhere down the line there will be other hockey players from Prince Edward Island who will be inspired by McQuaid or Flood, writes Tim Wharnsby.
more »

Diversions »

[an error occurred while processing this directive]
more »