MARK CRITCH-SON OF A CRITCH - podcast episode cover

MARK CRITCH-SON OF A CRITCH

Feb 05, 20249 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

The podcaster did not provide a description for this episode.

Transcript

This is Later with Lee Matthews the Lee Matthews Podcast More what You Hear weekday afternoons on the Drive. Mark Critch is one of the most recognizable faces in Canadian comedy, and he's becoming one of the more recognizable faces in the US thanks to his television series, a CW original Son of a Critch, and he is joining us now Son of a Critch. This is based on a

book that you composed some time ago. Mark, Yeah, I was a twenty eighteen I wrote this story about growing up in the eighties on an island in Canada off the Coasta, Canada called Newpoundland and we joined Canada nineteen forty nine. Before that were our own dominion. And anyway, it's all about my life going to Catholic school there and feeling like an outsider being I had

older parents and was really a kid out of time, you know. I was listening to a lot of Dean Martin and stuff with other people were listening to ATDs and it was a rude awakening. And so this is season three now and we're just delighted to be able to come down and share our story

with people in the States. It really it resonates with me because I grew up in a culturally diverse background in deep South Louisiana, where everybody speaks the Akadi French from Acadia, and you have this very very intense Roman Catholic culture going on. I was one of the few white Protestants. My parents were of English descent, so I was taught to speak a certain way and not use the dialect I mean, and if I if I spoke the incorrect dialect of French, I was scolded. So I see a lot of that in

your character as a young man. And we're about the same age, so I was a late bloomer as well in the eighties. Oh that's fantastic. I always think of it as, you know, almost like star Trek, where the house is the starship Enterprise and schoolyard is the planet. You beam down here and have your adventure, and you fight someone and you barely survive, and you get back on the shuttle, you beam back up to your house at the end of the day, going what was that, you know,

And that's the way it kind of felt growing up. What is the culture in Newfoundland? Is it? Was it by and large English or was it French? Or a mixture of both. Oh no, it's English and Irish. So you would have been started to settle in fourteen ninety seven.

We were settled and it was all about codfish. So you'd have all these people with from places in Ireland and in places like like Devin in England and Liverpool and things like that, and these little codes and they became bigger cities and stuff over the years, but very very Irish and as you say, with the Acade language, it has its own kind of very Irish thing.

So how'd you go, Oh my god, out hands now down here at the thing that you wouldn't understand the word people were saying generally, you know, depends and where they're from. So there's a lot of similarities there. Oh really yeah. Like the big thing I had to shake when I left that part of the country was you would drop certain prepositions. For instance, if I were to ask you if you're going to go eat lunch with the Akadi language, you'd be coming out, go and eat, go and eat.

Oh yeah, you know, I think we drop a lot of h's. You know, they were going to have a heart attack. You might say you're going to have an art attack. You drop an H here and added somewhere else. But when we speak quickly, and we'd always say, you know what, we're not speaking too quickly, you're listening too slow. We're talking to Mark Critch. His television show is Son of a Critch on the CW now and it's third season. It's a charming tale, and I

love how you make the main character. He is a late bloomer, but he's not necessarily bullied. Well, no, like he What I would do is, you'd have these bullies and you try to I would use stathaw. I developed humor. You know, a guy would come up and he's gonna beat me up because of the way I look or what have you, because

I have an inhaler or whatever it is. And then you start to do impressions of teachers or you tell them jokes and then they get confused and go, oh, no, I want to beat this guy up, but I think I like him now. And so, you know, always trying to be the mascot of the of the bigger kids and the tougher kids, and yeah, try trying to calm these situations with humor and using that as a weapon in a way. Son of a Critch is the television show on the

CW now in the third season. I highly recommend it. And it was because of your television show, Mark Critch, I was able to get through this confounded actors and writers strike here in the US. I discovered a lot of Canadian content. Well, that's great to hear. You know, we we were probably able to step up and serve your Canadian neighbors because we have so much I mean we spent I mean growing up, come on, I

mean the great American entertainment. Yeah, growing up it would be you know, it's tough to compete with here in Canada, and we know so much about you and where your neighbor kind of looking over the fence at all the cool things you have. So it's nice to be able to bring something to the pot luck entertainment wise from across the street. You know, Son of a Critch on the CW. It's got a great cast too. Malcolm McDowell really fits into his role as Patrick Popcritch. Did you have to coach him

at all as to what your real grandfather was like? No, the thing is with that, whether it's him or young the great Young Benjamin hav An Ainsworth who plays me or any other cast. I kind of write it and put it out there and say, Okay, this is my story, but you don't. It's not like you're playing a historical character like Winston Churchill or Kennedy or something where people are like, well that's not the way he spoke or walked or war. It's you had to make it your own now,

so you know. And when the first ay filming with the great Malcolm mcdowe, people know from Club Where Orange and a million other things. He came on set and I didn't really know how he was going to play it, you know, and then he started to act and I thought, oh, so that's who he is. Okay, cool, and it's your memories and people in your life. But they do become characters, and you had to let that go because you can't box these people in, especially when you have

people as talented as that. And Malcolm's always playing some loathsome character. It's fun to see him in a comedic role. He's such a sweetheart, and he is terrifying when you first meet him until he speaks to you, because you have this impression of all these horrible I mean, he killed Captain Kirk in the Star Trek movie. Yeah, yes, and he comes in and he is just mischievous. He's the biggest kid on set. He's eighty years

old. And young Benjamin Evan Ainsworth, who is now fourteen, who plays me as a kid, is very professional, you know, and he works very, very hard. And Malcolm will show up big twinkle in his eye and full of laps and playing pranks and stuff. And it's great because it reminds you that you can get older, but you don't have to grow up. Son of a Critch. Mark Critch is with us. He is the executive producer and creator and how much of the writing goes to his credit?

You play the father in this role who's not seen that often because you work in radio. Yeah. I live next door to a radio station growing up, so it's a little bit the wonder Yours and a little bit WKRP in that way, and so it was really cool to grow up next to this world. I always say, like dad was a lighthouse keeper, but the lighthouse was a radio station, so we lived next door to it back in those days. Because if something went wrong, you had to get up there

quick overnight. And it was just a world of characters, and of course radio in the eighties was king. They were the most famous people in town, you know, and everybody felt like a superhero. So that was a real great treat to and you know, when you have a love of music and stuff like that, it was just the best place in the world to grow up next to. Oh. I got started at a very young age

at my hometown radio station, I remember it well. And you just made love to the community and they you, oh my god, you know, it was amazing, and everyone did an impression of my father. He had what we would call it towney twang, and that he had very much a kind of an irishy accent, but he didn't change it, you know, and so it was a bit of a Walter Winchell thing going on. And so people loved him for that that he didn't sound like a radio guy.

He had this thick accent, and everywhere he went, you know, doors would open and people would and a funny thing with people always assumed you were really wealthy because you're on the radio. People assumed you were fitous, you

know, and know, and radio money isn't like that. And then the dad would come in and but what I would love to see the love people had for him because they had You were in their homes, you're in the kitchen, you're you're letting them know if there's a snowstorm, that there, what have you? And that's that's and he really carried that with a great deal of responsibility too, you know, to tell the truth and to do right by people. And those were all great lessons to learn. C W

Son of a Critch, Mark Critch is it's about his life. It's a really charming tale and it's probably something you've not seen before. I encourage you to look forward on the CW and I thank you for joining us. Mark, Oh, thank you, Lee. It's a real pleasure. Thanks for listening to Later with Lee Matthews the Lee Matthews Podcast, and remember to listen to The Drive Live weekday afternoons from five to seven and iHeartMedia Presentation

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android