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Death or
Canada
Production Notes
Ireland
Casting took place in
Westport Co Mayo to find the
Willis Family – John and
Mary Willis and their five
children. Rose Conway was
cast as Mrs Mary Willis and
Tony Murphy as Mr John
Willis. Three of the actors
who played the Willis
children and many of the
other cast members and
extras had relatives who had
survived the famine and were
able to recount stories of
starvation and humiliation
that had been passed down
through their families.
Achill was one of the worst
affected areas during the
famine, and filming famine
scenes on the island had a
profound and lasting affect
on the cast and crew. Our
Irish Production designer
was Cos Egan (‘Garage’,
‘Count of Monte Cristo’,
‘Saving Private Ryan’), make
up Morna Ferguson (‘Old
Curiosity Shop’, ‘My Boy
Jack’, ‘Middleton’) and
wardrobe designer Lynne
Williams (‘Cromwell in
Ireland’, ‘King Arthur’).
Canada
Director Ruán Magan, DOP
Colm Whelan, actors Tony
Murphy (Mr. John Willis) and
Rose Conway (Mrs. Mary
Willis) flew to Toronto to
film the scenes of the Irish
famine
ships arriving in Grosse
Isle, Canada, hundreds of
immigrants being vetted by
Canadian doctors, and the
fever sheds and hospitals of
Toronto where thousands of
Irish died. The Canadian
production crew and cast
numbered 160 in total.
Included in the Canadian
crew were Production
Designers Rocco Matteo
(Interstate 60, The Scarlet
Letter, My Big Fat Greek
Wedding) and Jennifer
Jacobson (American Psycho,
Dark Water, Time Travellers
Wife). The Canadian crew
were hugely enthusiastic
about the project, realising
that they were bringing back
to life a story that been
hidden under the streets of
Toronto for 150 years. They
were commemorating the
thousands of Irish Famine
victims who died in Toronto
but also celebrating the
extraordinary Canadian men
and women who were
responsible for selflessly
saving thousands of Irish
emigrants from starvation,
sickness and death.
Archaeological Digs
The programmes also follow
the intriguing progress of
the present day
archaeological excavations
on the sites of the fever
sheds, famine hospitals and
burial grounds where these
immigrants died and were
buried. There is a sense of
high drama as archaeologists
anticipate what the digs
might uncover about a story
that has, literally, lain
buried for 150 years. Under
the expert guidance of
Canadian historian Mark
McGowan and chief
archaeologist Ron
Williamson, we filmed these
excavations and combined
archaeological and
historical evidence to piece
together the story of the
terrible summer of 1847.
Using clues from recovered
artifacts, ships manifests,
newspaper clippings, diaries
and burial records, Mark
tries to determine what
happened to the people who
perished and those who
survived.
CGI
Acme Pictures in Toronto
created the CGI scenes
depicting the mayhem at
Limerick Docks in 1847, the
famine ships arriving in
Grosse Isle Canada that same
year, and the hundreds of
steamers and liners at
Toronto docks as the Irish
immigrants make their way up
St Lawrence River. Seamless
CGI scenes were also created
to replicate the hundreds of
fever sheds and the Toronto
hospital that housed the
sick and dying Irish.
Death or
Canada is an
Ireland-Canada Co-Production
produced by Tile Films
(Ireland) and Ballinran
Productions/Summer of Sorrow
Productions (Canada) for
RTE, Canwest Broadcastings,
History Channel UK with the
participation of the Sound
and Vision Broadcasting
Funding Scheme, The Canadian
Television Fund, the
Canadian Film or Television
Production Tax Credit and
the Ontario Media
Development Corporation Film
and Television Tax Credit.
www.tilefilms.ie & www.ballinran.com
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