The City is a Canadian television drama series, created by Pierre Sarrazin and Suzette Couture, which aired on CTV from 1999 to 2000.
Set in Toronto, the series starred Torri Higginson as Katharine Strachan Berg, a society wife who gave up her career in law after marrying wealthy real estate developer Jack Berg (John Ralston).
The series was essentially a prime time soap opera, although Sarrazin rejected that label because of its association with unrealistic and melodramatic plots, and instead compared the show's intentions to socially realistic antecedents such as The Bonfire of the Vanities, Upstairs, Downstairs and the novels of Victor Hugo.
The series premiered in March 1999 with a 13-episode first season, and then returned in November 1999 with a 20-episode second season. It was not renewed for a third season.
Awards
The show received three Gemini Award nominations at the 14th Gemini Awards in 1999, for Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series (Shawn Doyle, Michael Sarrazin) and Best Guest Actor in a Drama Series (Jan Rubeš). It won three awards at the 15th Gemini Awards in 2000, for Best Actress in a Drama Series (Higginson), Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series (Shannon Lawson) and Best Guest Actor in a Drama Series (Geordie Johnson); it was also nominated, but did not win, for Best Guest Actress in a Drama Series (Sheila McCarthy) and Best Direction in a Drama Series (Jerry Ciccoritti).
Cast
- Torri Higginson as Katharine Strachan Berg, a Rosedale lawyer
- John Ralston as Jack Berg
- Shannon Lawson as Marly Lamarr
- Jody Racicot as St. Crispin St. James
- Matt Lemche as Strachan Berg
- Michael Sarrazin as Milt
- Madhuri Bhatia as Mrs. Socialist
- Aidan Devine as Father Shane Devlin
- Robin Brûlé as Angie Hart
- Shawn Doyle as Det. McKeigan
- James Gallanders as Det. Croft
- Arnold Pinnock as Tyrone Meeks
- Noam Jenkins as Lance
- Lorne Cardinal as Gabriel
- Enuka Okuma as Kira
Mel Lastman, the real-life Mayor of Toronto at the time the series aired, made a cameo appearance in the second season as himself, and Toronto radio host "Humble" Howard Glassman was heard in numerous episodes as a radio personality voicing public commentary on events.
