One Woman's Heroic Journey

 

 

Kelly Rowan felt it was time to bring the often ugly truths of

polygamy to prime time, writes GAYLE MacDONALD

 

23/01/07

 

Globe and Mail

 

GAYLE MACDONALD

 

Long before B.C. serial polygamist Winston Blackmore creeped out

audiences by telling CNN's Larry King about his 20 wives and at least

100 children, Ottawa-born actress Kelly Rowan had vowed to take on a

religious sect whose men view women as chattel.

 

Two full years before Blackmore's debut on Larry King last December,

the former O.C. star had knocked on the door of Toronto's Shaftesbury

Films, pitching a fictionalized drama about a woman who escapes a

commune of fundamentalist Mormons (which bears an eerie resemblance

to Blackmore's polygamy stronghold of roughly 700 faithful in

Bountiful, B.C.) Sickened by what she had read and watched about

polygamist communities in Canada and the United States, Rowan decided

that it was time to make a program that lifted the veil on a religion

that sanctions men marrying young girls (some under 16) -- and, at

times, intermarriage between family members.

 

"The purpose of the film really was to cause some dialogue," asserts

Shaftesbury Films chair Christina Jennings, who shot the film with a

$5-million budget. "Kelly's goal -- like ours -- was to make a movie

that gets people talking and thinking about polygamy, about how

society can possibly justify men having a whole bunch of wives and

the taking of young girls."

 

Rowan, who stars in the film and has a co-executive producer's title

along with Jennings, shot In God's Country in and around Hamilton

last summer. The finished product, which co-stars Desperate

Housewives alumnus Richard Burgi, airs tonight at 9 ET on CTV.

 

In the TV movie, Burgi plays Bishop Josiah Leavitt, who takes Rowan's

character, Judith Joseph, as his eighth wife. The couple have four

kids together, but Judith is expelled from her community by her

husband after she tells child protection services that her

12-year-old daughter was raped.

 

Judith struggles to build a new life in a strange world, but is

forced to return to the commune when she learns that the Bishop is

plotting to wed her 16-year-old daughter (from another marriage).

 

"Ultimately this is the heroic journey from a woman's standpoint,"

says Burgi, who started his career playing Chad Rollo on the daytime

soap Another World. "You have a woman who's kind of going along with

the system, who grew up this way, and ultimately, all systems are

saying it's not working.

 

"She had to muster extraordinary courage and will, in order to really

take care of her children the way she believes they need to be taken

care of," adds Burgi, who is best known for playing Susan's cad of an

ex-husband, Karl, on Desperate Housewives.

 

"This movie really encapsulates that struggle between what she's

drawn to -- which is wanting to do right by her community and by what

she's grown up with -- and her own inner voice that's telling her

this is not working."

 

On Larry King, Blackmore showed that there was a lot of truth in

Rowan's fiction. He told the talk-show host that while none of his 20

wives are currently underage, some were "just barely" under 16 when

he married them.

 

"There's one that was, and one that lied about their age, but that's

not unusual for women, is it?" he said.

 

Blackmore was investigated by British Columbia authorities early in

2006 over alleged misconduct. In late September, the RCMP submitted a

report to the Crown after a long probe into alleged misconduct by

some of Bountiful's residents.

 

The Crown said last fall that it was determining whether any criminal

offences had been committed.

 

So far, Jennings says, she has not received any hate mail or angry

protests from fundamentalist Mormons, who are not to be confused with

North America's 12-million-strong, mainstream Mormons -- The Church

of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints -- who renounced plural marriage in 1890.

 

Fundamentalist Mormons follow the teachings of Joseph Smith, who

believed that a man must have at least three wives and as many

children as possible in order to reach the highest level of heaven.

 

Last August, U.S. polygamist sect leader Warren Jeffs was arrested

and is awaiting trial in the States on charges linked to marriages he

allegedly arranged between underage girls and older men in both Utah

and Arizona.

 

Polygamy is illegal in Canada, Jennings notes. But for whatever

reasons, lawmakers rarely enforce anti-polygamy laws. "I find it

extraordinary that polygamist communities exist in North America

today," the producer adds.

 

With a straight face, Blackmore also told King that it's "biblically

sound" for just the men in his faith to have multiple marriages. If

any of his wives were to take another husband, he added, she would

have to leave the society.