Why Fox says you donât need faith to enjoy âThe Passion,â a live show about Jesusâ crucifixion
On Sunday, Fox is praying for a Christian miracle: that masses of viewers will tune in for a live two-hour musical extravaganza about the last week of Jesusâ life on Earth.
âThe Passionâ stars Cuban American telenovela star Jencarlos Canela as Jesus, with country singer Trisha Yearwood as Mary, pop hitmaker Seal as Pontius Pilate and former âAmerican Idolâ rocker Chris Daughtry as the traitorous disciple Judas.
Tyler Perry will narrate the story as a crowd guides a 20-foot illuminated cross through the streets of New Orleans. Itâs Perryâs hometown, âthe perfect place,â he says, because of its resurrection after Hurricane Katrina.
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The network, which earlier this year scored a critical and commercial success with a live version of a much racier tale â the teen musical âGreaseâ â has worked with missionary zeal to spread the gospel.
Perry, taking a break from producing other projects, pitched âThe Passionâ during a 54-minute conference call on March 11 with 30,000 pastors nationwide, hoping they would urge their flocks to watch.
The network aims for âThe Passion,â budgeted at a reported $11 million, to appeal to everyone, not just religious observers.
âI hate using the word âreligiousâ because I donât think this is a religious production at all,â says Daughtry, 36, during a recent joint interview with Canela for The Times. âI think of religion as rules and man-made BS.â
Fox Entertainment President David Madden is a bit more diplomatic. âI think anybody could relate to this story whether they are believers in the Christian religion or not,â Madden says. âWe try to treat the show in a way where it will be as powerful for a believer as it will be for a nonbeliever.â
Whether such an approach will deliver divine ratings is another question.
I hate using the word âreligiousâ because I donât think this is a religious production at all.
— Chris Daughtry
For its live spectacle on Palm Sunday, Fox, which is producing the program with Dick Clark Productions, has to peel viewers away from AMCâs zombie smash âThe Walking Dead,â not to mention March Madness NCAA basketball tournament games.
Biblical spectacle, moreover, has a decidedly mixed record on TV.
Veteran reality impresario Mark Burnett and his wife and producing partner, Roma Downey, scored a massive hit with their 2012 miniseries âThe Bible,â estimated to have lured more than 100 million viewers worldwide.
But viewers donât always heed the call. ABC recently found that out with âOf Kings and Prophets,â its epic retelling of the Old Testament tale of King Saul, which bombed and was cut this week after just two episodes.
Fox could find it especially tough to convert young viewers, who are notoriously fickle and have drifted away from network TV in favor of Instagram, Snapchat and other social media apps.
Richard Flory, a scholar at the Center for Religion and Civic Culture at USC who has written extensively about faith and young people, says he would be surprised if âThe Passionâ connected widely with viewers under 30. âUnless they watch it on YouTube,â he says, âthey wouldnât really be tuning in.â
But âThe Passionâ producers believe they can entice a big audience with a unique mix of pop music and New Testament. Netflix announced Friday that it was picking up the show for international distribution starting Tuesday.
The Fox show is an American adaptation of a Netherlands show, also called âThe Passion,â which began in 2011 and has become an annual Easter season fixture in that country. That program is an adaptation of the medieval passion plays, which dramatized and set to music the final days of Jesusâ life, including his triumphant entry to Jerusalem, trial, crucifixion and death.
Adam Anders, a Swedish music producer who has helped create hits for Backstreet Boys, Miley Cyrus and others, forged tight relations with Fox through his work on the musical comedy âGlee.â Anders saw the Dutch version of âThe Passionâ and thought it would make a promising prospect for a live TV event in America. Only a few changes would need to be made to the basic story â for instance, finessing the exact details of how Jesus died.
âItâs a family show,â Anders says. âWeâre not going to show crucifixion on TV.â
When producers began the casting process, some actors were leery of the religious context and doubted that the live aspect would be enough to lure viewers. âWe had people that didnât get it,â director Robert Deaton admits. In the end, the multiethnic, multi-generational cast has appeal to nearly every conceivable demographic.
Itâs a family show. Weâre not going to show crucifixion on TV.
— Adam Anders, a Swedish music producer
Meanwhile, Anders started hunting for pop songs that could be used to accent key moments in the story.
âItâs amazing to go through hit songs [and see] how many themes there are that correspond with the details of this story, which are love, betrayal, friendship, hope, forgiveness,â Anders says. âThose are universal themes.â
The tunes that made the cut include âWhen Love Takes Over,â a 2009 David Guetta club anthem that will be performed by gospel singer Yolanda Adams; âBring Me to Life,â a hard-rock ballad by Evanescence, here sung by Daughtry, who post-âIdolâ has gone on to a successful career as a hard-rock bandleader, and Imagine Dragonsâ rock song âDemons,â sung as a duet by Canela and Daughtry.
âThe Passion,â uses âexisting songs, contemporary songs, to tell a 2,000-plus year-old story,â says Canela, 27. âIt puts it into the perspective of another generation that I feel has a disconnect with the story. Especially in todayâs time ⌠the word âreligionâ has a bad name.â
As important as the music and the multicultural cast is the setting. The producers wanted a location that conveyed a sense of history, suffering and rebirth.
In his call with pastors, Perry (who was not available for an interview) extolled the virtues of New Orleans. âI donât know of a better place for âThe Passionâ to be told ⌠other than in the city that was, that literally was, resurrected from a liquid grave, and to see where itâs come from and where it was.â
One downside, especially for a live telecast: New Orleansâ notoriously unpredictable weather. But the producers insist that wonât stop them telling the story of Jesusâ final hours.
âLast week I ordered 50 clear umbrellas,â Deaton says. âWeâre live on Sunday no matter what.â
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âThe Passionâ
Where: Fox
When: 8 p.m. Sunday
Rating: TV-PG-L (may be unsuitable for young children, with an advisory for coarse language)
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