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Encyclopedia > Cicely, Alaska
Northern Exposure is also the name of a short series of artic-themed trance music albums mixed by Sasha and John Digweed.

Northern Exposure was a quirky, surreal, character-driven dramatic-comedy television show, originally broadcast between 1990 and 1995.


The central character was Joel Fleischman (played by Rob Morrow), a New York doctor who is contractually obligated to practice in the tiny remote Alaskan town of Cicely for four years in order to repay a student loan from the state. The comedy centered originally on the clash between Fleischman's rather neurotic urban mindset and the individual, easy-going and community-minded people around him. As time went on, the show began to focus more and more on the quirky characters of the town.


Main characters

  • Maurice Minnifield (Barry Corbin), ex-astronaut, aging millionaire, entrepreneur, and all-American hero, determined to make tiny Cicely the next boomtown, the 'Alaskan Riviera," to use his words.
  • Chris Stevens (John Corbett), the philosophical ex-felon DJ, who intersperses the music of his morning show with musings on the nature of life, or readings of everything from philosophy to Tolstoy and Where the Wild Things Are;
  • Maggie O'Connell (Janine Turner), fiery, independent, yet somewhat neurotic bush-pilot, whose boyfriends all die in bizarre accidents. She has the mother of all love-hate relationships with Fleischman;
  • Shelly Tambo (Cynthia Geary), 18 year old Northwest Passage beauty pageant winner, brought to Cicely by Maurice, who had fallen in love with her. However, immediately on arrival she met, fell in love with, and now lives with:
  • Holling Vincoeur (John Cullum), the sexagenarian ex-hunter, now given up killing, and the owner of 'The Brick' bar and restaurant, where he lives with Shelly Tambo. Best friend of Maurice until they fell out over Shelly, his main worry is that, since the males of his family mostly live to over 100, Shelly will die before he does;
  • Ruth-Anne Miller (Peg Phillips) octogenarian owner of the local store;
  • Ed Chigliak (Darren E. Burrows), a shy native foundling and general go-fer for Maurice, learned everything he knows about life and the outside world from movies, especially those of Woody Allen. Ed is a Shaman-in-training and is occasionally visited by his invisible spirit guide, 'One Who Waits';
  • Marilyn Whirlwind (Elaine Miles), Fleishman's Buddha-like self-appointed receptionist and dispenser of native wisdom and common sense. Never uses one word where none will do.

Recurring guest stars included:

  • Adam Arkin, son of Alan Arkin, as wildman/gourmet chef/possible ex-CIA agent Adam;
  • Richard Cummings Jr. as Bernard Stevens, Chris's half-brother;
  • Anthony Edwards as the hyperallergic lawyer Mike Monroe, exiled to Cicely for the sake of his health;
  • Grant Goodeve as Rick, Maggie's season one boyfriend;
  • Graham Greene as Leonard Quinhagak, the native medicine man and Ed's mentor;
  • Valerie Mahaffey as Adam's hypochondriac wife Eve;
  • William J. White as Dave, the cook.

It is also worth noting the involvement of series creator/producer/writer David Chase, who went on to bring The Sopranos to prominence.


Thematic and technical details

The main street of Cicely was actually that of Roslyn in Washington.


Northern Exposure's unique flavor comes from a combination of various influences: the show’s creators, Joshua Brand and John Falsey, had been members of the Esalen Institute in California where they imbibed an eclectically "spiritual" worldview, best exemplified in wisdom writings of Swiss psychologist Carl Jung and his disciple, American anthropologist Joseph Campbell (whose works are frequently referenced in the series). There are also fantasy elements, which were likely inherited from the novels of Carlos Castañeda and, on a higher level, the works of Latin American magical realism of Gabriel García Márquez. Both were also conversant with classical Russian Literature. This characteristic is evident in the drastically satirical elements from the show that are “trademarks” of the Russian literary grotesque style of such authors as Gogol and Dostoevsky. Above all, the Northern Exposure explored the timeless themes that pattern the human condition: envy, love, hate, aging, snobbery, ambition, motherhood, alienation, boredom, et cetera, all in a broad-minded and humane manner that attracted faithful following from around the globe.


The show frequently made use of dream- and fantasy-sequences and other dense imagery. In that sense, Northern Exposure could be described as a light hearted version of Twin Peaks which was filmed in the same area.


External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

There are dozens of fan sites dedicated to Northern Exposure. Here are a few:



  Results from FactBites:
 
Northern Exposure - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1740 words)
The show was set in a small, remote (and fictional) town called Cicely, Alaska.
Determined to make tiny Cicely the next boomtown, "the cusp of the new Alaskan Riviera," Maurice was the owner of the local radio station KBHR and newspaper, as well as fifteen thousand acres of local land.
The main street of Cicely and the filming location was actually that of Roslyn, Washington.
TV ACRES: Cities & Towns > Cicely, Alaska (Northern Exposure) (412 words)
It culminates with the men of Cicely rushing stark naked through town in freezing temperatures (a la "The Running of the Bulls" during the Fiesta of San Fremin in Pamplona, Spain).
The town used as the backdrop for Cicely was actually the old coal mining town of Roslyn, Washington (population 869) located seventy-one miles east of Seattle on Interstate 90 in the Yakima Valley, across Snoqualmie Pass area from Puget Sound.
During the fall season of 1991, an episode about the history of the town of Cicely, revealed that the town (the "Paris of the North") was founded by two lesbians named Cicely and Roslyn.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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