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    Due South is an award-winning Canadian television police drama created by Paul Haggis and produced by Alliance Communications (now part of Alliance Atlantis), first airing in 1994. It followed the adventures of a fictional Mountie Benton Fraser and his wolf companion Diefenbaker, living and working in Chicago. Fraser's methods, usually more sensitive and understanding than is typical for police work, gave the series a reputation for well-rounded characters.


        Due South
            History
            Story overview
            Cast
            Awards
            Published media
                Music
                Books
                Video/DVD releases
            Episodes
                List of Due South episodes (Season 1)|Season One (1994-1995)
                List of Due South episodes (Season 2)|Season Two (1995-1996)
                List of Due South episodes (Season 3)|Season Three (1997-1998)
                List of Due South episodes (Season 4)|Season Four (1998-1999)
            International
            Trivia
    Show Namedue South
    image
    Captiondue South title screen
    FormatComedy-drama
    Runtime45 minutes approx.
    CreatorPaul Haggis
    StarringPaul Gross
    David Marciano
    Callum Keith ...
    CountryCanada
    NetworkCBS CTV
    First Aired1994
    Last Aired1999

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    History
    Due South originally debuted as a made-for-television movie aired on CTV in Canada and CBS in the United States. After higher than anticipated ratings, Due South was turned in to a continuing drama series with its first season launching late in 1994. It was the first Canadian-made series to earn a prime-time slot on a major U.S. network.

    After the first season, CBS cancelled the series, but due to the show's success in Canada and the United Kingdom, the production company raised sufficient money for a second series which ran from 1995-1996. The show was once again shown on CBS in late 1995, but again in 1996 CBS refused to renew the series.

    After a one year hiatus, CTV revived the series in 1997 with international investment (from the BBC, Pro Sieben AG in Germany and the French company TF1) and it ran for two further seasons until 1999. In the United States, seasons three and four were packaged together as a single third season for syndication. The post-1997 episodes could be considered a spinoff from the original series, but were in fact titled as Season Three and Season Four of the original series. Despite critical acclaim and a consistently warm reception by American audiences, Due South never became a huge hit in the United States; however it was one of the highest-rated regular series ever aired on a Canadian network and remains highly regarded and popular in the United Kingdom. In the UK, Due South was aired on BBC2 between 1996 and 2002 and then on ITV3 from 2006.

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    Story overview

    The basic premise of the series is a Royal Canadian Mounted Police constable named Benton Fraser (Paul Gross) who, accompanied by his deaf half-wolf, Diefenbaker, goes to Chicago to solve the murder of his father. The investigation leads Fraser to uncover a plot by a damming company that is slowly killing the environment. This uncovering leads to the dam being shut down and many people losing their jobs. He also implicates members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in the affair. This along with the loss of so many people's jobs makes him decide that he is not wanted in Canada and he decides to stay in Chicago. This whole plot line is very often brushed over as he often states,


    I first came to Chicago on the trail of the killers of my father and, for reasons which don't need exploring at this juncture, I have remained, attached as liaison to the Canadian consulate.


    His partner in Chicago is Ray Vecchio (David Marciano), a tough, streetwise cop. Marciano did not appear in the post-1997 episodes, save for the first and last episode, but was replaced by Callum Keith Rennie as Stanley Raymond Kowalski, a detective who was under orders to impersonate Vecchio while the real Vecchio was undercover. Marciano did return for the series finale, in which Vecchio ran off to Florida with Kowalski's ex-wife.

    The show falls somewhere between a cop show and a comedy show. Although superficially following the police drama format, the comedy derives from the outrageous plots, the self-mocking Canadian and American stereotypes, and the occasional fantasy elements (such as the regular visits paid to Fraser by the ghost of his dead father), all played with absolute deadpan by the actors. Much of the comedy, as well as setting much of the tone of the show, was provided by Fraser's supernormal detective ability. For instance, in one episode, Fraser tracks down a suspect by smelling the breath of a rat to detect which brand of cooked ribs it had been eating.

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    Cast

    | class="wikitable"
    |-
    ! Character
    ! Actor/Actress
    ! Seasons
    |-
    | Constable Benton Fraser
    | Paul Gross
    | 1-4
    |-
    | Detective Raymond Vecchio
    | David Marciano
    | 1-2, 4
    |-
    | Diefenbaker
    | Draco
    | 1-4
    |-
    | Lieutenant Harding Welsh
    | Beau Starr
    | 1-4
    |-
    | Elaine Besbriss
    | Catherine Bruhier
    | 1-3
    |-
    | Detective Jack Huey
    | Tony Craig
    | 1-4
    |-
    | Detective Louis Gardino
    | Daniel Kash
    | 1-2
    |-
    | Francesca Vecchio
    | Ramona Milano
    | 1-4
    |-
    | Inspector Meg Thatcher
    | Camilla Scott
    | 2-4
    |-
    | Detective Stanley Raymond Kowalski
    | Callum Keith Rennie
    | 3-4
    |-
    | Detective Thomas E. Dewey
    | Tom Melissis
    | 3-4
    |-
    | Constable Renfield Turnbull
    | Dean McDermott
    | 2-4
    |-
    | Sgt. Buck Frobisher
    | Leslie Nielsen
    | 1-2,4
    |-
    | Sgt. Bob Fraser
    | Gordon Pinsent
    | 1-4
    |-



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    Awards
    Over the four-season run of the series, Due South and its cast and crew earned a number of awards. Most significantly, the show earned 53 Gemini nominations, winning 15 in total, including Best Dramatic TV series three years running (1995-1997). Paul Gross won Best Actor in a Continuing Leading Dramatic Role two years running (1995-1996) and creator Paul Haggis won Best Writing in a Dramatic Series the same two years running.

    The following table summarizes awards won by the Due South cast and crew:


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    Published media





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    Music
    The producers of Due South sought to showcase various Canadian artists within the show's episodes, with many of the featured tracks eventually being released on to CD soundtrack. The original theme for the show was written and composed by Jay Semko, after which, working with Jack Lenz and John McCarthy, he went on to score the first two seasons of Due South. The second soundtrack album was released in June 1998 containing sixteen tracks from the final two seasons.

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    Books




    Due South: The Official Companion by Geoff Tibballs was published in May 1998 containing basic information on the series and cast and brief episodes synopses up to the end of the third season. Another illustrated companion, Due South: The Official Guide by John A. Macdonald, was published in December 1998. It contains some interviews with the characters and bios of the cast.

    A number of paper-back novelizations of a selection of episodes by Tom McGregor were later published including, Death In The Wilderness based on the pilot movie, An Invitation to Romance based on the episodes An Invitation to Romance and Gift of the Wheelman, All The Queen's Horses based on All the Queen's Horses and Red, White or Blue, and Vaulting North based on North and Vault.


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    Video/DVD releases
    The pilot two-hour movie was originally released on VHS in 1996, but individual episodes had been released prior to this throughout 1995 on VHS with two episodes per tape. Finally, in 1998, the season three and the season four two-part finales were released. In November 2002, the Due South Giftset was released containing the pilot movie and episodes Mountie on the Bounty and Call of the Wild.

    In 2002, Alliance Atlantis began releasing the series on DVD, starting with the first season in Canada, followed by releases in the US. The final season was released in Canada in 2005, and part of the season three and four combination in the US. In the UK, the first season was released in January 2006 , with planned releases for the remaining seasons. Note that the U.S. DVD's are allegedly of poorer quality than the Canadian releases; the pilot episode is included on the first season U.S. release, but on the third season Canadian release.

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    Episodes
    The following is a list of titles of the broadcast episodes broken down by seasons:


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    List of Due South episodes (Season 1)|Season One (1994-1995)
      Pilot
      Free Willie
      Diefenbaker's Day Off
      Manhunt
      They Eat Horses, Don't They
      Pizzas and Promises
      Chinatown
      Chicago Holiday, Part 1
      Chicago Holiday, Part 2
      A Cop, a Mountie and a Baby
      The Gift of the Wheelman
      You Must Remember This
      A Hawk and a Handsaw
      An Eye For an Eye
      The Man Who Knew Too Little
      The Wild Bunch
      The Blue Line
      The Deal
      An Invitation to Romance
      Heaven and Earth
      Victoria's Secret, Part 1
      Victoria's Secret, Part 2
      Letting Go

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    List of Due South episodes (Season 2)|Season Two (1995-1996)
      North
      Vault
      Witness
      Bird in the Hand
      The Promise
      The Mask
      Juliet is Bleeding
      One Good Man
      The Edge
      We Are the Eggmen
      Starman
      Some Like it Red
      White Men Can't Jump to Conclusions
      All the Queen's Horses
      Body Language
      The Duel
      Red, White, or Blue
      Flashback





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    List of Due South episodes (Season 3)|Season Three (1997-1998)
      Burning Down the House
      Eclipse
      I Coulda Been a Defendant
      Strange Bedfellows
      Mounty and Soul
      Bounty Hunter
      Seeing is Believing
      Spy vs. Spy
      Dead Guy Running
      Perfect Strangers
      Asylum
      Mountie on the Bounty, Part 1
      Mountie on the Bounty, Part 2


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    List of Due South episodes (Season 4)|Season Four (1998-1999)
      Doctor Longball
      Easy Money
      A Likely Story
      Odds
      The Ladies Man
      Mojo Rising
      Mountie Sings the Blues
      Good for the Soul
      Dead Men Don't Throw Rice
      Say Amen
      Hunting Season
      Call of the Wild, Part 1
      Call of the Wild, Part 2



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    International
      In Italy, the show is shown on various networks as Due Poliziotti a Chicago.
      In Germany, parts of the show have seen several re-runs on ProSieben under the title Ein Mountie in Chicago.
      In Finland, the show was shown on YLE TV1 as Chicagon ratsupoliisi from 1996 to 2000.

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    Trivia
      Filming was mostly done in Toronto, Ontario, which was used as a stand-in for Chicago.


      Carrie-Anne Moss appeared in the season 2 episode "Juliet is Bleeding" as Irene Zuko, the sister of a Chicago crime boss.

      Maria Bello appeared in the season 2 episode "One Good Man" as reporter Mackenzie King.
     
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