Six Feet Under
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- For the band, see Six Feet Under (band)
| Six Feet Under | |
|---|---|
| Image:Sfu logo 23.jpg Six Feet Under title screen </small> | |
| Genre | Comedy-drama |
| Running time | approx. 60 minutes (commercial-free) |
| Creator(s) | Alan Ball |
| Starring | Peter Krause Michael C. Hall Frances Conroy Lauren Ambrose Mathew St. Patrick Freddy Rodriguez Rachel Griffiths |
| Country of origin | USA |
| Original channel | HBO |
| Original run | June 3, 2001–August 21, 2005 |
| No. of episodes | 63 |
| Official website | |
| IMDb profile | |
| TV.com summary | |
Six Feet Under was a popular and critically acclaimed American television drama produced by HBO. It first aired on June 3, 2001 and concluded its fifth and final season on August 21, 2005. On October 2, 2006, Bravo began rerunning the series from its start, broadcasting two episodes back-to-back on Monday evenings starting at 9:00pm, repeating the pair on the same night starting at 11:30pm, and again at various times later in the week.
There are conflicting reports on how the series was born. In one instance, creator Alan Ball says he conceived the premise to create the show after the deaths of his sister and father. However in this interview, [1], he intimates HBO entertainment president, Carolyn Strauss proposed the idea to him.
Contents |
[edit] Plot overview
The show, created by Alan Ball, stars Peter Krause as Nathaniel Samuel ("Nate") Fisher, Jr., the son of a funeral director who reluctantly becomes a partner in the family funeral business with his brother David, played by Michael C. Hall. The Fisher clan also includes mother Ruth (Frances Conroy) and sister Claire (Lauren Ambrose). Other regulars include mortician and family friend Federico Diaz (Freddy Rodriguez), Nate's longtime girlfriend and eventual wife Brenda Chenowith (Rachel Griffiths), and David's boyfriend and eventual husband Keith Charles (Mathew St. Patrick).
The show revolves around the world of Fisher & Sons Funeral Home, a fictitious mortuary set in present day Los Angeles, California (2000–2005).
On one level, the show is a conventional family drama, dealing with such issues as relationships, infidelity, and religion. At the same time, it is a show that is distinguished by its unblinking focus on the topic of death, which it explores on multiple levels (personal, religious, and philosophical), rather than treating it as a convenient impetus for the solution of a murder. Each episode begins with a death — anything from drowning or heart attack to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome — and that death usually sets the tone for each episode, allowing the characters to reflect on their current fortunes and misfortunes in a way that is illuminated by the death and its aftermath. In the fifth season, the episode All Alone was the first ever to open without a death, focusing instead on a death revealed at the end of the previous episode. The only other episode that did not feature an opening death scene was the series finale, Everyone's Waiting, which instead began with a birth, and ended with the future death scenes of all of the main characters.
A recurring plot device consists of a character having an imaginary conversation with the person who died at the beginning of the episode. Sometimes, the conversation is with other recurring dead characters, notably Nathaniel Fisher Sr., Nate Jr.'s late wife Lisa, and eventually Nate himself. They represent the living character's internal dialogue by exposing it as an external conversation. Casual conversations with the dead also reflect the genre of magical realism. A similar device is occasionally used in which a real conversation between two living characters slips into the imaginary and becomes unrealistic. The shift cannot be clearly distinguished from the normal flow of the scene until an abrupt cut brings the audience back to a mundane conversation, which reveals through contrast the imaginary nature of the preceding moment.
In November 2004, series creator and executive producer Alan Ball announced that the fifth season would be the show's last. The producers and writers felt that after 63 episodes they had told their "story". The series concluded after five seasons, with the finale airing on August 21, 2005.
On March 9, 2006 the basic cable network Bravo acquired the rights to the series which began airing edited episodes in fall 2006. [2]
[edit] Setting
The setting for many of the scenes is in the family owned and operated Fisher & Sons Funeral Home in Los Angeles. The family resides on the upper floors of the funeral home; with the main floor used for the business as viewing and chapel rooms and the basement for the embalming and body preparation areas. There is also an adjacent apartment above the garage.
Six Feet Under, being a show about death, is also a show about time; each episode is set in a particular month in a "contemporary universe" that spans the period from 2000–2005. Nathaniel Fisher, Sr. (played by Richard Jenkins) dies in the pilot, which begins on December 24, 2000. The next episode is set on January 8, 2001 [3]. Some of the deaths in the series have occurred in other periods, such as the 1970s and the 1950s; in these cases, the story is brought up to date so that the plot revolves around the ramifications of the death, rather than the death itself.
The show devotes considerable attention to continuity. Sometimes months pass between each episode; on other occasions, a day. In all cases, the story carries on from where it left off in the previous episode.
[edit] Cast and characters
- Main article at List of Six Feet Under characters.
| Actor | Character | Relationship |
|---|---|---|
| Peter Krause | Nate Fisher | Eldest son of Ruth and Nathaniel; co-operator of Fisher & Diaz; husband to Brenda; widower to Lisa; father of Maya and Willa. Succumbs to AVM in 2005 at age 40. |
| Michael C. Hall | David Fisher | Middle child of Ruth and Nathaniel; co-operator of Fisher & Diaz; husband (later widower) of Keith; adopted father to Durrell and Anthony. Dies in 2044 at age 75 at a picnic in Echo Park. |
| Frances Conroy | Ruth Fisher | Matriarch of Fisher family; former wife/lifelong partner to George and widow to Nathaniel; mother to Nate, David and Claire. Passes away in 2025 at age 79 in a hospital surrounded by Claire, David and George. |
| Lauren Ambrose | Claire Fisher | Youngest child of Ruth and Nathaniel; artist of the family who worked temporarily as a secretary. The final montage of the show, and her obituary on HBO's website, suggest that she became a successful photographer and teacher. Wife, then widow, of Ted Fairwell. Passes away at age 101 in 2085. |
| Freddy Rodriguez | Federico Diaz | Business partner and embalmer at Fisher & Diaz with Nate and David; husband of Vanessa; father to Julio and Augusto. Founder of Diaz Family Mortuary in 2005. Dies at age 75 in 2049 on a cruise ship with Vanessa (suggested heart attack). He appeared in 62 episodes, missing one episode of the first season, Life's Too Short, due to Federico's storyline. |
| Mathew St. Patrick | Keith Charles | Former Los Angeles police officer now in private security; husband of David; adopted father to Anthony and Durrell. Gunned down in 2029 at age 61 by a gang of robbers as he unloads an armored truck. |
| James Cromwell | George Sibley | Geologist/professor; second husband to Ruth; father to Brian, Maggie and Kyle. |
| Rachel Griffiths | Brenda Chenowith | Daughter of Margaret and Bernard Chenowith; sister of Billy. Former shiatsu practitioner; now a cognitive therapist. Girlfriend, then wife, then widow of Nate Fisher. Mother to Willa Fisher Chenowith, and step-mother to Maya. Dies in 2051 at age 82. She didn't appear in four episodes of the third season due to her 2002 pregnancy. Rachel Griffiths' second pregnancy in 2004 was written into the show. Brenda appeared in 59 of the 63 episodes. |
| Justina Machado | Vanessa Diaz | Registered nurse; former employee at Bay Breeze Nursing Home in Sherman Oaks. Wife and high school sweetheart of Federico; mother to Julio and Augusto. |
| Richard Jenkins | Nathaniel Samuel Fisher Sr. | Patriarch of Fisher family and owner of Fisher & Sons Funeral Home before his death in 2000. Husband of Ruth; father of Nate, David and Claire. |
| Tina Holmes | Maggie Sibley | Daughter of George Sibley; traveling pharmaceutical representative from Arizona. Tina Holmes originally auditioned for the minor role of "Marci", Bettina's daughter. She didn't get the job but was called back to read for George's daughter, Maggie. |
| Patricia Clarkson | Sarah O’Connor | Younger sister of Ruth Fisher, an artist who lives in Topanga Canyon. |
| Kathy Bates | Bettina | Sarah’s friend and caretaker who becomes Ruth’s friend when Sarah undergoes withdrawl and further drug rehabilitation. |
| Lili Taylor | Lisa Kimmel Fisher | Nate’s former girlfriend and roommate while living in Seattle; she subsequently becomes pregnant with Nate's child, and they marry in 2002. She is murdered in 2003. Mother to Maya. |
| Jeremy Sisto | Billy Chenowith | Brenda’s younger brother who has bipolar disorder; son of Margaret and Bernard Chenowith; one-time boyfriend of Claire Fisher. |
| Joanna Cassidy | Margaret Chenowith | Psychiatrist mother of Brenda and Billy; widow of Bernard; current lover to Olivier Castro-Staal. |
| Robert Foxworth | Dr. Bernard Chenowith | Brenda and Billy’s psychiatrist father; husband to Margaret before his death in 2003. |
| Peter Macdissi | Olivier Castro-Staal | Professor of Form in Space at LAC-Arts; lover to Margaret Chenowith. |
| Rainn Wilson | Arthur Martin | A young intern from Cyprus College mortuary school who works for the funeral home briefly. |
| Ben Foster | Russell Corwin | Former boyfriend and classmate of Claire. |
| Mena Suvari | Edie | Free spirited lesbian artist and one-time lover of Claire. |
| Sprague Grayden | Anita Miller | Former best friend and roommate of Claire Fisher; ex-girlfriend of Russell Corwin. |
| Marina Black | Parker McKenna | Best friend of Claire Fisher during her high school years. |
| Eric Balfour | Gabriel Dimas | Claire’s high school boyfriend who was a drug addict and robbed a convenience store. |
| Ed O'Ross | Nikolai | Owner of Blossom d’Amour Flower Shop; boyfriend of Ruth Fisher when she worked at the florist. |
| Chris Messina | Ted Fairwell | Corporate attorney at Braeden Chemical Legal Department who becomes Claire's boyfriend when she is assigned as a secretary through her temp job (temporary employee). Marries Claire shortly after her mother's death. |
| Kendre Berry | Durrell Charles-Fisher | Adopted older son of David and Keith; older brother of Anthony. He plans on working as a firefighter but later becomes a funeral director like his father. |
| C.J. Sanders | Anthony Charles-Fisher | Adopted younger son of David and Keith; brother of Durrell. |
| Catherine O'Hara | Carol Ward | A Hollywood producer who hired Lisa as her private vegan chef. Soon after though, she quit. |
| Brenna and Bronwyn Tosh | Maya Fisher | Nate and Lisa’s toddler daughter. |
[edit] Recurring cast
- Ben Foster - Russell Corwin (22 episodes)
- Joanna Cassidy - Margaret Chenowith (20 episodes)
- Richard Jenkins - Nathaniel Fisher (20 episodes)
- Ed O'Ross - Nikolai (18 episodes)
- Peter Macdissi - Olivier Castro-Staal (15 episodes)
- Rainn Wilson - Arthur Martin (13 episodes)
- Tina Holmes - Maggie Sibley (13 episodes)
- Tim Maculan - Father Jack (13 episodes)
- Eric Balfour - Gabe Dimas (12 episodes)
- Sprague Grayden - Anita Miller (12 episodes)
- Aysia Polk - Taylor (11 episodes)
- Kathy Bates - Bettina (10 episodes)
- Peter Facinelli - Jimmy (9 episodes)
- Garrison Hershberger - Matthew Gilardi (8 episodes)
- David Norona - Gary Deitman(8 episodes)
- Joel Brooks - Robbie (8 episodes)
- Melissa Marsala - Angelica Suarez (8 episodes)
- Justin Theroux - Joe (8 episodes)
- Idalis DeLeon - Sophia Morales (8 episodes)
- Ed Begley, Jr. - Hiram Gunderson (8 episodes)
- Mena Suvari - Edie (7 episodes)
- Terrell Clayton - Eddie (7 episodes)
- Robert Foxworth - Dr. Bernard Chenowith (6 episodes)
- Dina Waters - Tracy Montrose Blair (6 episodes)
- Julie Dretzin - Barb Woodworth (6 episodes)
- Jeff Yagher - Hoyt Woodworth (6 episodes)
- Kellie Waymire - Melissa (6 episodes)
- Patricia Clarkson - Sarah O'Connor (6 episodes)
- Anne Ramsay - Jackie Feldman (6 episodes)
- Chris Messina - Ted Fairwell (6 episodes)
- Matt Malloy - Roger Pasquese (6 episodes)
- Steffani Brass - Michaela Woodworth (5 episodes)
- Michael Weston - Jake (4 episodes)
- Catherine O'Hara - Carol Ward (4 episodes)
- Ricardo Antonio Chavira - Ramon Diaz (4 episodes)
- Michelle Trachtenberg - Celeste (4 episodes)
- Julie White- Mitzi Dalton-Huntley (4 episodes)
- Janice Lynde - Woman In Turquoise/Mrs. Loretta Sibley (3 episodes)
- Bobby Cannavale - Javier (3 episodes)
- Steven Pasquale - Kurt, David's boyfriend (3 episodes)
- Jessica D. Stone - Young Brenda (3 episodes)
- Jenna Fischer - Sharon Kinney (2 episodes)
- Illeana Douglas - Angela (2 episodes)
- Lee Garlington - Fiona Kleinschmidt (2 episodes)
- Harriet Sansom Harris - Catherine Collins (2 episodes)
- Molly Parker - Rabbi Ari Hoffman (2 episodes)
[edit] Significant guest stars
- Sandra Oh (Episode 5, An Open Book)
- Leeza Gibbons (Episode 22, Someone Else's Eyes)
- Ellen DeGeneres (Episode 42, Parallel Play)
- Nicole Richie (Episode 51, Untitled)
- Chris Harrison (Episode 52, A Coat of White Primer)
- Susie Bright (Episode 57, The Rainbow of Her Reasons)
[edit] Family tree
</table>
[edit] List of episodes
[edit] Timeframe
The following is a timeframe which features the year the particular episode is set in. Not to be confused with the actual year the episode originally aired.
- Season 1: 2000 (pilot), 2001 (12 episodes)
- Season 2: 2001 (8 episodes), 2002 (5 episodes)
- Season 3: 2002 (1 episode), 2003 (12 episodes)
- Season 4: 2003 (4 episodes), 2004 (8 episodes)
- Season 5: 2004 (2 episodes), 2005 (10 episodes)
2000 - Episodes 1.01<p> 2001 - Episodes 1.02 - 2.09<p> 2002 - Episodes 2.10 - 3.01<p> 2003 - Episodes 3.02 - 4.04<p> 2004 - Episodes 4.05 - 5.02<p> 2005 - Episodes 5.03 - 5.13
[edit] Promotionals
[edit] Season promotionals
As Six Feet Under gradually became a topic in pop culture after the first season, HBO came up with very stylish promotional advertisements to promote the anticipation of upcoming seasons. The promos often depicted the mood that may have occurred in previous episodes or foretold future scenarios. Music, according to creator Alan Ball, plays an integral role in the life of Six Feet Under, as it depicts the mood of the Fishers.
The following songs were played during the teaser trailers for the seasons following the first season:
- Season 2: Heaven by Lamb [4]
- Season 3: A Rush of Blood to the Head by Coldplay [5]
- Season 4: Feeling Good by Nina Simone [6]
- Season 5: Breathe Me by Sia Furler [7]
[edit] Episode recaps
The song played during each episode recap is a 1995 single called Nothing Lies Still Long by Pell Mell.
[edit] Episode previews
Previews for upcoming episodes feature the Six Feet Under theme. The first and fifth seasons feature the original version of the song while the second, third and fourth seasons feature the Rae & Christian remix.
[edit] Releases
[edit] DVD
[edit] Soundtracks
Two soundtrack albums, featuring music that had appeared in the series, were released:
[edit] Book
- Ball, Alan (2003). Alan Poul: Six Feet Under: Better Living Through Death. ISBN 0-7434-8065-1.
- Akass, Kim and McCabe, Janet ed. (2005). Reading Six Feet Under: TV To Die For.
[edit] Scheduling changes
In March 2005, HBO announced that the final season of Six Feet Under would be moved to Monday evenings starting June 6. The reason being to add an additional night of programming to the HBO lineup for their upcoming summer season which included Entourage and The Comeback. This was a huge adjustment for regular viewers as the series had traditionally been scheduled for Sundays. The Monday night experiment ultimately failed due to decreased ratings and complaints. HBO chairman, Chris Albrecht admitted the move was a mistake [8] since the network has always been committed to airing programs on the weekends. Six Feet Under returned to its old timeslot on July 10, 2005 after having been in the new timeslot for only five episodes [9].
[edit] Trivia
- Alan Ball had 13 days to shoot the pilot episode.
- The pilot episode features several spoof commercials for funeral homes and products. This was intended to be a recurring feature throughout the series[citation needed], but was dropped after the first episode.
- The title theme music is composed by Thomas Newman.
- HBO renewed the series for a second season a week after the pilot episode aired.
- The Fisher & Sons Funeral Home is located at 2302 West 25th St. in the West Adams section of Los Angeles, the actual location of The Filipino Federation of America.
- Caskets for the show are made by ABC Caskets in Los Angeles.
- The series converted to HDTV (16:9 widescreen) during the third season.
- Only two episodes of the series have been co-written: Episode 30, Nobody Sleeps and Episode 49, The Black Forest, which is very odd for a series since many writers on other shows are paired up into writing teams.
- Every episode written by writer and cartoonist, Bruce Eric Kaplan, begins with the word "The" in the episode's title, e.g. The Foot, The Dare.
- Lauren Ambrose was 23 years old during the first season while playing Claire Fisher who was only 17.
- Frances Conroy (Ruth Fisher) is only 12 years older than Peter Krause (Nate Fisher), despite playing his mother.
- Freddy Rodriguez (Federico Diaz) had a recurring role on Alan Ball's ABC series, Oh, Grow Up!, which aired in 1999, two years prior to Six Feet Under. The show was cancelled after 11 episodes.
- Lauren Ambrose (Claire Fisher), Freddy Rodriguez (Federico Diaz), Eric Balfour (Gabriel Dimas) and Peter Facinelli (Jimmy) were all in the 1998 movie, Can't Hardly Wait.
- Justina Machado (Vanessa Diaz) became a series regular during the fifth season after being in a guest role since Episode 2.
- Kathy Bates, who was a director during the first three seasons, went on to pursue a recurring role on the series as Ruth's friend, Bettina.
- Amy Spanger, who played Holly Duncan (the death of the week's sister) in Static, is the wife of Michael C. Hall (David Fisher) in real life.
- Chenowith, the last name of Brenda and her family, was the last name of creator Alan Ball's high school baseball coach. [citation needed]
[edit] Awards
[edit] Emmy Awards
[edit] 2002
- Outstanding Casting for a Drama Series
- Libby Goldstein, Junie Lowry-Johnson and Julie Tucker
- Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series (Pilot)
- Alan Ball
- Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series
- Patricia Clarkson
- Outstanding Main Title Design
- Eric Anderson, Scott Hudziak, Paul Matthaeus, Danny Yount
- Outstanding Main Title Theme Music
- Thomas Newman
- Outstanding Makeup for a Series (Prosthetic)
- Kylie Bell, Donna-Lou Henderson, Justin Henderson, Thomas Floutz, Todd Masters, Dan Rebert, Lee Romaire, Scott Tebeau (A Private Life)
[edit] 2003
- Outstanding Casting for a Drama Series
- Libby Goldstein, Junie Lowry-Johnson
[edit] 2006
- Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series
- Patricia Clarkson
- Outstanding Prosthetic Makeup for a Series, Miniseries, Movie or a Special
[edit] Golden Globe Awards
[edit] 2002
- Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for Television
- Rachel Griffiths
- Best Television Series - Drama
[edit] 2004
- Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series- Drama
- Frances Conroy
[edit] Screen Actors Guild Awards
[edit] 2003
- Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series
[edit] 2004
- Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series
- Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series
- Frances Conroy
[edit] HBO broadcast history
- Season 1: Sunday June 3, 2001–Sunday August 19, 2001—10:00 p.m. ET and PT
- Season 2: Sunday March 3, 2002–Sunday June 2, 2002—9:00 p.m. ET and PT
- Season 3: Sunday March 2, 2003–Sunday June 1, 2003—9:00 p.m. ET and PT
- Season 4: Sunday June 13, 2004–Sunday September 12, 2004—9:00 p.m. ET and PT
- Season 5: Monday June 6, 2005–Monday July 4, 2005—9:00 p.m.
[edit] Broadcasting
Six Feet Under is broadcast on the following channels around the world:
- Australia: began February 18, 2002 on the Nine Network as a replacement for The Sopranos. Broadcast schedule was sporadic. Avid fans usually prefer the DVD release or internet downloads.
- Austria: September 9, 2004 on ORF 1
- Belgium: Kanaal Twee
- Brazil: HBO Plus, Warner Channel and TV Land (pay-TV)
- Canada: June 11, 2001 on pay-TV channel TMN and 2003 on Showcase
- Czech Republic: 2002 on HBO, 2003 on ČT2
- Denmark: January 13, 2003 on TV2
- Estonia: Kanal 2
- Finland: February 4, 2003 on MTV3
- France: December 6, 2001 on Jimmy, Canal+, France 2 and France 4.
- Germany: April 13, 2003 on Vox and pay-TV channel Premiere
- Hong Kong: TVB Pearl
- Hungary: September 7, 2002 on HBO and Viasat 3
- Iceland: Stöð 2
- India: Zee English
- Indonesia: TV7
- Ireland: RTÉ Two
- Israel: November 7, 2003 on Channel 2
- Italy: May 20, 2004 on Italia 1 and FOX
- Japan: July 1, 2005 on Super! drama TV
- Lithuania: on LNK
- The Netherlands: January 20, 2003 on Nederland 3/NPS
- Mexico: HBO (pay-TV), Warner Channel (pay-TV), Canal 5 (FTA)
- New Zealand: on TV One (TVNZ)
- Norway: NRK
- Poland: TVN and pay-TV channel HBO
- Portugal: June 10, 2002 on RTP 2 and FOX
- Romania: on HBO, ProTV and Pro Cinema
- Russia: NTV, translated by Leonid Volodarskiy, aired under the name Always Dead Client (Russian: Клиент всегда мёртв)
- South Africa: e-tv
- Serbia: TV Pink
- South Korea: 2003 on CatchOn
- Spain: May 6, 2003 on TVE 2 and FOX
- Sweden: March 2, 2003 on SVT
- Switzerland: SF Schweizer Fernsehen (SF zwei), Télévision Suisse Romande (TSR1) and Radiotelevisione svizzera di lingua italiana (TSI1)
- Taiwan: HBO Asia
- Turkey: CNBC-e
- UK: June 10, 2002 on Channel 4 and E4, repeated on More4 from January 9, 2006
- USA: June 3, 2001 on HBO.
[edit] External links
- Six Feet Under official website
- Official obituaries of main characters dying in series finale
- Six Feet Under at the Internet Movie Database


