"We're both very shallow people! (Laughter) We have the perspective of being apart from each other a lot, which is something many
couples don't have. Some people never get a break from their partners and don't have the chance to really appreciate what they have."
Your affinity for the works for LMM date back to when you portrayed Gilbert Blythe in a production of Anne of Green
Gables at summer camp.
"It was an all girl camp so somebody had to play Gilbert! It was a smashing role! I got to wear overalls and a plaid shirt and kick the
dirt under my feet. I was particulary found of the overalls. They were a lot more comfortable than the corsets I have to wear as
Olivia."
For many viewers, Road to Avonlea strikes a very universal chord, similar to the affinity many have for LMM's works. Why
is that?
"When you read LMM's diaries, you can sense that she wanted something more than what she had. It wasn't at church that she got it,
she felt it much more in nature. There's a certain yearning quality running through most of the female artists of the 19th and early
20th century. I think a lot of inspiration for all great art came from people just being out in nature. From painting to poetry to film, so
much of it comes from simply being outside. People hardly spend any time outside today. LMM was always rambling through the
fields or berry-picking or going out for a traipse, then rushing home to write frantically in her journal about the beauty of the land.
Who does that now?
"So, in Road to Avonlea, the simple fact that the characters are out in nature is an echo of how most of us would like to live. Don't
we all wish we had a field to ramble through on our way to school?"
to the introArticle © 1996 by:
Avonlea Traditions Inc.
Photo by André Pilon