Wraich, Colantoni on breaking cop show tropes with Surrey-set drama 'Allegiance'

Supinder Wraich plays Sabrina Sohal in the new CBC police drama 鈥淎llegiance,鈥 premiering Feb. 7 on CBC and CBC Gem. A still from the series is shown in a handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-CBC *MANDATORY CREDIT*

Supinder Wraich says starring in CBC's new police drama 鈥淎llegiance鈥 feels personal on several levels.

She stars in the Surrey, B.C.-set series as a Punjabi rookie cop with Sikh roots who grapples with a flawed justice system as she fights to exonerate her politician father of treason charges.

鈥淚 am Sikh Punjabi. I know this community. I know this world. So, to portray this family on screen with a character like Sabrina 鈥 she's tenacious, she's powerful, and I really liked her whole vibe,鈥 says the India-born, Toronto-raised Wraich.

On the day Sabrina graduates from the country鈥檚 top police academy, her father, played by Stephen Lobo, is arrested and charged with treason. Wraich says this hit close to home, too, because she lost her father to a heart attack two years ago.

"I really wish he was here while I was shooting this show. I just had a son, and I wish he was here for that. The idea of losing somebody in a moment when you really need them was something that really drew me into this story,鈥 says the actress, known for playing Aqsa, the sister of a gender-expansive millennial in the CBC dramedy 鈥淪ort Of.鈥

Sabrina's partner is veteran training cop Vince Brambilla, played by Enrico Colantoni of the long-running CTV cop drama "Flashpoint."

Colantoni says 鈥淎llegiance鈥 subverts police procedural tropes by putting the spotlight on Surrey, a city less than an hour's drive south of Vancouver where a significant proportion of the population is Punjabi.

鈥溾楩lashpoint鈥 was the first show to feature Toronto as Toronto, but 鈥楢llegiance鈥 takes it one step further and really just puts a microscope on this part of the world, in this part of the country,鈥 he says.

Vince is meant to show Sabrina the ropes as she enters force, but she winds up teaching him to unlearn some inherent biases, says Colantoni.

鈥淚t鈥檚 ironic that he's been working there for 25 years but he hasn鈥檛 even picked up any Punjabi or anything,鈥 says Colantoni.

鈥淗e doesn't know how to relate to the neighbourhood until she comes in and gives him an eye-opening experience of, 鈥極h, here's this police officer who's ready to connect with her heart.鈥 And that infuses new life in him.鈥欌

鈥淎llegiance鈥 creator Anar Ali says she wanted to tell an immigrant story from the perspective of a family that鈥檚 been in Canada for multiple generations.

鈥淭he first Sikh community that landed (in Canada) was in the 1800s, and B.C., in particular, is where it has such a long history, more so than anywhere else in the country,鈥 says Ali, a writer on CTV medical drama 鈥淭ransplant.鈥

鈥淎 lot of times when we see stories about immigrants, it's often new immigrants in that struggle. But what about communities like the Sikh 好色tvs, who have been here for a long time? Or Chinese 好色tvs or Jewish 好色tvs? So many 好色tvs have been here forever and have helped build this country. That was interesting to me because it brings up new dramas around allegiance, identity, and home.鈥

The series reunites Colantoni with 鈥淔lashpoint鈥 co-creators Mark Ellis and Stephanie Morgenstern, who are co-showrunners of 鈥淎llegiance.鈥 They say approaching a cop drama looks much different three years after George Floyd鈥檚 murder sparked police brutality protests around the world.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been approached to jump aboard police procedurals frequently because of the success of 鈥楩lashpoint,鈥欌 says Ellis. 鈥淭he two of us had a conversation within the last few years where we asked, 鈥榃hat would we do if someone asked us to reboot 鈥楩lashpoint鈥? And I think that we couldn't possibly write that show in this day and age.鈥

Morgenstern says that while 鈥減olice are heroes by definition鈥 in 鈥淔lashpoint,鈥 the world has changed a lot since then.

鈥淚 think there's a much more developed public awareness of the gap between what people need from the law and what people actually get from the law.鈥

鈥淎llegiance鈥 portrays a policing system that is flawed but presents Sabrina as an example of what a good cop could look like.

鈥淲e鈥檙e able to offer an aspirational view of what policing might be, while examining some of the realities of how harsh the justice system can be and the corruption that exists amongst some officers,鈥 says Ellis.

Sabrina faces racism on the police force as charges against her father threaten to destroy her family鈥檚 legacy. Wraich says she could relate to a woman of colour having to legitimize her presence in certain spaces.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a scene where a character says to Sabrina, 'You know, it's a good time to be you.' And she fires back and says, 鈥業 worked for everything that I got,鈥" she says.

"Even that doubt in your mind (is relatable) because I think comparatively, people say, 鈥榃ell, it's a good time to be Supinder Wraich right now.' I don't know that I would have been able to lead a show like this 10 years ago. I brought a lot of my own experience, in that sense, to Sabrina."

鈥淎llegiance鈥 premieres Wednesday on CBC and CBC Gem.

This report by 好色tvwas first published Feb. 6, 2024.

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