Susan Sarandon stars in "Monarch"
All eyes will be on the music industry when it comes to television airing this week. While one of the biggest televised music events of the year, the 64th annual Grammy Awards, has been postponed due to safety issues surrounding COVID-19 and its Omicron variant, one show about the country music industry is still going strong.
Premiering Sunday, Jan. 30, on Fox, "Monarch" stars Hollywood legend Susan Sarandon ("Thelma & Louise," 1991) as Dottie Cantrell Roman, the matriarch of the fictional Roman country music dynasty. Created by budding talent Melissa London Hilfers ("Blasphemy," 2019), the series follows in the footsteps of multigenerational family dramas such as "Blue Bloods," "Dallas," "Succession" and, most notably, "Nashville," while also blazing its own fresh path in the world of television.
Plot-wise, the series follows the Romans throughout their daily lives, performances and personal dramas both big and small. As daughter and dynastic heir Nicolette "Nicky" Roman (Anna Friel, "Land of the Lost," 2009) begins her ascension into the limelight previously long dominated by her parents, the family elders try with all their might to hold onto the secrets that paved the way to stardom for their family.
In addition to Sarandon in the leading role of matriarch, real-life multiplatinum country star Trace Adkins ("The Lincoln Lawyer," 2011) stars as her husband, family patriarch Albie Roman, another key role in the series. Together, the two must grapple with a series of rumors that threaten to collapse the shaky foundation upon which they built their empire. The changes also appear to coincide with the rise to fame of their daughter, who, luckily for them, seems to have inherited more than just the family name and talent as she vows to do everything in her power to stave off media vultures and the prying eyes of the public.
Fox, the network that owns and produced the show in its entirety, calls "Monarch" a "Texas-sized, multigenerational musical drama," noting in the same news release that "even though the Roman name is synonymous with authenticity, the very foundation of their success is a lie."
Set to air the first half of the two-hour premiere directly following the NFC Championship on Jan. 30, "Monarch" continues the hoedown two days later on Tuesday, Feb. 1, with another hour-long episode (Part 2 of the premiere) for fans to enjoy. The series will then continue to air new episodes in its weekly Tuesday night time-slot.
The series was officially announced in May 2021, four months prior to core casting announcements made in September. By that time, Beth Ditto ("On Becoming a God in Central Florida"), Martha Higareda ("Altered Carbon"), Inigo Dôminic Pascual ("Wansapanataym"), Emma Milani ("Solve") and Joshua Sasse ("No Tomorrow") had joined the main cast alongside Sarandon, Adkins and Friel, and filming began mid-September in Atlanta. If all goes well and no further shutdowns are implemented for the pandemic, the bulk of filming is expected to wrap before April begins this year.
Joshua Sasse, Trace Adkins, Susan Sarandon and Anna Friel star in "Monarch"
Since the announcements were made — and certainly since the official trailer was released in December — country music and TV fans have been excited to see what "Monarch" has in store. Sarandon's first series-regular appearance since her arc on "Ray Donovan" ended in 2019 (she also narrated "Dark Air With Terry Carnation" last year, but was never seen), the actress returns to the small screen in a very big way.
Insight from the trailer shows Sarandon's character, Dottie, struggling to leave the spotlight behind and retire, even going so far as to diminish her own daughters' goals in order to continue her claim on the Queen of Country title. She'll need the help of her husband to let go as the empire they built passes on to their own very talented kids, now all adults themselves.
The Roman children, however, appear to have some battles of their own ahead, as sisters Nicky and Gigi (Ditto) go head-to-head to see who will follow in their mother's footsteps, and brother Luke (Sasse) manages Monarch Entertainment under the title of CEO. With each of their futures hanging in the balance of their parents' shadows and lies, the Roman siblings will need to band together to forge ahead. Sadly, that doesn't appear to be much of an option starting out.
Also central to a series about country music is, well, the music.
"Monarch" features a mixture of original songs and covers throughout the series, some as the diegetic music performed by the characters in concert or at home (such as Adkins' cover of Hank Williams Jr.'s "A Country Boy Can Survive"), and others as non-diegetic music used to set the tone of the scene for the show's viewers. One new song that is getting a lot of traction already is the "Monarch" theme, "The Card You Gamble."
Written by Love Junkies — the trio comprising singer/songwriters Hillary Lindsey, Lori McKenna and Liz Rose — "The Card You Gamble" is performed by American singer Caitlyn Smith and tells the story of uncertainty associated with following one's passion, whether it's love, music or something else entirely: a recurring theme throughout the series.
With live performances still largely on hold in today's pandemic-stricken society, this new series offers a way to escape reality while enjoying some "Texas-sized" country flair.
"Monarch" premieres Sunday, Jan. 30, following the NFC Championship on Fox, before moving into its Tuesday night time-slot on Feb. 1 for Part 2 of the double-episode premiere.