It is a night of celebration, purpose, and artistic performance. The Knockturnal had the privilege of attending a special premiere event. This event marked the launch of a new streaming platform, The Network, and its flagship show, The Green Veil. In a strategic move, the Network joined forces with the iconic McKittrick Hotel in Chelsea. This collaboration set the stage for an unforgettable evening, mirroring the captivating allure of the first episode of The Green Veil. It will premiere today, April 30, with new episodes released every Tuesday.
“The Network,” created by director Aram Rappaport, is a streaming service made to “create purposeful stories for the right audiences” that are “premium, always free, and always original.” With this project, Aram hopes to cut through the endless scrolling on streaming platforms by offering a concentrated portfolio of eight TV shows in the platform’s first year, four dramas, and four comedies. Aram selected “The Green Veil” as the first drama series to air, leading to its feature at the launch party.
The launch event took place on Tuesday, April 25, 2024. The McKittrick Hotel in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood transformed into an intimate viewing room stocked with cozy seating arrangements (provided by their partners, LoveSac) and faux evergreen trees. The comfy seating created an open and relaxed environment; guests mingled amongst lead actors Hani Furstenburg and Isabell Poloner, taking press photos and welcoming their friends, 1950s music played in the background. While some guests settled into seats for the screening, others waited in small groups on the second level in a room filled with taxidermy for the immersive experience. The experience featured three distinct spaces: a town street, a whiskey refinery, and an orphanage. Each space references the physical place where the characters in the show began. Professional actors and dancers brought emotive performances that helped the viewer understand the feeling of these spaces before seeing them in the show. Below, energy was moving with excitement and ease; it felt like you had come home to find a TV premiere set up in your living room.
Our host, executive producer, and first-time lead actor in a drama series, John Leguizamo, eventually quieted the crowd and brought our attention to center stage. Before the screening, John introduced Aram Rappaport, who, in addition to being the founder of The Network, is the director for The Green Veil. He celebrated the unveiling of his achievements by thanking the cast, crew, investors, and teams that brought the vision of The Network and its shows to life. Shortly after, the lights dimmed, and the screen lit up.
An indigenous woman and her family appear on screen; the tools and technology place the time in the 1950s. This woman has a white husband with whom she shares a daughter who seems 8-11 years old. The family owns farmland and a whiskey refinery somewhere in middle America. The story begins with local law enforcement agitating the mother during her daily duties, for they have come to her farm to discuss their concern for the well-being of their daughter with her husband. During this period, the FBI was known to take indigenous children from their homes and put them up for adoption to prevent them from inheriting the oil-rich land on which they grew up.
We see the young girl from this opening sequence taken away to the orphanage; once the girl arrives at her destination, the show pivots to focus on the narrator of the story, a young girl named Abigail (Isabell Poloner). Abigail is also of preteen age and happens to be leaving the orphanage that day to join her new family, The Rodgers. Her new mother, Maybel Rodgers (Hani Furstenberg), was an ex-air pilot from WW2 who is now a curious housewife in post-war America. Her new father, Gordon Rodgers (John Leguizamo), is a government agent whose job is mysterious to the women in his life. The show unfolds to reveal a complex world behind the veil of a picturesque American family. Both mother and father stifle their genuine feelings, using their present life as an attempt to rewrite their histories. All while navigating the new challenge of parenting a young woman with a strong sense of individuality that is much too advanced to be socially celebrated. A connecting tension around the reports of alien sightings stretches the veil further, captivating us as it thins.
After the viewing, each actor was brought up on stage to participate in what could only be described as an inclusive celebration of achievement in the form of a moderated panel. From each actor, we heard not only of their individual experiences of growth and vulnerability that came from working on a closed set but of their shared pride in creating a historical fiction TV drama that focuses on the erased histories of indigenous and Latin-X Americans. To the cast, there was no higher honor than to be able to shed light on the stories that should not have been forgotten. It was a night of true celebration joy for the folk behind The Network and the actors of “The Green Veil.
You can tune in tonight and every Tuesday to see how the veil lifts on the American Dream.