Misplaced Pages

The L Word: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 04:38, 6 April 2009 edit24.193.105.230 (talk) Spin-off← Previous edit Latest revision as of 20:42, 22 December 2024 edit undo203.30.15.24 (talk)No edit summaryTags: Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit 
(799 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|American-Canadian TV series (2004–2009)}}
{{dablink|This article is about the TV series. "The L Word" can also refer to ], ], ] or a variety of other words starting with the letter L.}}
{{Infobox television
{{infobox Television |
| show_name = The L Word | image = The L Word logo.jpg
| genre = ]
| image = ]
| creator = {{Plainlist|
| caption = ''The L Word'' title logo
*]
| format = ]
*Michele Abbott
| runtime = approx. 50 mins<br>per episode
*Kathy Greenberg
| creator = ] <br>] <br>]
}}
| starring = ] <br>] (2004–2006)<br>] <br>] <br>] <br>] <br>] <br>]<br>] <br>] <br>and ]
| starring = {{Plainlist|
| country = ]<br>]
*]
| network = ]
*]
| first_aired = January 18, 2004
*]
| last_aired = March 8, 2009
*]
| num_seasons = 6
*]
| num_episodes = 70
*]
| list_episodes = List of The L Word episodes
*]
| website = http://www.sho.com/site/lword/
*]
|}}
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]
}}
| opentheme = "The L Word" performed by ] (seasons 2–6)
| composer = Elizabeth Ziff
| country = {{Plainlist|
*United States
*Canada
}}
| language = English
| num_seasons = 6
| num_episodes = 71
| list_episodes = List of The L Word episodes
| executive_producer = {{Plainlist|
*]
*Rose Lam
*]
*Larry Kennar
}}
| producer = {{Plainlist|
*Rose Lam
*Kim Steer
*Elizabeth Ziff
*Angela Robinson
*Elizabeth Hunter
*A.M. Homes
}}
| camera =
| location = {{Plainlist|
*], ]
*], ]
}}
| runtime = 50 minutes
| company = {{Plainlist|
*Coast Mountain Films
*Posse (season 1-2)
*Little Chicken Inc (season 3-6)
*] (pilot)
*]
}}
| network = ]
| first_aired = {{Start date|2004|1|18}}
| last_aired = {{End date|2009|3|8}}
| related = '']''
}}


'''''The L Word''''' is a television drama series that aired on ] in the U.S. from 2004 to 2009. The series follows the lives of a group of lesbian and bisexual women who live in ], ].<ref name=latimes1>{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/tv/story/2019-12-06/the-l-word-generation-q-showtime-queer-women-change|title=Commentary: Why 'The L Word' was must-see lesbian TV — and the reboot doesn't need to be|work=]|date=December 6, 2019|first=Tracy|last=Brown|access-date=August 31, 2021}}</ref><ref name=thr1/> The premise originated with ], Michele Abbott and Kathy Greenberg; Chaiken is credited as the primary creator of the series and also served as its executive producer.
'''''The L Word''''' was an American and Canadian co-production ] ] series on ] portraying the lives of a group of ], ] and ] men and women and their friends, family and lovers in the trendy ] city of ]. The show ran from 2004 to 2009.


''The L Word'' featured television's first ensemble cast of lesbian and bisexual female characters,<ref name=nyt1/><ref name=nyt2/> and its portrayal of lesbianism was groundbreaking at the time.<ref name=thr1>{{cite web|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/hollywood-flashback-l-word-was-a-groundbreaking-take-gay-womens-lives-1260117/|title=Hollywood Flashback: 'L Word' Was a Groundbreaking Take on Gay Women's Lives|work=The Hollywood Reporter|first=Bill|last=Higgins|date=December 15, 2019|access-date=August 1, 2021}}</ref><ref name=wapo1>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/arts-entertainment/2019/12/06/l-word-changed-television-its-reboot-speaks-new-generation/|title='The L Word' changed television. Its reboot speaks to a new generation.|newspaper=]|first=Sarah|last=Hashemi|date=December 6, 2019|access-date=August 1, 2021}}</ref><ref name=guardian1>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2019/dec/02/return-of-the-l-word-lesbian-show|title=The return of The L Word: the groundbreaking lesbian show is back|work=]|first=Rebecca|last=Nicholson|date=December 2, 2019|access-date=August 1, 2021}}</ref><ref name=seattle1>{{cite web|url=https://www.seattletimes.com/entertainment/tv/the-l-word-was-groundbreaking-in-the-canon-of-lgbtq-media-heres-why-its-reboot-generation-q-is-relevant-today/|title='The L Word' was groundbreaking in the canon of LGBTQ media. Here's why its reboot, 'Generation Q,' is relevant today.|work=]|first=Stefanie|last=Loh|date=December 6, 2019|access-date=August 1, 2021}}</ref> One of the series' pioneering hallmarks was its explicit depiction of lesbian sex from the ],<ref name=thr2/> at a time when lesbian sex was "virtually invisible elsewhere on television."<ref name=nbc1/> It was also the first television series written and directed by predominantly ] women.<ref name=mcjournal>{{cite journal|title=Upgrading The L Word: Generation Q|first1=Sarah|last1=Baker|first2=Amanda|last2=Rutherford|journal=M/C Journal|volume=23|issue=6|year=2020|issn=1441-2616}}</ref>
==Main crew==

The show was created by ] ] ('']'', '']'').<ref name = LWordInterview>Amy Cavanaugh, , '']'', ].</ref> Other executive producers include ] ('']'', '']'') and ] ('']''). Besides Chaiken, writers of the show have included ] ('']'', '']'') and ] (''Go Fish'', '']'').
''The L Word'' franchise led to the spin-off reality show '']'' (2010–2012) as well as the documentary film '']'' (2014), both of which aired on Showtime. A sequel television series, '']'', debuted in December 2019 and was canceled after three seasons in 2023.


==Production== ==Production==
''The L Word'' was co-created by ], Michele Abbott, and Kathy Greenberg; Chaiken served as the primary creator and executive director of the series, as well as a writer and director.<ref name=LWordInterview>Amy Cavanaugh, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090314200528/http://www.washblade.com/thelatest/thelatest.cfm?blog_id=24404 |date=2009-03-14 }}, '']'', 2009-03-09.</ref> ] and Larry Kennar served as additional executive producers, while ], ], ], and ] were among the series' writers.
The pilot episode premiered on January 18, ]. The original six year run ended with the series finale's airing on March 8, ]. Outside the US, the series is distributed by ]. ''The L Word'' was filmed in ], ], at Coast Mountain Films Studios, which was formerly known as Dufferin Gate Studios Vancouver. The studio was once owned by Dufferin Gate Productions, the sister company to ], the Canadian producer of the U.S. version of '']''.

The series premiered on ] on January 18, 2004 and ran for a total of six seasons, airing its finale on March 8, 2009. ''The L Word'' was filmed in ], ] at Coast Mountain Films Studio, as well as on location in ], California.


==Characters== ==Series overview==
===Cast and characters===
{{main|List of The L Word actors|List of characters from The L Word}}
]
{{main|List of The L Word characters}}


{| class="wikitable"
Below is the list of the main characters throughout the series, showing the seasons in which they appeared and left:
|- "
<!-- NOTE the span display:none tags make the actors sort by surname -->
! rowspan="2" | Actor/Actress
{| class="sortable wikitable"
! rowspan="2" | Character
! colspan="7" | Appearances
|- |-
! Season 1
! Actor !! Role !! Seasons<br />(guest)
! Season 2
! Season 3
! Season 4
! Season 5
! Season 6
|- |-
| <span style="display:none">Bea</span>] || '']'' || 1—6 | ]
| ]
| colspan="6" {{cMain}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">Hol</span>] || '']'' || 1—6
| ]
| colspan="6" {{cMain|Main}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">Hai</span>] || '']'' || 1—6
| ]
| colspan="6" {{cMain|Main}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">Kir</span>] || '']'' || 1—6
| ]
| colspan="6" {{cMain|Main}}
|- |-
| <span style="display:none">Moe</span>] || '']'' || 1—6 | ]
| ]
| colspan="6" {{cMain|Main}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">Gri</span>] || '']'' || 1—6
| ]
| colspan="6" {{cMain|Main}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">Dan</span>] || '']'' || 1–3 (4)
| ]
| colspan="3" {{cMain|Main}}
| {{cGuest}}
| colspan="2" {{cEmpty}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">She</span>] || '']'' || 2—6
| ]
| {{cMain|Main}}
| colspan="2" {{cEmpty}}
| {{cGuest|Guest}}
| {{cEmpty}}
| {{cGuest|Guest}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">Gav</span>] || '']'' || 4 (5) (6)
| Tim Haspel
| {{cMain|Main}}
| colspan="2" {{cGuest|Guest}}
| colspan="2" {{cEmpty}}
| {{cGuest|Guest}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">Liv</span>] || '']'' || 2
| ]
| {{cEmpty}}
| colspan="2" {{cMain|Main}}
| colspan="2" {{cEmpty}}
| {{cGuest|Guest}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">Lom</span>] || '']'' || 1 (4) (6)
| ]
| {{cEmpty}}
| colspan="5" {{cMain|Main}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">Mab</span>] || '']'' || 1 (2) (3) (6)
| Mark Wayland
| {{cEmpty}}
| {{cMain|Main}}
| colspan="4" {{cEmpty}}
|- |-
| ]
|<span style="display:none">Mat</span>] || '']'' || 4—6
| ]
| colspan="2" {{cEmpty}}
| colspan="4" {{cMain|Main}}
|- |-
| <span style="display:none">Rob</span>] || '']'' || 3–4 (6) | ]
| Angus Partridge
| colspan="2" {{cEmpty}}
| colspan="2" {{cMain|Main}}
| {{cEmpty}}
| {{cGuest|Guest}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">Rol</span>] || '']'' || 4—6
| Eva "Papi" Torres
| colspan="3" {{cEmpty}}
| {{cMain|Main}}
| {{cEmpty}}
| {{cGuest|Guest}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">Sea</span>] || '']'' || 3—6
| ]
| colspan="3" {{cEmpty}}
| colspan="3" {{cMain|Main}}
|- |-
| ]
| <span style="display:none">Sha</span>] || '']'' || 2–3 (6)
| ]
|-
| colspan="3" {{cEmpty}}
| <span style="display:none">She</span>] || '']'' || 4—6
| colspan="3" {{cMain|Main}}
|} |}


==Title== ===Title===
Contemporary use of the phrase "the L word" as an alias for ''lesbian'' dates to at least the 1981 play ''My Blue Heaven'' by ], in which a character stammers out: "You're really...? The L-word? Lord God, I never met one before."<ref>{{cite journal | last = Bailey | first = Lucille M. | title = Still More on "X-Word" | journal = American Speech | volume = 70 | issue = 2 | pages = 222–223 | publisher = Duke University Press| year = 1995 | doi = 10.2307/455820| jstor = 455820 }}</ref>
The original code-name for the project was ''Earthlings'', a rarely used slang term for lesbians.<ref name="curve">{{cite web

| url=http://www.curvemag.com/Detailed/296.html
The original code-name for ''The L Word'' was ''Earthlings'', a rarely used slang term for lesbians.<ref name="curve">{{cite web|url=http://www.curvemag.com/Detailed/296.html |title=Folk Like Us |access-date=2006-09-03 |author=Schenden, Laurie K. |work=Curve Magazine |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060506071922/http://www.curvemag.com/Detailed/296.html |archive-date=May 6, 2006 }}</ref>
| title=Folk Like Us
| accessdate=2006-09-03
| author=Schenden, Laurie K.
| date=
| work=Curve Magazine}}</ref>


==="The Chart"===
Contemporary use of the phrase "the L word" as an alias for ''lesbian'' dates to at least the 1981 play ''My Blue Heaven'' by ], in which a character stammers out: "You're really ...? The L-word? Lord God, I never met one before."<ref>{{cite journal | last = Bailey | first = Lucille M. | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Still More on "X-Word" | journal = American Speech | volume = 70 | issue = 2 | pages = 222–223 | publisher = | date = 1995 | url = http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0003-1283%28199522%2970%3A2%3C222%3ASMO%22%3E2.0.CO%3B2-2 | doi = 10.2307/455820| id = | accessdate = 2007-02-11 }}</ref>
{{See also|Six degrees of separation}}
"The Chart", an ] in which nodes represent individuals and lines represent affairs or hookups, is a recurring plot element throughout the series.<ref name="NYTimes">Elizabeth Jensen, , '']'', 2006-12-18.</ref> Originally, ''The L Word'' was to be based around a lesbian, ], and "The Chart" was tattooed on her back.


The idea for the chart was formed in the L word's writers room. The creators of the show were discussing their own mutual friends and who had had romantic entanglements with whom. This led to them creating a beta version of what the chart comes to be on a piece of paper. The writers eventually decide to incorporate this chart into the show.
Historical use of "the L word" as code language can also be found in the sentence of a letter written by ] to ]: "By God and by Christ, if anyone should call that love by that unattractive word that begins with 'L', I'd tear their guts out." (Du Maurier rejected the existence of homosexuality in her attraction and unrequited passion for Doubleday -- a homophobic sentiment that also masked her affair with ].) <ref>''Daphne du Maurier: The Secret Life of the Renowned Storyteller'', by Margaret Forster (1993).</ref>


In season 4, Alice launches The Chart as a ]. Concurrently, a real-world parallel project OurChart.com was created.<ref name="OurChart">Pete Cashmore, , '']'', 2006-12-18.</ref> The website, which allowed registered members to create their own profiles and hosted several blogs on the show, operated from the beginning of season four until the end of season six, after which the site was discontinued and redirected to Showtime's official website.<ref name="OurChartMerge">Ilene Chaiken, . ({{webarchive |url=http://arquivo.pt/wayback/20090629024038/http://www.sho.com/site/lword/popup.do?content=ourchart_info |date=June 29, 2009 }}.) ].</ref>
==Season synopses==
{{see also|List of The L Word episodes}}


{{wide image|File:The L Word - The Chart.svg|1000px|A small portion of The Chart, covering some of the relationships established throughout the series. Pink circles denote primary characters, purple circles denote supporting and minor characters, and grey circles denote characters who are only alluded to and never depicted.}}]
===Season 1===
Season 1 was first aired in the ] on January 18, 2004, on ] and featured 13 episodes presenting several entwined storylines. Set in ], the series first introduces ] and ], a couple with a seven-year relationship who want to have a child. Tina eventually becomes pregnant through artificial insemination but has a miscarriage during episode 1.09: ''Luck, next time''. Later in the series, Bette develops an affair with ], which Tina learns of during the season finale. <ref name="Episode 1.13">{{cite web
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=119247
| title=Limb for Limb
| accessdate=2007-02-01
| author=
| date=2005-02-27
| work=Showtime}}</ref>


==Plot==
The pilot introduced a coming out/love triangle storyline involving Tina and Bette’s neighbor, ], his new-in-town girlfriend, ], and ]. Marina is part of Tina and Bette’s circle of friends, and owns the neighborhood café, The Planet, which serves as the group's hang-out and focal point for the show. The season also introduces ], an androgynous, highly-sexual hairstylist and serial heart-breaker; ], a girly, bisexual journalist looking for love in any way she can, and ], a professional tennis player who is still in the closet and torn between pursuing her career and finding love. In the first season, Dana falls for a ] named ] whose sexuality is questioned by the group until Lara has an unexpected meeting with Dana in the locker room.
{{See also|List of The L Word episodes}}


===Season 2=== ===Season 1===
{{main|The L Word (season 1)}}
Season 2 began airing on ] on ], ]. It starts by unveiling to the viewers a secret Tina is keeping from everyone: she successfully became impregnated after a second insemination. Tina begins seeing ], while Bette’s life is portrayed as a wreck, with alcohol abuse, problems with her job, the death of her father in episode 2.12:''L'Chaim'', and being fired during the season finale. Tina and Bette reconcile during the final episode. The character of Marina was written out of the show, and the Planet was bought by ]. <ref name="Episode 2.02">{{cite web
The first season of ''The L Word'' premiered on January 18, 2004 and ended on April 11, 2004. The season introduces ] and ], a couple in a seven-year relationship attempting to have a child; ], owner of the local cafe The Planet; ], who has recently moved to Los Angeles to live with her boyfriend Tim Haspell; ], an androgynous, highly sexual hairstylist; ], a bisexual journalist who maintains The Chart; ], a ] professional tennis player; and ], Bette's straight half-sister.
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=123809
| title=Lap Dance
| accessdate=2007-02-01
| author=
| date=2005-02-27
| work=Showtime}}</ref>


===Season 2===
Introduced in the second season are ], a confident DJ who becomes part of a ] with Shane and Jenny; ], the daughter of a wealthy supporter of the arts who later becomes Tina's love interest; and ], a documentary filmmaker who moves in with Shane and Jenny. Mark makes them part of his latest documentary by setting up hidden cameras in the house to videotape them. During episode 2.09: ''Late, Later, Latent'', Jenny discovers Mark’s tapes and also discovers the truth about Carmen’s true love.
{{main|The L Word (season 2)}}
The second season of ''The L Word'' premiered on February 20, 2005 and ended on May 15, 2005. The season introduces ], a DJ who becomes part of a ] with Shane and Jenny; ], a wealthy art patron who becomes a rival to Bette and love interest to Tina (while she and Bette are separated).


Major story lines in the season include Tina's pregnancy following a second insemination, culminating in Tina and Bette's reconciliation at the end of the season; the introduction of Mark Wayland, a documentary filmmaker who moves in with Shane and Jenny and Kit's acquisition of The Planet following Marina's departure from Los Angeles;<ref name="Episode 2.02">{{cite web| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=123809| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070309035929/http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=123809| url-status=dead| archive-date=2007-03-09| title=Lap Dance| access-date=2007-02-01| author=m| date=2005-02-27| work=Showtime}}</ref> Shane and Jenny becoming the unknowing subjects of Mark's documentary after he places hidden cameras in their home; a developing relationship between Alice and Dana; and insights into Jenny's past as an abused child.
Season 2 introduces a developing affair between Alice and Dana, which becomes public in episode 2.07: ''Luminous''. It also presents insights into Jenny’s past as an abused child in episode 2.11: ''Loud and Proud'', and reveals episodes of self-mutilation that reach their climax in the season finale.


===Season 3=== ===Season 3===
{{main|The L Word (season 3)}}
Season 3 first aired on January 8, 2006. It begins six months after the birth of Tina and Bette's daughter, Angelica. Tina's and Bette's relationship as a couple is decaying. <ref name="Episode 3.01">{{cite web
The third season of ''The L Word'' premiered on January 8, 2006 and ended on March 26, 2006. The season introduces ], a working-class trans man initially introduced presenting as a ]; and Angus Partridge, a male nanny who becomes Kit's lover.<ref name="Episode 3.06">{{cite web| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=125210| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070309001527/http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=125210| url-status=dead| archive-date=2007-03-09| title=Lifesize.| access-date=2007-01-25| date=2006-02-12| work=Showtime}}</ref>
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=125205
| title=Labia Majora
| accessdate=2007-01-25
| author=
| date=2006-01-08
| work=Showtime}}</ref> and finally ends when Tina begins a heterosexual relationship on episode 3.10:''Losing the light''<ref name="Episode 3.10">{{cite web
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=125213
| title=Losing the light.
| accessdate=2007-01-25
| author=
| date=2006-03-12
| work=Showtime}}</ref> The estrangement between the two leads to a climactic showdown over Angelica's custody.


The season is set six months after the birth of Tina and Bette's daughter Angelica. Major story lines include Bette and Tina's relationship deteriorating once again, due to Tina developing feelings for men; Max coming out as a ]; Dana's diagnosis with and ultimate death from breast cancer;<ref name="Episode 3.10">{{cite web| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=125213| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070309040141/http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=125213| url-status=dead| archive-date=2007-03-09| title=Losing the light.| access-date=2007-01-25| date=2006-03-12| work=Showtime}}</ref> and Shane and Carmen's engagement and wedding, which ends when Shane abandons Carmen at the altar. Helena is integrated into the primary group of characters as a friend rather than a rival; she acquires a movie studio, where she is entangled in a sexual harassment lawsuit that leads her mother to cut her off financially.
New characters in this season include ] (a working class butch who is Jenny’s girlfriend for most of the season) and Angus Partridge, Angelica’s male nanny who later becomes Kit’s lover. <ref name="Episode 3.06">{{cite web
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=125210
| title=Lifesize.
| accessdate=2007-01-25
| author=
| date=2006-02-12
| work=Showtime}}</ref> Sweeney starts the process of ] from female to male, switching his name to Max. Shane and Carmen's relationship (begun in season 2) leads Carmen to face her family and reveal her ] to them in episode 3.09: ''Lead, follow or get out of the way''. <ref name="Episode 3.09">{{cite web
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=125212
| title=Lead, follow, or get out of the way
| accessdate=2007-01-25
| author=
| date=2006-03-05
| work=Showtime}}</ref>


In the lead-up to the third season, the ] website FanLib.com launched a contest where individuals could submit a piece of ''L Word'' fanfiction, with the winner's story incorporated into a scene in third-season episode.<ref>Hibberd, James (December 5, 2005), "Lights! Camera! 'L Word' Action!". ''Television Week''. '''24''' (49):4</ref><ref>(December 5, 2005), "At Deadline".''MediaWeek''. '''15''' (44):3</ref>
At the beginning of the season, Dana and Alice's relationship has ended and Alice is having a hard time dealing with it. Dana is back with Lara, but is diagnosed with ] and dies in episode 3.10: ''Losing the light'' of heart failure. <ref name="Episode 3.10">{{cite web
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=125213
| title=Losing the light.
| accessdate=2007-01-25
| author=
| date=2006-03-12
| work=Showtime}}</ref> Dana's death inspires Shane to ask Carmen to marry her; Carmen agrees, but in the season finale, Shane does not show up to the ceremony.

Helena's character storyline is switched from being Bette's rival into a new member of the circle of friends, paired mostly with Alice. During episode 3.01:''Labia Majora'' she buys a film studio, <ref name="Episode 3.01">{{cite web
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=125205
| title=Labia Majora
| accessdate=2007-01-25
| author=
| date=2006-01-08
| work=Showtime}}</ref> and later Tina begins to work for her. <ref name="Episode 3.03">{{cite web
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=125207
| title=Lobsters
| accessdate=2007-01-25
| author=
| date=2006-01-22
| work=Showtime}}</ref> Further in the season, Helena meets a documentary producer, Dylan Moreland, portrayed by ], with whom she has an affair. A ] lawsuit filed by Dylan during episode 3.09:''Lead, follow or get out of the way'' <ref name="Episode 3.09">{{cite web
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/previous_episodes.do?episodeid=125212
| title=Lead, follow, or get out of the way
| accessdate=2007-01-25
| author=
| date=2006-03-05
| work=Showtime}}</ref>, along with Helena’s prodigal behavior (Helena has given $10,000 to Shane's father Gabriel for the purpose of buying Shane a wedding present) puts her family business in jeopardy. During the season finale, Helena's mother Peggy (portrayed by ]), cuts Helena off financially when she realizes that Helena cannot discriminate between people who are friends with her because of her money and people who are legitimately friends. Gabriel skips out with the money and a woman he has met at a bar inside the hotel where the group was staying for the wedding, triggering Shane to question whether she can commit to a relationship with Carmen.

Throughout this season, each episode begins with a short pre-credits vignette of two individuals meeting romantically or sexually. As the season progresses, lines from Alice's chart ('']'') connect one member of each vignette with a new individual in the next. Beginning in the early 1970s with a housewife named Marilyn, these connections eventually wind through several of the series' main characters, showing scenes of their earlier lives until it ends with Lara, alone in Paris. A much older Marilyn is introduced in the season finale, showing once again the interconnectedness of all of their lives.


===Season 4=== ===Season 4===
{{main|The L Word (season 4)}}
Showtime announced renewal of the series, in a February 2, 2006, press release:<ref name="season4-1">{{cite web
''The L Word'' was renewed for a fourth season on February 2, 2006,<ref name="season4-1">{{cite web| url=http://www.sho.com/site/announcements/060202lword.do| title=More Love! More Lust! More Longing! Showtime's The L Word Returns for a fourth Season| access-date=2006-09-03| date=2006-02-02| work=Showtime| url-status=dead| archive-url=https://archive.today/20130202052745/http://www.sho.com/site/announcements/060202lword.do| archive-date=2013-02-02}}</ref> and began filming on May 29, 2006.<ref name="season4-7">{{cite web |url=http://www.bcfilmcommission.com/news/film_lists.php?id=5&press=1&draw_column=3:1:2 |title=Film List: Television series in production in BC |access-date=2006-09-03 |date=2006-08-29 |work=British Columbia Film Commission |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061020080741/http://www.bcfilmcommission.com/news/film_lists.php?id=5&press=1&draw_column=3%3A1%3A2 |archive-date=2006-10-20 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The season aired from January 7, 2007 to March 25, 2007,<ref name="season4-6">{{cite web |url=http://www.starbrand.tv/thelword/nexton.asp |title=Next On ''The L Word'' |access-date=2006-09-03 |work=Starbrand.tv |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060627054638/http://www.starbrand.tv/thelword/nexton.asp |archive-date=2006-06-27 |url-status=dead }}</ref> and introduces ], a love interest for Bette;<ref name="season4-2">{{cite web| url=http://www.sho.com/site/announcements/060501lword.do| archive-url=https://archive.today/20130202061455/http://www.sho.com/site/announcements/060501lword.do| url-status=dead| archive-date=2013-02-02| title=Marlee Matlin Joins Cast of Showtime's Hit Series The L Word| access-date=2006-09-03| date=2006-05-01| work=Showtime}}</ref> ], Bette's closeted new boss at California Art College;<ref name="season4-3">{{cite web| url=http://www.sho.com/site/announcements/060606lword.do| archive-url=https://archive.today/20130202101204/http://www.sho.com/site/announcements/060606lword.do| url-status=dead| archive-date=2013-02-02| title=The L Word "Sheperds" in a New Cast Member| access-date=2006-09-03| date=2006-06-06| work=Showtime}}</ref> ], a love interest for Shane;<ref name="season4-4">{{cite web| url=http://www.afterellen.com/archive/ellen/TV/2006/7/kristanna.html| title=Kristanna Loken| access-date=2012-02-06| author=Dodd, Stacy| date=2006-07-26| work=Variety| url-status=dead| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111109125831/http://www.afterellen.com/archive/ellen/TV/2006/7/kristanna.html| archive-date=2011-11-09}}</ref> ], a former ] in the ] and love interest for Alice; and Papi, who has slept with the most women on The Chart.<ref name="season4-3" /> ] reprises her role for two episodes.<ref name="season4-5">{{cite web| url=http://www.karinaworld.com/news.htm| archive-url=https://archive.today/20130127182635/http://www.karinaworld.com/news.htm| url-status=dead| archive-date=2013-01-27| title=News| access-date=2006-09-03| date=2006-06-14| work=P Papi World}}</ref>
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/announcements/060202lword.do
| title=More Love! More Lust! More Longing! Showtime's The L Word Returns for a fourth Season
| accessdate=2006-09-03| date=2006-02-02| work=Showtime}}</ref>.
:On the heels of a year highlighted by industry recognition and critical acclaim for its award-winning original programming including ], ] and ], Showtime has ordered a fourth season of its hit drama series ''The L Word''.


Major story lines in the season include the adaptation of ''Lez Girls'', an article written by Jenny for '']'', into a film; Bette taking a job as a ] at California Art College; and Tasha's struggle to reconcile her military service with her sexuality under ].
The season premiere of the fourth season, ''Legend in the Making'', first aired on January 7, 2007.<ref name="season4-6">{{cite web
| url=http://www.starbrand.tv/thelword/nexton.asp
| title=Next On ''The L Word''
| accessdate=2006-09-03
| author=
| date=
| work=Starbrand.tv}}</ref> The filming of the season's twelve episodes began in Vancouver, on May 29, 2006.<ref name="season4-6">{{cite web
| url=http://www.bcfilmcommission.com/news/film_lists.php?id=5&press=1&draw_column=3:1:2
| title=Film List: Television series in production in BC
| accessdate=2006-09-03
| author=
| date=2006-08-29
| work=British Columbia Film Commission}}</ref>.

New cast members for the show's fourth season included ] winner ],<ref name="season4-2">{{cite web
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/announcements/060501lword.do
| title=Marlee Matlin Joins Cast of Showtime's Hit Series The L Word
| accessdate=2006-09-03
| author=
| date=2006-05-01
| work=Showtime}}</ref> three time ] winner ],<ref name="season4-3">{{cite web
| url=http://www.sho.com/site/announcements/060606lword.do
| title=The L Word "Sheperds" in a New Cast Member
| accessdate=2006-09-03
| author=
| date=2006-06-06
| work=Showtime}}</ref> ],<ref name="season4-4">{{cite web
| url=http://www.afterellen.com/TV/2006/7/kristanna.html
| title=Kristanna Loken
| accessdate=2006-09-03
| author=Dodd, Stacy
| date=2006-07-26
| work=Variety}}</ref>, ] and ]<ref name="season4-3" />. ] reprised her role as ] for two episodes<ref name="season4-5">{{cite web
| url=http://www.karinaworld.com/news.htm
| title=News
| accessdate=2006-09-03
| author=
| date=2006-06-14
| work=Karina World}}</ref>. Film and television star ] guest-starred in several episodes as lesbian film director Kate Arden, chosen to direct the film version of Jenny's (]) book ''Lez Girls''.


===Season 5=== ===Season 5===
{{main|The L Word (season 5)}}
] picked up a fifth season of ''The L Word'' for 12 episodes, touting the show as "a signature franchise among our viewers". Production began in Vancouver the summer of 2007 and ended in Los Angeles early November 2007. The fifth season premiered on January 6, 2008, with episode "501 - LGB Tease"<ref></ref>.
''The L Word'' was renewed for a fifth season on March 9, 2007, and began filming in summer 2007.<ref>{{cite press release |title=Five Times the Love! Lust! Laughs! Longing! SHOWTIME's THE L WORD(R) Returns for a Fifth Season |url=http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/03-08-2007/0004542685&EDATE |agency=PR Newswire |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080511112726/http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=%2Fwww%2Fstory%2F03-08-2007%2F0004542685&EDATE |archive-date=2008-05-11 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The season aired from January 6, 2008 to March 23, 2008 and introduces ], a closeted gay actress who portrays the lead role in ''Lez Girls.'' <ref>{{cite news| url=https://variety.com/2007/digital/features/showtime-loyal-to-l-word-1117960762/ | work=Variety | title=Showtime loyal to 'L Word' | first=Josef | last=Adalian | date=2007-03-08}}</ref> ] is also introduced, potentially by chance meeting Jenny at the Planet, and soon becoming her personal assistant. Papi and Angus were written out of the series.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ourchart.com |title=OurChart. You're On It. |publisher=OurChart |access-date=2013-12-18 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120711153412/http://www.ourchart.com/ |archive-date=2012-07-11 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

The 5th season led to the mysterious disappearance of ] (]), as well as the departures of Dallas Roberts' male token character Angus Patridge (who was dumped by Kit), along with season four recurring guest stars Paige Sobel (portrayed by ]) and Kate Arden portrayed by ].

], daughter of ], reprised her role as Phyllis Kroll's daughter and began a relationship with ], played by Katherine Moennig. <ref></ref>

The character of Helena Peabody is arrested in the beginning of the season for her actions in the previous season finale: stealing money from her wealthy lover Catherine Rothberg. After a few early episodes depicting her time in jail and subsequent release, she temporarily departs from the series when her character allegedly runs off with a new lover she met in prison. Helena does not return until the season finale, back from exile and reinstated into the main cast.

] joined the show as entrepreneur Dawn Denbo, who started a rival lesbian bar with her ].

] and ] were cast as guest characters for this season.<ref></ref> Malaya played ], a young fan of Jenny's work who gets hired as her personal assistant. Kate played ], an ambitious young actress who lands the lead role of Jenny's character, Jesse, in the movie production 'Lez Girls'.


Major story lines in the season include Bette and Tina reconciling their relationship, Jenny being ousted from the production of ''Lez Girls'', and Tasha's ] from the military.
Season five mainly revolves around Jenny and the filming of ''Lez Girls'', Jenny's book-based movie. All the characters' story lines are somehow intertwined to this common thread. Jenny is the director of the movie and expects to have the last word on everything; Tina is one of the executive producers and must put up with Jenny's moods and whims in order to meet the project's deadlines. Jenny personally hires Shane as a hairstylist and picks Adele Channing at the Planet as her new personal assistant. Jenny also becomes romantically involved with lead actress Niki Stevens though this is kept secret from the media as it may harm Niki's career in acting. Adele soon becomes essential to the production company by solving any unexpected problems that come up on the way thus selling an efficient and reliable picture of herself to everyone. That is why no one sees it coming when she threatens the movie producers to disclose a very compromising tape of Niki and Jenny together. In exchange of her silence she demands to take up Jenny's position as film director. As a result Jenny loses her job and is also betrayed by Niki, too coward to stand by her. However she can still count on her friends and realizes she's always had feelings for Shane but before Jenny can tell her so she finds Shane in the middle of a usual one-night adventure with no other than Niki Stevens. While all this was going on in Jenny's life, Bette and Tina were having an affair at Jodi's back and that ultimately leads to Jodi and Bette's ugly break up and sees the former couple's reunion. Tasha faces a military trial for homosexual conduct in the Army, causing her to reflect and take a break from her complicated liaison with Alice. In the end she chooses Alice over her career and resigns from the Army. When everything seems fine, it's Alice who has second thoughts about their relationship. Kit is first robbed at gunpoint at The Planet, then faces competition with Shebar stealing clients away and is forced to close the business when rats are found to have infested The Planet. Kit eventually loses her temper when Denbo announces she's bought the Planet's majority shares from Kit's business partner. Fortunately Helena comes to her friend's rescue when she returns to LA after hearing of her mother's ill health condition. Helena buys both the clubs and resolves to run the business with Kit.


===Season 6=== ===Season 6===
{{main|The L Word (season 6)}}
Showtime confirmed a sixth and final season for ''The L Word''. Unlike the show's previous seasons, it only lasted 8 episodes to conclude with 70 episodes in total. Studio executives commented on the longevity of the show, with the Showtime president of entertainment Robert Greenblatt saying that ''The L Word'' has "surpassed its niche as a gay show". The sixth season premiered on January 18, 2009 and ended its original run on March 8 of the same year.<ref></ref>
The sixth and final season of ''The L Word'' aired from January 18, 2009 to March 8, 2009.<ref name="season6">{{cite news| url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/search/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003722311 | title=Showtime will have last 'Word' }} {{Dead link|date=January 2012|bot=RjwilmsiBot}}</ref> The season introduces ], Bette's college roommate, who attempts to open a gallery with her; ], a social worker who becomes involved in a love triangle with Alice and Tasha; and Marybeth Duffy and Sean Holden, detectives with the ].<ref> EW.com Jul 22, 2008 by Michael Ausiello</ref>


The season is a ] story line focused on the murder of Jenny. The events of the season are depicted as a ] leading up to the night of the crime, with each episode focused around what could have potentially motivated each character to have killed Jenny. The series concludes without revealing the identity of her murderer.
Before airing the show, Creator Ilene Chaiken denied reports of socialite ] guest starring on an interview on gaydarnation.com.<ref> gaydarnation.com, 20 Jun 2008</ref> In July 2008, it was confirmed that ] would star in a ] of the final season. She played Kelly Wentworth (née Freemont), the straight girl that got away from ] in college. Berkley and Beals are best friends in real life, having previously worked on the 2002 ] '']''.<ref> EW.com Jul 22, 2008 by Michael Ausiello</ref>


====Interrogation tapes====
Producers and writers of ''The L Word'' took viewers' opinions regarding the final season’s episodes. The main story of the season is related to the death of ] and the rest of the season is a flashback from that point. Other major storylines included a romantic relationship between Jenny and Shane beginning in the second episode, the disappearance of the 'Lez Girls' negative, and Max's pregnancy. Several former cast members and regular guest stars made appearances. The whereabouts of Eva 'Papi' Torres were revealed, to the satisfaction of many viewers. Besides the addition of Elizabeth Berkley to the guest cast, ] also made guest appearances for the last season as ], a counselor from the L.A. Gay and Lesbian Youth Center who befriends Alice and Tasha and becomes their third-wheel crush.
Following the series finale of ''The L Word'', Showtime released a series of seven short videos depicting Bette, Alice, Tina, Nikki Shane being questioned by the police over Jenny's murder. The episodes were posted weekly on Showtime's website. Showtime additionally released an interview with ''L Word'' series creator Ilene Chaiken, released in two weekly installments. In the interview, Chaiken stated that Alice went to jail for Jenny's murder, but was not necessarily guilty of the crime.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sho.com/site/lword/interrogation.do |title=Showtime : The L Word : Home |publisher=Sho.com |access-date=2013-12-18 |url-status=dead |archive-url=http://arquivo.pt/wayback/20090629030202/http://www.sho.com/site/lword/interrogation.do |archive-date=2009-06-29 }}</ref><ref name=death_theories>{{YouTube|pqZT5lOx0IU|Executive Producer Ilene Chaiken and The Cast Comment on different Theories about Jenny's death}}. Originally aired Dec. 18, 2008.</ref>


=== ''Generation Q'' ===
===Interrogation tapes===
{{main|The L Word: Generation Q}}
Shortly after airing the final episode, Showtime began releasing short videos in which characters reveal secrets that weren't revealed during the course of the show. Each video showed the interrogation of one character with a new video being released each Monday after the final episode via the Showtime website<ref>http://www.sho.com/site/lword/interrogation.do</ref>. All episodes feature ] as Sgt. Marybeth Duffy and Sean Tyson as Det. Sean Holden who are investigating the death of ].


On July 11, 2017, it was announced a sequel series was in the works with Showtime.<ref name=":0">{{cite web |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/l-word-sequel-works-at-showtime-1019916 |title='The L Word' Sequel in the Works at Showtime |work=The Hollywood Reporter |first=Lesley |last=Goldberg |date=July 11, 2017 |access-date=July 11, 2017}}</ref> ] has been selected to serve as executive producer and ].<ref name=":0"/><ref>{{Cite news |url=https://variety.com/2017/tv/news/the-l-word-sequel-series-showtime-marja-lewis-ryan-showrunner-1202619267/|title='The L Word' Sequel Series Taps Marja-Lewis Ryan as Showrunner|last=Otterson|first=Joe|date=2017-11-20|work=Variety|access-date=2017-11-24|language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://deadline.com/2017/11/the-l-word-sequel-marja-lewis-ryan-showrunner-1202211918/|title='The L Word' Sequel Taps Marja-Lewis Ryan As Showrunner At Showtime |last=Andreeva|first=Nellie|date=2017-11-20 |work=Deadline|access-date=2017-11-24 |language=en-US}}</ref> On January 31, 2019, '']'' reported Showtime had picked up the sequel series for a premiere later in the year, in which Jennifer Beals, Katherine Moennig, and Leisha Hailey would reprise their roles.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://ew.com/tv/2019/01/31/the-l-word-sequel-2019-showtime/|title=The L Word sequel ordered to series for 2019 premiere on Showtime |magazine=Entertainment Weekly |first=Nick|last=Romano|date=January 31, 2019}}</ref> Other sources, such as '']'',<ref>{{cite web |url=https://tvline.com/2019/01/31/the-l-word-revival-series-order-showtime/ |title=''The L Word'' Revival Officially Snags Eight-Episode Order at Showtime |website=TVLine |first=Rebecca|last=Iannucci|date=January 31, 2019}}</ref> call the eight-episode order a revival, so the nature of the follow-up is unclear. The new series, titled '']'', premiered in the fall of 2019.<ref>. ''Deadline Hollywood'', May 22, 2019</ref>
The first episode features Tina who reveals that her father was a politician who cheated on her mother and that she had an incestuous relationship with her older sister for three years.


==Related media==
The second episode features Shane who reveals that it was, in fact, her and not Paige who burned down her business, Wax.
===''The Farm''===
In July 2008, Showtime CEO Matthew Blank announced that the network would shoot a ] for ''The Farm'', an ''L Word'' ] series based on a pitch from ''L Word'' series creator Ilene Chaiken. Set in a ], the series was slated to star ], ], ], and Leisha Hailey, the lattermost of whom would reprise her role as Alice Pieszecki. The pilot was shot in December 2008.<ref name="BuddyTV The L-Word Sixth Season">{{cite web| url=http://www.buddytv.com/articles/the-l-word/the-l-word-set-to-come-back-in-23364.aspx| title='The L Word' Set to Come Back in January Next Year| access-date=2009-02-26| author=Valerie Anne del Castillo| date=2008-10-06| work=Showtime| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090226233919/http://www.buddytv.com/articles/the-l-word/the-l-word-set-to-come-back-in-23364.aspx| archive-date=2009-02-26| url-status=dead}}</ref> In April 2009, Showtime declined to pick up ''The Farm'' for a full series order.<ref name="BuShowtime passes on ''L Word'' spinoff (whew!) and Matthew Perry series (sniff!)">{{cite magazine| url=http://popwatch.ew.com/popwatch/2009/04/l-word-spinoff.html| title=Showtime passes on ''L Word'' spinoff (whew!) and Matthew Perry series (sniff!)| access-date=2009-04-03| author=Annie Barrett| date=2009-04-03| magazine=Entertainment Weekly}}</ref>


===''The Real L Word''===
Helena appears in the third episode, flirting with Sgt. Duffy and confessing that she never hid the money she stole from Catherine Rothburg, but instead donated it all to left-wing charities.
{{main|The Real L Word}}
'']'', a ] series produced by Chaiken, aired on Showtime from June 20, 2010 to September 6, 2012. The series, initially set in ] and later in ], ], followed a group of real-life gay women.<ref name="TVG">{{cite web
|url=https://www.tvguide.com/News/Word-Franchise-Keeps-1019736.aspx?rss=breakingnews&partnerid=imdb&profileid=01
|title=The L Word Franchise Keeps It Real with New Series
|last=Rudolph
|first=Ileane
|publisher=]
|date=18 June 2010
|access-date=18 June 2010}}</ref>


===''L Word Mississippi: Hate the Sin''===
Nikki appears in the fourth episode, had admitted of stealing the lez girls negative and placing it in Jenny's attic.
{{main|L Word Mississippi: Hate the Sin}}


''L Word Mississippi: Hate the Sin'', a documentary directed by ] and produced by Chaiken, premiered on Showtime on August 8, 2014.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Thomas |first1=June |title=L Word Mississippi: Hate the Sin, a Great Documentary With a Terrible Title |url=https://slate.com/human-interest/2014/08/l-word-mississippi-hate-the-sin-on-showtime-reviewed.html |website=Slate |access-date=2 August 2019 |date=8 August 2014}}</ref> The documentary, which follows a group of LGBT women in rural ], won the ] for Outstanding Documentary in 2015.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lowe |first1=Kinsey |title=GLAAD Awards NYC: Kelly Ripa, 'Lilting,' 'L Word Mississippi: Hate The Sin' |url=https://deadline.com/2015/05/glaad-awards-nyc-kelly-ripa-lilting-l-word-mississippi-hate-the-sin-1201423875/ |website=Deadline |access-date=2 August 2019 |date=9 May 2015}}</ref>
Bette's interrogation tape reveals that she feels that her relationship with Tina is not perfect and wonders why Tina never asked her to conceive their second child.


==Music== ==Music==
{{main|List of The L Word soundtracks}} {{main|List of The L Word soundtracks}}
EZgirl served as ''The L Word'''s music composer, while Natasha Duprey served as music supervisor. A total of five soundtracks were produced.
As of March 2008, The L Word has released 5 Compilation CDs with the show's soundtrack. The music composer of the show is ].


All three of ]'s bands have been referenced in the series. A song by ], Hailey's first band, was used in a first season episode and included on that season's soundtrack. During the second season, the character Shane is sometimes seen wearing a t-shirt for ], Hailey's second band. Songs of Hailey's most recent band, ] were featured during the show's fifth and sixth seasons; the character Tasha Williams is seen wearing an Uh Huh Her t-shirt during the sixth season. All three of ]'s bands were referenced in the series: a song by ] was used in the first season, Shane wears a shirt for ] in the second season. Songs by ] were featured in the show's fifth and sixth seasons; Tasha is seen wearing an Uh Huh Her t-shirt during the sixth season.


The band ] wrote and performed the , which is first introduced in season two. Betty makes numerous appearances in the show, and their music is featured throughout the series.
==The Chart==
{{see also|Six degrees of separation}}
]
"The Chart" is a graph of the affairs that occur among Alice's friends and acquaintances; it is an ] in which nodes are labeled with people's names and the lines represent affairs or hookups.


==Reception==
According to the storyline, Alice first started the Chart on the back of a napkin. In Season 1 it was moved from the whiteboard stretched across one wall of her apartment to an internet site of Alice's own creation.
The show's first season was "broadcast to critical acclaim and instant popularity"; as an article from '']'' pointed out:<ref name="nyt2005">{{cite news| title=She Likes to Watch| url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/06/arts/television/06gloc.html?pagewanted=all| date=February 6, 2005| first=Alison |last=Glock| access-date=2009-03-16| work=] |url-access=limited}}</ref>
{{cquote|Before ''The L Word'', female gay characters barely existed in television. Interested viewers had to search and second-guess, playing parlor games to suss out a character's sexuality. ]? Jo on '']''? ] and ]? Showtime's decision in January 2004 to air ''The L Word'', which follows the lives of a group of fashionable Los Angeles gays, was akin to ending a drought with a monsoon. Women who had rarely seen themselves on the small screen were suddenly able to watch gay characters not only living complex, exciting lives, but also making love in restaurant bathrooms and in swimming pools. There was no tentative audience courtship. Instead there was sex, raw and unbridled in that my-goodness way that only cable allows.
}}


Co-creator and executive producer ] had some issues with the reaction:<ref name="nyt2005"/>
During episode 1.02: "Let's Do It", Alice attempted to write an article about the chart in '']'' magazine. As she was unable to convince her supervisor editor of the validity of such an article, she opted to publish the Chart on the internet instead. The network was then enriched by the visitors, and was one of the resources used in season 1 when ]'s sexual orientation was in question.
{{cquote|I do want to move people on some deep level. But I won't take on the mantle of social responsibility. That's not compatible with entertainment. I rail against the idea that pop television is a political medium. I am political in my life. But I am making serialized ]. I'm not a cultural missionary.}}


While the show was seen as fulfilling gay characters' "obvious and modest representational need"<ref>Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, "Foreword: The Letter L." ''Reading the L Word'', edited by Kim Akass and Janet McCabe. London: I. B. Tauris (2006): xix</ref> or even the "ferocious desire not only to be seen in some literal sense... but to be seen with all the blood and angst and magic that you possess",<ref>Dana Heller, "How Does a Lesbian Look? Stendhal's Syndrome and the L Word." ''Reading the L Word'', edited by Kim Akass and Janet McCabe. London: I. B. Tauris (2006): 57</ref> the show was criticized for various scenes which served to "reify ]".<ref>Samuel A. Chambers, "Heteronormativity and ''The L Word'': From Politics of Representation to a Politics of Norms" ''Reading the L Word'', edited by Kim Akass and Janet McCabe. London: I. B. Tauris (2006): 91</ref> The show was also praised for its nuanced consideration (in the first season) of how and in what ways gay women should stand up to the religious right, with the "Provocations" art show story line being "a fictionalized version of what happened when Cincinnati's Contemporary Art Center booked a controversial exhibition of Mapplethorpe photographs in 1990".<ref>Margaret McFadden, ""We cannot afford to keep being so high-minded": Fighting the Religious Right on ''The L Word''" ''The New Queer Aesthetic on Television: Essays on Recent Programming'', edited by James R. Keller and Leslie Stratyner. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers (2006): 125</ref>
Late in season 2, the Chart regains plot relevance in the show when a disturbing encounter with Alice's former girlfriend Gabby Deveaux prompts her to put it up as a topic during an interview at ]. In the story, the producer was amazed at the complexity of the affair network and granted Alice a section for its public discussion. The program's low popularity is mentioned during episode 2.11: "Loud and Proud", but by the third season it is pictured as a hit among the lesbian community, even heard at public places (Dana is forced to listen to an ad of the program while visiting the hospital in episode 3.04: "Light My Fire").


As the series progressed, however, reviews became far more negative. By the time the sixth and final season began, ''The New York Times'' called the show a "] '']'' ]" that has "shown little interest in variegating portrayals of gay experience. Instead it has seemed to work almost single-mindedly to counter the notion of "]" and repeatedly remind the viewer of the "limits and tortures of monogamy" while "never align itself with the traditionalist ambitions ]] of a large faction of the gay rights movement".<ref name="nyt2009">{{cite news| title=So Many Temptations to Succumb to, So Many Wandering Eyes to Track| url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/16/arts/television/16word.html?fta=y| author=Ginia Bellafante| access-date=2009-03-16| work=The New York Times | date=2009-01-16|author-link = Ginia Bellafante}}</ref> The decision to make the final season into a murder mystery which was ultimately left unresolved was also met with negative response.<ref name="ellenl">{{cite web|last=Hogan |first=Heather |title=R.I.P., Jenny Schecter, and other things on her tombstone |url=http://www.afterellen.com/blog/stuntdouble/rip-jenny-schecter-and-other-things-on-her-tombstone |work=] |publisher=]) |access-date=18 July 2010 |date=26 February 2009 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20101213010907/http://www.afterellen.com/blog/stuntdouble/rip-jenny-schecter-and-other-things-on-her-tombstone |archivedate=13 December 2010 }}</ref>
From Alice's point of view, the Chart is about her and how she is connected to everyone else on it. Any of the main characters can be connected to Alice in less than four moves. In episode 2.08: "Loyal", Alice claimed she could connect almost anyone to her in less than six moves.


The series currently holds a 57% "Rotten" rating on Rotten Tomatoes.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/the-l-word|title = The L Word|website = ]}}</ref>
In episode 1.02: "Let's Do It", it is mentioned that the major contributor to the Chart is Shane, which is later confirmed during episode 1.12: "Locked Up" by a comment in which she points out her connections could sum up to about twelve hundred.


==Cultural impact and legacy==
During Season 3, the Chart serves as a marginal storyline that advances through each episode and concludes in the season finale. The Concept of the Chart was further exploited in Season Four. Within the series, the Chart evolves into a social network hosting profiles and provides the introduction for the character of Papi in Episode 4.01:''Legend in the Making'', when a larger "hub" than shane is found by Helena on the server. At the same time, a real-world parallel project OurChart.com was launched. The website, which allowed registered members to create their own profiles and also hosted several blogs on the show, was fully operational until the launch of the Sixth Season, after which OurChart.com was merged with Showtime's website.
''The L Word'' broke new ground as the first television series to feature an ensemble cast made up of lesbian and bisexual female characters.<ref name=nyt1>{{cite news|first=Maya|last=Salam |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/29/arts/television/lesbian-tv-shows.html |title=The Very (Very) Slow Rise of Lesbianism on TV |work=]|date=November 29, 2019 |access-date=December 19, 2019}}</ref><ref name=nyt2>{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/29/arts/television/l-word-generation-q.html|title='The L Word' Is Back With Sex, Glamour and a Wider Lens|work=]|date=November 29, 2019|first=Melissa Kravitz|last=Hoeffner|access-date=August 31, 2021}}</ref> Similarly, it was also the first television series to be written and directed predominantly by queer women.<ref name=mcjournal/> The series has been lauded for revolutionizing the depiction of queer women on television,<ref name=thr1/><ref name=wapo1/><ref name=guardian1/><ref name=seattle1/> particularly for its portrayal of a queer community at a time when lesbian representation was often relegated to a single lesbian character amid an otherwise heterosexual cast.<ref name=mcjournal/> One of the pioneering hallmarks of the series was its graphic lesbian sex scenes from the ],<ref name=thr2>{{cite web|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-reviews/l-word-generation-q-review-1259503/|title='The L Word: Generation Q': TV Review|work=The Hollywood Reporter|date=December 5, 2019|first=Robyn|last=Bahr|access-date=September 8, 2021}}</ref> at a time when lesbian sex was "virtually invisible elsewhere on television."<ref name=nbc1>{{cite web|url= https://www.nbcnews.com/nbc-out/out-pop-culture/-l-word-generation-q-cast-caught-marriage-monogamy-season-2-rcna1625|title= 'The L Word: Generation Q' cast is caught between marriage and monogamy in Season 2|publisher=]|date=August 6, 2021|first=Elaina|last=Patton|access-date=August 7, 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/13/arts/television/sex-scenes-coronavirus.html|title=How to Shoot a Sex Scene in a Pandemic: Cue the Mannequins|work=]|date=July 13, 2020|first=Henry|last=Goldblatt|access-date=August 7, 2021}}</ref>


Several shows have referenced ''The L Word'', including '']'''s first season episode "Girls Guide to Dating"; '']''; the medical drama '']''; the first season finale of '']'', ]'s '']'' (July 24, 2006); '']''; '']'' episode "]"; the US version of '']''; '']'' fourth season episode "Scene in a Mall"; '']''; '']'' episode "]"; and '']'' episode "]". Also, movies such as '']'', '']'', and '']'' have made mention of ''The L Word'' as to reference lesbians but considers the term is sometimes used as slander.
In the episode 5.04: "Let's Get This Party Started", as the investigation of Tasha for homosexual conduct escalates, Alice scrubs the chart off her apartment wall to hide evidence of her relationship with Tasha.


===Awards and honors===
Originally, ''The L Word'' was to be based around a lesbian ], and "The Chart" was tattooed on her back.<ref name="curve"/> When Kit Porter was changed into a straight character, The Chart was given to Alice instead.
In 2004, ] won a ]. The show was also for a ] in the same year. In the second season, ] received a posthumous ] nomination for ] in recognition of his portrayal of ] and ]'s father, Melvin. The show received multiple nominations for ], and both ] and ] were repeatedly nominated for ].


In 2006, ''The L Word'' won the GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Drama Series. It was consequently honored with a Special Recognition Award in 2009 from the same organization.
==Critical and scholarly reception==
The show's first season was "broadcast to critical acclaim and instant popularity"; as an article from '']'' pointed out:<ref name="nyt2005">{{cite web| title=She Likes to Watch| url=http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/06/arts/television/06gloc.html?pagewanted=all| date=February 6, 2005| author=]| accessdate=2009-03-16| publisher=]}}</ref>
:Before "The L Word," lesbian characters barely existed in television. Interested viewers had to search and second-guess, playing parlor games to suss out a character's sexuality. ]? Jo on "]"? ]? Showtime's decision in January 2004 to air ''The L Word'', which follows the lives of a group of fashionable Los Angeles lesbians, was akin to ending a drought with a monsoon. Women who had rarely seen themselves on the small screen were suddenly able to watch lesbian characters not only living complex, exciting lives, but also making love in restaurant bathrooms and in swimming pools. There was no tentative audience courtship. Instead there was sex, raw and unbridled in that my-goodness way that only cable allows.


In 2008, ''The L Word'''s companion website was honored at the 59th Annual ]s for Outstanding Achievement in Advanced Media Technology for Best Use of Commercial Advertising on Personal Computers.
But co-creator and executive producer ] had some issues with the reaction:<ref name="nyt2005"/>
:I do want to move people on some deep level. But I won't take on the mantle of social responsibility. That's not compatible with entertainment. I rail against the idea that pop television is a political medium. I am political in my life. But I am making serialized ]. I'm not a cultural missionary.

While the show is seen as fulfilling lesbians' "obvious and modest representational need"<ref>Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, "Foreword: The Letter L." ''Reading the L Word'', edited by Kim Akass and Janet McCabe. London: I. B. Tauris (2006): xix</ref> or even the "ferocious desire not only to be seen in some literal sense... but to be seen with all the blood and angst and magic that you possess",<ref>Dana Heller, "How Does a Lesbian Look? Stendhal's Syndrome and the L Word." ''Reading the L Word'', edited by Kim Akass and Janet McCabe. London: I. B. Tauris (2006): 57</ref> the show has been criticized for various scenes which serve to "reify ]".<ref>Samuel A. Chambers, "Heteronormativity and ''The L Word'': From Politics of Representation to a Politics of Norms" ''Reading the L Word'', edited by Kim Akass and Janet McCabe. London: I. B. Tauris (2006): 91</ref> The show has also been praised for its nuanced consideration (in the first season) of how and in what ways lesbians should stand up to the religious right, with the "Provocations" art show storyline being "a fictionalized version of what happened when Cincinnati's Contemporary Art Center booked a controversial exhibition of Mapplethorpe photographs in 1990".<ref>Margaret McFadden, ""We cannot afford to keep being so high-minded": Fighting the Religious Right on ''The L Word''" ''The New Queer Aesthetic on Television: Essays on Recent Programming'', edited by James R. Keller and Leslie Stratyner. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers (2006): 125</ref>

Some critics find ''The L Word'' to be "a better written series than '']'' and seems less exploitative", with relationships being more important than sex.<ref>Rob Owen, "TV Review: Lesbians in love" '']'' January 16, 2004</ref> Some reviewers (and fans) are put off by the theme song (introduced in the second season) and the "graceless, clunky dialogue".<ref>Heather Havrilesky, "" salon.com , January 14, 2007</ref>

By the time the sixth and final season began, ''The New York Times'' was calling the show a "] '']'' ]" that has "shown little interest in variegating portrayals of gay experience. Instead it has seemed to work almost single-mindedly to counter the notion of ]" and repeatedly remind the viewer of the "limits and tortures of monogamy" while "never align itself with the traditionalist ambitions ]] of a large faction of the gay rights movement."<ref name="nyt2009">{{cite web| title=So Many Temptations to Succumb to, So Many Wandering Eyes to Track| url=http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/16/arts/television/16word.html?fta=y| author=]| accessdate=2009-03-16| publisher=]}}</ref>

==Awards==
In 2005, ] won a ] for her portrayal of ]; the ] also nominated the show for a ]. In the second season, ] won a posthumous ] for ] in recognition of his portrayal of the father of ] and ]. The show received multiple nominations for ] and both ] and ] were repeatedly nominated for ].

In 2008 ''The L Word'''s companion website was honored at the 59th Annual ]s for Outstanding Achievement in Advanced Media Technology for Best Use of Commercial Advertising on Personal Computers.

==International broadcasts==
{{unreferenced section|date=March 2009}}
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
* Australia: ] (season 1-2), ] (Season 1-2), ] (Season 3-4)
* Argentina: ]
* Bosnia and Herzegovina: ]
* Brasil: ]
* Belgium: ]
* Bulgaria : ]
* Canada: ] (English), ] on demand (Season 1-2), ] (Season 3-5) (French)
* Chile: ] (season 1-2-3-4)
* Colombia: ]
* Costa Rica: ], currently{{specify}} broadcasting season 4
* Denmark: ]
* Finland: ]
* France: ]
* Germany: ]
* Greece: ]
* Hungary: ]
* Iceland: ]
* Ireland: ]
* Israel: ]
{{col-2}}
* Italy: ], ]
* Japan: ]
* Latin America: ]
* Lithuania: ]
* Malaysia: ]
* Netherlands: ]
* New Zealand: ]
* Norway: ]
* Philippines: ], ] (Season 2)
* Portugal: ] and ]
* Peru: ]
* Russia: ] (Season 1-4)
* Serbia : ]
* Slovenia: ]
* South Africa: ] ]
* South Korea: ]
* Spain: ]
* Sweden: ] (Season 4- and reruns of 1-3), ] (Season 1-3)
* Switzerland: ]
* United Kingdom: ]
* Uruguay: ]
{{col-end}}

==Spin-off==
Series creator ] recently wrote and produced a 20-minute presentation for a possible spin-off centering around women's prison in which ]'s character ] is detained. The Farm<ref>http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1288495/</ref> as it was so named started shooting in December 2008, while the sixth and final season of the L word premiered in January 2009. ], ] and ] were part of the cast.

Showtime's CEO Matthew Blank announced plans for the new show at the ] press tour in July 2008. "We're doing this interesting thing: The storyline at the end of ''The L Word'', the final episode in the final season, there will be an open-ended component to it," Blank confirmed. "And Ilene is going to carry that story along on the Internet, which we think is an interesting way to keep The L Word experience going. Then if we decide to go ahead with the spin-off that storyline will segue into the new series".<ref name="BuddyTV The L-Word Sixth Season">{{cite web
| url=http://www.buddytv.com/articles/the-l-word/the-l-word-set-to-come-back-in-23364.aspx
| title='The L Word' Set to Come Back in January Next Year
| accessdate=2009-02-26
| author=Valerie Anne del Castillo
| date=2008-10-06
| work=Showtime}}</ref>.

It was announced in April that Showtime will not pick up ''The Farm'' as a series, which may leave the open-ended element of the series finale as permanently unresolved.<ref name="BuShowtime passes on ''L Word'' spinoff (whew!) and Matthew Perry series (sniff!)">{{cite web
| url=http://www.buddytv.com/articles/the-l-word/the-l-word-set-to-come-back-in-23364.aspx
| title=Showtime passes on ''L Word'' spinoff (whew!) and Matthew Perry series (sniff!)
| accessdate=2009-04-03
| author=Annie Barrett
| date=2009-04-03
| work=Entertainment Weekly}}</ref>.

==References in pop culture==
{{In popular culture|date=March 2009}}
Several shows have referenced the ''The L Word'':
*The teen-drama ], in Season 1's episode Girls Guide to Dating, Ashley asks Spencer a question, with the prize being - "two tickets for the Ellen DeGeneres show and a box set of the first two seasons of ''The L Word''".
*In '']'', Jim is asked what "The L Word" is (obviously in this context relating to the word "love"). Instead, Jim states that "The L Word" is "Lesbian".
*On the medical drama '']'', ] said he watches ''The L Word'', but only on mute.
*On the ] series '']'', after finding her daughter Isabel kissing another girl, ] tells Isabel that she can't become a lesbian to avoid losing weight, citing the slim lesbians on ''The L Word''.
*News satire program '']'', which features news headlines altered to reflect pop cultural gags, referred to its coverage of the ] as "The L War" on the July 24, 2006 episode. Host ] is a close friend of ''The L Word'' actress ], and has previously invited her on to promote the show.
*On '']'', ] mentions "watching ''The L Word'' On Showtime, BYAAAAH!!" in his impersonation of ]'s ] in the election runnings. Dave (as Dean) - "I love lesbians. BYAAAAH, I watch ''The L Word'' on Showtime, BYAAAAH! *Smells his finger* BYAAAAAH!!!"
*On '']'' episode "]", ] references ''The L Word'' while speaking to his psychiatrist stating that "all that lesbian thing, with the, uh, ]...it's not bad. She a dyke in real life?"
*In the US version of '']'', when ] feels he is being accused of discrimination toward homosexuals, he cites watching ''The L Word'' as evidence to the contrary.
*The fourth season '']'' episode "Scene in a Mall" features a scene where a ] ] is trying to keep her shared dorm room with an ill ] clean (including spraying ] on the doorknob), and mentions she'll be sleeping with the other girls in the dorm in their room that night, causing Rory to joke "How very ''The L Word''" at the sleeping arrangement.
*On ]'s '']'', the skit "Lesbionic Women" has the protagonist mentioning watching ''The L Word''.
* Creator of the show ], ], commented on watching "The L Word" during the commentary for the Pilot episode of Supernatural, an episode which features ].
* '']'' (Logo Network) references ''The L Word'' on several occasions. In a sketch from Season Two: Episode Six, in which two women plan a birthday party, one explains to the other that several guests will not be able to attend the party because they will be busy planning their "pre-L Word recap meeting" on Saturday nights. In an episode from Season One: Episode Three, a woman calls a lesbian erotic hotline and proclaims to the operator that what she "really wants" is for "''The L Word'' to be written better." The series also created a parody advertisement to coincide with ''The L Word's'' syndication on Logo. It was not part of any specific episode but is available on ''The Big Gay Sketch Show's'' website and the DVD bonus features.
* In the movie ] a character asks if the girl that is about to enter the room was "a glamour dyke like those in The L Word".
* In an episode of '']'' entitled '']'', ] makes a list of shows that he considers unruly, one of which is The L Word (For using "The L Word").
* Comedian and former writer for ''The Big Gay Sketch Show'' ] created a rap and music video called .
* In the movie, ], Yasmin, Leyla's sister, refers to the L Word when trying to tell Leyla's ex, Ali, that Leyla and Tala are in love with each other.
* In a Family guy episode, ], Meg becomes a lesbian to make friends, just for be mocked by Peter saying that "the Bible and Showtime tell us that all lesbians are insanely hot and covered in oil".


==References== ==References==
{{reflist|2}} {{Reflist|30em}}


==External links== <!-- websites from infobox not duplicated here --> ==External links==
{{wikiquote}} {{wikiquote}}
{{commons}}
* Showtime's Official L-Word Wiki
* {{Official website}}
* Comprehensive news, reviews, interviews, recaps, and polls related to the series.
* official site
* {{imdb title|0330251|The L Word}}
* {{tv.com|18662|The L Word}} * {{IMDb title}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:L Word, The}} {{The L Word}}
{{Showtime Network programming}}
]
{{GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Drama Series}}
]
{{Authority control}}
]

{{DEFAULTSORT:L Word}}
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
] ]
] ]
] ]
] ]
] ]
] ]
]
] ]
] ]
] ]
] ]
]

]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 20:42, 22 December 2024

American-Canadian TV series (2004–2009)
The L Word
GenreDrama
Created by
Starring
Opening theme"The L Word" performed by Betty (seasons 2–6)
ComposerElizabeth Ziff
Country of origin
  • United States
  • Canada
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons6
No. of episodes71 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
Producers
  • Rose Lam
  • Kim Steer
  • Elizabeth Ziff
  • Angela Robinson
  • Elizabeth Hunter
  • A.M. Homes
Production locations
Running time50 minutes
Production companies
Original release
NetworkShowtime
ReleaseJanuary 18, 2004 (2004-01-18) –
March 8, 2009 (2009-03-08)
Related
The L Word: Generation Q

The L Word is a television drama series that aired on Showtime in the U.S. from 2004 to 2009. The series follows the lives of a group of lesbian and bisexual women who live in West Hollywood, California. The premise originated with Ilene Chaiken, Michele Abbott and Kathy Greenberg; Chaiken is credited as the primary creator of the series and also served as its executive producer.

The L Word featured television's first ensemble cast of lesbian and bisexual female characters, and its portrayal of lesbianism was groundbreaking at the time. One of the series' pioneering hallmarks was its explicit depiction of lesbian sex from the female gaze, at a time when lesbian sex was "virtually invisible elsewhere on television." It was also the first television series written and directed by predominantly queer women.

The L Word franchise led to the spin-off reality show The Real L Word (2010–2012) as well as the documentary film L Word Mississippi: Hate the Sin (2014), both of which aired on Showtime. A sequel television series, The L Word: Generation Q, debuted in December 2019 and was canceled after three seasons in 2023.

Production

The L Word was co-created by Ilene Chaiken, Michele Abbott, and Kathy Greenberg; Chaiken served as the primary creator and executive director of the series, as well as a writer and director. Steve Golin and Larry Kennar served as additional executive producers, while Guinevere Turner, Susan Miller, Cherien Dabis, and Rose Troche were among the series' writers.

The series premiered on Showtime on January 18, 2004 and ran for a total of six seasons, airing its finale on March 8, 2009. The L Word was filmed in Vancouver, British Columbia at Coast Mountain Films Studio, as well as on location in Los Angeles, California.

Series overview

Cast and characters

(Left to right) Mia Kirshner, Daniel Sea, and Anne Ramsay at L6, "The L Word" Fan Convention in 2009
Main article: List of The L Word characters
Actor/Actress Character Appearances
Season 1 Season 2 Season 3 Season 4 Season 5 Season 6
Jennifer Beals Bette Porter Main
Mia Kirshner Jenny Schecter Main
Pam Grier Kit Porter Main
Laurel Holloman Tina Kennard Main
Katherine Moennig Shane McCutcheon Main
Leisha Hailey Alice Pieszecki Main
Erin Daniels Dana Fairbanks Main Guest
Karina Lombard Marina Ferrer Main Guest Guest
Eric Mabius Tim Haspel Main Guest Guest
Sarah Shahi Carmen de la Pica Morales Main Guest
Rachel Shelley Helena Peabody Main
Eric Lively Mark Wayland Main
Daniel Sea Max Sweeney Main
Dallas Roberts Angus Partridge Main Guest
Janina Gavankar Eva "Papi" Torres Main Guest
Rose Rollins Tasha Williams Main
Marlee Matlin Jodi Lerner Main

Title

Contemporary use of the phrase "the L word" as an alias for lesbian dates to at least the 1981 play My Blue Heaven by Jane Chambers, in which a character stammers out: "You're really...? The L-word? Lord God, I never met one before."

The original code-name for The L Word was Earthlings, a rarely used slang term for lesbians.

"The Chart"

See also: Six degrees of separation

"The Chart", an undirected labeled graph in which nodes represent individuals and lines represent affairs or hookups, is a recurring plot element throughout the series. Originally, The L Word was to be based around a lesbian, Kit Porter, and "The Chart" was tattooed on her back.

The idea for the chart was formed in the L word's writers room. The creators of the show were discussing their own mutual friends and who had had romantic entanglements with whom. This led to them creating a beta version of what the chart comes to be on a piece of paper. The writers eventually decide to incorporate this chart into the show.

In season 4, Alice launches The Chart as a social networking service. Concurrently, a real-world parallel project OurChart.com was created. The website, which allowed registered members to create their own profiles and hosted several blogs on the show, operated from the beginning of season four until the end of season six, after which the site was discontinued and redirected to Showtime's official website.

A small portion of The Chart, covering some of the relationships established throughout the series. Pink circles denote primary characters, purple circles denote supporting and minor characters, and grey circles denote characters who are only alluded to and never depicted.
Leisha Hailey, Katherine Moennig, Ilene Chaikin, Jennifer Beals, and Kara Swisher at the Lesbians Who Tech & Allies Summit in October 2023

Plot

See also: List of The L Word episodes

Season 1

Main article: The L Word (season 1)

The first season of The L Word premiered on January 18, 2004 and ended on April 11, 2004. The season introduces Bette Porter and Tina Kennard, a couple in a seven-year relationship attempting to have a child; Marina Ferrer, owner of the local cafe The Planet; Jenny Schecter, who has recently moved to Los Angeles to live with her boyfriend Tim Haspell; Shane McCutcheon, an androgynous, highly sexual hairstylist; Alice Pieszecki, a bisexual journalist who maintains The Chart; Dana Fairbanks, a closeted professional tennis player; and Kit Porter, Bette's straight half-sister.

Season 2

Main article: The L Word (season 2)

The second season of The L Word premiered on February 20, 2005 and ended on May 15, 2005. The season introduces Carmen de la Pica Morales, a DJ who becomes part of a love triangle with Shane and Jenny; Helena Peabody, a wealthy art patron who becomes a rival to Bette and love interest to Tina (while she and Bette are separated).

Major story lines in the season include Tina's pregnancy following a second insemination, culminating in Tina and Bette's reconciliation at the end of the season; the introduction of Mark Wayland, a documentary filmmaker who moves in with Shane and Jenny and Kit's acquisition of The Planet following Marina's departure from Los Angeles; Shane and Jenny becoming the unknowing subjects of Mark's documentary after he places hidden cameras in their home; a developing relationship between Alice and Dana; and insights into Jenny's past as an abused child.

Season 3

Main article: The L Word (season 3)

The third season of The L Word premiered on January 8, 2006 and ended on March 26, 2006. The season introduces Max Sweeney, a working-class trans man initially introduced presenting as a butch; and Angus Partridge, a male nanny who becomes Kit's lover.

The season is set six months after the birth of Tina and Bette's daughter Angelica. Major story lines include Bette and Tina's relationship deteriorating once again, due to Tina developing feelings for men; Max coming out as a trans man; Dana's diagnosis with and ultimate death from breast cancer; and Shane and Carmen's engagement and wedding, which ends when Shane abandons Carmen at the altar. Helena is integrated into the primary group of characters as a friend rather than a rival; she acquires a movie studio, where she is entangled in a sexual harassment lawsuit that leads her mother to cut her off financially.

In the lead-up to the third season, the fan fiction website FanLib.com launched a contest where individuals could submit a piece of L Word fanfiction, with the winner's story incorporated into a scene in third-season episode.

Season 4

Main article: The L Word (season 4)

The L Word was renewed for a fourth season on February 2, 2006, and began filming on May 29, 2006. The season aired from January 7, 2007 to March 25, 2007, and introduces Jodi Lerner, a love interest for Bette; Phyllis Kroll, Bette's closeted new boss at California Art College; Paige Sobel, a love interest for Shane; Tasha Williams, a former captain in the Army National Guard and love interest for Alice; and Papi, who has slept with the most women on The Chart. Karina Lombard reprises her role for two episodes.

Major story lines in the season include the adaptation of Lez Girls, an article written by Jenny for The New Yorker, into a film; Bette taking a job as a dean at California Art College; and Tasha's struggle to reconcile her military service with her sexuality under don't ask, don't tell.

Season 5

Main article: The L Word (season 5)

The L Word was renewed for a fifth season on March 9, 2007, and began filming in summer 2007. The season aired from January 6, 2008 to March 23, 2008 and introduces Nikki Stevens, a closeted gay actress who portrays the lead role in Lez Girls. Adele Channing is also introduced, potentially by chance meeting Jenny at the Planet, and soon becoming her personal assistant. Papi and Angus were written out of the series.

Major story lines in the season include Bette and Tina reconciling their relationship, Jenny being ousted from the production of Lez Girls, and Tasha's dishonorable discharge from the military.

Season 6

Main article: The L Word (season 6)

The sixth and final season of The L Word aired from January 18, 2009 to March 8, 2009. The season introduces Kelly Wentworth, Bette's college roommate, who attempts to open a gallery with her; Jamie Chen, a social worker who becomes involved in a love triangle with Alice and Tasha; and Marybeth Duffy and Sean Holden, detectives with the LAPD.

The season is a whodunit story line focused on the murder of Jenny. The events of the season are depicted as a flashback leading up to the night of the crime, with each episode focused around what could have potentially motivated each character to have killed Jenny. The series concludes without revealing the identity of her murderer.

Interrogation tapes

Following the series finale of The L Word, Showtime released a series of seven short videos depicting Bette, Alice, Tina, Nikki Shane being questioned by the police over Jenny's murder. The episodes were posted weekly on Showtime's website. Showtime additionally released an interview with L Word series creator Ilene Chaiken, released in two weekly installments. In the interview, Chaiken stated that Alice went to jail for Jenny's murder, but was not necessarily guilty of the crime.

Generation Q

Main article: The L Word: Generation Q

On July 11, 2017, it was announced a sequel series was in the works with Showtime. Marja-Lewis Ryan has been selected to serve as executive producer and showrunner. On January 31, 2019, Entertainment Weekly reported Showtime had picked up the sequel series for a premiere later in the year, in which Jennifer Beals, Katherine Moennig, and Leisha Hailey would reprise their roles. Other sources, such as TVLine, call the eight-episode order a revival, so the nature of the follow-up is unclear. The new series, titled The L Word: Generation Q, premiered in the fall of 2019.

Related media

The Farm

In July 2008, Showtime CEO Matthew Blank announced that the network would shoot a pilot for The Farm, an L Word spin-off series based on a pitch from L Word series creator Ilene Chaiken. Set in a women's prison, the series was slated to star Famke Janssen, Melissa Leo, Laurie Metcalf, and Leisha Hailey, the lattermost of whom would reprise her role as Alice Pieszecki. The pilot was shot in December 2008. In April 2009, Showtime declined to pick up The Farm for a full series order.

The Real L Word

Main article: The Real L Word

The Real L Word, a reality television series produced by Chaiken, aired on Showtime from June 20, 2010 to September 6, 2012. The series, initially set in Los Angeles and later in Brooklyn, New York City, followed a group of real-life gay women.

L Word Mississippi: Hate the Sin

Main article: L Word Mississippi: Hate the Sin

L Word Mississippi: Hate the Sin, a documentary directed by Lauren Lazin and produced by Chaiken, premiered on Showtime on August 8, 2014. The documentary, which follows a group of LGBT women in rural Mississippi, won the GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Documentary in 2015.

Music

Main article: List of The L Word soundtracks

EZgirl served as The L Word's music composer, while Natasha Duprey served as music supervisor. A total of five soundtracks were produced.

All three of Leisha Hailey's bands were referenced in the series: a song by The Murmurs was used in the first season, Shane wears a shirt for Gush in the second season. Songs by Uh Huh Her were featured in the show's fifth and sixth seasons; Tasha is seen wearing an Uh Huh Her t-shirt during the sixth season.

The band Betty wrote and performed the theme song, which is first introduced in season two. Betty makes numerous appearances in the show, and their music is featured throughout the series.

Reception

The show's first season was "broadcast to critical acclaim and instant popularity"; as an article from The New York Times pointed out:

Before The L Word, female gay characters barely existed in television. Interested viewers had to search and second-guess, playing parlor games to suss out a character's sexuality. Cagney and Lacey? Jo on Facts of Life? Xena and Gabrielle? Showtime's decision in January 2004 to air The L Word, which follows the lives of a group of fashionable Los Angeles gays, was akin to ending a drought with a monsoon. Women who had rarely seen themselves on the small screen were suddenly able to watch gay characters not only living complex, exciting lives, but also making love in restaurant bathrooms and in swimming pools. There was no tentative audience courtship. Instead there was sex, raw and unbridled in that my-goodness way that only cable allows.

Co-creator and executive producer Ilene Chaiken had some issues with the reaction:

I do want to move people on some deep level. But I won't take on the mantle of social responsibility. That's not compatible with entertainment. I rail against the idea that pop television is a political medium. I am political in my life. But I am making serialized melodrama. I'm not a cultural missionary.

While the show was seen as fulfilling gay characters' "obvious and modest representational need" or even the "ferocious desire not only to be seen in some literal sense... but to be seen with all the blood and angst and magic that you possess", the show was criticized for various scenes which served to "reify heteronormativity". The show was also praised for its nuanced consideration (in the first season) of how and in what ways gay women should stand up to the religious right, with the "Provocations" art show story line being "a fictionalized version of what happened when Cincinnati's Contemporary Art Center booked a controversial exhibition of Mapplethorpe photographs in 1990".

As the series progressed, however, reviews became far more negative. By the time the sixth and final season began, The New York Times called the show a "Sapphic Playboy fantasia" that has "shown little interest in variegating portrayals of gay experience. Instead it has seemed to work almost single-mindedly to counter the notion of "lesbian bed death" and repeatedly remind the viewer of the "limits and tortures of monogamy" while "never align itself with the traditionalist ambitions of a large faction of the gay rights movement". The decision to make the final season into a murder mystery which was ultimately left unresolved was also met with negative response.

The series currently holds a 57% "Rotten" rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

Cultural impact and legacy

The L Word broke new ground as the first television series to feature an ensemble cast made up of lesbian and bisexual female characters. Similarly, it was also the first television series to be written and directed predominantly by queer women. The series has been lauded for revolutionizing the depiction of queer women on television, particularly for its portrayal of a queer community at a time when lesbian representation was often relegated to a single lesbian character amid an otherwise heterosexual cast. One of the pioneering hallmarks of the series was its graphic lesbian sex scenes from the female gaze, at a time when lesbian sex was "virtually invisible elsewhere on television."

Several shows have referenced The L Word, including South of Nowhere's first season episode "Girls Guide to Dating"; According to Jim; the medical drama House; the first season finale of Weeds, Jon Stewart's The Daily Show (July 24, 2006); Chappelle's Show: The "Lost Episodes"; The Sopranos episode "Live Free or Die"; the US version of The Office; Gilmore Girls fourth season episode "Scene in a Mall"; The Big Gay Sketch Show; The Simpsons episode "You Kent Always Say What You Want"; and Family Guy episode "Brian Sings and Swings". Also, movies such as Puccini for Beginners, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, and I Can't Think Straight have made mention of The L Word as to reference lesbians but considers the term is sometimes used as slander.

Awards and honors

In 2004, Laurel Holloman won a Satellite Award for Best Actress – Television Series Drama. The show was also for a Satellite Award for Best Television Series – Drama in the same year. In the second season, Ossie Davis received a posthumous Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series in recognition of his portrayal of Bette and Kit Porter's father, Melvin. The show received multiple nominations for GLAAD Media Awards, and both Pam Grier and Jennifer Beals were repeatedly nominated for NAACP Image Awards.

In 2006, The L Word won the GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Drama Series. It was consequently honored with a Special Recognition Award in 2009 from the same organization.

In 2008, The L Word's companion website was honored at the 59th Annual Technology & Engineering Emmy Awards for Outstanding Achievement in Advanced Media Technology for Best Use of Commercial Advertising on Personal Computers.

References

  1. Brown, Tracy (December 6, 2019). "Commentary: Why 'The L Word' was must-see lesbian TV — and the reboot doesn't need to be". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
  2. ^ Higgins, Bill (December 15, 2019). "Hollywood Flashback: 'L Word' Was a Groundbreaking Take on Gay Women's Lives". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  3. ^ Salam, Maya (November 29, 2019). "The Very (Very) Slow Rise of Lesbianism on TV". The New York Times. Retrieved December 19, 2019.
  4. ^ Hoeffner, Melissa Kravitz (November 29, 2019). "'The L Word' Is Back With Sex, Glamour and a Wider Lens". The New York Times. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
  5. ^ Hashemi, Sarah (December 6, 2019). "'The L Word' changed television. Its reboot speaks to a new generation". The Washington Post. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  6. ^ Nicholson, Rebecca (December 2, 2019). "The return of The L Word: the groundbreaking lesbian show is back". The Guardian. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  7. ^ Loh, Stefanie (December 6, 2019). "'The L Word' was groundbreaking in the canon of LGBTQ media. Here's why its reboot, 'Generation Q,' is relevant today". The Seattle Times. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  8. ^ Bahr, Robyn (December 5, 2019). "'The L Word: Generation Q': TV Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 8, 2021.
  9. ^ Patton, Elaina (August 6, 2021). "'The L Word: Generation Q' cast is caught between marriage and monogamy in Season 2". NBC News. Retrieved August 7, 2021.
  10. ^ Baker, Sarah; Rutherford, Amanda (2020). "Upgrading The L Word: Generation Q". M/C Journal. 23 (6). ISSN 1441-2616.
  11. Amy Cavanaugh, "An interview with Ilene Chaiken" Archived 2009-03-14 at the Wayback Machine, Washington Blade, 2009-03-09.
  12. Bailey, Lucille M. (1995). "Still More on "X-Word"". American Speech. 70 (2). Duke University Press: 222–223. doi:10.2307/455820. JSTOR 455820.
  13. Schenden, Laurie K. "Folk Like Us". Curve Magazine. Archived from the original on May 6, 2006. Retrieved 2006-09-03.
  14. Elizabeth Jensen, "‘The L Word’ Spins Off Its Chart", The New York Times, 2006-12-18.
  15. Pete Cashmore, "OurChart.com – The L-Word Launching Lesbian Social Network", Mashable, 2006-12-18.
  16. Ilene Chaiken, "A New Year A New OurChart". (Archived June 29, 2009, at the Portuguese Web Archive.) Showtime.
  17. m (2005-02-27). "Lap Dance". Showtime. Archived from the original on 2007-03-09. Retrieved 2007-02-01.
  18. "Lifesize". Showtime. 2006-02-12. Archived from the original on 2007-03-09. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
  19. "Losing the light". Showtime. 2006-03-12. Archived from the original on 2007-03-09. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
  20. Hibberd, James (December 5, 2005), "Lights! Camera! 'L Word' Action!". Television Week. 24 (49):4
  21. (December 5, 2005), "At Deadline".MediaWeek. 15 (44):3
  22. "More Love! More Lust! More Longing! Showtime's The L Word Returns for a fourth Season". Showtime. 2006-02-02. Archived from the original on 2013-02-02. Retrieved 2006-09-03.
  23. "Film List: Television series in production in BC". British Columbia Film Commission. 2006-08-29. Archived from the original on 2006-10-20. Retrieved 2006-09-03.
  24. "Next On The L Word". Starbrand.tv. Archived from the original on 2006-06-27. Retrieved 2006-09-03.
  25. "Marlee Matlin Joins Cast of Showtime's Hit Series The L Word". Showtime. 2006-05-01. Archived from the original on 2013-02-02. Retrieved 2006-09-03.
  26. ^ "The L Word "Sheperds" in a New Cast Member". Showtime. 2006-06-06. Archived from the original on 2013-02-02. Retrieved 2006-09-03.
  27. Dodd, Stacy (2006-07-26). "Kristanna Loken". Variety. Archived from the original on 2011-11-09. Retrieved 2012-02-06.
  28. "News". P Papi World. 2006-06-14. Archived from the original on 2013-01-27. Retrieved 2006-09-03.
  29. "Five Times the Love! Lust! Laughs! Longing! SHOWTIME's THE L WORD(R) Returns for a Fifth Season" (Press release). PR Newswire. Archived from the original on 2008-05-11.
  30. Adalian, Josef (2007-03-08). "Showtime loyal to 'L Word'". Variety.
  31. "OurChart. You're On It". OurChart. Archived from the original on 2012-07-11. Retrieved 2013-12-18.
  32. "Showtime will have last 'Word'".
  33. Exclusive: Elizabeth Berkley Utters 'The L Word' EW.com Jul 22, 2008 by Michael Ausiello
  34. "Showtime : The L Word : Home". Sho.com. Archived from the original on 2009-06-29. Retrieved 2013-12-18.
  35. Executive Producer Ilene Chaiken and The Cast Comment on different Theories about Jenny's death on YouTube. Originally aired Dec. 18, 2008.
  36. ^ Goldberg, Lesley (July 11, 2017). "'The L Word' Sequel in the Works at Showtime". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved July 11, 2017.
  37. Otterson, Joe (2017-11-20). "'The L Word' Sequel Series Taps Marja-Lewis Ryan as Showrunner". Variety. Retrieved 2017-11-24.
  38. Andreeva, Nellie (2017-11-20). "'The L Word' Sequel Taps Marja-Lewis Ryan As Showrunner At Showtime". Deadline. Retrieved 2017-11-24.
  39. Romano, Nick (January 31, 2019). "The L Word sequel ordered to series for 2019 premiere on Showtime". Entertainment Weekly.
  40. Iannucci, Rebecca (January 31, 2019). "The L Word Revival Officially Snags Eight-Episode Order at Showtime". TVLine.
  41. "'The L Word' Sequel Gets Official Title, Set For Fall Premiere On Showtime". Deadline Hollywood, May 22, 2019
  42. Valerie Anne del Castillo (2008-10-06). "'The L Word' Set to Come Back in January Next Year". Showtime. Archived from the original on 2009-02-26. Retrieved 2009-02-26.
  43. Annie Barrett (2009-04-03). "Showtime passes on L Word spinoff (whew!) and Matthew Perry series (sniff!)". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2009-04-03.
  44. Rudolph, Ileane (18 June 2010). "The L Word Franchise Keeps It Real with New Series". TV Guide. Retrieved 18 June 2010.
  45. Thomas, June (8 August 2014). "L Word Mississippi: Hate the Sin, a Great Documentary With a Terrible Title". Slate. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  46. Lowe, Kinsey (9 May 2015). "GLAAD Awards NYC: Kelly Ripa, 'Lilting,' 'L Word Mississippi: Hate The Sin'". Deadline. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  47. ^ Glock, Alison (February 6, 2005). "She Likes to Watch". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-03-16.
  48. Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, "Foreword: The Letter L." Reading the L Word, edited by Kim Akass and Janet McCabe. London: I. B. Tauris (2006): xix
  49. Dana Heller, "How Does a Lesbian Look? Stendhal's Syndrome and the L Word." Reading the L Word, edited by Kim Akass and Janet McCabe. London: I. B. Tauris (2006): 57
  50. Samuel A. Chambers, "Heteronormativity and The L Word: From Politics of Representation to a Politics of Norms" Reading the L Word, edited by Kim Akass and Janet McCabe. London: I. B. Tauris (2006): 91
  51. Margaret McFadden, ""We cannot afford to keep being so high-minded": Fighting the Religious Right on The L Word" The New Queer Aesthetic on Television: Essays on Recent Programming, edited by James R. Keller and Leslie Stratyner. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers (2006): 125
  52. Ginia Bellafante (2009-01-16). "So Many Temptations to Succumb to, So Many Wandering Eyes to Track". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-03-16.
  53. Hogan, Heather (26 February 2009). "R.I.P., Jenny Schecter, and other things on her tombstone". AfterEllen.com. Logo). Archived from the original on 13 December 2010. Retrieved 18 July 2010.
  54. "The L Word". Rotten Tomatoes.
  55. Goldblatt, Henry (July 13, 2020). "How to Shoot a Sex Scene in a Pandemic: Cue the Mannequins". The New York Times. Retrieved August 7, 2021.

External links

The L Word
Characters
Seasons
Related
Paramount+ with Showtime original programming
Current and upcoming
Current
Upcoming
Former
1980s debuts
1990s debuts
2000s debuts
2010s debuts
2020s debuts
See also
Paramount+
Showtime (OTT)
GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Drama Series
Categories: