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Liz Tigelaar Says Being Adopted Inspired Her to Create “Life Unexpected”

Liz Tigelaar is one of the most well-known screenwriters and producers in Hollywood. She has written episodes for “Dawson’s Creek” and “Melrose Place” and is also an author of books for young people.

Tigelaar’s latest project is “Life Unexpected,” which airs Monday nights at 9 p.m. Eastern on the CW. She is creator and executive producer of the drama. “Life Unexpected” is about “Lux,” a foster child who reconnects with her birth parents and finds they have more growing up to do than she does.

Social workers are often at the forefront of helping foster children get counseling and find permanent homes. So SocialWorkersSpeak.org talked to Tigelaar about what motivated her to create “Life Unexpected,” which premiered this month and is already garnering favorable critic reviews:

Q: What prompted you to do a series on a foster child?  Were you a foster child yourself?

A: I wasn’t in foster care myself, but growing up as an adopted kid I was always kind of interested in that subject –foster care, orphanages, etc.  I really wanted to tell a story about a kid who never had a permanent home, who never felt truly settled or wanted.  I felt so wanted by my parents (my adoptive parents) and have still dealt with feelings of rejection and abandonment, of holding on to people so tightly, being fearful that they’ll leave. I can’t imagine how I would feel if I never truly felt wanted.  So that’s the story I wanted to tell: a story of a girl who didn’t feel wanted and never had parents and basically was in this world alone.

Additionally, I feel like there isn’t much of a voice for foster kids, for what they have to endure, for what they have to go through at such a young age. I know we do the TV version of it but I thought it was a group that was underrepresented.

Q: What issues and experiences will “Lux” have in the opening episodes?

I think one of the biggest things is feeling torn.  She’s been put back in the custody of great people (maybe not great parents yet but great people) while her friends have not.  Tasha is still in foster care or at a group home, while Bug and Gavin have aged out of the system but have little support.  The four of them were supposed to be a family together but now Lux has a new one.  I think she feels incredibly guilty, not wanting to pass up this opportunity but also not wanting to leave them behind.

Q: Social workers often work with foster children.  Did you consult with social workers or other professionals when developing the series?

A: Yes absolutely.  We certainly check with experts on everything but sometimes there are conflicting opinions or different states have different ways of doing things.  To me, it’s the foster care element that makes this show so unique so it’s important that we’re able to tell those stories in a way that’s palatable for a CW show and our audience while being true to reality.  I will say that the stories that involve foster care are some of the stories that touch me the most.  Look for a story in the seventh episode between Lux and Tasha that just breaks my heart.

(Photo: Inset: Liz Tigelaar, creator and executive producer of “Life Unexpected.” The program stars from left Shiri Appleby, Britt Robertson, and Kristoffer Polaha. Photo courtesy of the CW.)

For more information on how social workers help children in foster care, check out the National Association of Social Workers “Help Starts Here” Adoptions and Foster Care Web page by clicking here.

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4 Comments

  1. I intend to check out that show; I’ve worked in child mental health and protective services for years. She sounds like a great role model.

  2. I started watching this show because it seemed like a show I would like to watch. After reading this interview I can definitely see the struggles the Lux is going through and have actually had a client who struggled about her place in the world because she felt that no one wanted her. I hope this show stays for awhile and opens some eyes about Social Work as well as children who grow up in the system.

  3. I like Life Unexpected. The pilot was nearly perfect.. well written, well casted, well acted. I was hoping this would be a very positive show with good moral values and good role models. But the following 3 episodes were full of disappointments for the viewers: (1) Cate should not have accused Baze of maybe not wanting to take responsibility for Lux in front of Lux; (2) Cate should not have given up her principles and values and read the lies her producer wanted her to do on the air. (3) Lux’s friend should have been happy for her, for being able to improve her life, instead she resented it, and stole Cate’s diamond ring; (4) Baze’s parents did not take enough time to get to know Cate, instead the father criticized her and Baze in the presence of Lux; (5) Lux should not have told Cate that she Baze and the grandparents are not her family: (6)Lux should not have announced on the radio that Cate and Ryan are engaged out of revenge; (7) Lux should have apoligized to Cate (and Ryan) the very next time she saw Cate (them), but said nothing; (8) Lux should have stayed awake to tell Cate she wanted to stay with her, and to apologize. (9) Lux has never expressed any appreciation for what Cate, Baze, and Ryan are doing for her. (10) The background music is too loud, and I question whether it is apropriate. I hope the show will be more positive, and less negatively dramatic.

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