
Kainai actor on challenge of portraying an Indigenous cop on ‘Three Pines’
TORONTO, ON – Prime Video’s book-to-screen adaptation of Louise Penny’s beloved Quebec-set detective novels does more than just update the source material, it spotlights Indigenous stories in a whole new way, says co-star Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers.
Tailfeathers, who is a member of the Kainai First Nation, says the eight-part drama Three Pines deepens and updates the “whodunit” tales by expanding Indigenous threads in the text, most notably by making her character Sgt. Isabelle Lacoste an Indigenous woman, instead of white.
Instead of investigating the case of a missing nine-year-old boy as in the 11th book, the streaming version of lead character Chief Insp. Armand Gamache is faced with a series of murders that intersect with police failure to examine the town’s history of missing and murdered Indigenous women.
Three Pines also adds several Indigenous characters, including a calm-spirited gallery owner played by Tantoo Cardinal and the relatives of a missing woman, whose resilient family is played by Georgina Lightning, Anna Lambe and Crystle Lightning.