Premiering on the Oprah Winfrey Network last Tuesday with two back-to-back, one-hour episodes, it’s the second drama that Perry and Winfrey have partnered on. The Have and the Have Nots proved to be a success for the network, but little did anyone know that If Loving You Is Wrong would end up the most watched series premiere in network history, with 1.93 million viewers!
Created, written, directed
and executive produced by Tyler Perry, If Loving You Is Wrong features a
diverse cast, and storylines ranging from heartfelt to scandalous. The sexy,
sleek drama takes viewers into the lives of a group of husbands, wives and
friends that live and love in the same middle-class neighborhood. On the
surface, they’re true-to-life, relatable people—raising children, working jobs,
finding and maintaining romance—but just below their veneer of happiness are
lives entangled by heartbreak, deceit and lies that threaten to destroy
everything.
The season premiere opened
in the middle of a torrid affair between neighbours Randal and Alex. Randal’s
wife Marcie desperately wants children, but Randal’s attention is focused on
the wife of his best friend, Brad. Just down the street, divorcée Esperanza is
trying to move on with her life, while keeping a budding relationship with
Julius a secret from her vindictive ex-husband, Edward.
Keeping up? Meanwhile,
neighbour Kelly longs to marry Travis, who is away on a relief mission in Haiti
and who’s promised to help her raise her 8-year-old son, Justice. Outside of
the neighborhood, single mother Natalie struggles to raise her children in the
inner city. Lushion, the father of her son Frank, has returned to town and
stepped up to the plate to help. In addition, Natalie grapples with the tough
decision of whether or not to allow her fourth son, Joey, to return home once
he’s released from prison.
If Loving You Is Wrong has
gotten some comparisons to the former ABC primetime drama, Desperate
Housewives. Actor Aiden Turner set the record straight recently at an OWN
headquarters cast interview on why that’s an unfair comparison.
“The only thing that would
make it seem like it’s similar to Desperate Housewives is that it’s on a street
with beautiful houses and beautiful people,” said Turner. “But apart from that,
I just think that it’s completely different. The diversity of all the different
people that play on the show and watching each episode… you’re just going to
fall in love with them. You’re going to relate to them. You’re going to cry
along with them. There’s sex, comedy, drama, love, sorrow.”
Watching the premiere with
the cast for the first time was quite an experience, gasping and shrieking at
the same scenes at the same time. Zulay Henao dished on what it was like to see
the show first the first time. “I think our show mirrors society,” she said. “I
think that watching it and following the storylines, I was like, ‘Wow, there’s
so many different sides to everybody’ that it was really cool watching it. It
really mirrors our society. There’s a storyline that anybody can follow and
appreciate.”
Charles Malik Whitfield was
wowed by a different factor of the show: Tyler Perry’s approach to filming. He
said, “It does take on the film noir style of filming for TV and you have
characters that are not being performed actually, they’re just being lived.
That dynamic is really going to be very enriching for so many different
viewers.”
Film noir is great, but If
Loving You Is Wrong is also rich with drama and diversity. Amanda Clayton
explained why the audience would appreciate those aspects of the show.
“The way Tyler writes and
creates a character, it doesn’t matter what race, religion, sex… There’s so
many blurred lines throughout this entire program that I referred to us as
sisters,” she said, “but then there’s also the blurred lines of watching the
guys go through some cattiness and keeping secrets with each other. There isn’t
just, ‘it’s a female problem; it’s a male problem; it’s a Black problem; it’s a
White problem; it’s a poor problem; it’s a rich problem.’ It’s across the
board. Everybody is dealing with something.”
Edwina Findley Dickerson,
who’s had some experience with an ensemble cast during her time on The Wire,
revealed what she wanted viewers to take away: “Our characters go through a
lot! Women go through a lot. Whether it’s mothering, desiring to be loved,
trying to balance a career, domestic violence. Women experience a lot, and our
characters really reflect that. And so we’re willing to go to places that many
of us in our own lives would like to shun away from. We don’t want to go into
the pain, but there is a lot of pain that comes along with love as well, as you
can see from the title, If Loving You Is Wrong.”

Tyler never let you down.
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