Tamora Pierce’s Tortall series is heading to TV! Deadline has reported that all 22 books set in the Tortall universe have been optioned for the small-screen by Lionsgate and Playground Entertainment, the production company behind Starz’ The White Princess and PBS Masterpiece’s Little Women.
There’s no plot details yet, but the producers have a wealth of material to draw from, more than enough to fuel the producers’ hopes of a “tentpole series that crosses over between fans of Game of Thrones and YA novels”:
There’s the Song of the Lioness quartet, which follows the journey of a young noblewoman named Alanna, who disguises herself as a boy to become a knight, and the Protector of the Small series, about a girl named Keladry who follows in Alanna’s footsteps. There’s The Immortals series, about Daine Sarrasri, a girl with wild magic in her blood who can speak to animals and shapeshift, and the Tricksters duology, about Alanna’s daughter Aly, who ultimately becomes a spymaster and crow-speaker after being sold into slavery by pirates. That’s not even getting into the Provost’s Dog, a series set 200 years before the Alanna stories, and The Numair Chronicles, a prequel about the magician who appears in The Immortals, or any of the short stories and the Tortall guide.
There’s no word yet on which of the Tortall books will be making it into the series, and whether the different storylines will be combined into one massive plot, or if each season will follow a different character. Since all of the series (minus Provost’s Dog) build off one another, fill in their gaps, and share characters, we’re going to assume the former. If so, we hope they give the individual storylines the space and thought they deserve, as each of the different series are very much rooted in their main characters.
The series has a long-running reputation for feminist portrayals of female characters and viewpoints, and it remains to be seen how producers Colin Callender (PBS’s Little Women, Wolf Hall), Scott Huff (Wolf Hall), and David A. Stern (Howard’s End, Departure) will work to translate that to the screen, and who may be hired as showrunner. In a statement to Deadline, Tamora Pierce commented, “Not only am I over the moon that the Tortall books will be adapted by Playground, but I know my fans will be ecstatic.”
Cross your fingers and swords everyone! I'm thrilled to share this news with you all. Thank you to @PlaygroundEnt for this wonderful opportunity to bring my words to life :-) https://t.co/BV2wSsvVlA
— Tamora Pierce (@TamoraPierce) November 1, 2019
It’s too early for a release date, cast, production schedule, or network, but we’ll have an update when we hear more details. In the meantime, check out our primer to the world of Tortall.
https://reactormag.com/2019/01/01/tamora-pierces-fantasy-changes-lives/
I’m so super excited! There are so many ways the show runners can go with the world! I cant wait to watch this with my kids! I’ve been a fan of the Author for decades, and I’m just intoducing my oldest child to the books. By the time this comes out it will
lbe a family affair.
So exciting (well, if they choose an appropriate showrunner).
Song of the Lioness and The Immortals were some of the books that shaped my interest in fantasy and introduced me to powerful women wielding swords and spells. I hope they stay true to the material (cross-dressing! swordplay! romance!)
YES!!
I’ve loved these books since I was a kid and have been hopin* for an adaptation of them for a while. And TV is better suited for the books’ structure than film.
They’ll have to make some changes to make the narrative flow well in a televised format, but I hope they’ll stay true to the essence of the books.
I just hope they employ diversity in casting so that the characters are represented by all types of people.
As a lifelong fan of Tamora Pierce and her books, I’M SO EXCITED!!!
Sandry’s Book was the first fantasy novel I ever read, with Wild Magic being a close second. I grew up devouring Pierce’s work and I am beyond excited that this is happening.
Obligatory reminders that options are the first step in a long process before anything viewable exists, but if there was ever a timeline where a long running fantasy series could become a television series, it’s the one we’re in!