

The co-creators/ executive producers of the CW‘s two top-rated series, Arrow and The Vampire Diaries, have teamed for a new project at the network — a series adaptation of the cult British 1970s sci-fi series The Tomorrow People. Arrow‘s Greg Berlanti and The Vampire Diaries‘ Julie Plec will executive produce the project, written by Phil Klemmer (Chuck). In the vein of X-Men and Heroes, Tomorrow People is the story of several young people from around the world who represent the next stage in human evolution, possessing special powers, including the ability to teleport and communicate with each other telepathically. Together they work to defeat the forces of evil.
Created by Roger Price, The Tomorrow People, ITV’s answer to BBC’s Dr. Who, ran on the commercial broadcaster for eight seasons from 1973-1979 (watch its opening credits below). It developed a strong cult following and was a favorite of Berlanti and Plec, who are good friends from college. They had been chasing the rights to Tomorrow People for more than a decade, finally tracking them down to FremantleMedia, which rarely licenses its formats to other studios. But, given the level of auspices and Berlanti and Plec’s passion for the project, the company made an exception and will co-produce the adaptation with Warner Bros TV and studio-based Berlanti Prods. Berlanti, Plec, Klemmer and Berlanti Prods’ Melissa Berman executive produce, with SVP Scripted Programming Tony Optican overseeing for Fremantle. This is not the first attempt to reboot The Tomorrow People. ITV tried it in the early 1990s, with the new series running for three seasons.
Berlanti has credited Plec with convincing him to go back to writing when he had given up on his Hollywood dreams after a year of odd jobs and a string of rejections by agents and studios. Years later, the two briefly worked together on Dawson’s Creek and sold a feature, Her Leading Man, to Universal, with Dawson’s Creek creator and The Vampire Diaries‘ co-creator/exec producer Kevin Williamson attached to direct. Klemmer recently worked with Berlanti Prods on Berlanti’s USA drama Political Animals as well as the company’s midseason CBS series Golden Boy. Berlanti and Plec are with WME.
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The original Tomorrow People was a great kids’ show because it could be watched without embarrassment by adults (I never the three-season reboot from 1992, so I have no idea how that worked), so an American version could be delightful – and since Berlanti (Arrow) and Plec (her experience on Kyle XY seems more likely to make her a fit here) have plenty of experience with shows that are out of the mainstream (and yet, popular), they could be the team to make it work over here.
I’d love to see that.
Is there no childhood favorite that Hollywood will not rape (it’s possible that the reboot of The Tomorrow People’ will be perfect, though I doubt it)?
This is the same guy who had a significant hand in messing up a sure thing like Green Lantern, so I am not feeling exactly positive here.
Wasn’t there already a remake of this in the mid-90s on Nickelodeon?. It was a UK production but aired in the US as well.
I remember when Nickelodeon aired the episodes back in the late 70s/early 80s. I loved that show as a kid.
I loved the 1992 reboot. Was one of my absolute favorite shows growing up. I won’t even bother watching this one because of the special place it holds in my heart. I do hope, however, that it is a great success. Oh, and yeah, it’s the show that gave me one of earliest celeb crushes – Naomie Harris!!!
Todd me too I used back in da day on old Nickeleron
That show rocks
The special effect was cheesey
For while my PBS station was showing the original in early 1990s
Man, Greg Berlanti is like Teflon. What he writes/produces does not exactly get the juices running but, yet, he keeps getting deal after deal after deal. How does he do it? Amazing. (said shaking my head!)
Yes, Nickelodeon did indeed air a 90s version of The Tomorrow People for several seasons. It even featured a teenaged Naomie Harris during its second and third season as one of The Tomorrow People.
The original Tomorrow People was aired after school and not Saturday, as was Dr Who. More likely created in response to “Timeslip” and other “children’s” TV rather than Dr Who, if memory serves. But can’t fault the press release author for pushing that boat out.
Lately the CW has picked up some pretty cool series. This is exactly the direction the CW should go in.
Phil’s the best!
Phil Klemmer is evil or pretty close to it.
Nice hair and smile though.
The Tomorrow People was an amazing show and loved that they had to resort to non-violent solutions to the various conflicts and threats they all faced on a daily basis. Lets not forget the amazing computer “TIM”!! Hope it’s set in the 70s or at least has flashbacks?? Tons of source material ftom the BBC TV and radio programs, too. Looking forward to seeing what develops!! If anyone is interested I believe there is an all-regions box set of the original TV series available.
Happy for anyone who gets a sale – really. BUT enough with the super-hero movies and tv shows!!! There is nothing new here- its lazy development for a high end talent like Berlanti.
The whole point of the show was that they WEREN’T superheroes! They were just ordinary kids with extraordinary abilities. If they got the Xmen route they’ll RUIN the whole thing. I won’t be watching because the CW runs CRAP shows for the super low IQ American Idiot and Dancing with Has-beens crowd.
Not only was there a second series a couple years back, but Big Finish did a set of audio books that followed up the original series, getting back many of the original voices to reprise their parts. In the audio books they made acknoledgement of the second TV series, saying those events took place while the original cost of Tomorrow People were off planet. So both TV series and the audio books take place in one continuous universe.
The Tomorrow People was my favorite show as a child. I even enjoyed the 1994 remake in my 20s. This show has great potential if done right. I have actually written several Tomorrow People short stories in my life.
I adored the original series from the 70′s! There was a reason it worked so well; rock solid concept about human evolution. The reboot didn’t have that (spaceship in the ocean???) The original had no adults, yet the archetypal family roles are well defined by the characters. I sincerely hope this gem of a concept is kept as canon as possible.