Sleepy Hollow angered many fans last Friday night when the Fox show killed off one half of its lead duo during its third season finale.
The show’s two main stars are Tom Mison as Ichabod Crane and Nicole Beharie as Abbie Mills, who together are known as the Witnesses. Amid ongoing conversations about the frequent deaths of minority characters, Beharie, a black woman, had her character killed in a way that furthers the storyline of her white male counterpart.
Fans have cited the chemistry between Mison and Beharie as a major draw to watching the Fox show. And Beharie’s role on the show was seen as an important one — so much so that Viola Davis referred to the actress during her celebrated speech at the Emmy Awards last year, the one in which she declared “you cannot win an Emmy for roles that are simply not there.”
On Friday and throughout the weekend, fans tweeted their disappointment.
Among those tweeting was Orlando Jones, who left the show ahead of its third season:
“’The white male lead should totally sacrifice his life to protect the *dark skinned* black girl’ said no development executive EVER.”
Over at Vulture, writer Nicole Perkins details the show’s overall derailment:
“The first season of Sleepy Hollow was charming, fun, and special. It took a familiar story from American literature and gave it a fantastical twist, complete with one of the most diverse casts on air. The chemistry between the two leads, Nicole Beharie and Tom Mison as Abbie Mills and Ichabod Crane, was remarkable and undeniable. Then season two happened. Everything that attracted fans to the show was dismantled in a series of perplexing creative choices. And now, at the conclusion of season three, Abbie was killed off in one of the most unsatisfactory goodbyes in recent memory, sending fans reeling.”
Perkins also notes that Beharie’s departure is the latest in a string of decisions that have caused fans to question the show’s treatment of minority characters. Jones reportedly saw significantly decreased screen time before he was asked to leave.
“I don’t think Captain Irving is coming back,” Jones said in a fan Q&A on his YouTube channel, referencing his character, Frank Irving. “And what led to me leaving is they changed the show. It’s a different show.”
