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BONANZA
 Bonanza CAST
Ben
Cartwright........................................ Lorne Greene
Little Joe Cartwright.............................. Michael
Landon Eric "Hoss" Cartwright (l959-l972)...............
Dan Blocker Adam Cartwright (1959-l965)..................
Pernell Roberts Hop Sing ............................................Victor
Sen Yung Sheriff Roy Caffee (1960-1972)........................
Ray Teal Candy (l967-1970, l972-l973).....................
David Canary Dusty Rhoades (1970-1972).........................
Lou Frizzel Jamie Hunter (1970-1973)..........................
Mitch Vogel Griff King (l972-l973)..............................
Tim Matheson Deputy Clem (l961-l973)............................
Bing Russell
PRODUCERS
Richard
Collins, David Dortort, Robert Blees
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 440 Episodes
NBC
September 1959-September l961.......Saturday 7:30-8:30
September l961-September 1972...... Sunday 9:00-10:00 May 1972-August
l972.......................Tuesday 7:30-8:30 September 1972-January
1973...........Tuesday 8:00-9:00
U.S. Western
Bonanza,
the first Western televised in color, premiered on a Saturday night
in the fall of 1959. After Gunsmoke, Bonanza was the longest-running
and most successful Western in U.S. television, airing for fourteen
seasons. The series related the story of Ben Cartwright (Lorne Greene)
and his three sons, Adam (Pernell Roberts), Hoss (Dan Blocker) and
Little Joe (Michael Landon), prosperous ranchers in the vicinity
of Virginia City, Nevada, in the mid 1800s, during the Civil War
years and the discovery of the Comstock Silver Lode. The show was
designed to appeal to a broad audience, crossing age and gender
groups. The action characteristics catered to a more traditional
audience for Westerns, while dramatic issues and family values expanded
the show's popularity to a more general audience. The careful photography
presented beautiful scenery and interiors resembled movies more
than other contemporary television shows.
The Cartwrights
were not a traditional nuclear family. The patriarch was a three-time
widower, with a son from each wife. In the first few seasons, personality
differences between the sons motivated most of the plot conflicts.
Two years after its debut, Bonanza moved to Sunday night
and its popularity soared. By this time, the three sons had worked
out most of their differences and the show was about the dealings
of a well-integrated all male family as well as their problems with
mining and ranch interests. Other characters would wander into the
community causing conflict, leading the members of the family individually
or communally as a group to restore the order. The oldest son, Adam,
was the most serious of the three brothers, the potential patriarch.
Middle son, Hoss was the Buffoon type, big and friendly, naive yet
explosive. Little Joe was the impulsive and romantic type in the
family.
Bonanza
differs from other Westerns in its relative use violence and "shoot-outs".
Conflicts were resolved through dialogue between the main characters
and guest stars. Generally, this one-hour show tackled topical issues
(i.e.: racial discrimination, voting, religion). Famous guest stars
such as Yvonne De Carlo, Ida Lupino, Barry Sullivan, Ricardo Cortez
and Jack Carson added to the show's popularity. Bonanza was
also the first show to introduce the ranch, in this case the thousand-acre
Ponderosa, as an important element in the narrative, the fifth character,
as producers referred to it. Brauer and Brauer (1975) argue that
this emphasis on the "piece of land" was symbolic of a shift in
emphasizing mobility, the lone wanderer, with his gun and horse
to a focus on the settle landowner. These changes also led to a
restructuring of the leading characters' role in the community.
The cook at
Ponderosa was Hop Sing (Victor Sen Yung), a Chinese immigrant. He
was presented in the traditional subservient role reserved for minorities
in the period the show was produced. He spoke with a heavy accent,
wore generic Asian clothes and long, braided hair, and he always
delivered words of wisdom. In several episodes the family engaged
in various conflicts with outsiders to protect Hop Sing against
discrimination. In doing so, the show foregrounded the racial discrimination
in the historical period as well as the ongoing racial conflicts
in the 1960s.
Between 12 September
1959 and 16 January 1973 a total of 440 episodes were produced.
Those years witnessed several cast changes. Pernell Roberts left
the series at the end of 1964-65 season calling it "Junk TV" and
complaining about the glorified portrayal or wealthy ranchers. His
character was eliminated from the series. Dan Blocker died before
the beginning of the 1972-73 season. After his death the show's
ratings started to fall, and it was canceled in 1973. A change from
the traditional slot on Sunday to Tuesday evening, after 11 years
in the air might also have caused the demise of the show. Even before
the show was canceled it was already being rerun under the name
Ponderosa by NBC on Tuesday evenings. Bonanza was
exported throughout out the world, and it has been in syndication
for several years in the United States.
In
the mid 1980s there was an attempt to revive the series with a made-for-television
Movie entitled Bonanza: The Next Generation. None of the
original cast of the series appeared in the show. Greene's death
forced the producer to cast another actor. John Ireland, playing
Ben Cartwright's brother, became the patriarch of Ponderosa. He
could not control the ranch and it was almost taken over by miners
and oil speculators. It is only when the sons of Little Joe and
Hoss returned that the ranch experienced a new Bonanza.
-Antonio
LaPastina
FURTHER
READING
Brauer,
R. and Brauer, D. The Horse, the Gun and the Piece Of Property:
Changing Images of the TV Western. Bowling Green, Ohio: Bowling
Green University Popular Press, 1975.
Jackson, R. Classic TV Westerns. New York: Citadel, 1994.
Kirkley,
D. A Descriptive Study of the Network Television Western During
The Seasons 1955-56--1962-63. New York: Arno, 1979.
MacDonald,
J. Fred. Who Shot the Sheriff: The Rise and Fall of the TV Western.
New York: Praeger, 1987.
See
also Greene,
Lorne; Westerns
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