
Peyton Place

Peyton Place
CAST
Constance
Mackenzie/Carson (1964-l968) .............................................................Dorothy
Malone Allison Mackenzie (1964-1966) ......................Mia
Farrow Dr. Michael Rossi..........................................
Ed Nelson Matthew Swain (1964-1966).................. Warner
Anderson Leslie Harrington (1964-l968) ......................Paul
Langton Rodney Harrington......................................
Ryan O'Neal Norman Harrington......................... Christopher
Connelly Betty Anderson/Harrington/Cord/Harrington......................
............................................................Barbara
Parkins
Julie Anderson ........................................Kasey
Rogers George Anderson (1964-1965) ................Henry
Beckman Dr. Robert Morton (1964-1965)......................
Kent Smith Steven Cord..........................................
James Douglas Hannah Cord (1965-l967)............................
Ruth Warrick Paul Hanley (1965)..................................
Richard Evans Elliott Carson (1965-1968) .........................Tim
O'Connor Eli Carson .............................................Frank
Ferguson Nurse Choate (1965-1968)................. Erin O'Brien-Moore
Dr. Claire Morton (1965)......................... Mariette
Hartley Dr. Vincent Markham (1965)..................... Leslie
Nielsen Rita Jacks/Harrington (1965-1969).......... Patricia
Morrow Ada Jacks (1965-1969)..............................
Evelyn Scott David Schuster (1965-1966)..................
William Smithers Doris Schuster (1965).....................................
Gail Kobe Kim Schuster (1965) ...............................Kimberly
Beck Theodore Dowell (1965) ............................Patrick
Whyte Stella Chernak (1965-l968) ..............................Lee
Grant Joe Chernak (1965) .......................................Dan
Quine Gus Chernak (1965-1966) .........................Bruce
Gordon Dr. Russ Gehring (1965-1966).................... David
Canary John Fowler (1965-1966).................................
John Kerr Marian Fowler (1965-1966) ......................Joan
Blackman Martin Peyton (1965-1968)................... George
Macready Martin Peyton (temporary replacement, 1967) .......................................................Wilfred
Hyde-White Sandy Webber (1966-1967)...........................Lana
Wood Chris Webber (1966-1967) .........................Gary
Haynes Lee Webber (1966-1968)......................... Stephen
Oliver Ann Howard (1966) .....................................Susan
Oliver Rachael Welles (1966-1967).............. Leigh Taylor-Young
Jack Chandler (1966-1967)......................... John Kellogg
Adrienne Van Leyden (1967)................... Gena Rowlands
Eddie Jacks (1967-1968)............................. Dan
Duryea Carolyn Russell (1968-1969) ......Elizabeth "Tippy"
Walker Fred Russell (1968-1969) .............................Joe
Maross Marsha Russell (1968-1969) ......................Barbara
Rush Rev. Tom Winter (1968-1969)........................
Bob Hogan Susan Winter (1968-1969) .........................Diana
Hyland Dr. Harry Miles (1968-1969)....................Percy
Rodriguez Alma Miles(1968-1969)...................................
Ruby Dee Lew Miles (1968-1969)..............................
Glynn Turman Jill Smith/Rossi (1968)..............................
Joyce Jillison Joe Rossi (1968).................................
Michael Christian
PRODUCERS
Paul Monash, Everett Chambers, Richard Goldstone, Felix Feist, Richard
DeRoy
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 514 Episodes
ABC
September 1964-
June 1965 Tuesday/Thursday
9:30-10:00 June 1965-
October 1965 Tuesday/Thursday/Friday
9:30-10:00 November 1965-
August 1966 Monday/Tuesday/Thursday
9:30-10:00 September 1966-
January 1967 Monday/Wednesday
9:30-l0:00 January 1967-
August 1967 Monday/Tuesday
9:30-10:00 September 1967-
September 1968 Monday/Thursday
9:30-10:00 September 1968-
January 1969 Monday 9:00-9:30/Wednesday
8:30-9:00 February 1969-June 1969 Monday
9:00-9:30
Peyton
Place, a prime-time program based on the Grace Metalious novel,
was an experiment for American television in both content and scheduling
when it appeared on ABC, at that time still the third-ranked U.S.
network. Premiering in the fall of 1964, Peyton Place was
offered in two serialized installments per week, Tuesday and Thursday
nights, a first for American prime-time television. Initially drawing
more attention for its moral tone than for its unique scheduling,
the new night-time serial was launched amid a sensational atmosphere
borrowed from the novel's reputation. ABC president Leonard Goldenson
defended the network's programming choice as a bread-and-butter
decision for the struggling network, and the moral outcry settled
down once the program established itself as implying far more sensation
than it would deliver. This prototype of what came to be known in
the 1980s as the prime-time soap opera initially met with great
success: a month after Peyton Place premiered, ABC rose in
the Nielsens to number one for the first time. At one point, the
program was so successful that a spin-off serial was considered.
Both CBS and NBC announced similar prime-time serials under development.
Executive
producer Paul Monash declined the "soap opera" label for Peyton
Place, considering it instead a "television novel." (His term
is, in fact, the one applied in Latin America, telenovela, and Francophone
Canada, teleroman.) Set in a small New England town, Peyton Place
dealt with the secrets and scandals of two generations of the town's
inhabitants. An unmarried woman, Constance MacKenzie, and her daughter
Allison were placed at the dramatic center of the story. Constance
(played by 1950s film melodrama star Dorothy Malone) eventually
married Allison's father, Elliott Carson, when he was released from
prison, though his rival Dr. Michael Rossi was never entirely out
of the picture. Meanwhile, Allison (Mia Farrow) was caught up in
a romantic triangle with wealthy Rodney Harrington (Ryan O'Neill)
and Betty Anderson (Barbara Parkins), a girl from the wrong side
of the tracks. Over the course of the series, Betty tricked Rodney,
not telling him she had miscarried their child until after they
were married; Rodney fled and found love with Allison, but Allison
disappeared; Betty was married briefly to lawyer Steven Cord, but
finally remarried Rodney. Other soap-operatic plot lines involved
Rodney's younger brother Norman Harrington and his marriage to Rita
Jacks.
The production schedule was closest to that of daytime soap opera,
with no summer hiatus, no repeats, unlike any prime-time American
series before or since. Within the first year, the pace was increased
to three episodes per week rather than two, going back to two episodes
per week in the 1966-67 season as the craze for the show declined.
Several of the show's plot twists were necessitated by cast changes.
Most notably, Allison MacKenzie's disappearance occurred when Mia
Farrow left the series in 1966 for her highly publicized marriage
to Frank Sinatra. The program never fully recovered from Farrow's
departure, though news of the distant Allison kept the character
alive. Some two years later a young woman appeared with a baby she
claimed was Allison's--this timed with the release of Mia Farrow's
theatrical film, Rosemary's Baby.
In
1968, Peyton Place underwent a transformation. Though some storylines
were developed to accommodate more cast changes (Dorothy Malone
left the show), many of the changes in the final season seem to
have been in response to Goldenson's call for more youthful, "relevant"
programming. One of the youthful additions was the leader of a rock
group. Most significantly, however, an African-American family--Dr.
Harry Miles (Percy Rodriguez), his wife Alma (Ruby Dee), and their
teenage son, Lew (Glynn Turman)--assumed a central position in the
heretofore all-white Peyton Place. Cut back to one half-hour
episode per week, the show also was scheduled a half-hour earlier
to appeal further to youthful audiences.
These
drastic changes did nothing to revive ratings for the serial, which
lasted through the spring of 1969. ABC brought it back for two years
in the seventies as a daytime serial, and in 1985, nine of the original
cast members appeared in a made-for-TV movie, Peyton Place: The
Next Generation.
-Sue
Brower
Litwak,
Leo E. "Visit to a Town of the Mind," New York Times Magazine
(New York), 4 April 1965.