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THE WALTONS
 The Waltons NARRATOR
Earl Hamner, Jr.
CAST
John
Walton ..............................................Ralph Waite
Olivia Walton (1972-1980) .....................Michael Learned
Zeb (Grandpa) Walton (1972-1978) ..................Will Geer
Esther (Grandma) Walton (1972-1979)............Ellen Corby
John Boy Walton (1972-1977) ................Richard Thomas
John Boy Walton (1979-1981).............. Robert Wightman
Mary Ellen Walton Willard ..................Judy Norton-Taylor
Jim-Bob Walton ...................................David W.
Harper
Elizabeth Walton........................................
Kami Cotler
Jason Walton ..........................................Jon
Walmsley
Erin Walton .........................Mary Elizabeth McDonough
Ben Walton ...................................................Eric
Scott
Ike Godsey.................................................
Joe Conley
Corabeth Godsey (1974-1981) ......Ronnie Claire Edwards
Sheriff Ep Bridges ...................................John
Crawford
Mamie Baldwin...........................................
Helen Kleeb
Emily Baldwin.......................................... Mary
Jackson
Verdie Foster..........................................
Lynn Hamilton
Rev. Matthew Fordwick (1972-1977)................ John Ritter
Rosemary Hunter Fordwick (1973-77) ...Mariclare Costello
Yancy Tucker (1972-1979) .......................Robert Donner
Flossie Brimmer (1972-1977) .....................Nora Marlowe
Maude Gormsley (1973-1979)........................ Merie
Earle
Dr. Curtis Willard (1976-1978) .......................Tom
Bower
Rev. Hank Buchanan (1977-1978)................... Peter Fax
J. D. Pickett (1978-1981) ........................Lewis Arquette
John Curtis Willard (1978-1981) [Alternating]
......................................... Marshall Reed/Michael
Reed
Cindy Brunson Walton (1979 1981) ...........Leslie Winston
Rose Burton (1979-1981) ..............................Peggy
Rea
Serena Burton (1979-1980) ............................Martha
Nix
Jeffrey Burton (1979-1980) ........................Keith
Mitchell
Toni Hazleton (1981) .................................Lisa
Harrison
Arlington Wescott Jones(Jonesy)(1981) ..Richard Gilliland
PRODUCERS
Lee Rich, Earl Hamner, Jr., Robert L. Jacks, Andy
White, Rod Peterson
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 178 Episodes
CBS
September 1972-August 1981 Thursday
8:00-9:00
U.S. Drama
The
Waltons was a highly successful family drama series of the 1970s,
which portrayed a sense of family in sharp contrast to the problem-ridden
urban families of the "socially relevant" sitcoms such as All
in the Family, Maude or Sanford and Son which vied with
it for top billing in the Nielsen ratings. Set in the fictitious
rural community of Walton's Mountain, Virginia, during the 1930s,
the episodic narrative focused upon a large and dignified, "salt-of-the-earth"
rural white family consisting of grandparents, parents and seven
children. Based upon the semi-autobiographical writings of Earl
Hamner, Jr., much of the early narrative was enunciated from the
perspective of the oldest son, John Boy, an aspiring writer. The
series was based on Hamner's novel Spencer's Mountain, which
had been made into a feature film of the same name and subsequently
adapted as a CBS-TV holiday special, The Homecoming, in 1971.
The initial public reaction to the special was so overwhelming that
executives Lee Rich and Bob Jacks of the newly-formed Lorimar Productions
convinced CBS to continue it as a series, with Hamner as co-executive
producer and story editor.
Lorimar
executives constructed the series to emphasize both the locale (the
Blue Ridge Mountains) and the historical period (the Great Depression),
hoping to evoke a nostalgia for the recent past. They proposed to
walk that fine line between "excessive sentimentality and believable
human warmth," and took care not to caricature the mountain culture
of the family, desiring to portray them as descendants of pioneer
stock rather than stereotypical "hillbillies." Production notes
in the Hamner papers emphasized the respect to be afforded the family
and its culture: "That the Waltons are poor should be obvious, but
there should be no hint of squalor or debased living conditions
usually associated with poverty." Producers also stressed that The
Waltons would not be like earlier wholesome family series Father
Knows Best or I Remember Mama transplanted to the Blue
Ridge Mountains of Virginia," but instead would be "the continuing
story of a seventeen-year old boy who wants to be a writer, growing
up during the Depression in a large and loving family."
Premiering
in the fall of 1972, the hour-long dramatic series was scheduled
in what was considered a "suicidal" time slot against two popular
Thursday-night shows, ABC's The Mod Squad and NBC's top-rated
The Flip Wilson Show. By its second season, The Waltons achieved
the valedictory rank in the overall ratings, and stayed in the top
20 shows for the next several years. During its first season, the
series garnered Emmy Awards for Outstanding Drama Series, Best Dramatic
Actor (Richard Thomas) and Actress (Michael Learned), Best Supporting
Actress (Ellen Corby) and Best Dramatic Writing (John McGreevey),
and continued to receive Emmy's for acting and/or writing for the
next half a decade. The series endured until 1981, with the extended
family maturing and changing--surviving the loss of some characters,
the addition of new supporting characters, and the socio-historical
changes as the community weathered the Depression era and entered
that of World War II. The cast has reunited for a number of holiday
and wedding specials in the nearly 15 years since the series ended,
and the Walton family has endured in America's mythic imagination
as well as in ratings popularity.
The Walton family was portrayed as a cohesive and nearly self-sufficient
social world. The family members operated as a team, full of collective
wisdom and insight, yet always finding narrative (and physical)
space for their individuality. In addition to the continuing narrative
development of each regular character and of the family dynamics
over the course of the series, each episode frequently dealt with
a conflict or tension introduced by an outsider who happened into
the community (Ziegler described these characters as "foreigners,
drifters, fugitives, orphans, and others just passing through")
bringing their own problems which were potentially disruptive influences
upon the harmony and equilibrium of the Walton's Mountain community.
The narrative of each episode worked through the resolution of these
tensions within the household, as well as the healing or spiritual
uplift achieved by the outsider characters as they assimilated the
values of the family and learned their lessons of love and morality.
The
series was critically praised as being bittersweet, "wholesome",
emotion-laden viewing. Reviewers noted that the series conveyed
a vivid authenticity of both historical time and cultural place,
as well as an emotional verisimilitude regarding the portrayal of
a certain type of family life rooted in that time and place. Devoted
viewers besieged the network, producers and cast members with fan
letters praising the show and expressing their degree of emotional
identification with many aspects of the series. Many considered
the series to be the epitome of television's capacity for romantic,
effective and moving storytelling in its evocation of childhood
and its ability to tap into a deep desire for a mythicized community
and family intimacy.
Yet
the series also had its detractors, who complained that The Waltons
was too sweet, sappily sentimental, and exploitative of viewers'
emotions. Crowther remarked that its "homey wisdom and Sunday school
platitudes have been known to make me gag"; others labeled it an
"obviously corny, totally unreal family" with characters too good
to be true. Many recognized in the show an "intolerable wistfulness"
for a romanticized past constructed through the creation of false
memory and hopeless longing. Some critics noted that such a romanticized
image of the era could make viewers forget the real nature of rural
poverty. "The Depression was not a time for the making of strong
souls" or healthy, well-nourished bodies, according to Roiphe, who
criticized the series for associating poverty with elevated moral
values and neutralizing the social, economic and political upheavals
of the 1930s "behind a wall of tradition, goodness and good fortune."
Roiphe noted how skillfully the media producers were able to design
and articulate myths of American happiness and innocence during
the historical period the series portrayed; however, the viewers
who admired the series also eagerly participated in that construction
of a mythical past. Other critics have noted that despite its embrace
of liberal humanitarian values (against racism, etc.), The Waltons'
inherent conservatism has made it ripe for appropriation by
right-wing "family values" religious groups. Indeed, it has become
a benchmark series for The Family Channel, the media outlet for
Pat Robertson's Christian Coalition, which has held exclusive syndication
rights for the series since 1991.
-Pamela
Wilson
FURTHER
READING
Crowther, Hal. "Boxed In." The Humanist (Buffalo, New York)
July/August 1976.
Hamner, Earl, Papers. The Waltons Mountain Museum in Schuyler, Virginia.
Roiphe, Anne. "The Waltons." New York Times Magazine, 18
November, 1973.
"Wholesome
Sentiment in the Blue Ridge." Life (New York) 13 October
1972.
Ziegler,
Robert E. "Memory-spaces: Themes of the House and the Mountain in
The Waltons." Journal of Popular Culture (Bowling Green,
Ohio), 1981.
See also Family
on Television; Melodrama
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