Hawkins Falls
About This Show
From Wikipedia:
Hawkins Falls was the first successful television soap opera: its sponsor was Unilever's blue detergent, Surf. The program began as a one hour comedy-drama on June 17, 1950 and ran in prime time on the NBC network until October 12, 1950. It moved to a fifteen minute daytime slot on April 2, 1951 and ran until July 1. 1955, making it NBC's longest running soap opera until The Doctors exceeded it in 1967. Hawkins Falls was unusual for the network because it originated from Chicago. Its first announcer was Hugh Downs.
The Drewer family lived in the town of Hawkins Falls. Lorna Drewer was played by Bernadine Flynn, while her husband was played by Frank Dane. After the first year, according to Hugh Downs, Dane came to feel that as the lead actor he was indispensable to the show. He demanded more money and fewer hours. In a move that set the model for countless future encounters between imprudent stars and their management, Dane walked off the set and refused to return until his demands were met. The producer and writer saw their chance to accommodate Dane's desire for less work and crafted a script that sent Mr. Drewer on a plane flight that was lost over the sea. Actor Jim Bannon was happy to join the cast as Lorna's new romantic interest.
People Who Talked About This Show
Featured Content
Video: Episode from October 21, 1953 (daytime version) of Hawkins Falls from the Internet Archive
Resources
Links:
Link to all episodes of Hawkins Falls on the Internet Archive
IMDb entry on Hawkins Falls
Wikipedia entry on Hawkins Falls
Highlights
Director Lynwood King on the creation of Hawkins Falls (00m 52s)
Director Lynwood King on the plotlines and tone of Hawkins Falls (02m 18s)
Director Lynwood King on stretching a scene on a Hawkins Falls broadcast that was short (02m 29s)
Director Lynwood King on why and how actor Frank Dane was written out of the show (01m 03s)


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