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Falcon Crest

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Falcon Crest
Image:Falcon_Crest.jpg
Main title card
Genre Soap Opera
Running time 50 minutes
Creator(s) Earl Hamner
Starring Jane Wyman
Lorenzo Lamas
David Selby
Susan Sullivan
Robert Foxworth
Ana Alicia
William R. Moses
Margaret Ladd
Abby Dalton
Laura Johnson
Chao-Li Chi
Cesar Romero
Gregory Harrison
Sarah Douglas
Country of origin Flag of United States United States
Original channel CBS
Original run December 4, 1981May 17, 1990
No. of episodes 227
IMDb profile

Falcon Crest was an American primetime television soap opera about the feud between the Channings and the Giobertis, two separate rich wine families in West Central California, around San Francisco in a fictional town, Tuscany Valley. It aired on the CBS network from December 4th, 1981 to May 17th, 1990, and 227 episodes were made in total. Reruns of the show aired on SOAPnet, a decade after its demise.

Contents

[edit] The Uncorking

The show was created by Earl Hamner, noted for his work on The Waltons. Hamner wanted to create a family drama involving the wine industry. CBS ordered him to make the show more sensational, along the lines of Dallas; CBS wanted to more easily win Friday night in the Nielsen ratings, and so Falcon Crest was scheduled at 10PM, with top-rated Dallas scheduled immediately before it. Falcon Crest also replaced the popular series The Incredible Hulk in its time slot.

Hamner proceeded to deliberately write what he viewed as trashy, turgid melodrama [citation needed]. The show starred Academy Award-winner Jane Wyman as Angela Channing, a despotic woman and corrupt matriarch who ruled with an iron fist over her vineyards in the fictional Tuscany Valley region of California (modeled after the Napa Valley). Robert Foxworth also starred as Chase Gioberti, a man new to the area who had inherited a portion of the Falcon Crest vineyards and winery from his father, Angela's brother Jason (who died after a fall in the winery during the premiere episode). The rivalry between the established professional and the newcomer, who both happened to be tied together by blood relations, set the tone for much of the series. The Dallas-Falcon Crest one-two punch proved lucrative for CBS and Falcon Crest was a Top 20 show in the Nielsens for several years. Despite its success, Falcon Crest usually lost about three to five million viewers from the previous hour and was never as dependable a draw as Dallas had proven itself to be.

Angela's heir was her young, playboy grandson, Lance Cumson (Lorenzo Lamas), who loved money and yearned for power but lacked Angela's discipline and determination, proven after she persuaded him to work in the vineyards and for his grandfather's newspaper company. It was also certain that Angela herself wouldn't be moving into her nephew's own land, and eventually, she hoped to enlarge her empire by coercing Lance to marry winery heiress Melissa Agretti (Ana Alicia); Melissa was herself a selfish schemer who would cause trouble for many residents of Tuscany Valley. Other major characters introduced in the first season were Angela's daughters, Julia (Abby Dalton), who was chief winemaker and Lance's mother, and the emotionally troubled Emma (Margaret Ladd). Chase's family included his sympathetic wife Maggie (Susan Sullivan) and grown-up children Cole (William R. Moses) and Vickie (Jamie Rose, later replaced by Dana Sparks). But none could truly rival Angela until the conniving Richard Channing (David Selby) arrived in the show's second season. Originally a newspaper editor, Richard got into the business of running the vineyards when he wished to take control from Angela; Richard was the love child of Angela's late husband, and Angela despised him.

[edit] The Vintage Years

Despite its reputation as merely being "Dallas with grapes”, Falcon Crest soon found its own niche amongst the prime-time dramas of the 1980s, occupying the middle ground between the two extremes of the genre — being more glamorous than Dallas yet not quite as outrageous as Dynasty. The distinctive location filming in the Napa Valley and the dry, wryly humorous tone of the scripts gave the series a tone of its own.

The rivalry among Angela, Chase and Richard stayed at the core of the show for years, as more romantic entanglements spun around them. Lance and Cole found themselves not only caught up in their family battles, but also competing for Melissa's affection.

Like Dallas and Dynasty, Falcon Crest employed the use of memorable end of season cliffhangers to boost ratings. The 1982-1983 season climaxed with the culmination of a murder mystery whodunit plot (surrounding the death of Melissa's father, Carlo Agretti) that had spanned most of the season. The killer — Angela's daughter Julia Cumson — was confronted in front of the entire cast, only to produce a handgun. Shots were fired, and a coffin was seen being lowered to the ground, leaving the audience to wonder who had been killed off. Other cliffhangers included the crashing of a plane carrying all the major characters, a bomb explosion and an earthquake that ripped through the valley.

The series also made a virtue of casting former Hollywood royalty in guest roles; Lana Turner, Gina Lollobrigida, Cesar Romero and Celeste Holm all appeared in Falcon Crest. Kim Novak joined the cast in 1986 and enjoyed a season-spanning story arc that was a thinly veiled parody of her role in the classic film Vertigo. This aspect to the series seemed to be consciously embraced by the producers, who at one stage instituted a rotating guest star policy; Leslie Caron, Lauren Hutton, Eddie Albert, Eve Arden and Ursula Andress all made appearances during the 1987-1988 season.

[edit] Sour Grapes

At the end of the 1985-1986 season, Maggie's shifty, but warm-hearted, younger sister Terry Hartford (Laura Johnson) was tragically killed in the massive earthquake that rocked the valley in the fifth season cliffhanger. At the start of the 1986-1987 season, Cole Gioberti decided to leave the valley and literally sailed off into the sunset aboard a boat called Free Will (an inside joke since actor William R. Moses had asked to leave the series). At the end of that season, the scheming Melissa kidnapped Maggie’s newborn baby. Hotly pursued by Chase, Maggie and Richard, Melissa’s car crashed into the water at San Francisco Bay. Chase jumped in to save the baby and out of the goodness of his heart, went back down for Melissa. Melissa survived but Chase did not (in accordance with Robert Foxworth’s decision to leave the series). Melissa herself died in a house fire shortly into the 1988-1989 season whilst the first episode of the 1989-1990 season saw Maggie killed in a freak accident, drowning in the Falcon Crest pool after her wedding ring was caught in a drain (despite of Susan Sullivan's firing from the series). After Maggie's death, she was replaced with two new actors, Gregory Harrison as Michael Sharpe, and Wendy Phillips as Lauren Daniels, whose characters were both disfavored from the audience.

Some intriguing plot developments did occur late in the series, such as the long love affair between Richard and Maggie, and the shock revelation that Angela and Richard, bitter enemies for many years, were in fact mother and son. However, with the departures of many of the core cast, the series began to lose its former sparkle and the ratings dropped accordingly, coupled with a smaller fanbase for the night-time soap genre as a whole.

Fans took particular umbrage to the fact that major changes took place in the 1988-89 season, starting with the firing of Ana Alicia in favor of introducing Kristian Alfonso as Pilar Ortega, a much less popular character with viewers. Ratings plummeted to such an adverse degree due to Alfonso's hiring [citation needed] that Ana Alicia was soon brought back to the show as another character, but the damage was already done.

Angela Channing (Jane Wyman) raises a toast to Falcon Crest in the final episode of the series.
Enlarge
Angela Channing (Jane Wyman) raises a toast to Falcon Crest in the final episode of the series.

The last straw for many viewers came when Angela, who had been the pivotal character since day one, lay unconscious in a coma for most of the 1989-1990 season. This was not due to any contract negotiations as is widely believed, but due to actress Jane Wyman's ongoing health problems. The series shifted to a darker tone as the season dealt with the powerplays between various parties during Angela’s absence from the valley, introducing a number of new characters who failed to strike a chord with the audience. CBS executives made the decision to end Falcon Crest at the end of the season, and Jane Wyman defied doctors’ orders to return to the show for the last three episodes.

After many traumatic events over the course of nine seasons of the wine country soap (plane crashes, explosions, murders, drownings), Falcon Crest ends happily with a wedding taking place in the grounds of the mansion. Taking a walk outside, Angela delivers a speech — allegedly written by Wyman herself — that brings the series to a conclusion, mentioning past characters and events but looking forward to the future. Raising a glass of champagne, Angela ends the series with "a toast to you, Falcon Crest, and long may you live."

[edit] Starring Cast

Cast of Falcon Crest
Enlarge
Cast of Falcon Crest
Angela Gioberti-Channing - Jane Wyman.
The tough, tyrannical self-styled queen of Tuscany Valley and head of Falcon Crest Wines, Angela ruthlessly combats her enemies, determined to preserve what she sees as her birthright. She's the mother of Julia, Richard and Emma Channing. She's also the grandmother of Lance Cumson, grandaunt of Cole and Vickie Gioberti.
Chase Gioberti - Robert Foxworth.
Former airline pilot and Vietnam veteran, Chase moves back to Tuscany Valley from New York, having inherited Falcon Crest from his father Jason after his death. Chase determines to make a go of running the vineyards, which brings him into conflict with his aunt Angela. (Seasons 1-6)
Maggie Gioberti/Channing - Susan Sullivan.
Chase's wife was a freelance writer, who agrees with her husband's wish to build a new life for the family in Tuscany Valley. A warm-hearted but resilient woman, Maggie becomes the sympathetic heroine of the series. (Seasons 1-9)
Richard Channing - David Selby.
Shady businessman and the son of Angela's husband Douglas, Richard arrives in Tuscany Valley having inherited his father's shares in the newspaper, the San Francisco Globe and proves to be a formidable adversary of both Angela and Chase. (Seasons 2-9)
Lance Cumson - Lorenzo Lamas.
Angela's playboy grandson, whom she often uses as a henchman in her schemes. A fervent ladies' man, Lance is as amoral as he is handsome. Angela even pressured him of marrying Melissa Agretti so that he could have only the money and the power that grandmother Angela ever had. Once divorced, remarried and widowed, Lance remarried Pilar Ortega, the foreman's daughter.
Melissa Agretti/Cumson/Gioberti - Ana Alicia.
Feisty young heiress of her father's vineyard, Angela plots to have Melissa marry Lance as a scheme to bring the Agretti vineyards under her control, only to find that Melissa herself is an unscrupulous scheming young woman. (Seasons 1-8)
Cole Gioberti - William R. Moses.
Chase and Maggie's son, who supports his father in his new venture running the vineyards (Seasons 1-7)
Emma Channing - Margaret Ladd.
Angela's emotionally fragile younger daughter
Chao-Li - Chao-Li Chi.
Angela's faithful Chinese manservant
Vickie Gioberti/Hogan/Stavros - Jamie Rose (Seasons 1-3), Dana Sparks (Seasons 6-8) 
Chase and Maggie's daughter.
Julia Cumson - Abby Dalton.
Angela's eldest daughter and the mother of Lance, Julia works as a wine-maker at Falcon Crest. (Seasons 1-6)
Philip Erickson - Mel Ferrer.
Angela's crooked lawyer. (Seasons 1-3)
Terry Hartford/Ranson/Channing - Laura Johnson.
Maggie Gioberti's younger sister. A former call girl who creates scandal in Tuscany Valley with her attempts to move up the society ladder. (Seasons 3-5)
Pamela Lynch - Sarah Douglas (Seasons 3-4), Martine Beswick (Season 5).
Personal assistant to Richard Channing
Greg Reardon - Simon MacCorkindale.
Smooth British lawyer who works for Angela. (Seasons 4-5)
Gustav Riebmann - Paul Freeman.
Head of a sinister neo-Nazi cartel who raises hell in Tuscany Valley (Season 4)
Father Christopher Rossini - Ken Olin.
Priest and illegitimate son of Julia Cumson (Season 5)
Peter Stavros - Cesar Romero.
Billionaire Greek industrialist who becomes romantically involved with Angela (Seasons 5-8)
Eric Stavros - John Callahan.
Peter Stavros' son, who marries Vickie Gioberti (Seasons 5-7)
Dan Fixx - Brett Cullen.
Long-lost relative of the Channings (Seasons 6-7)
Frank Agretti - Rod Taylor.
Melissa's uncle and love interest for Angela. (Seasons 7-9)
Nick Agretti - David Beecroft.
Melissa's cousin and Frank's son (Season 8)
Pilar Ortega/Cumson - Kristian Alfonso.
Possibly the most reviled and unpopular character in the history of Falcon Crest. Former teenage sweetheart of Lance Cumson. Her Hispanic family works at the vineyards. (Seasons 8-9)
Lauren Daniels - Wendy Phillips.
Love interest for Richard Channing. (Season 9)
Michael Sharpe - Gregory Harrison.
Ruthless businessman who becomes an opponent of Richard Channing (Season 9)
Genele Ericson - Andrea Thompson.
Frank Agretti's murderous sister-in-law (Season 9)

[edit] Special guest stars

Jacqueline Perrault - Lana Turner.
Chase's flamboyant mother and an enemy of Angela's (Seasons 1-2)
Dr. Michael Ranson - Cliff Robertson.
Chase's cousin who causes a stir when he marries Terry Hartford (Season 3)
Francesca Gioberti - Gina Lollobrigida.
Angela's Italian cousin who visits Tuscany Valley (Season 4)
Anna Rossini - Celeste Holm.
A widow with a score to settle with Angela (Seasons 4-5)
Jordan Roberts - Morgan Fairchild.
A glamorous attorney who works for Richard Channing (Season 5)
Kit Marlowe - Kim Novak.
A shady lady who causes mayhem when she arrives in Tuscany Valley, posing as Skylar Kimball, Peter Stavros' daughter (Season 6)
Roland Saunders - Robert Stack.
Criminal out to kill Kit Marlowe (Season 6)
Vince Karlotti - Marjoe Gortner.
Psychic medium who has Emma Channing under his spell (Season 6)
Nicole Sauget - Leslie Caron.
Wealthy woman and old friend of Chase's (Season 7)
Liz McDowell - Lauren Hutton.
Businesswoman who has dealings with Richard Channing.(Season 7)
Carlton Travis - Eddie Albert.
Villain whose business with Richard Channing turns deadly (Season 7)
Madame Malec - Ursula Andress.
Exotic woman whom Richard Channing deals with in his efforts to rescue Vickie Stavros from a white slave ring (Season 7)
Lillian Nash - Eve Arden (Season 7)
Samantha Ross - Ana Alicia.
Exact doppelganger for Melissa Gioberti who becomes involved in the schemes of both Angela and Richard (Season 8)
Anne Bowen - Susan Blakely.
Danny Sharpe's mother, and an old flame of both Richard Channing and Michael Sharpe (Season 9)

[edit] Other Recurring Cast

Gus Nunouz - Nick Ramus.
Foreman at vineyard and a friend to Chase (Season 1)
Douglas Channing - Stephen Elliott.
Angela's ex-husband and father of Richard, Julia and Emma (Season 1)
Tony Cumson - John Saxon (Seasons 1, 6-7), Robert Loggia (Season 2).
Julia's ex-husband and Lance's father
Father Bob - Bob Curtis.
Catholic priest involved with several major characters throughout the series
Carlo Agretti - Carlos Romero.
Melissa's wealthy, vineyard-owning father (Seasons 1-3)
Mario Nunouz - Mario Marcelino.
Gus Nunouz's son, romantically involved with Vickie Gioberti (Seasons 1-2)
Alicia Nunouz - Silvana Gallardo.
Wife of Gus Nunouz, and mother of Mario (Seasons 1-2)
Nick Hogan - Roy Thinnes.
Man who marries Vickie Gioberti.(Season 2-3)
Diana Hunter - Shannon Tweed.
Personal assistant to Richard Channing who is secretly involved in the mysterious Cartel organisation (Season 2)
Darryl Clayton - Bradford Dillman.
Film producer who works with Maggie Gioberti on a script as part of a plot by Angela (Season 2)
Katherine Demery - Joanna Cassidy.
Woman who becomes romantically involved with Cole Gioberti (Season 2)
Sheila Hogan - Katherine Justice.
Ex-wife of Nick Hogan (Seasons 2-3)
Linda Caproni/Gioberti - Mary Kate McGeehan.
Young woman who marries Cole Gioberti (Seasons 2-4)
Vince Caproni - Harry Basch.
Linda's father (Seasons 2-4)
Joel McCarthy - Parker Stevenson.
Terry Hartford's unsavoury ex-husband (Season 4)
Lorraine Prescott - Kate Vernon.
Stepdaughter of Richard Channing and love interest for Lance (Season 4)
Cassandra Wilder - Anne Archer.
Cool businesswoman who makes her presence felt at Falcon Crest. Daughter of Anna Rossini (Seasons 4-5)
Charlotte Pershing - Jane Greer.
Maggie's mother (Season 4)
Connie Giannini - Carla Borelli.
Woman with whom Chase Gioberti has a brief affair (Seasons 4-5)
Damon Ross - Jonathan Frakes.
Brother of Cassandra Wilder, and son of Anna Rossini (Seasons 4-5)
Robin Agretti - Barbara Howard.
Young woman employed by Cole and Melissa as part of a surrogate pregnancy arrangement (Seasons 4-5)
Apollonia - Apollonia Kotero.
Budding pop star and love interest for Lance (Season 5)
Dwayne Cooley - Daniel Greene.
Dashing truck driver who falls for Emma Channing (Season 5)
Jeff Wainwright - Edward Albert.
Press agent for a book written by Maggie Gioberti, whose interest in Maggie takes on a disturbing edge (Seasons 5-6)
Li-Ying Chi - Rosalind Chao.
Chao-Li's daughter (Season 5)
Erin Jones - Jill Jacobson.
Mysterious woman who works for Richard Channing (Seasons 5-6)
Meredith Braxton - Jane Badler.
Erin Jones' sister (Season 6)
Guy Stafford - Jeff Kober.
Heavy involved with Kit Marlowe (Season 6)
Francine Hope - Melba Moore.
Woman who tries to help Maggie Gioberti trace her baby (Season 6)
Gabrielle Short - Cindy Morgan.
Love interest for Chase (Seasons 6-7)
Dina Wells - Robin Greer.
Love interest for Lance (Seasons 6-7)
Garth - Carl Held.
Personal assistant to Richard (Seasons 6-8)
John Remick - Ed Marinaro.
Vietnam veteran and an old friend of Chase's (Season 7)
Carly Fixx - Mariska Hargitay.
Dan Fixx's sister (Seasons 7-8)
Ben Agretti - Brandon Douglas.
Son of Nick Agretti and Anna Cellini (Season 8)
Cesar Ortega - Castulo Guerra.
Pilar Ortega's father who works on the vineyards (Season 8)
Tommy Ortega - Dan Ferro.
Pilar Ortega's brother (Season 8)
Gabriel Ortega - Danny Nucci.
Pilar Ortega's younger brother (Season 8)
Anna Cellini - Assumpta Serna.
Love interest of Nick Agretti (Season 8)
Charley St. James - Mark Lindsay Chapman.
Sleazy villain who manipulates his way into Emma's affections and tries to kill Angela to gain control of Falcon Crest (Season 9)
Ian St. James - David Hunt.
Charley St. James' equally villainous brother (Season 9)
Sydney St. James - Carla Gugino.
Young wife of Ian St. James (Season 9)
Danny Sharpe - David Sheinkopf.
Headstrong young man who believes that Michael Sharpe is his father (Season 9)
Walker Daniels - Robert Ginty.
Lauren Daniels' husband (Season 9)

[edit] Trivia

  • At first, Falcon Crest was originally supposed to be a family dramatic series. By its first season, it was considered to be a serial, but thanks to good scripts and ratings, beginning with the second season, CBS suggested to creator Earl Hamner to make these storylines more serialized, self-contained and abandoned to become yet another prime-time soap opera, next to Dallas, and its spin-off series, Knots Landing, and Dynasty.
  • When David Selby came to Falcon Crest during the second season, he told Earl Hamner that he wanted to create the character's name of: Richard Denault Channing, who was the former staff member of Lorimar named: Edward O. Denault, in real-life.
  • An unaired pilot for the series was filmed entitled The Vintage Years, which featured number of significant differences from the series that would eventually air. The character of Richard Channing was present in the original pilot, but was not introduced in the series until the second season, albeit a very different character to the one seen in the pilot. In the pilot, Richard (played by Michael Swan) was Angela's biological son fighting for his domineering mother's favor. Abby Dalton's character, Julia, was called Dorcas, Jane Wyman wore an grey wig as Angela and Chase and Maggie were played in the pilot by Clu Gulager and Samantha Eggar respectively. Emma was not a character, but there was a strange subplot concerning a mysterious woman crying for her mother while locked away in one of the upstairs rooms.
  • At the beginning of the ninth and final season in 1989-90, there were rumors circulating about actress Jane Wyman's health; she had been hospitalized with liver problems and diabetes early that year, and the producers wrote her out of much of the final season. At one point, the writers were going to put Wyman's character in Greece, where she would visit her ex-husband (played by Cesar Romero). However, when it proved impossible for her to appear on the show at all, in the third episode of Season 9 the writers put the character in a coma in the hospital, after almost being killed. In real-life, while the new season began, co-star Lorenzo Lamas paid a visit to see the ailing actress at the hospital. In "The Return" (episode 9-20), Lance and Pilar went to visit Mrs. Channing at the hospital, but she had already disappeared from the hospital room to return home (because filming these hospital scenes with Wyman was difficult due to her frail health).
  • Jane Wyman, Chao-Li Chi, and Lorenzo Lamas were the only cast members to stay throughout its entire run; Lamas was the only actor to appear in all 227 episodes of the series. Jane Wyman was the runner-up in terms of a number of episodes an actor appeared in. She appeared in almost every episode from 1981-1989; she missed 3 episodes prior to the final season because of health problems. She missed 16 episodes in the ninth and final season (also due to health problems), before she came back (against her doctor's advice) to appear in the final three shows, for a total of 208 of the 227 episodes. David Selby appeared in eight of the nine seasons.
  • In real-life, Jane Wyman wrote the soliloquy for the series finale.
  • Emma Channing's usual greeting whenever she saw her mother Angela was "How's tricks?"
  • According to rumor, Jane Wyman had a running feud with Robert Foxworth, to the point where they measured each other's dressing room trailers just to make sure they were equal in size. When Foxworth became a director for the show, Wyman demanded CBS add a clause to her contract making her a director. Although she never directed an episode, Wyman was pleased that she had the same designation as Foxworth. Wyman had had a long-running feud with fellow movie star Lana Turner which dated back to their Hollywood years. The two legendary actresses quickly refused to speak to each other and the producers had to film their confrontational scenes separately and then splice them together. Turner was written out of the show soon after. A few years after she appeared on the program, Turner noted that she believed Wyman was negative in demeanor due to the fact that her ex-husband, Ronald Reagan, was elected president during the 1980s, something that Turner believed Wyman could not reconcile within herself. Mel Ferrer, Celeste Holm and Simon MacCorkindale also stated that Wyman drove them off the show.
  • Barbara Stanwyck was considered for the role of Angela Channing, but turned it down and gave it to her old friend Jane Wyman.
  • On the first season of Falcon Crest, Lorenzo Lamas's Valentino look was caused by his nearsightedness; he insisted that his acting coach Jane Wyman made him wore contact lenses to solve the problem.
  • Between the first and seventh seasons, the Channing family resided in the Falcon Crest's, Victorian mansion, built by Angela Channing's grandfather, Joseph "Giuseppe" Gioberti. In real-life, it is known as Spring Mountain Vineyards, a winery and tourist attraction in Napa Valley, California.
  • In the episode "Home Again", neither Margaret Ladd (Emma) nor Rod Taylor (Frank) came back for the series finale due to budget restrictions. In this episode, Angela told her family that she received a letter from Emma, who had had a new baby named Angela. Angela also received a phone call from her ex-husband, Frank, stating that he would be released from jail.
  • For the final season, the theme song, composed by Bill Conti, was redone by renowned composer and multi-instrumentalist Patrick O'Hearn, who had previously played bass with Frank Zappa, was a part of the 80's band Missing Persons, and has released numerous, highly acclaimed solo albums in the New Age/Electronic music genre. O'Hearn also composed and performed the score for these episodes .
  • On the second episode of the ninth and final season, Susan Sullivan left the series. Prior to her departure, two new characters were introduced (portrayed by Gregory Harrison and Wendy Phillips), but neither of these characters ever matched the popularity of Sullivan's Maggie.
  • Falcon Crest reunited two minor co-stars from the smash hit 1978 movie comedy Grease, Eve Arden, who joined the cast as of season 7, and Lorenzo Lamas.
  • During the 1988-89 season, creator Earl Hamner was originally going to have Jane Wyman cross-over to Dallas and Larry Hagman to cross-over to Falcon Crest, but the idea never came to fruition.
  • Sophia Loren was all set to begin the role of Francesca Gioberti, Angela's secret half-sister who comes to the valley to threaten Angela's control of Falcon Crest. Loren was to play thirteen episodes, and producers promised a fabulous wardrobe and a revolting character that would rival Dynasty's Alexis. At the last minute, negotiations with Loren went sour and the deal fell through. Gina Lollabrigida, who was dubbed the "poor man's Sophia Loren" throughout her career, was recast in the role, but only signed on for four episodes.
  • The character of Meredith Braxton (Jane Badler) was supposed to be a lesbian whose female lover was her cohort in a scheme to extract a fortune from Richard Channing. A staunch Catholic, Jane Wyman objected to the storyline, and Meredith and her lover Erin Jones were rewritten to be sisters instead of lovers.
  • Lauren Bacall and Mia Farrow were asked to guest-star in the third season in roles that were not defined. Negotiations fell through. Other blockbuster names that the show tried to lure included Brooke Sheilds as a love interest for Lance Cumson; Richard Burton, who was asked to play Jacqueline Perrault's ex-husband; and Anthony Quinn, who was asked to play the brother of Peter Stavros in a planned storyline that would have both brothers waging a war that would draw Falcon Crest into its centre. It was rumored that Burton was offered $2.5 million for a five-minute appearance[citation needed].
  • Four endings were filmed for the "Climax" cliffhanger, the last epiosde of the second season in which the murderer of Carlo Agretti was revealed. Richard, Lance, Julia and Diana Hunter were all filmed being exposed as the killer. Four characters were slated to be potential bodies in the coffin shown in the last scene of the episode: Vickie Gioberti, Melissa Cumson, Diana Hunter or Jacqueline Perrault.
  • Chase almost died by Julia's bullet. Actor Robert Foxworth was disappointed the show was becoming more serialized along the lines of Dallas and Dynasty, and began to make grumblings about leaving. Writers were going to have him the third victim of Julia when producers were able to convince Foxworth to stay by promising him the chance to direct a number of episodes of Falcon Crest[citation needed].

[edit] Availability

Falcon Crest is not yet available on DVD, but plans to release the first season along with the unaired pilot "The Vintage Years" have been announced for 2007. However, the rights to the series are held by Warner Bros. (successor-in-interest to original production company Lorimar). WB has now made selected episodes of the series available for viewing on AOL's free-on-demand Internet service in2tv.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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qu - quality - rm - rmy - rn - ro - roa_rup - roa_tara - ru - rw - sa - sah - sc - scn - sco - sd - se - sg - sh - si - simple - sk - sl - sm - sn - so - sr - srn - ss - st - stq - su - sv - sw - szl -
 
ta - te - tet - tg - th - ti - tk - tl - tlh - tn - to - tpi - tr - ts - tt - tum - tw - ty - udm - ug - uk - ur - uz - ve - vec - vi - vls - vo - wa - war - wo - wuu - xal - xh -
yi - yo - za - zea - zh - zh_classical - zh_min_nan - zh_yue - zu -

Static Wikipedia 2008 (no images)

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