(05-12-2013 11:35 )4evadionne Wrote: 1964 - USA: Lorne Greene star of the NBC-TV show "Bonanza" is at No.1 on the US singles chart with "Ringo."
Bonanza ran for 14 years from 1959-1973 and 430 episodes, making it (after Gunsmoke) the second longest, and one of the most successful, western series of all time.
Set in Nevada in 1859, it told the story of thrice-widowed rancher Ben Cartwright, played by Canadian born (of Russian parents) Lorne Greene, and his three sons (one by each wife), Adam, Hoss and Little Joe, played by Pernell Roberts, Dan Blocker and Michael Landon respectively who farm a sizeable ranch, the "Pondorosa", said to be in excess of half a million acres, in the triangle between Virginia City, Carson City and the shores of Lake Tahoe.
The series is particularly remembered for its distinctive theme music, and the map of the area which catches fire in the opening credits (famously compared, by Jasper Carrott, to his arse the morning after a curry from his local Indian restaurant!). Although geographically accurate, the map is in fact on its side, with East at the top. The series was made at a television studio in California, including the sets replicating Carson and Virginia Cities, but the scene of the characters riding across a field towards the cameras in the opening credits was actually shot where the "Pondorosa" was supposedly located.
The "Bonanza" referred to had nothing to do with ranching, but the discovery of one of the biggest ever deposits of silver in the history of the world. The "Comstock Lode" as it became known (named after prospector Henry Comstock) was already known for its gold deposits but when silver was discovered in the 1850s the "Bonanza" took off. The vast fortunes made and lost turned Virginia City from a small village into a town with a permanent population of 15,000 and a transient population four times that, including the author Mark Twain whose brother was Governor of the territory at the time. In 1877, the year of peak production, over £5bn (in today's money) of ore was extracted from an area of little more than 25 square miles.
One historical error that the trainspotters among you will delight in is that the railroad scenes in Bonanza couldn't have happened, as the line from Reno-Carson City-Virginia City didn't open until the early 1870s.
Pernell Roberts left the series in 1965 after a dispute with the scriptwriters over the direction his character was taking and the fact that his contract wanted exclusivity preventing him working elsewhere. The producers of the show considered expanding the roles of several other characters or introducing a long-lost brother/cousin/nephew but they eventually decided to continue with just the three remaining main characters, and it seemed justified as there was little effect on either the show's popularity or (more importantly) the ratings.
However, in 1972 the 22-stone Dan Blocker died suddenly at the age of 43 following complications after a routine gall bladder operation. Roberts' character hadn't been killed off (he was "at sea") and the producers toyed with the idea of seeing if he would be interested in a return, but this came to nothing, they knew that the show couldn't continue and it was cancelled the following year.
Michael Landon went on to star in "Little House on the Prairie" and "Highway to Heaven", but he also died young, of pancreatic cancer in 1991 at the age of 51.
Lorne Greene went on to star in "Battlstar Gallactica" and for many years was the voice of a well-known American dog food commercial. He died in 1987 at the age of 72.
Pernell Roberts went on to star in the title role of "Trapper John MD", the story of what had happened to Dr "Trapper" John McIntyre in the 25 years since the M*A*S*H character returned from Korea (Wayne Rogers, who played the role in the TV series, had turned it down). A lifelong civil rights activist, Roberts died in 2010 at the age of 81 coincidentally from pancreatic cancer which had also killed Landon.
As for the Comstock Lode, it was largely mined out by the early 1900s, although small scale mining continues to this day. The area around Virginia City, however, fell into decline as the population collapsed. Nowadays the town has a population of around 2,000 and is little more than a tourist attraction, with tawdry souvenir stalls selling wild west memorabilia, fast food outlets, small casinos and "saloons" (although the Red Dog Saloon does have a role in modern culture as in the 1960s its then owner was one of the founders of the West Coast hippie movement and the bar saw early performances from Janis Joplin and the Grateful Dead).
I visited Virginia City some 11/12 years ago and whilst it is a harmless enough place to spend a couple of hours on a late spring afternoon alongside the other (supposedly) two million visitors a year I dread to think what it must be like living there in the depths of winter when the tourists aren't around.
It is 6,200 feet above sea level in a bleak, desolate area 16 miles from the nearest town. No main roads or routes go through it, there is no public transport of any kind (the train service was axed in 1948 although a steam preservation company runs for a couple of miles) and although it still has its own school and a few small stores it is not the sort of place I'd choose to retire to!