The Americans (1961 TV series)
The Americans | |
---|---|
Genre | Drama |
Starring | Darryl Hickman Richard Davalos |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 17 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Frank Telford |
Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 44 mins. |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Picture format | Black and white |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original release | January 23 May 15, 1961 | –
The Americans is a 17-episode American drama television series that aired on NBC from January to May 1961. Set during the American Civil War, the series focuses on two brothers fighting on opposite sides of the conflict. Guest stars included Lee Marvin, Jack Elam, Brian Keith, Kathleen Crowley and Robert Redford, among many others.
Background[]
The series was inspired by James Warner Bellah's 1953 novel The Valiant Virginians which was serialized in the Saturday Evening Post as Tales of the Valorous Virginians from May 9, 1953, through June 10, 1954.[1] The novel is an arc of separate stories on the impact of the war on the young men fighting it. The series characters are Ben Canfield, who fights with the Union Army, and Jeff Canfield who fights with the Confederate Army.
Production[]
The series was part of the United States' commemoration of the centennial of the beginning of the Civil War. It aired as a mid-season replacement[2] for the canceled western series, Riverboat, starring Darren McGavin and Noah Beery, Jr., broadcast in the 7:30–8:30 p.m. timeslot on Monday evenings.
Ben Canfield was played by Darryl Hickman, older brother of actor Dwayne Hickman; Richard Davalos played Jeff Canfield; Davalos had portrayed James Dean's character's brother in East of Eden. Hickman and Davalos were the only actors who appeared in every episode of the series. Most of the supporting cast appear in only a single episode though several actors played the same role in more than one episode:
- John McIntire, just weeks prior to replacing Ward Bond on NBC's Wagon Train in the wake of Bond's sudden death, played Ben and Jeff's father, Pa Canfield.
- John Doucette as Capt. Cardiff
- Sandy Kenyon as Ritter
- Slim Pickens as Johnson
- Wynn Pearce as Bailey
Among the more well-known actors to appear in this series were the following:
Lee Marvin, Robert Redford, Jack Elam, Brian Keith, Robert Culp, Jack Lord, Michael Rennie, Nina Foch, Dan O'Herlihy, James Franciscus, Susan Oliver, Ray Walston, Lloyd Bochner, Dick York, Jackie Coogan, L. Q. Jones, and Carroll O'Connor.
Seventeen one-hour episodes were broadcast, although either twenty-one or twenty-six episodes were filmed.[2] Episodes were written by, among others, John Gay (screenwriter for the film Run Silent Run Deep and of many television adaptions of literary classics), William D. Gordon (who also acted in at least one episode), Andy Lewis (writer of the movie Klute), Carey Wilber (writer of the Star Trek episode "Space Seed"), and Pat Falken Smith (head writer in the 1970s and 1980s for the soap operas Days of Our Lives and General Hospital). Music for the series was created by composers Bernard Herrmann and Hugo Friedhofer. Henry Steele Commager was the historical consultant.
A tie-in novel called The Americans, written by Donald Honig, was released in paperback by Popular Library publishers in 1961.[3][4][5]
Episodes/cast[]
First-run episodes of the series aired January 23, 1961, through May 15, 1961; repeats aired from May 22 through September 11, 1961.
- Episode 1: Harper's Ferry (broadcast January 23, 1961)
- The Canfield family finds itself split down the middle after the Civil War breaks out when Confederate forces attack the Union arsenal at Harpers Ferry, now West Virginia.
- Episode 2: Rebellion at Blazing Rock (broadcast January 30, 1961)
- Jeff encounters two men, one Confederate and one Yankee, preparing to stage a mock battle.
- Michael Rennie played Capt. James Duquesne
- Ray Daley ... Bugler
- John Howard ... Capt. Chilcoath
- Karen Sharpe ... Louanne Higgins
- Adam Williams ... Wilcott
- Jeff encounters two men, one Confederate and one Yankee, preparing to stage a mock battle.
- Episode 3: The Regular (broadcast February 6, 1961)
- A regular-army sergeant, delivering guns to a volunteer unit, is shocked at how badly trained they are.
- Kathleen Crowley played Lucy Vickery
- Ken Drake ... Bravo
- William D. Gordon ... Lt. Barnes
- Maurice Manson ... Mayor Cahill
- William Murray ... Craigie
- Kent Smith ... Capt. Vickery
- A regular-army sergeant, delivering guns to a volunteer unit, is shocked at how badly trained they are.
- Episode 4: The Rebellious Rose (broadcast February 13, 1961)
- The beautiful Rose Greenhow serves the Confederacy by charming susceptible Union officials into talking too much. When Jeff comes to Washington, D.C., Rose charms him into committing murder.
- Charles Aidman ... Capt. Wheeler
- Nina Foch ... Rose Greenhow
- Martin Gabel ... Tim Mayhew
- The beautiful Rose Greenhow serves the Confederacy by charming susceptible Union officials into talking too much. When Jeff comes to Washington, D.C., Rose charms him into committing murder.
- Episode 5: On to Richmond (broadcast February 20, 1961)
- Ben sees that his volunteer soldiers are not the combat professionals he needs for the upcoming Battle of First Bull Run.
- Diana Millay ... Emma Templeton
- Ben sees that his volunteer soldiers are not the combat professionals he needs for the upcoming Battle of First Bull Run.
- Episode 6: Half Moon Road (broadcast February 27, 1961)
- Jeff goes deep into the backwoods to recruit sharpshooters for the Confederate army.
- James Barton ... Old Goodwin
- Enid Jaynes ... Melissa (as Enid Janes)
- Jack Lord ... Charlie Goodwin
- George Mitchell ... Preacher
- Jeff goes deep into the backwoods to recruit sharpshooters for the Confederate army.
- Episode 7: Reconnaissance (broadcast March 6, 1961)
- Jeff is assigned to sneak through enemy lines to gather information. He then discovers his brother Ben is among the Union soldiers stationed there.
- Diane Jergens ... Sally
- Lee Marvin ... Capt. Judd
- Don Megowan ... Lt. Fairfax
- Jan Stine ... Hollis
- Brad Weston ... Cpl. Blackburn
- Jeff is assigned to sneak through enemy lines to gather information. He then discovers his brother Ben is among the Union soldiers stationed there.
- Episode 8: The Escape (broadcast March 13, 1961)
- Col. Fry and Ben are captured and sent to the Confederate POW camp at Libby Prison.
- Dayton Lummis ... Maj. Turner
- Dan O'Herlihy ... Col. Fry
- Col. Fry and Ben are captured and sent to the Confederate POW camp at Libby Prison.
- Episode 9: The Guerrillas (broadcast March 20, 1961)
- A band of guerrillas lays siege to a town torn apart by the war.
- Norman Alden ... Paine
- Robert Culp ... Finletter
- Cyril Delevanti ... Canfield
- Berry Kroeger ... Keezer
- Paul Lambert ... Hudson
- Strother Martin ... Wadd
- Sonya Wilde ... Caroline
- A band of guerrillas lays siege to a town torn apart by the war.
- Episode 10: The Invaders (broadcast March 27, 1961)
- After a Union force takes over a Confederate town, its captain orders the Confederate flag taken down. Outraged, an elderly resident of the town fires at him.
- Steve Brodie ... Sgt. Rafer
- Myrna Fahey ... Ruth
- James Franciscus ... Lt. Hannon
- Frank Gerstle ... Capt. Bice
- Ian Wolfe ... Sever
- After a Union force takes over a Confederate town, its captain orders the Confederate flag taken down. Outraged, an elderly resident of the town fires at him.
- Episode 11: The Gun (broadcast April 3, 1961)
- Jeff is ordered to capture Union cannons.
- Robert Carlyle ... Sergeant
- Lonny Chapman ... Chester Longbaugh
- Jack Elam ... Loper Johnson
- Susan Oliver ... Rachel
- Jeff is ordered to capture Union cannons.
- Episode 12: The Sentry (broadcast April 10, 1961)
- Three Confederates are assigned to sabotage an important railroad trestle.
- Ben Cooper ... Ward Roberts
- Robert Hastings ... Lieutenant
- Brian Keith ... Owen
- Judson Pratt ... Sgt. Willers
- Three Confederates are assigned to sabotage an important railroad trestle.
- Episode 13: The Bounty Jumpers (broadcast April 17, 1961)
- Ben goes undercover to gather evidence on a criminal ring that specializes in phony recruits.
- Larry Gates ... Maj. Eustice Cary
- Anne Helm ... Dulcie Morrow
- Gene Lyons ... Col. Elgin
- Murvyn Vye ... Police Lieutenant
- Ray Walston ... Whit Bristow
- Ben goes undercover to gather evidence on a criminal ring that specializes in phony recruits.
- Episode 14: Long Way Back (broadcast April 24, 1961)
- A group of Missouri farmers capture Jeff.
- Patricia Barry ... Jessica
- Charles Bickford ... Peterson
- Ron Nicholas ... Scout
- Walter Sande ... Jayhawker
- A group of Missouri farmers capture Jeff.
- Episode 15: The War Between the States (broadcast May 1, 1961)
- Ben is worried when his best friend falls for a Confederate girl.
- Lloyd Bochner ... Lt. Brady
- Lisabeth Hush ... Rebel girl
- John McGiver ... Col. Allen
- Lurene Tuttle ... Mrs. Allen
- Dick York ... Bolick
- Ben is worried when his best friend falls for a Confederate girl.
- Episode 16: The Coward (broadcast May 8, 1961)
- A soldier convicted of cowardice under fire and sentenced to death has his execution delayed. However, two of the soldiers in his company are determined to see the sentence carried out, even if they have to do it themselves.
- Jackie Coogan ... Rowe
- L.Q. Jones ... Yonts
- Carroll O'Connor ... Capt. Garbor
- Robert Redford ... George Harrod
- A soldier convicted of cowardice under fire and sentenced to death has his execution delayed. However, two of the soldiers in his company are determined to see the sentence carried out, even if they have to do it themselves.
- Episode 17: The Inquisitors (broadcast May 15, 1961)
- The U.S. Congress wants answers about some disastrous battle results for the Union Army.
- Robert Gist ... Gen. Charles P. Stone
- Marsha Hunt ... Jeanie Stone
- Robert Middleton ... U.S. Senator Benjamin Wade of Ohio
- The U.S. Congress wants answers about some disastrous battle results for the Union Army.
References[]
- ^ York, Neil Longely (2001) "Fiction As Fact: The Horse Soldiers and Popular Memory" Kent State University Press ISBN 0-87338-688-4, page 157 (Footnote 27)
- ^ a b The Americans webpage of the Classic Television Archive website
- ^ Honig, Donald (1961) "The Americans" Popular Library ASIN B000MH5BVE
- ^ The Americans, by Donald Honig webpage in the Amazon book section
- ^ Review of The Americans tie-in novel at Television Obscurities
External links[]
- 1961 American television series debuts
- 1961 American television series endings
- 1960s American drama television series
- Black-and-white American television shows
- English-language television shows
- NBC original programming
- Television series about the American Civil War
- Television series by CBS Studios