Earl Hamner and the "Waltons" home |
Final ‘Goodnight’ for Earl Hamner
Virginia writer Earl Hamner Jr., who created “The Waltons” and
“Falcon Crest,” died Thursday in Los Angeles. He was 92.
He also wrote 8 episodes of “The Twilight Zone” in the 1960s.
“Spencer’s Mountain,” Hamner’s childhood-inspired 1961 novel, was
turned into a 1963 movie starring Henry Fonda and Maureen O’Hara.
His 1970 book “The Homecoming: A Novel About Spencer’s Mountain,”
inspired by Christmas Eve 1933 when Hamner’s father was late in arriving home,
was turned into “The Homecoming: A Christmas Story,” a two-hour CBS television
movie that introduced the family, renamed the Waltons, to television viewers in
1971.
Its success led to the weekly hourlong TV series in 1972. “The
Waltons” had Richard Thomas as John-Boy, the budding young writer modeled after
Hamner, who did the voice-over introduction and postscript to each episode.
“The Waltons,” which ran
until 1981, won five Emmy Awards its first season, including one for
outstanding drama series.
He also wrote the 1968 TV adaptation of “Heidi,” which infuriated football
fans when NBC began airing the children’s classic by cutting off the final one
minute and 15 seconds of a New York Jets-Oakland Raiders game in which the
Raiders scored two touchdowns in the final 75 seconds.
The eldest of eight red-haired children in a poor, Baptist family,
Earl Henry Hamner Jr. was born July 10, 1923, in Schuyler, Va., a mining and
milling village in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains.
Hamner and wife Jane had two children, Scott and Caroline.
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