The Life & Times of The Waltons

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a life and times of The Waltons next on TNN in the fall of 1972 CBS decided to risk going against the trend in television they debuted a show that wasn't cool sexy or violent and it became an American institution known as The Waltons the series was based on its creator Earl hammers early life it was about a large close-knit family that lived in a very small town in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia for nine years the Waltons captured the hearts of its loyal viewers and a lot of prestigious awards along the way it was not only quality television but also just what audiences were waiting for maybe even meaning certainly when the show came along in the early 70s it was the exact opposite of all the turmoil that was going on in the country at the time and just to return to a simpler and a sweeter time I think it was a healing show primarily I think it was we were coming out of a decade of chaos at a time when so many families were cracking apart because kids were for testing the war doing drugs moving away from home having alternative lifestyles that were complicated for families to understand Ralph Waite told me something that really was sweetie said there's a lot of guys who down in Venice and they're sort of a self-help group and they sit there and they're these tough old guys and they sit and they sob for an hour every Thursday night watching the show and I said that's strange why I said because they look at life the way it should be it tapped into something that America was hungry for and still is at first it seemed that nobody even those involved anticipated the success of the Waltons The Waltons started out as a throwaway I mean it was up against Mod Squad and Flip Wilson it had no chance of making it I mean they wrote it off and they were writing reviews like this is a great show but no one's ever gonna watch it but everybody I mean including myself and my agents had said this'll last six weeks maybe thirteen where they usually cancel and you'll be able to go back to New York and that's one of the reasons I was willing to test for it because I knew I could make a little money and get back get back home so consequently the network visited them you know Network people do interfere and with the best of intentions but I think thinking that the wold has had didn't stand a chance they let me alone and I was able to tell the the stories that I wanted to tell and present these people the way I knew them when the series debuted it was said in the 1930s and the Walton family like most of the rest of the country back then was trying to survive the hardships of the Great Depression people ask me how could you write such fond memories of such a grim time and the thing is it wasn't a grim time for us we were a sufficient family everything's getting my father would go ahead and shoot a turkey if we we had a cow so that we had fresh milk and butter I'm probably the only writer in Hollywood who knows how to to milk a cow and certainly on the right of the die Noah who's ever slaughtered a hog so you see my qualifications of being a writer very wide the stories were told in the form of memories with each episode starting with Earl handlers narration giving a little family history and setting up the theme of that night show richard Thomas's character john-boy represented Earl Hamner in his youth he was the oldest child in a large family with the dream of becoming a writer over the years the series took the family from the depression through World War two but at its core it's about the kind of experiences everyone shares people died people got sick people graduated from school people have success people had failure people had conflicts the same as they do today the series also proved that good acting and strong storytelling were still great ways to find an audience the writing on the wall turns was incredible the producers were amazing and the actors were incredible Richard Ralph Michael will and Ellen were amazing and the synergy that they had carried the show and Richard was such a great actor and so young I was basically born and raised in to the world that john-boy would have given anything to leave home to become not that he wanted to become an actor or performer but you know I was born in New York City raised in New York City I was the son of ballet dancers I became an actor at the age of six seven I moved in a circle of when as a child growing up of a great deal of cultural sophistication and you know in a huge urban area so no two uprisings could have been farther from from each other Earl Hamner saw Richard in the film red sky of mourning and thought he had the ability to convey the intelligence and sensitivity he was looking for I would look at Richard Thomas and as he was experiencing something on the screen I would feel it as if I was experiencing it all over again I must say Richard did a better job of being john-boy than I did he fact he was he was brilliant I think Richard Thomas was on the show for five seasons directed several episodes and then it came time for him to leave I always plan to leave after five years it was never my original contract was a five-year contract I never assumed it would go five years at the age of twenty-one which is what I was when I started the show five years is an eternity now it's a drop in the bucket it was time for him to move on after all role Hamner moved away from the mountain to pursue his writing career so it made perfect sense for john-boy to do the same it took a big emotional toll I never never made me want to turn around and go back but it was it was was devastating in its way I mean I was fine but I missed it more than I thought I would anyone who watched Richard Thomas on the walls knows a lot about Earl handlers life as a young man in Virginia he was born in the little town of Schuyler in 1923 and was his parents first of eight children I wanted to write from the time I was conscious of myself as a person and when I was six years old I wrote a poem and got it published as a matter of fact and there was no hope for me after that there's no question but what I was a writer and now I am 76 and still writing it just like the Waltons Earl Hamner 's family struggled through the depression luckily a local doctor and his wife helped or will get a scholarship to the University of Richmond but soon he was drafted into World War two I was right behind the front line but I was never shot at but father we were there they began teaching us special and I was taught to disarm landmines where the life expectancy on the battlefield something like 20 minutes and fortunately some unit in Paris needed a typist and boy could I type and so I was stationed in in Paris for the next two years after the war Earl was able to finish college at the University of Cincinnati thanks to the GI Bill he then began his career as a writer in the mid 50's I was working in New York I had written several books by then but I kept my job as a radio and television writer at NBC because the books were not enough to support a growing family and my my by the end my wife and I had two children and then in the late 50s television moved from New York to to the west coast and so we had to move with it and I like living in California it's an odd place but I enjoy it Earl wrote for several shows including the twilight zone but he always had the most success when he wrote about his family his book the homecoming became the television Christmas special that turned out to be the pilot for the Waltons during and after the Waltons Earl Hamner also wrote and produced several other shows including Falcon Crest he recently published a new book titled the avocado drive Zoo but it's those stories of his family that continue to resonate across America and around the world I live in times of The Waltons returns in a moment on TNN by the end of the first season the Waltons was a solid hit had cleaned up at the Emmy Awards that year and was becoming something more than just another TV show I think I really knew that we had made it when we were parodied in Mad Magazine I thought well that's it we've we've arrived and you know and pretty soon on all kinds of shows mostly comedy shows you'd hear people saying good night to each other you know mama I've been matching bub mama the house that we lived in was very small and we could hear each other all over the house and I don't know how it started but one night one of the kids called goodnight to somebody in another room and then someone would call back and before you know it there was a whole chorus of good nights going on all over the house and we would have kept it up till dawn except my father would finally gone and say all right that's enough we would say one last good night the character is modeled after Earl's parents were played by Michael Lerner and Ralph Waite Michael learn it a skilled and accomplished stage and television actress was cast to play Olivia Walton she had been born in Washington DC and by age 10 was attending school in England where her interest in acting developed Michael was in her early 30s when she started playing Olivia Walton she wasn't really old enough to be Richard's mother so she was like a mother but a friend as well and Michael always was making me laugh cuz I had to sit next to her at the dinner table and when Ralph would make her laugh she would squeeze my hand during the prayer and I knew she was laughing and then I would laugh and of course she was a professional so she never started to laugh and I always got in trouble Michael learn it won three Emmy Awards for her portrayal of Olivia Walton after seven years on the series she left to pursue other acting opportunities on the show her absence was explained as a prolonged cure for tuberculosis she made occasional appearances while the series was still in production and was in the three Waltons reunion specials made during the 1990s unlike Michael learn it Ralph Waite discovered acting fairly late in life he was born in White Plains New York in 1928 and was the oldest of five children when he was attending college his parents died and he was launched into a difficult journey of personal discovery he went home to help his youngest siblings then became a minister for about five years still unfulfilled he then jumped into becoming a publicity director for a publisher in New York I was drinking more and more I got into some very serious trouble over the years drinking and living it up and being restless and being ill at ease and eventually all this I split from my family we got a divorce it was when Ralph was in his early 30s that he began taking acting classes and he decided to change professions again in the 1960s he found work on Broadway and in movies including Cool Hand Luke then after Henry Fonda turned it down Ralph was offered the role of John Walton the impact on the walls of courses is tremendous in my life I mean it changed everything I made good money for the first time in life I became quote famous but most importantly I was with a group people and doing scenes and telling stories in which I was a very loving and kind and responsible human being and I had gotten so far away from that and my childhood as I helped raise my brothers and sisters I had been a caring kind of guy and really took care of business as best I could what were the drinking and with acting and with running all over the country and with acting up thinking I was a a wild man which I guess I was and I couldn't believe that they hired me a hard man to harness tunnel you did and as I played John Walton over the years all of those impulses and qualities that were in me early on were really condone destructive behavior became less and less powerful in my life so in a way I became John Walton blonde around here later look at what stuff towel to me Ralph Waite seemed to catch that combination of mischievousness and compassion and and masculinity and all those lovely things that my father was actors give us great gifts and at Ralph gave me a terrific gift of portraying my father the way he did life and times of The Waltons returns in a moment on TNN one reason that the Waltons appealed to such a broad audience is because it was about a multi-generational family children love to see what the Waltons kids were up to parents could relate to the struggles and joys John and Olivia Walton went through older audiences could not only revisit the 1930s but enjoy the performances of two hollywood veterans Ellen Corby and wheel gear Earl hammers respect for his real grandparents made him want to include them in the series and Ellen Corby and will gear turned them into two of the most memorable and beloved characters on the show Ellen was a very determined woman but the first time I saw her play grandma I went to her after the scene and said Ellen that's much too brittle much too harsh my own grandmother who is the basis for the character was a much sweeter woman and Ellen said young man you've got an awful lot of really nice people here and it's going to get terribly saccharine if you laugh you pipey sweetness and light and she said I'm gonna give you some some tartness and she did I think Ellen Corby and real gear were the most remarkable he cast grandma grandpa I've ever seen on television she and wills relationship on camera was not unlike their relationship off-camera Ellen would tend to hide with real gear because he gets so exuberant and Ellen and he would I would sniff at each other a little bit although he never sniped back actually but Ellen was such a professional and everybody was respected her and was a little intimidated by her in the early days because she had been around forever Ellen Corby was born Ellen Hansen on June 3rd 1911 in Racine Wisconsin early on she wanted to perform but when she came to Hollywood she started out behind the scenes Allen Corby and I became great friends because she said I was a script girl - your father Tex Ritter on several of his westerns and she was also script girl for Laurel and Hardy or Stan and baby she called him and she was right in the middle of that and then finally she became an actress Ellen was soon in demand as a character actress in Hollywood with credits that included the classics It's a Wonderful Life and Sabrina but she'll always be remembered as Grandma Walton Ellen Corby was our grandmother we called her grandma Ellen adopted us she never had children of her own and so she immediately became a grandmother of seven children so I think she really liked that Ellen Corby won many awards for her portrayal including several Emmys for Best Supporting Actress her greatest challenge came five years into the series when she suffered a serious stroke that she would never fully recover from when Ellen had her stroke she was away from the show for a while and then they had her come back playing grandma as a stroke victim which was I think a very courageous thing for the show and and for Ellen sit down let's try a duet oh no no I'm not gonna let you get away that it's what everybody wanted and I think it was a great honest thing to do one hand is all you need Ellen was an amazing fighter and was an inspiration for so many stroke survivors to keep going and to fight and up until the day she died she got letters and letters and letters thanking her for her show of strength Ellen Corby continued to play grandma Walton through the rest of the series and in the three reunion specials in the 1990s sadly Ellen Corby at age 87 passed away in early 1999 wheel gear was one of my favorite people in the world he was in his 70s when he came to the show and at the top of a very distinguished career in vaudeville and on stage and in films he had just done a movie called Jeremiah Johnson with Robert Redford but when he came to our show he didn't have to act will was simply himself the person that we saw playing grandpa but simply will having a wonderful time William Gere was born on March 9th 1902 in Frankfort Indiana when he went away to school at the University of Chicago he got a degree in horticulture but also started acting in plays he spent his early years after college uh in tent shows today that would be compared to say summer stock it's a wonderful commercial kind of saying you know the boats would go down the river they get off and they perform and it's a way to cut your teeth that is so important for an actor will made his way to the New York stage and then to Hollywood where his career in film took off then in early 1951 will gear got caught up in the Communist witch hunt led by Senator Joseph McCarthy known in Hollywood as the blacklist he was called before the house on American Activities Committee and like so many others remember the Communist Party being accused made you guilty his name was taken off all billboards and there is no more salary everything was dropped we came back to our Santa Monica home and nobody wanted us and we had to go away in isolation because it was becoming too cruel for his family the way we were treated and we moved up to Topanga Canyon which was at that time would take about an hour to get there because he didn't have a freeway there was only well water we used to go to school kind of orange because it was well water you know to wash yourself and we had animals and we lived off our chickens and our goats and it was sort of like if the Walton said ah it took him a long time to get back on his feet but he went through this process without bitterness that was the extraordinary thing about well care will gear rebuild his career on stage in film and on television during the 60s then the producers of The Waltons gave him a chance to become America's favorite grandfather it was a marvelous period of his life it was a safe period of his life with it he was able to build again the thing that he loved a repertory company the Wilkie or theater from botanical and that always sustained him and also a place to have his gardens so he had everything at the end of his life which was very important and I think Earl Hamner for that he had his his commercial success his greatest commercial success which was grandpa Walton he had his gardens and he had his theater and so he went out on a golden star it was during the break after the sixth season that will gear passed away at the age of 76 his family was all around him his ashes are buried on the grounds of his beloved theatrical Botanica in Topanga Canyon and we have a beautiful bust of Papa in the garden and I'm sure he's very very happy with all the flourishing around that goes on out there when the seventh season began once again reality and the fiction of the Waltons blended into unforgettable television when we resumed shooting the first episode was a tribute to him and we all went up on the mountain to say goodbye will died a couple of weeks after my own father died so that was very tough for me I feel like I lost my father and my grandfather within a month and coming back and doing the episode where we all paid tribute to him in our own way was was a great way to to say goodbye and have closure I remember feeling a lot of sadness when we filmed that it was very strange very surreal because we were truly truly touched by by him as an individual as a cast member and as a friend the life and times of the Waltons returns in a moment on TNN the Waltons premiered Thursday nights on CBS back in 1972 our competition the Flip Wilson show and Mod Squad stay with us during the run of the series the back lot and sound stages of the Warner Brothers Studios in Burbank California substituted for the mountains of Virginia it was here that the actors playing the Waltons evolved into their own kind of family I think the relationships on the Waltons were very strong and grew stronger over the years after all we spend as much time more time together actually than we did with our own families in real life I mean you're together 12 14 hours a day for ten years I think the dynamics are every bit as complex and is interesting as then I mix in a family and I think that it's what came across and in its authentic form those feelings are irresistible that's why matter how corny they thought it might have been or how nostalgic around ie all the things though the ways which the walls could be criticized theoretically you could never argue with what was really there I think as the kids we always like to have times we got to play and there was a time when we got to go into the pond last one in has to hang a bowl and whenever we got to put on these 1930s bathing suits and play that was that was the most fun that we had things were really fun on the set I mean it got it got pretty wacky there were long days and especially in those kitchen scenes we would sit there on the dinner table for hours and after a while especially in the afternoon there was a real lack of oxygen there and I think it made us all giddy so pretty soon we'd all be laughing can we talk as long as your monumental no tickling at the table and I think that energy that we had at you know goofing around that we did right up until the word action gave us a nice flow of energy the kids came across as as real kids because we were we were just being ourselves which i think is probably the key to acting anyway the kids on the Waltons in the beginning we were looking just for kids that would just match if they all had red hair but fortunately each of them had their own special quality meri McDonough who played Erin Walton was born in the San Fernando Valley in 1961 only a few miles from where the Waltons would later be filmed I went on my very first audition for the homecoming which was the Christmas story which turned out to be a pilot for the show and I was nine years old and I got it and that was that was history the other kids like Judi Norton and some acting experience or training before being cast in the roles that would make them famous Eric Scott who played Ben Walton began his career at age six when he started doing print ads and commercials soon he was playing roles in shows of the era like bewitched he was 12 when he became part of the Walton clan the second oldest boy in the family Jason was played by Jon Wamsley this icon of the all-american family was actually born in 1956 in Lancashire England his family moved to California when he was still a toddler when I was 8 I started playing the guitar and not long after that I was performing and I did an amateur show for kids and was seen by some producers had invited to audition for a movie they were producing John didn't get that part but he did get an agent and was soon going on interviews all over Hollywood I did a lot of guest shots on different series combat my three sons Daniel Boone nannying the professor but actually I would guess one of my biggest breaks as a kid was a movie at Disney it was called the one and only genuine original family band while he was working at Disney they knew he was English so they asked him to be the voice of Christopher Robin in the Academy award-winning Winnie the Pooh and the blustery day when he started work on the Waltons John's musical background became an integral part of his character as he grew up on the show he was given his high school diploma on the set hands John and his character Jason managed to fall in love with the same girl her name was Tony on the show at Lisa Harrison in real life we were introduced by a mutual friend who had done a guest shot and we met and immediately started singing together and we had a band the Wamsley Harrison band did a lot of TV shows and fairs amusement parks things like that and the producers wrote a character for Jason's girlfriend at least audition for the part and got the role John's wedding proves what a family affair the Waltons cast had become the ceremony was held in Michael learn its backyard and Ralph Waite still a minister perform the ceremony when the series was coming to an end Ralph Waite and Michael learned it we've worried that it would have a detrimental effect on the kids so I think they spent a lot of time with the kids preparing them when they wouldn't be seeing each other every day after the show I mainly concentrated on my music which is still my first love I worked with some people like Richard Marx and did a couple of world tours with him marry McDonough went to college after the series was married and is now raising a daughter she continues to act and recently played a character on ER live a suffering from lupus a disease she was diagnosed with about four years ago I lobby Congress and I work for women's groups and I try and educate people about about the disease as much as possible so I've tried to take a challenging situation and turn it into something positive Judy Norton now lives in Vancouver Canada she still acts and runs an acting school she is also raising a son Eric Scott decided to build a more secure career outside of show business he's now the vice-president of a growing courier company but returns to the role of Ben for the reunion movies fans who have followed the lives of the stars of The Waltons know that Eric suffered a tragic loss seven years ago when his wife died right after giving birth to their daughter Ashley she was diagnosed with leukemia on Monday we are extracted Ashley's c-section on Tuesday and Thursday morning at 10:30 she passed away so in a period of 72 hours I went from having a very very happy normal a nine-month pregnant wife to being a father and a widower Eric dedicated himself to raising his daughter alone for the last seven years now happily Eric is engaged and will soon be married as far as the youngest kids on the show are concerned David Harper is an artist living in Southern California and kami Kotler now lives in Virginia she is raising her family not all that far from where the family that inspired the Waltons lived the life and times of The Waltons returns in a moment on TNN aside from the Waltons family itself Walton's mountain was home to plenty of colorful characters Joel Conley played general store owner Ike Godsey the specific character in the beginning was just a friendly good old boy as the show went on and I became more ingrained into the stories the character got stronger and he was the only man who owned a store and whole area outstandingly honest very moral as were all the Waltons quite a nice man people say that I put a lot of myself in the character and I hope that's true Joel was born in Buffalo New York in 1928 his family background may have helped him be the perfect actor to play Ike his grandfather was a traveling salesman known as snake oil Johnny his mother was a performer in vaudeville Joe started performing locally at age six after high school he moved out to California to go to college but even though he had been too young to be drafted during World War two he had leave college to serve as part of the occupying army in post-war Japan after his tour of duty he went back to complete his education I finished college graduated in 1951 the Korean War had just broken out the previous year and I was called back into the service it was a big time second lieutenant and I was in combat and in October I got wounded Joe was awarded a Purple Heart and Silver Star for his service to his country he returned to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career soon he was a familiar face on TV shows and hundreds of commercials all leading up to his role as America's best-known general store owner during the first few seasons Waltons audiences also got to see a young actor named John Ritter began on his road to stardom John was one of the most delightful characters we had on the show ever he played a young Minister named Reverend fordwick the young Baptist minister starting out in a very conservative area he made it a funny Killinger because he was so straight-laced and yet so innocent and so I mean it's so tortured and so narrow and so I mean he was a great vivid urgent physical comedy and his sense of the outrageous was already so highly developed neighbors and friends I want to thank and his just simple madness but part of his charm John had attended USC as a drama major and had primarily done stage work prior to the Waltons playing a Reverend was something new for him but he got plenty of support on the set fordwick here is a trained preacher he strainin preach the word of the Lord Ralph Waite was a minister before he was an actor and he helped me a lot with my character about doing the things off entacle II which I really wanted to the only two people who knew every hymn were will gear in Ellen Corby ya Staz I without one plea they knew every lyric every song that you know you could possibly have in a hymnal after a few seasons John Ritter was offered the lead in a new series and offer no actor can refuse the only thing that was bad about me getting the lead on Three's Company was that I knew I'd have to leave the Waltons that was that was it and I really hated to say goodbye because it was it was such a joy every time I got to come on the set so much fun so much fun another person Earl Hamner knew when he was growing up became the Waltons neighbor Verdie grant this reoccurring character was played by stage and television actress Lynn Hamilton oh my I was born in Yazoo City Mississippi which is a little town about that large and down in the Delta and I always wanted to be an actress I'm told that my mom tells me but when I was three I said I wanted to be an actress and she could figure out where that came from because this was before television later we moved to Chicago I went to the Goodman theater which is one of the finest drama schools in the country it's a part of Chicago's Art Institute but there simply weren't any roles for me I'm talking about the 50s I finally had a chance to do a play my third year in the drama school and they put white face makeup on me can you believe it Lynne modeled for awhile and in the 60s her stage career took off she then came to California and has worked continually in shows from Sanford and Son up to the practice but the character she played on the Waltons has a special place in her heart Marie Grant was a very industrious proud lady who lived on the mountain she had no education she was self-taught she had as my mom would say good common sense but what we didn't know is that she was harboring the secret she was illiterate she could not read or write and john-boy teaches our how to read and a whole new world opens up for her as a result of doing that show I think it had such an influence on so many people because I received letters all through the years saying that students children boys and girls and even young adults and even older people have gone back to school to learn how to read recognizing the value of an education as a result of that show The Waltons was such a spirit lifting hard warming piece and preached love and compassion and brotherhood it was a very special show life and times of The Waltons returns in a moment on TNL you're watching the life and times of the Waltons on TNN with the success of the Waltons Earl Hamner had put his little hometown on the map and put the spotlight on his family I gave him credit that Earl won to share his family with the American public but that's really what he really did I mean he was just I'm amazed they still talk to him my brother Jim is a little annoyed when tourists come in to his yard or knock on the door and when his autograph and he's photographed constantly when my mother was alive she used to delight in the tourists who would show up there she would serve them tea and haven't asked them in the house but when her tea bill got its exorbitant I advised her not to do that anymore but she loved people now there's another destination for fans making the pilgrimage to Walton's mountain an abandoned schoolhouse was turned into the Walton's mountain museum it's filled with memorabilia and features rooms recreated from the sets when Earl and the cast came to opening day it caught everyone a little off-guard this is totally overwhelming we thought it was going to be a little function where we would show up and 6,000 people turned out and then they had to turn thousands of people away because the town is so small cBS realized there was still interest in the Waltons and ended up airing three reunion movies in the 1990s it's interesting to do a reunion show because you spent a year or two since you might have seen them and then all of a sudden you're walking down these dirt roads on the back lot which is right outside of the mill the 70s and 80s come back with power and these kids are now all grown and it's a weird it's like life I think we unions are basically an opportunity for the public to see how old and fat everybody has gotten and I had gotten quite a bit older to hell well in a lot fatter did the first one no I it was great I hope there'll be another reunion CBS has a really fine script which treats the Waltons very in a much more recent time and after everybody's grown up and they all have children and I'm hoping that we get to do another reunion it would be great fun to get that group of bandits together again while fans all over the world are all hoping that the television saada of the walton family isn't over the cast did recently reunite for another reason my favorite project in the last year was producing the Waltons Christmas album which is called a Waltons Christmas together again and we all got together and sang a lot of old songs and some new songs and a few of which I wrote and just had a great time loyal followers of the series will undoubtedly make the Waltons Christmas CD a holiday tradition while reruns of the series continue to find new audiences there's something comforting about the Waltons by the end of each episode problems had been solved and the family had persevered Earl Hamner 'he's closing narration would sum it all up it's a television tradition that's worth honoring there was a very moving moment on one of our episodes called the Founders Day and I think it sums up great deal to how I feel about my family and growing up in Virginia I have bought the land and the footsteps of my father's back in time to where the first one trod and stopped saw sky felt wind bent to touch Mother Earth and call this home father mother grow to the sons and daughters to walk the old paths to look back in pride in honored heritage to hear its laughter and its song to grow to stand and be themselves one day remembered I have walked the land in the footsteps of my father's I saw yesterday and now look to tomorrow in Everett all this week experience the warmth of America's favorite TV family piston by original cast member Richard Thomas join me for a week of Waltons movie memories all this week right here on TNN you
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Channel: All About the Waltons
Views: 846,067
Rating: 4.8276997 out of 5
Keywords: The Waltons (TV Program), Behind The Scenes (TV Program), Ralph Waite (Film Actor), Richard Thomas (Film Actor), Michael Learned (TV Actor), Earl Hamner
Id: rhwRTxkF3w0
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 43min 47sec (2627 seconds)
Published: Sun Sep 07 2014
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