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Episode details

Radio 4 Extra,26 Dec 2011,30 mins

Goodnight John Boy

Available for over a year

Frank Cottrell Boyce celebrates one of the great TV families - 'The Waltons'. 'Goodnight, John Boy,' became one of the most common catchphrases of the 1970s, born as it was from one of that decade's most popular TV series. Set in rural Virginia during the Depression, The Waltons offered something very different from the typical TV of the time, which was chiefly made up of urban shows like 'Kojak', 'The Mod Squad' and 'Starsky and Hutch'. Not only was the setting different but so was the set of characters - poor, blue collar people who were broadly speaking happy with their lives - anathema to many commissioning editors. Frank Cottrell Boyce - himself father of seven kids and a successful TV writer - tries to find out precisely why it was such an unlikely TV recipe which proved quite so irresistible to many millions of viewers, and challenges the commonly held view that it was simple nostalgia that played to a Conservative moral agenda. When George Bush Sr. argued that America needed a lot more families like The Waltons and fewer like The Simpsons, he failed to recognise that the show and the family were deeply rooted in the values of FDR's New Deal. Indeed members of the cast such as Will Geer (Grandpa) and Ralph Waite (Pa Walton) were themselves very active on the political left, with Geer blacklisted as a gay communist and Waite refusing to take part in a photo shoot with President Nixon. Boyce speaks to Earl Hamner, who wrote the books upon which the series was based Plus cast members including: Ralph Waite - Pa Walton Richard Thomas - John Boy Walton Kami Cotler - Elizabeth Walton Producer: Geoff Bird First broadcast on ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Radio 4 in December 2011.

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