Posted on 01/28/2019 4:24:29 AM PST by vannrox
When The Dukes of Hazzard premiered on January 26, 1979, it was intended to be a temporary patch in CBSs primetime schedule until The Incredible Hulk returned. Only nine episodes were ordered, and few executives at the network had any expectation that the seriesabout two amiable brothers at odds with the corrupt law enforcement of Hazzard Countywould become both a ratings powerhouse and a merchandising bonanza. Check out some of these lesser-known facts about the Duke boys, their extended family, and the gravity-defying General Lee, which made their small-screen debut 40 years ago today.
CBS chairman William Paley never quite bought into the idea of spinning his opinion to match the company line. Having built CBS from a radio station to one of the Big Three television networks, he had harvested talent as diverse as Norman Lear and Lucille Ball, a marked contrast to the Southern-fried humor of The Dukes of Hazzard. In his 80s when it became a top 10 series and seeing no reason to censor himself, Paley repeatedly and publicly described the show as lousy.
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While John Schneider and Tom Wopat were the ostensible stars of the show, both the actors and the show's producers quickly found out that the main attraction was the 1969 Dodge Chargerdubbed the General Leethat trafficked brothers Bo and Luke Duke from one caper to another. Of the 60,000 letters the series was receiving every month in 1981, 35,000 wanted more information on or pictures of the car.
When the show began casting in 1978, producers threw out a wide net searching for the leads. Dennis Quaid was among those interested in the role of Luke Dukewhich eventually went to Wopatbut he had a condition: he would only agree to the show if his then-wife, P.J. Soles, was cast at the Dukes cousin, Daisy. Soles wasnt a proper fit for the supporting part, which put Quaid off; Catherine Bach was eventually cast as Daisy.
New York native Schneider was only 18 years old when he went in to read for the role of Bo Duke. The problem: producers wanted someone 24 to 30 years old. Schneider lied about his age and passed himself off as a Southern archetype, strutting in wearing a cowboy hat, drinking a beer, and spitting tobacco. He also told them he could do stunt driving. It was a good enough performance to land him the show.
After Schneider was cast, the show needed to locate an actor who could complement Bo. Stage actor Wopat was flown in for a screen test; Schneider happened to be in the bathroom when Wopat walked in after him. The two began talking about musicSchneider had seen a guitar under the stall doorand found they had an easy camaraderie. After flushing, the two did a scene. Wopat was hired immediately.
Bachs omnipresent jean shorts were such a hit that any kind of cutoffs quickly became known as Daisy Dukes, after her character. But they were so skimpy that the network was concerned censors wouldnt allow them. A negotiation began, and it was eventually decided that Bach would wear some extremely sheer pantyhose to make sure there were no clothing malfunctions.
Shirley Moore, Bachs former grade school teacher, went on to work in the White House. After Bach sent her a poster, she was surprised to hear back that then-First Lady Nancy Reagan was enamored with it. Im the envy of the White House and Im having your poster framed, Moore wrote in a letter. Mrs. Reagan saw the picture and fell in love with it. Bach sent more posters, which presumably became part of the decor during the Reagan administration.
Wopat and Schneider famously walked off the series in 1982 after demanding a cut of the shows massive merchandising revenuewhich was, by one estimate, more than $190 million in 1981 alone. They were replaced with Byron Cherry and Christopher Mayer, cousins of the Duke boys, who were reviled by fans for being scabs. The two leads eventually came back, but it wasnt the only time Warner Bros. had to deal with irate actors. James Best, who portrayed crooked sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane, refused to film five episodes because he had no private dressing room in which to change his clothes; the production just hosed him down when he got dirty. Ben Jones, who played Cooter the mechanic, briefly left because he wanted his character to sport a beard and producers preferred he be clean-shaven.
As established, the General Lee was a primary attraction for viewers of the series. For years, the show wrecked dozens of Chargers by jumping, crashing, and otherwise abusing them, which created some terrific footage. For its seventh and final season in 1985, the show turned to a miniature effects team in an effort to save on production costs: it was cheaper to mangle a Hot Wheels-sized model than the real thing. It was a source of embarrassment to all of us on the show, Wopat told E!.
A stapleand, eventually, clichéof action films everywhere, the slide over the hood was popularized by Tom Wopat. While it may have been tempting to take credit, Wopat said it was unintentional and that the first time he tried clearing the hood, the cars antenna wound up injuring him.
Warner Bros. capitalized on the shows phenomenal popularity with an animated series, The Dukes, which was produced by Hanna-Barbera and aired in 1983. Taking advantage of the form, the Duke boys traveled internationally, racing Boss Hogg through Greece or Hong Kong. Perhaps owing to the fact that the live-action series was already considered enough of a cartoon, the animated series only lasted 20 episodes.
At the time the series originally aired, little was made of the General Lee sporting a Confederate flag on its hood. In 2015, after then-South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley spoke out against the depiction of the flag in popular culture, Warner Bros. elected to stop licensing products with the original roof. The company announced that all future Dukes merchandise would drop the design element. Schneider disagreed with the decision, telling The Hollywood Reporter, Is the flag used as such in other applications? Yes, but certainly not on the Dukes ... Labeling anyone who has the flag a racist seems unfair to those who are clearly never meanin no harm.'
A red '69 Charger, roof emblazoned, races across your screen, closely followed by 50 media vans and black SUVs. As the action pans you see they are approaching the Snake River Canyon. The pursuers slam their brakes as the Charger goes airborne and lands softly on the far side. Out of the near side pile-up crawls a white suited Robert Mueller and Sheriff Jim Acosta, followed by his dog, Nancy. On the far side we can now read MAGA on the Charger's roof. Out vault the Trump Boys, Junior and Eric, and a Daisy Duke clad Ivanka. Junior waves across the abyss, "Daddy says nothing is impossible with the General Laissez-Faire!"
Then somehow a rural show about a couple of brothers driving around and doing good deeds while being chased by dopey lawmen slipped past him and became a giant hit. Must have driven him insane.
She is Dynamite!
Oops! Mu bad.
In the late 60s they had a cleansing and moved away from shows that were rural based to city based.
Been kinda downhill since.
At 12 years old, I thought it was great. Car chases, villains, ridiculous plots, and of course, Daisy! I sort of cringe now that I subjected my parents to it on our one color TV on Friday nights. It was pretty stupid, if fun.
“...urban...”
I imagine P&G convinced themselves that’s where the money was, (Probably true!)
I had a TV exec once tell me that daytime TV viewing hence commercials were focused more on the “urban” & female TV audience. Over the years because of working demographic changes more “urban” focus then female. Even though the “urbans” didn’t have the deep pockets of the females, there were more of them.
“Yeah. The liberal mindset said no guns for the good ole boys. But dynamite strapped to arrows was cute and like the A team, nobody got killed”
Oh baloney. it was circa 1980. The point of the movie wasn’t to do like today and make a dark, brooding, blood soaked horror-fest.
It was supposed to be good clean fun. Also back then ISIS was a hot chick professor who righted wrongs without killing anyone either.
That brings up a good observation I had to the reactions of several women when the Dukes of Hazzard movie came out.
They really objected to Jessica Simpson being cast in the role of Daisy. Their reasoning?
“She can’t play Daisy. Daisy was SMART!”
And looking back at the series I can see their point. That Daisy was feminine and redneck and tough and smoking hot....but she was smarter than the average bear too.
Smart and could handle a C.B. Radio!
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