Petticoat Junction
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Petticoat Junction | |
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Petticoat Junction title card |
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Format | Sitcom |
Created by | Paul Henning |
Starring | Bea Benaderet ('63-'68) Edgar Buchanan Linda Kaye Jeannine Riley ('63-'65) Gunilla Hutton ('65-'66) Meredith MacRae ('66-'70) Pat Woodell ('63-'65) Lori Saunders ('65-'70) Smiley Burnette ('63-'67) Rufe Davis ('63-'68) Frank Cady Don Washbrook ('63-'64) Russell Horton ('63-'64) Mike Minor ('66-'70) June Lockhart ('68-'70) |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons | 7 |
No. of episodes | 222 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
Jay Sommers Charles Stewart |
Running time | 30 Minutes |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | CBS |
Original run | September 24, 1963 – April 4, 1970 |
External links | |
IMDb profile |
Petticoat Junction was an American situation comedy produced by Filmways, which originally aired on the CBS network from 1963 to 1970. The rights to the show are held by CBS Paramount Domestic Television. The setting for the series was the Shady Rest Hotel in the farming town of Hooterville.
A petticoat is a garment worn under a woman's skirt. The opening titles of the series featured a display of petticoats hanging on the side of a large water tank. The "junction" in the title indicates that the Shady Rest Hotel was situated at a crossing of two train lines (though only one is ever mentioned).
Contents |
[edit] Background
Set in the rural town of Hooterville, the show followed the goings-on at the Shady Rest Hotel, of which Kate Bradley (Bea Benaderet) was the proprietor. Her lazy Uncle Joe (Edgar Buchanan) helped her in the day-to-day running of the business, while she served as a mediator in the various minor crises that befell her three daughters: Betty Jo, Bobbie Jo, and Billie Jo. The actresses portraying Billie Jo and Bobbie Jo changed over the years. Billie Jo was played by Jeannine Riley the first two seasons, and then by Gunilla Hutton for one year before Meredith MacRae assumed the role for the show's remaining seasons. Pat Woodell was the original Bobbie Jo for two years, with Lori Saunders playing the part subsequently.
Betty Jo was portrayed by Linda Kaye (Henning), daughter of series creator Paul Henning, for the entire run. The character of handsome crop duster Steve Elliott (Mike Minor) was added to the show at the start of its fourth season as a love interest for eldest daughter Billie Jo. However, in a plot twist he suddenly married Kate Bradley's youngest daughter Betty Jo a season later. Henning and Minor were dating and later married in real life, divorcing after 5 years and no children. They set up housekeeping in a cottage near tracks between Hooterville and Pixley. A baby was added the following season.
Much of the original focus of the show was on the Hooterville Cannonball, a steam-driven train (serviced by the above-mentioned water tower) run more like a taxi service by its engineer, Charley Pratt (Smiley Burnette) and conductor, Floyd Smoot (Rufe Davis). It was not uncommon for the Cannonball to make an unscheduled stop in order to go fishing or pick fruit for Kate Bradley's menu at the Shady Rest Hotel. Occasionally, Betty Jo Bradley could be found with her hand on the Cannonball's throttle, as running the train home from trips into town was one of her favorite pastimes. Those trips usually consisted of a stop at "Drucker's Store," run by Sam Drucker (Frank Cady).
Another character was the unnamed canine companion of the sisters, referred to simply as "dog". It was portrayed by "Higgins", who later went on to even greater fame as Benji.
Homer Bedloe, played by actor Charles Lane, was vice president of the C.&F.W. Railroad. Bedloe was a mean-spirited railroad executive who visited the Shady Rest Hotel periodically attempting to find justification for ending the train service of the Hooterville Cannonball, but never succeeding. In the series pilot, it was established that the branch line had become separated from the main part of the railroad several years earlier, but that nobody had ever bothered to do anything about it, so the crew just kept operating the Cannonball on the remaining section of track.
The show benefitted greatly in its first four seasons from the very strong lead-in of The Red Skelton Show, which immediately preceded it on Tuesday nights. In its first season it even exceeded Skelton's ratings, finishing at #4 overall for the season. The rest of its time on Tuesday nights, it remained in the Nielsen top 25.
Illness kept Bea Benaderet away for the last portion of the 1967-68 season, and she made only a few appearances when the show returned in fall 1968. Storylines had her away on a trip, as everyone's hopes were that the actress would recover. When Kathy Jo Elliot was born to Betty Jo ("The Valley has a Baby"), Kate Bradley is seen full-back to the audience in the last scene, as actress Edna Laird played the part with Benaderet's voice-over. The episode aired 13 days after Benaderet's October 13, 1968, death from lung cancer. Henning had cast Rosemary DeCamp in several episodes as Kate's sister Helen, which completed the series' fifth season. Choosing not to recast the Kate role, or to sign DeCamp on full-time (she was also playing Ann Marie's mom on, "That Girl"), the new character of hotel resident Dr. Janet Craig, played by June Lockhart, was created, as a counsel of sorts for the girls. Though still beloved by fans, the central premise of a country family was lost without a motherly figure. The long absence of Kate was only mentioned in passing during the final season, when Uncle Joe gave a guest a key to "the Kate Bradley memorial suite". The decline in ratings, which began when the show moved to Saturday night, contnued to slide. The show was canceled in 1970 as a precursor to the infamous CBS "rural purge", when all the other country-themed shows were axed the following season.
The show was set in the same fictional universe as the rural television comedy Green Acres, also set in Hooterville. Both shows shared such characters as Sam Drucker, Newt Kiley, and Floyd Smoot. A number of core Green Acres characters, such as Fred and Doris Ziffel, Arnold the Pig, Newt Kiley and Ben Miller, actually got their "start" on Petticoat Junction in the 1964-1965 season, which saw a number of scripts written by Acres creator Jay Sommers. Characters on all of Henning's creations sometimes "crossed over" into another's programs, especially so during Green Acres first two seasons. In a 1968 episode ("Granny, the Baby Expert"), Granny from The Beverly Hillbillies comes to Hooterville to tend to Betty Jo and Steve's baby. Granny looks at a picture of Kate and is astonished at her resemblance to Jed's cousin, Pearl Bodine (previously played by Benaderet), and prior to her visit to Hooterville, reminded Jed that he was related to Kate through Pearl. Other crossover shows include one where the Clampetts, Milburn Drysdale, and Miss Jane spend both Thanksgiving and Christmas of 1968 in Hooterville on The Beverly Hillbillies; and a 1970 episode of The Beverly Hillbillies in which Mr. Drysdale thought that billionaire Howard Hughes lived in Hooterville (the man turned out to be Howard Hewes, who owned the Hooterville airport).
[edit] Cancellation
Petticoat Junction was cancelled in the spring of 1970 due to declining ratings, a full year before the infamous "rural purge" by CBS of the other shows that, in the words of Pat Buttram, "had a tree in them."
CBS was lagging behind in certain key demographics by the late 60s, and decided it wanted a more hip, urban lineup to compete for younger viewers. Its sister shows Green Acres and The Beverly Hillbillies fell victim, as did Hee Haw and Mayberry R.F.D., the latter two of which were still garnering decent ratings.
Jeannine Riley (the first Billie Jo) and Lori Saunders (the second Bobbie Jo) would later star together in the 1973-74 comedy series, "Dusty's Trail".
Jeannine Riley and Gunilla Hutton (the second Billie Jo) were regulars on the TV show Hee Haw during the CBS years of the show from 1969 to 1971. Jeannine left the show in 1971, while Gunilla stayed with the show until 1991.
During the last season of The Beverly Hillbillies in 1970-1971, Lori Saunders and Mike Minor appeared on the show but in different characters, Saunders playing one of Mr. Drysdale's secretaries and Minor playing out of work actor Dick Bremerkamp.
Higgins the dog and Edgar Buchanan (Uncle Joe) reunited for the first "Benji" feature movie in 1974.
[edit] Syndication
After its cancellation, Filmways and Paul Henning's company sold the show to CBS. Its distribution has changed hands over the years due to corporate changes involving Viacom, which in 2006 split into two separate companies. Today CBS Paramount Television handles syndication.
The Technicolor (1965-70) episodes were shown in syndication for many years after the show's cancellation. However, the rights to the black-and-white (1963-65) episodes were not resolved and they were not included in the syndication package, although two of these episodes have been shown on occasion on TV Land.
[edit] DVD Releases
Some of the black-and-white episodes are now in the public domain, their copyrights having lapsed. As a result, there have been numerous releases on discount DVDs of a group of these episodes (although with generic bluegrass-like theme music instead of the familiar opening and closing music, which is still under copyright). The Paul Henning Estate holds the original film elements, and in 2005 allowed 20 of the black-and-white episodes to be officially released on DVD in "ultimate collections" via MPI Home Video.
DVD Name | Episodes | Release Date | Additional Information |
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Petticoat Junction - Ultimate Collection | 20 | August 30, 2005 |
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[edit] Episode List
[edit] Ratings
- 1963-1964: #4
- 1964-1965: #15
- 1965-1966: #21
- 1966-1967: #24
- 1967-1968: n.a.
- 1968-1969: n.a.
- 1969-1970: n.a.
[edit] Trivia
- Some exterior shots were filmed partially in Jamestown, California, the site of Railtown 1897 State Historic Park.[citation needed]
- The original idea for Petticoat Junction came from Henning's wife, whose family ran a small hotel in Eldon, Missouri in the early 20th century.[citation needed]