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Peyton Place



First Aired in 1964

Peyton Place was America's first truly successful primetime serial. The series was the brainchild of veteran producer Paul Monash. Impressed with the success of Britain's monster hit Coronation Street, Monash wanted to import that UK series; however, ABC executives felt that US audiences would not cotton to the thick British accents and kitchen-sink drama.

Monash countered with a slightly revamped version of Peyton Place, which had been a wildly popular novel by Grace Metalious and subsequent Hollywood film starring Lana Turner and Diane Varsi. While the book and series centered on the pious, hypocritical behavior of New England residents, the TV series eschewed most of that lasciviousness and told the story of life in a small New England village. In many ways, the TV program resembled a dramatic version of The Andy Griffith Show, featuring a recurring cast of warm, sympathetic characters who lived, loved, and died in a quaint town. Like the former series, Peyton Place was remarkably well-written and superbly acted by a cast of veteran actors and talented newcomers, several of whom were rewarded with Emmy nominations for their work.

By far, the most popular performers were Mia Farrow, Ryan O'Neal, and Barbara Parkins playing, respectively, confused young adults Allison MacKenzie, Rodney Harrington, and Betty Anderson.

Before the program went on the air, Monash consulted with veteran soap producer Irna Phillips who had created and wrote top-rated daytime serials As the World Turns and The Guiding Light. Phillips made several crucial decisions that ensured a long, healthy run for Peyton Place. First, she switched core character Michael Rossi's profession from high school principal to town doctor. This gave him a logical reason to participate actively in the lives of all Peyton Place residents, not just the school-age teens. Secondly, Phillips wisely dropped the novel and film's incest story involving Selena Cross. While this plot played well in the film and book, it was highly inappropriate for an evening network drama.

After two years, Mia Farrow decided to exit the story to seek fame in films and concentrate on her highly publicized marriage to Old Blue Eyes Frank Sinatra. At that point, Barbara Parkins' Betty, who originally had been slated to die after the first twelve episodes, became the central character in Peyton Place intrigue. Subsequent ingenues like Leigh Taylor-Young and Joyce Jillson were brought in to help replace Allison's innocence, but none of these characters ever truly captured the imagination of PP's audience. Finally, in 1968, Dorothy Malone and Tim O'Connor were given their walking papers as Connie and Elliot Carson. That fall, Leslie Harrington and Martin Peyton were also disposed of.

In its final season, Peyton Place attempted to recapture Nielsen popularity by restoring its original formula. Barbara Rush and Elizabeth "Tippy" Walker were brought in as the Mackenziesque mother/daughter duo Marsha and Carolyn Russell. Also, in a nod to the "relevance" campaign of the late 60's, the soap added an African-American neurosurgeon and his confused son to the cast, but these changes were unable to stop the slide in ratings. By the winter of 1969, Peyton Place ceased its two-episode telecasts, airing just once once a week. With abysmal ratings, the series quietly left the air in June 1969, leaving all loose plot threads untied.

Although the series enjoyed only a modest five-year run, it proved that primetime soaps could be enormously successful, and it paved the way for similar hits such as Dallas, Dynasty, Falcon Crest, Knot's Landing, and Melrose Place.

Peyton Place also set records. At 514 episodes, it ranks number two in the production of more episodes than any other dramatic series in primetime history, second only to Gunsmoke which accumulated over 600 episodes. Additionally, every single episode of Peyton Place was an original telecast, giving it the most consecutive, original episodes of any television program in U.S. primetime history.

NBC launched a daytime soap opera entitled Return to Peyton Place in 1972. Although several actors from the original primetime show appeared, the soap failed to satisfy viewers who hoped the daytime version would conclude the previously dangling storylines. In fact, the character of Allison Mackenzie was heavily featured on the daytime soap (played by Kathy Glass and later Pamela Susan Shoop) even though she had mysteriously vanished on the primetime series.

In 1977, NBC aired a reunion TV-movie entitled Murder in Peyton Place. A few former characters appeared, played by the original actors. Then in 1985, with nighttime soaps suddenly in vogue, NBC produced Peyton Place: The Next Generation, another attempt at reviving the infamous serial. Unfortunately, both TV movies were for the most part unfaithful to the parent program's narrative and didn't perform well enough in the ratings to launch a new weekly series.



Peyton Place Broadcast History:

September 1964 - June 1965
Tuesday/Thursday 9:30-10:00 pm (Eastern Time)

June-October 1965
Tuesday/Thursday/Friday 9:30-10:00pm (ET)

November 1965-August 1966
Monday/Tuesday/Friday 9:30-10:00pm (ET)

September 1966-January 1967
Monday/Wednesday 9:30-10:00pm (ET)

January-August 1967
Monday/Tuesday 9:30-10:00pm (ET)

September 1967-September 1968
Monday/Thursday 9:30-10:00pm (ET)

September 1968-January 1969
Monday 9:30-10:00pm (ET)
Wednesday 8:30-9:00pm (ET)

January-June 1969
Monday 9:00-9:30pm (ET)

Nielsen Ratings Top 25
#9 Thursday episode 1964-65
#20 Tuesday episode 1964-65
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Episodes:


Season 1:
1. Pilot
2. PP-2
3. PP-3
4. PP-4
5. PP-5
6. PP-6
7. PP-7
8. PP-8
9. PP-9
10. PP-10
11. PP-11
12. PP-12
13. PP-13
14. PP-14
15. PP-15
16. PP-16
17. PP-17
18. PP-18
19. PP-19
20. PP-20
21. PP-21
22. PP-22
23. PP-23
24. PP-24
25. PP-25
26. PP-26
27. PP-27
28. PP-28
29. PP-29
30. PP-30
31. PP-31
32. PP-32
33. PP-33
34. PP-34
35. PP-35
36. PP-36
37. PP-37
38. PP-38
39. PP-39
40. PP-40
41. PP-41
42. PP-42
43. pp-43
44. pp-44
45. pp-45
46. pp-46
47. pp-47
48. pp-48
49. pp-49
50. pp-50
51. pp-51
52. pp-52
53. pp-53
54. pp-54
55. pp-55
56. pp-56
57. pp-57
58. pp-58
59. pp-59
60. pp-60
61. pp-61
62. pp-62
63. pp-63
64. pp-64
65. pp-65
66. pp-66
67. pp-67
68. pp-68
69. pp-69
70. pp-70
71. pp-71
72. pp-72
73. pp-73
74. pp-74
75. pp-75
76. pp-76
77. pp-77
78. pp-78
79. pp-79
80. pp-80
81. pp-81
82. pp-82
83. pp-83
84. pp-84
85. pp-85
86. pp-86
87. pp-87
88. pp-88
89. pp-89
90. pp-90
91. pp-91
92. pp-92
93. pp-93
94. pp-94
95. pp-95
96. pp-96
97. pp-97
98. pp-98
99. pp-99
100. pp-100
101. pp-101
102. pp-102
103. pp-103
104. pp-104
105. pp-105
106. pp-106
107. pp-107
108. pp-108
109. pp-109
110. pp-110
111. pp-111
112. pp-111
113. pp-112
114. pp-113
115. pp-114

Season 2:
1. pp-115
2. pp-116
3. pp-117
4. pp-118
5. pp-119
6. pp-120
7. pp-121
8. pp-121
9. pp-122
10. pp-123
11. pp-124
12. pp-125
13. pp-126
14. pp-127
15. pp-127
16. pp-128
17. pp-129
18. pp-130
19. pp-131
20. pp-132
21. pp-133
22. pp-134
23. pp-135
24. pp-136
25. pp-137
26. pp-138
27. pp-139
28. pp-140
29. pp-141
30. pp-142
31. pp-143
32. pp-144
33. pp-145
34. pp-146
35. pp-147
36. pp-148
37. pp-149
38. pp-150
39. pp-151
40. pp-152
41. pp-153
42. pp-154
43. pp-155
44. pp-156
45. pp-157
46. pp-158
47. pp-159
48. pp-160
49. pp-161
50. pp-162
51. pp-163
52. pp-164
53. pp-165
54. pp-166
55. pp-167
56. pp-168
57. pp-169
58. pp-170
59. pp-171
60. pp-172
61. pp-173
62. pp-174
63. pp-175
64. pp-176
65. pp-177
66. pp-178
67. pp-179
68. pp-180
69. pp-181
70. pp-182
71. pp-183
72. pp-184
73. pp-185
74. pp-186
75. pp-187
76. pp-188
77. pp-189
78. pp-190
79. pp-191
80. pp-192
81. pp-193
82. pp-194
83. pp-195
84. pp-196
85. pp-197
86. pp-198
87. pp-199
88. pp-200
89. pp-201
90. pp-202
91. pp-203
92. pp-204
93. pp-205
94. pp-206
95. pp-207
96. pp-208
97. pp-209
98. pp-210
99. pp-211
100. pp-212
101. pp-213
102. pp-214
103. pp-215
104. pp-216
105. pp-217
106. pp-218
107. pp-219
108. pp-220
109. pp-221
110. pp-222
111. pp-223
112. pp-224
113. pp-225
114. pp-226
115. pp-227
116. pp-228
117. pp-229
118. pp-230
119. pp-231
120. pp-232
121. pp-233
122. pp-234
123. pp-235
124. pp-236
125. pp-237
126. pp-238
127. pp-239
128. pp-240
129. pp-241
130. pp-242
131. pp-243
132. pp-244
133. pp-245
134. pp-246
135. pp-247
136. pp-248
137. pp-249
138. pp-250
139. pp-251
140. pp-252
141. pp-253
142. pp-254
143. pp-255
144. pp-256
145. pp-257
146. pp-258
147. pp-259
148. pp-260
149. pp-261
150. pp-262
151. pp-263
152. pp-264
153. pp-265
154. pp-266
155. pp-267

Season 3:
1. pp-268
2. pp-269
3. pp-270
4. pp-271
5. pp-272
6. pp-273
7. pp-274
8. pp-275
9. pp-276
10. pp-277
11. pp-278
12. pp-279
13. pp-280
14. pp-281
15. pp-282
16. pp-283
17. pp-284
18. pp-285
19. pp-286
20. pp-287
21. pp-288
22. pp-289
23. pp-290
24. pp-291
25. pp-292
26. pp-293
27. pp-294
28. pp-295
29. pp-296
30. pp-297
31. pp-298
32. pp-299
33. pp-300
34. pp-301
35. pp-302
36. pp-303
37. pp-304
38. pp-305
39. pp-306
40. pp-307
41. pp-308
42. pp-309
43. pp-310
44. pp-311
45. pp-312
46. pp-313
47. pp-314
48. pp-315
49. pp-316
50. pp-317
51. pp-318
52. pp-319
53. pp-320
54. pp-321
55. pp-322
56. pp-323
57. pp-324
58. pp-325
59. pp-326
60. pp-327
61. pp-328
62. pp-329
63. pp-330
64. pp-331
65. pp-332
66. pp-333
67. pp-334
68. pp-335
69. pp-336
70. pp-337
71. pp-338
72. pp-339
73. pp-340
74. pp-341
75. pp-342
76. pp-343
77. pp-344
78. pp-345
79. pp-346
80. pp-347
81. pp-348
82. pp-349
83. pp-350
84. pp-351
85. pp-352
86. pp-353
87. pp-354
88. pp-355
89. pp-356
90. pp-357
91. pp-358
92. pp-359
93. pp-360
94. pp-361
95. pp-362
96. pp-363
97. pp-364
98. pp-365
99. pp-366
100. pp-367
101. pp-368

Season 4:
1. pp-369
2. pp-370
3. pp-371
4. pp-372
5. pp-373
6. pp-374
7. pp-375
8. pp-376
9. pp-377
10. pp-378
11. pp-379
12. pp-380
13. pp-381
14. pp-382
15. pp-383
16. pp-384
17. pp-385
18. pp-386
19. pp-387
20. pp-388
21. pp-389
22. pp-390
23. pp-391
24. pp-392
25. pp-393
26. pp-394
27. pp-395
28. pp-396
29. pp-397
30. pp-398
31. pp-399
32. pp-400
33. pp-401
34. pp-402
35. pp-403
36. pp-404
37. pp-405
38. pp-406
39. pp-407
40. pp-408
41. pp-409
42. pp-410
43. pp-411
44. pp-412
45. pp-413
46. pp-414
47. pp-415
48. pp-416
49. pp-417
50. pp-418
51. pp-419
52. pp-420
53. pp-421
54. pp-422
55. pp-423
56. pp-424
57. pp-425
58. pp-426
59. pp-427
60. pp-428
61. pp-429
62. pp-430
63. pp-431
64. pp-432
65. pp-433
66. pp-434
67. pp-435
68. pp-436
69. pp-437
70. pp-438
71. pp-439
72. pp-440
73. pp-441
74. pp-442
75. pp-443
76. pp-444
77. pp-445
78. pp-446
79. pp-447
80. pp-448
81. pp-449
82. pp-450
83. pp-451
84. pp-452
85. pp-453
86. pp-454
87. pp-455
88. pp-456
89. pp-457
90. pp-458
91. pp-459
92. pp-460

Season 5:
1. pp-461
2. pp-462
3. pp-463
4. pp-464
5. pp-465
6. pp-466
7. pp-467
8. pp-468
9. pp-469
10. pp-470
11. pp-471
12. pp-472
13. pp-473
14. pp-474
15. pp-475
16. pp-476
17. pp-477
18. pp-478
19. pp-479
20. pp-480
21. pp-481
22. pp-482
23. pp-483
24. pp-484
25. pp-485
26. pp-486
27. pp-487
28. pp-488
29. pp-489
30. pp-490
31. pp-491
32. pp-492
33. pp-493
34. pp-494
35. pp-495
36. pp-496
37. pp-497
38. pp-498
39. pp-499
40. pp-500
41. pp-501
42. pp-502
43. pp-503
44. pp-504
45. pp-505
46. pp-506
47. pp-507
48. pp-508
49. pp-509
50. pp-510
51. pp-511
52. pp-512
53. pp-513
54. The End



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Relevant Links:

Peyton Place CD1

Peyton Place CD2

Randolph, Peyton

Rous, Francis Peyton

Last Place You Look

There's A Place For Us


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