[75 years ago this week, the first network TV Western, Hopalong Cassidy debuted. Few genres have been influential for longer or across more media, so this week I’ll AmericanStudy Hopalong and other Westerns—add your responses & analyses in the comments, pardner!]
On how the
TV show built on an established character, and two important ways it changed
things.
When Hopalong
Cassidy premiered on NBC on
June 24th, 1949, it did so as an extension of nearly a half-century
of cultural representations of the character. Hopalong
was originally created in a 1904 short story by author Clarence E. Mulford, who would
over the next thirty-five years write 28 novels
and numerous additional stories about the character. Even more popular were the 66 films produced between
1935 and 1948 (for an average of nearly five films per year, if you’re counting),
all starring William Boyd
in the title role. So when Boyd bought the rights to the character from Mulford
and to the films from producer Harry Sherman, sold those rights to NBC, and began
playing the character in the TV series in June 1949 (and in a
radio show that launched around the same moment), he knew that he and the
show would have a built-in, longstanding, and multimedia audience, making this
first TV Western not nearly as much of an unknown quantity as that phrase might
suggest.
While the character
might not have been new in 1949, the genre of the TV Western unquestionably
was. Even though the first few episodes were edited versions of existing
Hopalong films (before original TV episodes began to be produced and aired), they
still aired once a week in a scheduled time slot on a national television network.
And I would argue that this represented a significant evolution in the existing
form of storytelling known as the serial—not the 19th century genre
of serialized
print publications that audiences could acquire and then read when and how
they wanted; nor the early 20th century genre of film serials that required going
to a movie theater to catch the new episode; but a serialized TV show, gradually
released installments that every audience member would watch in their own home but
all at precisely the same time (particularly in that early era before later evolutions
like reruns and home video). Phrases like “appointment television” and “must see TV” emerged down
the road to describe particular shows or time slots, but in truth those
concepts were never more relevant than for this first generation of TV shows,
which audiences had to see at that precise moment or risk missing out on that
part of the story entirely.
Perhaps that
serialization contributed to the immense popularity of the Hopalong TV
show, or perhaps it was just the built-in audience for the character by then—but
whatever the case, the show was indeed a mega-hit, and that popularity led to
other significant cultural shifts. To cite one of the most individually
striking examples, in 1950 the character of Hopalong Cassidy
was the first licensed image featured on a children’s lunchbox, and shortly
thereafter sales for the Aladdin
Industries lunchboxes overall rose from 50,000 to 600,000 per year. That’s just
the tip of the iceberg of the more than $70 million worth of Hopalong products produced
in 1950 alone, much of it directly targeted kids as the primary audience—as
illustrated by the reference to “Hopalong boots” as a desired present in Meredith
Wilson’s hit song “It’s
Beginning to Look a Lot like Christmas” (1951). Kids had no doubt been part
of the audience for Western films (and books, and radio shows, and etc.)
throughout the genre’s history, but the TV show’s popularity nonetheless reflected
a potent evolution and emphasis of that children’s entertainment side to this
cultural form.
Next
Western tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Westerns you’d analyze?
PPS. On Twitter, James (Randy) Fromm adds:
ReplyDeleteApparently, according to my mother years ago, I was a diehard Hopalong junkie as a child in the early-50s. He was my ‘hero’. I wanted to be Hopalong … or, at least, in his posse.
The Western has always interested me. The avenues of interest changed as my studies shifted to literature and, now, rhetoric. At this point, my interest (and studies) are oriented in part toward the relationships between the Western and American vigilantism (and the extended influences to nationalism and politics).
To answer your postscript question about other Westerns to study (ones I might turn to after finishing the PhD, if I live so long), I offer up:
Silverado as THE sendup of all possible Westerns;
Appaloosa (one of my all-time favorites);
Riders of the Purple Sage, in all of its manifestations and adaptations.
And those are just off the top of my head, first thing in the morning.