Was not real then and it is not real now... get a grip!
Was not real then and it is not real now... get a grip!
The show was filmed entirely in California and Utah, and looks it. You can always tell which scenes were shot on sound stages too. It's hard to describe, but although the vegetation looks fairly real the scene still somehow comes out looking fake. The sound is different as well. When an interior door is opened showing the outside you can tell the background is painted. Same on Bewitched and probably other shows of the era.I always get a kick out of the mountainous, semi-arid geography of the show as well. Hard to hide the true shooting location of the show. Definitely not filmed in KY (or anywhere east of the Mississippi).
Yes, very dramatic and once in awhile Daniel Boone or someone else caught on fire. They must have done that on purpose and had on some fireproof material under the costume. Wouldn't be surprised if they used asbestos.I loved it as a kid, but havent seen it in ...probably fifty years. I distinctly remember though that almost every show there was a fight resulting in someone rolling across the campfire. Poor Fess Parker....between D.Boone and Davey Crockett it must have been impossible to get any other roles being so type cast.
I personally really like the "ballpoint pen" quills where they can write with barely having to dip the quill in ink.I like how in those old shows how they are able to fire multiple times without reloading.
Remember Ed Ames as Mingo? Lest we forget:
I can do the Vulcan salute without having to hold my fingers with my other hand first.wait till he gives that famous hand sign. can any one do it.? it isn't easy.
Oh, it's worse than that. They start near the beginning of the Revolutionary War in Season 1, and in all seasons jump back and forth between "during the Revolutionary War" to "after the Revolutionary War" like a yo-yo, anywhere from a few years to up to thirty years' difference. One episode definitely mentions Daniel participating in Revolutionary War battles though no episode actually depicts that. Daniel is shown doing various other things to aid the Revolution and in one episode he even supplies information and aid to the British which is left unexplained.I've been watching the series myself. It was supposed to be available on Amazon Prime but apparently not in my area. I ended up ordering the DVD set off eBay. I took this same photo and was going to post it. You beat me too it!
My only complaints are it's often not formatted for my TV and there is no Closed Captioning. It's more Hollywood writing than actual events. They seem to have completely passed over his Military Service in the War for Independence. The beginning of the second season has us already being the "United States of America".
I do enjoy seeing some of the actors in their younger versions.
You mean they didn't have rattle cans back in them days??!!love the stencil lettering. still a good show.
men wore tights long before that..... ask robin hood and his crewDid men really wear tight pants like that back then? They almost look like leotards tucked into Daniels boots.
Although it says so right in the song...every version, of which there were at least half a dozen.Daniel did not ware coonskin cap
Yes, early in Season 1 (probably episode 1) it was stated that a war would break out soon. This specifically sets the year of Season 1 as 1775 and reasonably a year should be added for each season. At the beginning of the series, either the Revolution was just about to start, or it had started and word just hadn't reached Kentucky yet. Suddenly in Season 2, episode 7, "The Aaron Burr Story," they go as late as 1807. The capture of Aaron Burr occurred at Wakefield, in Mississippi Territory, now in the state of Alabama, (not Kentucky) on February 19, 1807, by Edmund P. Gaines and Nicholas Perkins III (not Daniel Boone). Besides the considerable fact twisting and time jump, the episode contains other things which did not exist in 1776 such as Federal troops. In other episodes, it is "long after the war" and George Washington is president (1789-1797), in another episode John Adams is president (1797-1801), in another Boone saves the Louisiana Purchase from the British, during which time Thomas Jefferson was president (1801-1809). 1807 is the latest I have seen them go specifically and I am well along in Season 5. Some episodes take place not long after the American Revolution, such as one in which a man who switched sides during the war returns to Boonesborough, while at least two take place during the French Revolution (1789-1799) and some mention the whiskey tax of 1791 and its repeal in 1802. During all of this, they keep skipping back to the American Revolution, meanwhile no one changes in age significantly. It goes without saying that Israel Boone continues to appear despite the real Israel having died on August 19, 1782 (ironically 175 years to the day before actor Darby Hinton's birth).Did they ever say exactly what year(s) or time period specifically show was supposed to be happening in? It seems like that tried to fit 25-30 years of events into that little time on the frontier.That son of his (Isreal?) sure saw alot of history. They even got to meet Abraham Lincoln's parents. And what became of his daughter, Jeminah? She seems to have gotten written of the show. Was there ever an explanation on that show of what happened?
That was one of the biggest disappointments of the series, that it did not feature Daniel's daring real life rescue of Jemima and her friends. Originally, the show cast Bobby Horan as Israel Boone and Darby Hinton as the younger Nathan Boone. Sometime during the first episode, Bobby Horan was dropped. He still appears in some scenes, including the end where the Boone family is walking out together, but appears to be an unnamed friend of Israel's who was never seen again.Apparently there was a feud between Patricia Blair who played Becky and Veronica Cartwright who played Jemima. It was a "Either she goes or I go" situation. Needless to say, Blair got her way.
In reality, Jemima was captured by Indians along with other girls from the settlement. Of course, a party was sent out with Daniel leading. They rescued the girls and Jemima married one of those men. I read the story where she tells the other girls, "That's my Pa's rifle" as she hears it in the distance. She used that same line in one of the episodes.
Based on the names chiseled in the obelisk at Fort Boonesborough, Becky (Betsy) and Daniel had and raised many more children than the two on the show.
Hi, I am coming in three years later but answered your question above.I asked earlier but never got a real answer. What was the supposed time period or setting of this show? It seems to hop around from 1777 to 1810 give or take a few years. Boone was borne in 1734 wasn't he?
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