‘Falcon Crest’ (Season 1): Intrigue, drunk on wine

We like our 80s prime time soaps here at Drunk TV. Oh yes we do.

We love the tangled, tortured familial relationships, the business double-crosses, the deadly personal vendettas, the romantic complications, the big hair and the bigger shoulder pads, the name-calling and the bitch slaps and the punch-outs, and most of all the veteran performers rolling their eyes at second-rate newcomers. We love it all. So why is one of the 80s’ best nighttime soap operas, Falcon Crest, stuck in DVD limbo-land?

By Paul Mavis

Falcon Crest’s first and second seasons were released in 2010, followed by an ominous three year wait for season three, and then poof…nothing. I hear some streaming has been available at times, but from what I can tell online, season four is MIA from that or physical media, with no word, either, on future releases of seasons five through nine. Well, in the hopes of getting Warner Bros. back on track in releasing this essential bit of 80s pop culture, we’re going to reboot my take on Falcon Crest’s season one in the hopes of inciting Drunk TV’s hundreds of thousands of readers to riot in the streets, torching cars and businesses, and pelting security forces with rocks and bottles to think good thoughts and maybe send a polite email to the Brothers Warner, asking for more Tuscany Valley shenanigans.

Before we look at Falcon Crest’s production more closely, a short synopsis of the series might be in order for some of our uninitiated readers. Midnight at the scenic, generations-old Falcon Crest vineyard and winery in the fabled Tuscany Valley, just two hours outside of San Francisco, California. Addle-pated Emma Channing (Margaret Ladd), interrupted in her late-night assignation with a no-good field hand, has just accidentally pushed her uncle Jason Gioberti (Harry Townes) off the high-dive in the vat room. Hysteria ensues, but mother Angela Channing (Jane Wyman) quickly—and coldly—takes control. Snapping her fingers for loyal manservant Chao-Li Chi (Chao Le Chi), she commands him to take her brother’s body and stuff it behind the wheel of Jason’s old truck, which is then unceremoniously pushed off a cliff where it explodes in a huge fireball. Problem solved. Or is it? Because this act will set into motion a series of events that will threaten Angela’s carefully constructed wine empire for the next nine and a half seasons.

Click to order Falcon Crest: The Complete First Season on DVD:

Falcon Crest: Season 1

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For you see, there was a little-known codicil in the Faber College constitution which gives the dean unlimited power to preserve order in time of campus emergency will of Falcon Crest founder Joseph Gioberti. Knowing full well that his son and daughter despised each other, he stipulated that should either sibling die under suspicious circumstances, the surviving sibling would forfeit his or her half of Falcon Crest to the heirs of the deceased. And in this case, that would be Chase Gioberti (Robert Foxworth), dashing, bearded airline pilot and ex-Vietnam War chopper jockey based out of ahem…New York City. Married to silver blonde fox Maggie (Susan Sullivan), an up-and-coming freelance journalist, with drifting kids Cole (William R. Moses), a hunky-but-dopey archeology major, and Vickie (Jamie Rose), a headstrong dancer along for the ride, Chase is called back to his ancestral home in California for the reading of the will of his estranged father. But soon the call of the grape—and a sneaky suspicion that his father met an untimely death—convinces Chase that abandoning their life in New York to become vintners would be the best thing for his rapidly-disintegrating family…a development that makes control-freak Angela see wine red.

Having inherited the last 50 acres of Falcon Crest that still belonged to his father (with Angela already having wheedled away most of troubled, drunkard Jason’s acreage), Chase presents a stumbling block for Angela, who wants to control not just all of Falcon Crest, but all of the Tuscany Valley. Of course, a vineyard and winery with such family tradition needs heir-apparents, but Angela can’t count on spacey, quite insane Emma, nor Angela’s older daughter Julia Cumson (Abby Dalton), the brains behind all the award-winning vintages that come out of Falcon Crest, but also a weak-willed drunk who let her husband get driven off the land by power-mad Angela. So that leaves smart, handsome, lazy playboy grandson Lance Cumson (Lorenzo Lamas) to eventually run Falcon Crest, and he’s learned every rat-bastard trick in the book on how to wheel-and-deal, from his pitiless grandmother.

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A classy, well-plotted, relatively reserved soap—at least for this first season—in comparison to all the chest-heaving and barn yard rutting going on over at Falcon Crest’s lead-in show, Dallas, Falcon Crest was required viewing back in the 80s if you were a Ewings/Barnes fan (and who wasn’t), with that Friday night two-hour Lorimar soap block providing an A-level kick-off to the weekend TV offerings. I remember Falcon Crest getting quite a lot of press not only because it was a solid ratings’ winner, but also because of the understandable buzz created by its lead star, Oscar-winner Jane Wyman, happening to be the ex-wife of the then-current president, Ronald Reagan (Wyman always steadfastly refused to discuss Reagan, a classy move that of course flummoxed the uncomprehending liberal mainstream press, who subsequently twisted her silence into some sort of political rebuke of her former husband). Unfairly labeled a Dallas knock-off, Falcon Crest, particularly in this first season, seemed to strive for a more modest approach to its melodramatic trappings, keeping the storylines (relatively) believable and grounded in solid dramatic conventions, while never forgetting to throw in a self-reflexive, breezily comic moment now and again.

Fans of Falcon Crest of course know it was created by Earl Hamner, the genius behind one of the best dramatic series of the 1970s: The Waltons. According to a few Hamner interviews I’ve read, Falcon Crest, as originally conceived by the author and TV producer, was to be more of a straightforward drama series about a California wine-making family, in line more with his previous hit, The Waltons, rather than the sex-and-backstabbing antics over on Dallas. However, suggestions to jack up the sex and purple melodrama from CBS and Lorimar, Falcon Crest‘s production company, eventually put Hamner’s project on the fast track for network release, with the series this first season showing an interesting hybrid of Hamner-esque civility and humanity, and Dallas-like gropings and backstabbings.

As series creator, executive producer, scriptwriter (he pens one of the episodes this season), and creative consultant for the first few seasons, it’s safe to say that Falcon Crest has the patented Earl Hamner stamp. It’s also a good guess that it was his influence that kept Falcon Crest’s scripts and storylines from going overboard, while still evoking thematic motifs such as the strength of family ties, and the ancestral pull of the land, that were found threading through the previous nine seasons of The Waltons (as a game, you can even find more direct parallels between the two series, with Vickie acting an awful lot like Mary Ellen Walton, and Cole having some of John-Boy’s naiveté and honesty and enthusiasm…although John-Boy certainly never knocked up any girl). The potential for bed-hopping is certainly present here (Dallas‘ favorite indoor sport), but Falcon Crest all but rejects those temptations at this early point in the series, discreetly tiptoeing around the subject until more blatant sex siren Melissa Agrettie Cumson (the knee-weakening Ana Alicia) comes onto the scene.

Instead, inter-family fighting over control of Falcon Crest dominates the central story arc (not unlike the Ewing boys fight over Ewing Oil), with several hefty subplots filling in the details. Chase’s determination to bring his splintering family back together through the efforts of toiling in the soil begins the season (this would seem to be coming from Hamner), before Chase is put into a more political role as councilman, fighting Angela’s domination of the Valley’s water rights (this move makes sense, getting Chase out of the fields, and opening up conflicts with Angela that don’t rest solely on how well the current crop is coming in). Lance’s maturation (or de-evolution) into a mean-spirited lap dog for Angela’s machinations also gets quite a bit of play, with the writers (and Lorenzo Lamas) doing a good job of getting across the ying/yang aspect of the character. Chase sees that Lance could be so much more of a real man if he didn’t have Angela’s influence (during their camping trip together where Lance helps save Cole’s life), but Lance’s fatal flaw is money and control over Falcon Crest, and he bows to Angela’s threats of being disinherited each and every time.

Presiding over all of this is quiet, controlling, socially correct monster Angela Channing, spinning various webs while desperately trying to keep the lid on her headcase daughter, who’s ready to spill the beans about her uncle’s death. Wyman, who won among numerous awards a well-deserved 1948 Best Actress Academy Award for Johnny Belinda, is delightfully arch in her turn here. Purposefully stiff and unyielding, Angela Channing is the nighttime soap opera’s most diplomatic villain, who’s almost as obsessed with her reputation remaining intact, as she is in pulling every dirty trick in the book to get what she wants: the Valley. Yet importantly, she wants control wrested away from pretenders to her throne her way: subtly, smoothly, and without a trace (she dismisses out of hand Lance’s cheap, crude methods of persuasion, like blowing up Chase’s pump house). Wyman’s Angela is an unusual example of the nighttime soap villain, and Wyman’s frequently amusing turn is a big reason why Falcon Crest works so well.

Equally good is Chase’s Robert Foxworth, providing the show’s moral compass (rather like Waltons patriarch, John Walton), and a believably realistic foe to the more melodramatic shenanigans of Angela and Lance. Despite his one-time standing as a sometimes-punch line for disposable TV and movie personalities (hey, he asked for it with Body Rock and Leave It to Lamas), Lamas fits the bill nicely as the spoiled playboy Lance, keeping his voice low and modulated, while never losing the suggestion of a smirk that lets us know this is all silly stuff, after all. Once Ana Alicia comes on the scene, as one of nighttime soap’s most memorable vixens (don’t get me started; when she tells Cole, with all double entendre intended, that he’s “not the only ride in town,” I got the vapors), the duo become a full-fledged comedy team, getting solid laughs with their spitting insults as this impossibly good-looking couple navigate their arranged, loveless marriage.

Special mention, though, must be made for Margaret Ladd, as Falcon Crest‘s strangest, most hilarious character, Emma. Acting as if she’s channeling some future character in David Lynch’s Twin Peaks, Emma floats in and out of the rooms of the spooky Falcon Crest mansion, awash in a combination of waking nightmares about her participation in Jason’s death, and airy, false dreams about her love affair with the field hand who comes back to cause trouble for everyone. Rambling around the house, told to go to her room countless times (I’ve got the copyright on any future “Emma, go to your room!” drinking game), and popping up unexpectedly on the road after escaping her gothic, hellish existence (Angela and Lance even go so far as to keep her sedated in her room so she can’t testify at Chase’s inquest into his father Jason’s death), Emma would seem, at first glance, to be a tragic, sad character.

However, the Falcon Crest writers—and Ladd’s performance—keep Emma surprisingly light and hysterically, quirkily funny. All the best punch lines in Falcon Crest belong to Emma this season, including her first trip to the headshrinker (“I’m the crazy one,” she helpfully volunteers as she raises her hand), or her toast to arranged newlyweds Lance and Melissa (“Bottoms up!” she leers, to which Wyman automatically, warningly retorts, “Sit down, Emma!”), or her eventual appearance at the inquest (“Are you running this show?” she deadpans to the judge). And Ladd just runs with those jokes, creating a genuinely interesting, original character that one couldn’t find anywhere on TV back in the early 1980s. Falcon Crest would eventually acquire an almost Aaron Spelling-like reputation for trotting out classic Hollywood old-timers for ratings “coups” (Lana Turner and Dana Andrews show up this season, to almost no noticeable effect), but a performance like Ladd’s Emma—smart, funny, quirky, and solidly scripted—seems more indicative of the early promise of Falcon Crest, when it married nighttime soap opera conventions with admirably realistic dramatics.

Coming in as a Friday 10pm mid-season replacement for CBS’ 1981-1982 television season, Falcon Crest, benefiting obviously from its two hit lead-ins—The Dukes of Hazzard at 8pm, the sixth most-watched show in America, followed at 9pm with Dallas, the number one show on television that year—destroyed its competition. ABC had some potential muscle with its ultra-violent (for 1981…) cop series, Strike Force, starring Robert Stack, but pressure from watchdog groups forced ABC to essentially dump it. Over on hapless NBC, no less than three series—two brand new—were thrown at Falcon Crest, to no avail: Johnny Carson’s ill-fated Police Woman knock-off, Cassie & Company, starring former girlfriend Angie Dickinson; Harry O and McQ hybrid, McLain’s Law, with James Arness riding out his fading Q rating, and the venerable NBC Friday Night at the Movies. And Falcon Crest would go right on winning its time slot for many seasons to come.

Here are the 18 episodes from the four-disc collection, Falcon Crest: The Complete First Season, as described on the enclosed episode guide pamphlet:

DISC ONE

Episode 1: In His Father’s House
The Falcon Crest story begins with a suspicious death, a web of lies, an unusual will and a land grab.

Episode 2: A Time for Saboteurs
With the Vegas mob on his tail, Chase’s war buddy will do anything for money – even sabotage his friend’s vineyard.

Episode 3: The Tangled Vines
Chase needs money to pay off a tax bill. And where there’s money, there’s Angela with an underhanded scheme.

Episode 4: The Harvest
Angela thinks Lance is too irresponsible to be her heir. Lance proves her right by dynamiting Chase’s pump house.

Episode 5: Tony Comes Home
Julia’s husband deserted her years ago. Now he’s back, hoping to pick up where he left off.

DISC TWO

Episode 6: Kindred Spirits
Far from home, Cole is injured during a wilderness trek; Emma runs away when she fears Angela will institutionalize her.

Episode 7: The Extortionist
Turner Bates knows what really happened the night Jason Gioberti died. And he’ll keep silent – for a price.

Episode 8: Lord of the Manor
On a trip to Rome, Angela finds romance and Cole finds a clue to the real relationship between Jason and Angela.

Episode 9: Dark Journey
Vicky needs a job, so Lance introduces her to his good friend – who happens to be connected to the porno biz.

Episode 10: Victims
Maggie uncovers an extortion plot. Lance fears Emma’s baby will get a big piece of the Falcon Crest pie.

DISC THREE

Episode 11: For Love or Money
Lance meets the perfect girl. But don’t expect a wedding invitation: Angela wants Lance to marry for money, not love.

Episode 12: Family Reunion
Chase is caught between two formidable women when his glamorous mother and Angela square off.

Episode 13: The Candidate
Angela unleashes her inner Machiavelli when Chase runs for county supervisor on an anti-Angela platform.

Episode 14: House of Cards
Angela plots to sabotage the Cole-Melissa romance. Julia learns the truth about Jason’s death.

DISC FOUR

Episode 15: Heir Apparent
Two secrets: Melissa keeps hers to herself, but the secret of Jason’s death threatens to become very public.

Episode 16: The Good, The Bad and The Profane
Against his will, Lance marries Melissa. Then things get worse: his bride is pregnant with another man’s child.

Episode 17: Penultimate Questions
The coroner’s inquest begins, Angela takes the stand, Emma enters the courtroom – and tragedy strikes.

Episode 18: Ultimate Answers
Chase now owns half of Falcon Crest. But Angela doesn’t believe in power sharing.

One of the best examples of the network primetime soap opera, Falcon Crest managed its own tone of solid dramatics and a wry sense of humor, no doubt due to series’ creator Earl Hamner’s influence. Terrific performances by the lead actors (Wyman is a delight; Foxworth is solid and believable; Lamas is surprisingly good; and Margaret Ladd creates a winningly intriguing character), well-crafted scripts and storylines, and a top-of-the-line production (for 1981), mark the first season of Falcon Crest an unqualified success.

PAUL MAVIS IS AN INTERNATIONALLY PUBLISHED MOVIE AND TELEVISION HISTORIAN, A MEMBER OF THE ONLINE FILM CRITICS SOCIETY, AND THE AUTHOR OF THE ESPIONAGE FILMOGRAPHY. Click to order.Read more of Paul’s TV reviews here. Read Paul’s film reviews at our sister website, Movies & Drinks.

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