Dynasty (TV series)

Dynasty
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Dynasty title card. The house that appeared in the opening credits is not actually in Colorado, where Dynasty was set, but rather it is the Filoli estate in Woodside, California.
Format Soap Opera
Run time 44 Minutes
Creator Esther Shapiro and Richard Shapiro
Starring John Forsythe
Linda Evans
Pamela Bellwood
Pamela Sue Martin
John James
Gordon Thomson
Jack Coleman
Diahann Carroll
and Joan Collins as Alexis
Country USA
Network ABC
Original run January 12, 1981
May 10, 1989
No. of episodes 220

Dynasty was an American primetime television soap opera that aired on ABC from January 1981 to May 1989. The series revolved around the Carringtons, a wealthy oil family living in Denver, Colorado.

Dynasty epitomized the era of the primetime soap, in which all of the characters either had money and power and wanted more, or didn't have either but wanted it badly.

Contents

Beginnings

The working title for Dynasty was Oil -- the starring role originally went to George Peppard. In early drafts of the pilot script the two main families featured in the series, the Carrington and Colby families, were written as Parkhurst and Corby respectively.

Peppard, who had difficulties dealing with the somewhat unsympathetic role of Blake, was replaced with John Forsythe.

As the series opened, tycoon Blake Carrington (John Forsythe) was about to marry Krystle Jennings (Linda Evans), a younger woman whom he met when she took a job as a secretary at his company, the monolithic Denver-Carrington.

Krystle was young, beautiful and vulnerable, described by the show's creator Esther Shapiro as "an American Aphrodite". She found a hostile reception in the Carrington household - the staff patronised her, Blake's daughter Fallon (Pamela Sue Martin) resented her, and her husband was too preoccupied with his work. Krystle's only ally in the Carrington house was her stepson, the sexually ambivalent Steven (Al Corley).

At the conclusion of the show's first season, as Blake Carrington stood trial for the murder of his gay son's lover, Ted Dinard, the script called for the return of Blake's former wife, the sultry, elegant Alexis Carrington. (In early drafts of the script the character was named Madelaine Carrington.) With the role uncast, a model was used in the season finale.

"Enter Alexis"

In the first episode of the second season, titled "Enter Alexis," the mysterious stranger removed her Dior sunglasses to reveal English actress Joan Collins who chewed her way through the scripts, and confirmed Alexis Carrington, later Alexis Colby, as one of the greatest TV characters of all time. She blazed a trail across the show and the program quickly shot up in the ratings.

By the end of the 1981-1982 season Dynasty entered the Top 20 in the Nielsen ratings, and eventually hit #1 in the ratings in 1985. The show epitomized an era of glamour and decadence and was the talk of the nation. Even former President Gerald Ford guest-starred.

With Alexis settled as Krystle's implacable nemesis, mother and stepdaughter Fallon settled their differences - a bond which riled the displaced and resentful Alexis even further.

Krystle and Alexis

In the seasons which followed, Alexis caused Krystle's miscarriage, tried to ruin her marriage by finding Krystle's former husband (Samuel) Mark Jennings and proving that their divorce was never finalised (and that, consequently, Krystle's marriage to Blake was invalid), as well as provoking a handful of trademark catfights, beginning with one in the Carrington estate's art studio, another in the lily pond, a third in a burning cabn, a fourth in a mud pool in a park and a final spat (in Dynasty: The Reunion) in a fashion studio. The fights were toned down after Joan Collins wrenched her back during one altercation.

Cliffhangers and the "Moldavian Massacre"

The most memorable aspects of the series, outside the high camp scripts from writer/creators Richard and Esther Shapiro and writers Robert Mason Pollock and Eileen Pollock, were a stream of infamous cliffhanger storylines including an Alexis/Krystle showdown which ended in an inferno in Steven's cabin, a fire in the hotel La Mirage (which killed Claudia, while Blake and Alexis battled across town), and the show's most famous - the so-called "wedding massacre" when Blake's daughter Amanda (Catherine Oxenberg) married Prince Michael of Moldavia (Michael Praed) on the eve of a military revolution in his country.

Almost all of the show's characters went to the fictitious kingdom to attend the wedding, and in the final seconds of the season finale in May 1985, the revolutionaries gunned down everyone in the church. The camera panned out, showing all of the guests wounded and strewn about one another, giving the impression that anyone and everyone could have died. In the summer that followed, many magazines published stories wondering who would survive the massacre, and some tabloids published supposed "dirt" on who died. In the end, however, fans learned in the season premiere that fall that only two minor characters perished - a move which disenfranchised fans who felt the storyline had built to nothing.

The end of the Dynasty

The lackluster reaction to the Moldavian storyline, combined with a poorly received dual role for Evans and excessive time spent introducing characters to be spun off onto The Colbys, caused a ratings slump. Two other factors perhaps also account for the ratings decline: the revival of sitcoms, especially on NBC, whose Cosby Show took the number one position from Dynasty in the 1985-86 season, and Cheers (consistently in the top ten from 1985 until 1993), which aired opposite Dynasty in the 1988-89 season, and more realistic, low-key dramas such as thirtysomething which gained favor in the late eighties.

When The Colbys was cancelled, Stephanie Beacham was brought in to reprise her role as firecracker Sable Colby. Her bravura performance made many deem the final season as one of the best in some time, but ABC had had enough and pulled the plug in 1989. Many believe that the show was a creation perfect for the Ronald Reagan era and could never have outlived his Presidency.

Rock Hudson

Aside from the glamour and campy drama, the show is also remembered for the controversy surrounding a storyline involving former matinee idol Rock Hudson in 1984. Hudson's scenes required him to kiss Linda Evans and, as news that he had contracted AIDS broke, there was speculation Evans would be at risk.

Dynasty commercial tie-ins

A perfume, Forever Krystle, was marketed in 1985. In addition, the Crystal Light beverage had Linda Evans as a spokesperson, due to her character's name on Dynasty.

Characters

The major characters in the show included:

Dynasty spin-offs and television events

The Colbys, an unsuccessful spin-off came in 1985; a miniseries, Dynasty: The Reunion, aired in 1991. On January 2, 2005, ABC aired a TV-movie, Dynasty: The Making of a Guilty Pleasure, purporting to tell of the creation and backstage details of Dynasty. The movie received mixed reviews both for content and for historical accuracy, and was criticized by all three of its leads, John Forsythe, Linda Evans, and Joan Collins, in different press releases. Strangely, the movie was filmed in Australia (rather than Los Angeles) and a good majority of the cast members were foreign.

In April 2005, the first season of Dynasty was released on Region 1 DVD by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment.

See also: Dynasty (TV series), 1981, 1982, 1985, 1989, 1991, 2005, 20th Century Fox, ABC Network