The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams (film) | |
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Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Richard Friedenberg |
Produced by |
Charles E. Sellier Jr. Raylan D. Jensen |
Written by | Lawrence Dobkin |
Starring |
Dan Haggerty Denver Pyle Don Shanks |
Music by | Thom Pace |
Cinematography | George Stapleford |
Edited by | George Stapleford |
Production
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Distributed by | Sunn Classic Pictures Sun International Paramount Pictures (current) |
Release date
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Running time
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93 min. |
Country | United States |
Budget | $140,000 |
Box office | $45 million |
The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams (TV series) | |
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Dan Haggerty as "Grizzly Adams" and
Bozo the bear as "Ben", 1977 |
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Created by | Charles E. Sellier Jr. |
Starring |
Dan Haggerty Denver Pyle Don Shanks |
Narrated by | Denver Pyle |
Theme music composer | Thom Pace |
Opening theme | "Maybe" |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 38 |
Production | |
Running time | 60 mins. |
Production company(s) | Schick Sunn Classic Productions |
Distributor |
Viacom Enterprises CBS Television Distribution |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Original release | February 9, 1977 – May 12, 1978 (two TV films aired later on) |
The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams is a 1974 independent feature film inspired by a 1972 historical fiction novella written by Charles E. Sellier Jr.. The film's popularity led to an NBC television series of the same name. The title character, played by Dan Haggerty, was loosely based on California mountain man James "Grizzly" Adams (1812-1860), whose real name was "John Capen Adams," a one-time Boston shoe and boot maker.
The film and TV series portrayed the fictional Grizzly Adams as a frontier woodsman who fled into the mountains after he was wrongly accused of murder. While struggling to survive, Adams saves an orphaned grizzly bear cub he adopts and names Ben. The bear, while growing to its huge adult size, becomes Adams' closest companion. Consistently kind and gentle, Adams discovers and demonstrates an uncanny ability to gain the trust of most of the indigenous wildlife of the region, and he helps, sometimes rescues, takes in and tames many species. Originally a hunter, with his learned affection for wildlife Adams resolves never to harm another animal whenever possible. In the television series, Adams had two human friends, an old mountain man trader named "Mad Jack" played by Denver Pyle who was often featured with his mule, ("Number Seven") and a Native American by the name of "Nakoma" played by Don Shanks. Adams, Mad Jack, and Nakoma helped myriad mountain visitors while protecting wildlife at the same time.
NBC aired the series finale on February 21, 1982 by way of a two-hour TV movie called The Capture of Grizzly Adams where a bounty hunter used Adams' daughter, who was not seen or mentioned since the 1974 film, in a kidnap-extortion ploy to lure the fugitive mountain man back to civilization. In the end Adams proves his innocence.
In addition to Ben, there were many other named animals in the TV series, the most prominent being Number 7, Mad Jack's ornery mule. Bart the Bear, then a bear cub, made one of his first acting appearances in the series playing Ben as a cub.