 
(1923-2016)
Best known as
the creator, executive producer, and warm narrative voice of the long-running
television series The Waltons, writer Earl Hamner died Thursday, March
24, in Los Angeles at Cedars Sinai Medical Center. He was 92 and had battled
cancer for nearly two years. He is survived by Jane, his wife of 61 years, as
well as his son Scott, himself an accomplished writer, and daughter Caroline, a
family counselor.
Born into a
large affectionate family in Virginia's Blue Ridge foothills in 1923, Hamner
knew from an early age that he wanted to be a writer. He grew up during the
Great Depression, an era that captured his imagination and later served as the
time setting of his best-known novels and TV series. After seeing active service
in the U.S. Army during World War II and then interning as a writer for radio
station WLW in Cincinnati, Hamner began writing for radio (and later,
television) programs in New York, notably The Today Show. In 1961, with
television transitioning from live programming to film, he relocated to Los
Angeles, where he soon became a contributor of scripts to The Twilight
Zone, hosted by a man he had known at WLW, Rod Serling. He also published
the autobiographical novel Spencer's Mountain, which was praised at
length by novelist Harper Lee and adapted to a successful film starring Henry
Fonda and Maureen O'Hara.
In these and his teleplays for
other series, in his novels, and in his film adaptations of Johanna
Spyri's Heidi and E. B. White's Charlotte's Web, Hamner brought a
warm, affirming sense of traditional, timeless wisdom that affirmed love as the
essential quality that makes life worth living. He embraced William Faulkner's
famous credo: "I believe that man will not merely endure: he will prevail. He is
immortal . . . because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and
sacrifice and endurance. . . . The poet's voice need not merely be the record of
man, it can be one of the props, the pillars to help him endure and prevail."
Hamner kept a typed copy of those words tacked to the wall of his
office.
He won the
Christopher Award five times and also took home the coveted George Foster
Peabody Award in 1972 and an Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama (Continuing) in
1973 for The Waltons. Despite having achieved this level of success and
international recognition, he remained the real-life John-Boy Walton, never
losing his affection for the folkways, old stories, traditions, and manners of
the family united in loving community with its members, close friends, and the
larger community, living on family land or on long-familiar ground. In his
autobiographical works of imagination especially--Spencer's Mountain, the
CBS drama Appalachian Autumn, The Homecoming, and even the
nighttime drama Falcon Crest--the past forever flows into the present. In
one of the narrations that bookended an episode of The Waltons, Hamner
wrote: "Some men are drawn to oceans, they cannot breathe unless the air is
scented with a salty mist. Others are drawn to land that is flat, and the air is
sullen and is leaden as August. My people were drawn to mountains. They came
when the country was young and they settled in the upland country of Virginia
that is still misted with a haze of blue which gives those mountains their name.
. . . In my time, I have come to know them. . . . I have walked the land in the
footsteps of all my fathers. I saw yesterday and now look to
tomorrow."
Until the end
of his life, Hamner held to a personal vision of television and motion pictures
as media for affirming the better angels of human nature, reminding his audience
that the past is never dead; it's not even past. His world of wondering boyhood
and moral imagination can never stale. In Depression-era Walton's Mountain, in
the opulence of Falcon Crest, even in the unnerving alternative worlds
of The Twilight Zone, he created worlds to delight in and revisit time
and again. For press, high res photos and updated biography
please send an email to harlan@bhbpr.com
or call 626.296.3757
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