Closest Casino To Grizzly Adams

When I was young there were many a series, cartoons and movies showed over the telly that I would love to watch one of them was this. It was nice and memorable to watch Adams and the bear named Ben and of coz mad jack and the donkey named number 7... out of the blue I started humming the theme song to this heheh Its a lovely meaningful theme songClosest casino to grizzly adams run

The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams (1974) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.


The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams Theme Lyrics
Closest casino to grizzly adams locationMaybe by Thom Pace - The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams Lyrics
Deep inside the forest is a door into another land
Here is a life and home we are staying
Here forever in the beauty of this place all alone
We keep on hoping.
Maybe, there's a world where we don't have to run
Maybe, there's a time we call our own
Living free in harmony and majesty
Take me home, take me home
Walking through the land where every living thing is beautiful
Why does it have to end ?
We are calling all so sadly
On the whispers of the wind as we send
A dieing message.
Maybe, there's a world where we don't have to run
Maybe, there's a time we call our own
Living free in harmony and majesty
Take me home, take me home.
Maybe, there's a world where we don't have to run
Maybe, there's a time we call our own
Living free in harmony and majesty
Closest casino to grizzly adams locationTake me home, take me home.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Grizzly Adams is the main character from The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams, a 1974 film. Produced by Sunn Classic Pictures, the movie spawned a television series of the same name in 1977. The title character was loosely based on an actual trapper, James/John Capen 'Grizzly' Adams.
Grizzly Adams is a woodsman who fled into the mountains when he was wrongly accused of murder. While struggling to survive, Adams discovers an orphaned grizzly bear cub whom he takes in and calls Ben. The bear, despite his huge adult size, becomes Adams' closest companion. Adams has an uncanny link to most of the indigenous wildlife of the region, who have no fear of him. In return, he resolves never to harm another animal whenever possible.
In the television series, Adams has two human companions, an old trader named Mad Jack the Mountain Man (Denver Pyle, commonly featured with a mule named 'Number Seven') and a Native American named Nakoma (Don Shanks). Together, they help various visitors while protecting the wildlife. The series is also notable for its theme song, 'Maybe' by Thom Pace, which is goodhearted tune about love, sorrow and friendship.
The series concluded with a 1982 TV movie called The Capture of Grizzly Adams where a bounty hunter used Adams' hitherto unknown daughter to draw him back to civilization. In the end, Adams proves his innocence.

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The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams

Theatrical release poster
Directed byRichard Friedenberg
Produced byCharles E. Sellier Jr.
Raylan D. Jensen
Written byLawrence Dobkin
StarringDan Haggerty
Denver Pyle
Don Shanks
Music byThom Pace
CinematographyGeorge Stapleford
Editing byGeorge Stapleford
StudioSunn Classic Pictures
Distributed bySunn Classic Pictures
Sun International
Paramount Pictures (current)
Release date(s)November 13, 1974
Running time93 min.
CountryUnited States
Budget$250,000
Box office$45,411,063[1]
television series

Dan Haggerty and Ben, 1977.
Created byCharles E. Sellier Jr.
StarringDan Haggerty
Denver Pyle
Don Shanks
Narrated byDenver Pyle
Theme music composerThom Pace
Opening theme'Maybe'
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes38
Production
Running time1 hour
Production company(s)Sunn Classic Pictures
DistributorCBS Television Distribution
Broadcast
Original channelNBC
Original runMarch 2, 1977 – December 19, 1978,
February 21, 1982

The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams is a 1972 novel by Charles E. Sellier Jr., a 1974 film based on the novel, a two-season NBC television series, and a 1982 TV movie. The title character, played by Dan Haggerty, is loosely based on the actual trapper James 'Grizzly' Adams.

Grizzly Adams (Haggerty) is a woodsman during the frontier era who flees into the mountains after he is wrongly accused of murder. While struggling to survive, Adams discovers an orphaned grizzly bear cub whom he takes in and calls Ben. The bear, despite his huge adult size, becomes Adams's closest companion. Adams proves to have an uncanny link to most of the indigenous wildlife of the region, who have no fear of him. In return, he resolves never to harm another animal whenever possible. In the television series, Adams had two human companions, an old trader named Mad Jack the Mountain Man (Denver Pyle, commonly featured with a mule named 'Number Seven') and a native American named Nakoma (Don Shanks). Together, they helped various visitors while protecting the wildlife.

The series was concluded with a 1982 TV movie called The Capture of Grizzly Adams where a bounty hunter used Adams's daughter — not seen or mentioned since the 1974 film — to draw him back to civilization. In the end, Adams proved his innocence.

Cast

  • Dan Haggerty as James Capen 'Grizzly' Adams
  • Denver Pyle as Mad Jack
  • Don Shanks as Nakoma
  • John Bishop as Robbie Cartman
  • Bozo (a grizzly bear) as Ben (named after Benjamin Franklin whom Adams revered as a great man)

In addition to Ben, there were many other named animals in the series, the most prominent being Number 7, Mad Jack's ornery mule.

Gene Edwards—a stunt double for Dan Haggerty—later played Grizzly Adams in the otherwise unrelated 1990 film The Legend of a Grizzly Adams.

Production

Grizzly Adams was the creation of Sunn Classic Pictures, a company based in Park City, Utah operated by founder Charles E. Sellier Jr., who had written the book on which first the 1974 movie, and then the series, was based. The studio successfully made up for its lack of experience with lavish marketing and promotional budgets. The 1974 movie was a runaway success, produced on a $140,000 budget but which went on to earn $65 million at theaters. The 43% market share captured by a 1976 airing of this film on NBC caused network executives to greenlight a television series. This series drew a 32% market share, a figure which still remains very significant to this day. The enterprise also came at a time when the environmental movement flourished.

In a 1978 interview with TV Guide, Sellier said that the company used extensive market testing to produce the series, which was based on tests showing that audiences liked stories about men and animals in the wilderness; that bears were favorite wilderness animals; and that grizzlies were the favorite type of bear.[2] The actual filming locations for the television series took place in the mountains near Ruidoso, New Mexico.

The show's theme song, “Maybe,” was written and sung by Thom Pace. The song was released as a single in Europe, where it reached number one, and won Germany's Goldene Europa award for best song.[citation needed]

Episode list

Prod.#[3]EpisodeAir date
The Life and Times of Grizzly AdamsNovember 13, 1974
701'Unwelcome Neighbor'March 2, 1977
702'Beaver Dam'April 27, 1977
703'Blood Brothers'February 16, 1977
704'Adam's Cub'February 9, 1977
705'The Fugitive'February 23, 1977
706'Howdy-Do, I'm Mad Jack'March 9, 1977
707'The Tenderfoot'March 30, 1977
708'Home of the Hawk'May 5, 1977
709'Adam's Ark'March 16, 1977
710'The Redemption of Ben'March 23, 1977
711'The Unholy Beast'April 20, 1977
712'The Rivals'April 6, 1977
713'The Storm'May 12, 1977
714'The Trial'October 26, 1977
715'Survival'October 12, 1977
716'A Bear's Life'October 19, 1977
717'The Choice'December 21, 1977
718'Hot Air Hero'September 28, 1977
719'Track of the Cougar'December 14, 1977
720'The Search'November 9, 1977
721'Marvin the Magnificent'January 11, 1978
722'Woman in the Wilderness'December 28, 1977
723'The Orphans'November 2, 1977
724'Gold Is Where You Find It'November 23, 1977
725'A Time of Thirsting'January 18, 1978
726'The Seekers'January 25, 1978
727'The Spoilers'January 4, 1978
728'The Stranger'April 5, 1978
729'The Runaway'February 22, 1978
730'A Gentleman Tinker'February 8, 1978
731'The World's Greatest Bounty Hunter'May 12, 1978
732'The Littlest Greenhorn'March 15, 1978
733'The Great Burro Race'March 1, 1978
734'The Quest'April 26, 1978
735'The Skyrider'May 5, 1978
736'The Renewal' (two hours)March 22, 1978
737Once Upon a Starry Night(two hours)
Theatrically released as
Legend of the Wild[4]
December 19, 1978
November 1981
The Capture of Grizzly Adams(two hours)February 21, 1982

Referenced in pop-culture

Dan Haggerty also played Jeremiah—a modern day version of Grizzly Adams—in the films Grizzly Mountain (1997) and Escape to Grizzly Mountain (2000).

Television and film references to Haggerty's portrayal of Adams include SCTV (1980–1981 season), Clerks (1994 film), Happy Gilmore (1996 film), the 'Brian Wallows and Peter's Swallows' episode of Family Guy (2002), and What Just Happened? (2008 film).

'Grizzly Adams' is also the name of a Mr. Bungle song from album The Raging Wrath of the Easter Bunny, and a professional German ice hockey team.

References

  1. ^'Box Office Information for The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams'. The Numbers. http://www.the-numbers.com/movies/1975/00233.php. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  2. ^Chimpson, Janice C. (June 6, 1978). 'Studio Cleans Up By Marketing Films Like Selling Soap.'. The Wall Street Journal.
  3. ^'The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams: Episode Guide'. TV.com. http://www.tv.com/the-life-and-times-of-grizzly-adams/show/2998/episode.html?tag=tabs;episodes.
  4. ^'Once Upon a Starry Night'. BFI.org.uk. http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/301978.

External links

  • The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams at the Internet Movie Database
  • The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams (TV series) at the Internet Movie Database
  • The Capture of Grizzly Adams at the Internet Movie Database
  • GrizzlyAdams.net, a detailed site with behind the scenes photos and episode summaries.

Closest Casino To Grizzly Adams Facts

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