Thursday, October 17, 2019

PRE-United: Dynasty's Blake & Cecil

Check out this very early scene from the prime-time super soap Dynasty. A typical corporate showdown with John Forsythe's Blake Carrington taking on frenemy Cecil Colby (played by Lloyd Bochner) in his spacious, well-appointed office. Only... surprise! This isn't a scene from Dynasty at all!
While watching the first season of (the truly exemplary) anthology series Police Story, I came upon this episode which features Forsythe as the chief of police butting heads with Bochner as the mayor. It's fascinating to see these actors in 1974 interacting in ways that would later be similar to the rival oil barons they would portray in 1981.

On Police Story, Forsythe played a heavily put-upon police chief, juggling all his regular duties while also contending with a married police detective (Pernell Roberts) whose girlfriend has just shot herself, a politician (Michael Ansara) who is antagonistic towards the force and a concerned wife at home (played by Barbara Rush.) All this and an assassination attempt!

Bochner is a mayor with an eye on the governor's seat who will stop at almost nothing to get there. He basically blackmails Forsythe into helping him, though Forsythe is highly reluctant to alter his principles. It's quite a foreshadowing of the dynamic that the two men would play out in their later parts on Dynasty.

Of course, Forsythe was never meant to be Blake Carrington. The three-hour pilot was already in the can with George Peppard playing the lead until he and the producers clashed to the point where he was let go and all the scenes with Blake were re-shot with new hire Forsythe (who already had a solid working relationship with Aaron Spelling from a string of TV-movies and his participation on Charlie's Angels as the voice of Charlie.)
What passed for glitz in 1981... Blake's contemporary office at Denver Carrington.
The series limped along moderately that first abbreviated season and then swiftly became a hit (with no small thanks to the addition of Joan Collins to the cast as Forsythe's vengeful ex-wife Alexis.) As one can already see in this photo of the ever-expanding cast, original member Bochner was being edged into the shadows, despite having a considerable story line. Soon, he'd be killed off (despite being told point blank by producers that he was not going to be!) with his character's wealth and power going to Alexis. Cecil's name would be mentioned for years after, though that hardly did Bochner any good. Take a good look at this picture in which everyone really looks terrific!

Initially playing friends who occasionally did business favors for one another, things began to get sticky when Cecil wanted his nephew Jeff (John James) to marry Blake's daughter Fallon (Pamela Sue Martin), even though she - as a dyed-in-the-wool Daddy's girl - actually preferred the uncle more.

Then when Alexis suggested that Cecil might actually be Fallon's father, requiring dual blood tests amongst the men in question, the friendship was over. This scene ends with Blake punching Cecil in the mouth, bloodying it.

The wheels really came off the friendship when Cecil created a false entity known as "Logan Rhinewood" who was supposedly helping Blake out of a financial crisis, but in reality was draining him of any hope for recovery. The final nail was, of course, Cecil dying of a heart attack moments after marrying Alexis and leaving her his empire with which to destroy Blake (which she tried to do up until the series conclusion in 1989!)
For the next minute or two... til death do us part!
Bochner did continue to act with regularity after being written out of the show and was even pegged to headline his own daytime soap Santa Barbara in the role of C.C. Capwell, but he had a real life heart attack and had to be replaced before the show debuted. He figured in two episodes of The Golden Girls, memorably as ham actor Patrick Vaughn who is sleeping with practically the whole cast (and crew!) of a production of Picnic and later as a fey hairdresser. He died of cancer in 2005 at the age of eighty-one.

Forsythe, who was already over seventy by the time Dynasty ended, surely didn't need the work, but proceeded to star in a barely-remembered 1992 sitcom called The Powers That Be, as a harried senator. The show actually has more than a few deeply appreciative fans who bemoaned its cancellation after 21 episodes, but I doubt that one of the cast members fretted over it too much. When Powers was cancelled, David Hyde Piece was free to do Frasier, on which he appeared 263 times and became a household name! And the show's creators proceeded to come up with a little something called Friends! Forsythe was called upon the provide the familiar voice of Charlie for the first two movie reboots of that franchise, but passed away in 2010 at age ninety-two.

5 comments:

Gregory Moore said...

I realize it is a sacrilege to admit here that I wasn't a "Dynasty" watcher (gasp). I know Lloyd Bochner from another 1980's classic, and that was Pia Zadora's trashterpiece, "THE LONELY LADY". Bochner plays Pia's film director husband who can't get it up (one of the reasons she was so lonely). Bochner is required to emote heavily throughout and...well...Olivier, he ain't! He also has a shirtless bed scene with Miss Zadora, revealing he was about the hairiest man in Hollywood history, front and back. His character is not very sympathetic. His climactic scene, after Pia's character (Jerilee Randall) is violently attacked with a garden hose (by a then unknown Ray Liotta). She urges him to come to bed with her, resulting in him grabbing said hose and snarnling, "Or maybe THIS is more your KICK!" Tawdry, tawdry tawdry!! It's difficult (though not impossible) to find LONELY LADY on video, and for me, anyway, it's classic on the continuum of "Valley of the Dolls, "Mommie Dearest" and "Showgirls". If you've not seen it, I urge you to seek it out! Don't say you weren't warned. It's truly an awful film.

F. Nomen said...

That first season includes an early gay-themed episode, “The Ripper”. The straight owner of a modeling agency takes it upon himself to slash several gay men to death on the grounds that they, like drug addicts, prostitutes and “the lame and the blind” were “undesirables”. I watched it on one of the nostalgia channels a while back and (probably because the producers consulted with gay media activists) it was surprisingly even-handed. One of the lead cops was a stereotypical bigot but the other (who was living in sin with his girlfriend) dealt with the lesbian and gay suspects and witnesses with civility and respect. It certainly stood apart from contemporaneous episodes of other series which treated gay and lesbian characters as either pathetic victims or psycho murderers, or both.

http://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/ said...

Hey Poseidon,
I was a hit and miss Dynasty watcher during its initial run, but I've been watching them now. I am SO glad George Peppard didn't play Blake, as he is the American version of Laurence Harvey in my mind... and that's not a compliment!

My joke about Lloyd Bochner is that he must of have been born in an ascot!

And finally, doesn't Logan Rhinewood sound like a cheap wine?

More later!

Cheers on your fun find! Rick

Gingerguy said...

You have a eagle eye for sure. I don't remember this show, but I do remember thinking it was a little kinky that Fallon preferred her Dad's friend to his son. Lloyd was also in a cult fave of mine "The Lonely Lady" and had a gorgeous son, Hart. As time goes by and television choices seem limitless, I miss these shows more and more. Great to talk about them here

Poseidon3 said...

Gregory, I recall "The Lonely Lady" being a pay cable staple when I was a kid, but I have YET to see it since - and that was back in the '80s!! I do remember Lloyd Bochner's bedroom scenes on "Dynasty" and taking note of his FUR-ocious physique. LOL

F. Nomen, I watched that episode of "Police Story" with interest, too. The whole SHOW is so unusual for (and ahead of) its time. I will likely do a profile on at least part of it if I ever have a free moment.

Rick, I have no great adoration of George Peppard either, other than the fact that he could be handsome in his youth (and I did sort of enjoy "Banacek," but mainly because of the Mystery Movie format.) Had he stayed Blake, we likely would never have gotten Joan Collins as Alexis because she had had a barely tolerable experience with him in a movie ("The Executioner") beforehand and would have been in no hurry to work with him further...! Logan Rhinewood... HYSTERICAL!

Gingerguy, I love, love, love Hart Bochner and he really needed to have a bigger, better career on screen. But what there is I have enjoyed. I need to get my hands on "The Lonely Lady."