Two years after the release of Charles Sellierโs 1972 novel The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams, Dan Haggerty starred as the 19th-century farmer-turned-frontiersman in a feature film of the same name.

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Set in the 1850s, โThe Life and Times of Grizzly Adamsโ (1974) tells the story James Adams, a man accused of a crime he didnโt commit. To escape certain injustice he flees into the mountains, reluctantly leaving his young daughter, Peg in the care of his sister. In the wilderness Adams rescues and raises a bear cub, who becomes his constant companion.
The movie was one of the biggest hits of the year, and in 1976 Sellier pitched the idea of Grizzly Adams as a family-friendly television series to NBC.
By January of 1977, the TV series โThe Life and Times of Grizzly Adamsโ was on the air, featuring Dan Haggerty as the lead character of Adams, Denver Pyle as Mad Jack, and Don Shanks as Nakoma. Haggertyโs portrayal of Adams won the affection of viewers and in 1978 he was given the Peopleโs Choice Award as the most popular actor in a new series.
That was a long time ago, but this simple story of a man and his bear helped shape my love affair with period dramas; hereโs why.
In the first episode of the television series โThe Life and Times of Grizzly Adams,โ a young girl, traveling west with her parents in a covered wagon, gets lost in the mountain wilderness. Alone and afraid until Grizzly Adams comes to her aid, Eliza Bowker (Kristen Curry) quickly comes to trust the kind-hearted bearded man and the pair become fast friends. As soon as possible but after their share of adventures, Adams sees the child is safely reunited with her parents.
When the episode titled โAdams Cubโ premiered, I was no older than the character Eliza, and it was easy to relate to her. Not unlike Grizzly Adams, she was independent, loved animals and made the best of her situation. But I had never met an adult, let alone a man, like Grizzly Adams. He had a bear as a best friend, had built his own cabin, and had a deep respect for the natural world and all living things.
Dan Haggerty was 35 years old when the television show began, and he was vibrant with a genuine smile and emanated an unmistakable warmth. I was just a child and didnโt know if I wanted him for a dad, a friend, or my future husband, but I was completely hooked on the period drama.
โLittle House on the Prairieโ and โThe Waltonsโ surrounded me in a wonderful familial cocoon, but I felt protective of, and safe around, Grizzly Adams. Growing up in a city with a terrific matrilineal clan but without a strong father figure, the expansive wilderness and the gentle mountain man spoke deeply to my young self.
โFor any child of the Seventies, Grizzly Adams was a fascinating folk hero. This hirsute Californian woodsman who fled into the Californian mountains after he was wrongly accused of murder was irresistible to youngsters because he seemed so free from the constraints of normal adult life. Here was a man of integrity with a knack for survival and a mistrust for authority, and who, most importantly, was kind to animals. Ben, the grizzly bear cub he adopted, brought out the gruff Grizzlyโs caring side and many a young heart was melted by this unlikely friendship.โ โ The Telegraph
Grizzly Adams said endearing things like โbritches, humdinger, simmer down little fella, sit down a spell, and go to your ma.โ But he also taught me real life lessons like not to judge by appearances, that there is good and bad in everything, and โIf you live with nature, not against her, sheโll be real good to you.โ He was always learning from his adventures and from the animals around him; the mountains, the raccoons, owls, deer, rabbits, red-tailed hawks, badgers, cougars, bobcat, crows, fox, porcupine and even skunk were his friends.
Nearly forty years after โThe Life and Times of Grizzly Adamsโ came into our homes, the television series is still refreshing to watch for its scenes in the vast wilderness, and its grounded values. The sentiment of the showโs theme song Maybe is still powerfully resonant: โMaybe thereโs a world where we wonโt have to run and maybe thereโs a time weโll call our own, living free in harmony and majesty.โ
With his rugged good looks and real-life love for animals, Haggerty seemed at one with Grizzly Adams, and apparently he truly was. According to the New York Times, Haggerty โlived on a small ranch in Malibu Canyon with an assortment of wild animals that he had tamed at birth or rescued from injury.โ
โThe Life and Times of Grizzly Adamsโ aired during a period when people were awakening to the environmental movement, actively discussing the issues of preservation of the natural world and protection of wildlife. In 1977 Haggerty described his character to the Leader-Herald as โsort of a St. Francis of Assisi with his bears and wildlife,โ and the show carried its message elegantly.
Most importantly, for me, Grizzly Adams was kind, peaceful and tolerant; he was a man to look up to. Iโll forever be grateful to Haggertyโs portrayal of Adams, which helped shape my respect for others, animals and the natural world, and started my lifelong love of period dramas.
The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams: The Complete Series is available on DVD
โThe Life and Times of Grizzly Adamsโ (1974) feature film was based on Charles Sellierโs 1972 novel The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams. Outdoor scenes for the movie were shot on location in Kananaskis Country, Alberta, Canada.
โThe Life and Times of Grizzly Adamsโ television series originally aired on NBC from 1977 to 1978. Season 1 had 13 episodes, Season 2 had 24 episodes including the 90-minute Easter special The Renewal and the 90-minute Christmas special Once Upon a Starry Night. Until The Capture of Grizzly Adams, the television series ignored the fact that Adams had a daughter in the film. Starring Dan Haggerty, Don Shanks, Denver Pyle, Bozo the bear, John Bishop. Narrated by Denver Pyle. The television series was filmed on location in Utah and Arizona. Available on DVD
According to Television Obscurities, in August 1978, the National Parent Teacher Association released an updated network television program guide and โThe Life and Times of Grizzly Adamsโ was ranked among the top ten shows โon the basis of positive contribution to quality of life, lack of offensive content, and high artistic and technical quality. It was also ranked one of the least offensive shows and one of the least violent shows on television.
In 1982, a two-hour television movie โThe Capture of Grizzly Adamsโ concluded the series. A bounty hunter uses Adamsโ 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. Grizzly Adams proves his innocence, finally clearing his name.
Dan Haggerty also played Jeremiahโa modern day version of Grizzly Adamsโin the films โGrizzly Mountainโ (1997) and โEscape to Grizzly Mountainโ (2000) in which two children travel 127 years into the past to the 1840s, and meet mountain man Jeremiah, who offers to help locate their parents.
After the feature film โThe Life and Times of Grizzly Adamsโ but before the TV series aired, Haggerty starred in โThe Adventures of Frontier Fremont.โ Fremont (Dan Haggerty), a mild-mannered citizen of 19th-century St. Louis, gives up his job as a tinsmith in favor of a life in the mountains. Here he becomes friends with the animals and with other like-minded frontiersmen. As before, Denver Pyle co-stars as โthe old mountaineer.โ The filmโs plot was very similar that of โGrizzly Adamsโ but was set about twenty years earlier in the 1830s. TV Guide calls it โenjoyable family fare with spectacular photography.โ The G-rated film was only released on VHS, by Schick Sunn-Classic.
Another similar family film but non-Grizzly Adams role for Haggerty โSpirit of the Eagle.โ the story of William Smith, an independent mountain man in 1851. With the help of a bear and a golden eagle Smith tracks down an unsavory fur trader who has kidnapped his son.
Reportedly, both the film and series version are completed and โreveal a man who exchanged civilian life for solitude in the mountains near Yosemite. He was not a fugitive from justice who fled to the mountains, as the 1970s TV series conveyed. Rather, he opted for a peaceful life in order to escape the crush of a greed-driven society striving for wealth and power as a result of โgold rush fever.โ As Henry David Thoreau wrote about his own move to the woods โto live deliberately,โ so too did Adams have a similar calling. At least for awhile. The new Grizzly Adams motion picture and television series versions will be adjusted for todayโs viewing audience to better identify it with this fascinating, albeit long misunderstood and mostly forgotten person of western lore.โ โ Grizzly Adams Entertainment
Dan Haggerty was born on November 19, 1941 in Los Angeles, California. After battling with cancer for five months, Haggerty passed away on January 15, 2016 surrounded by his family. His longtime manager and friend Terry Bomar said โI told him weโre praying for himโฆI told him โI love you, man.โ The last thing I heard him say was โI love you.โ โ
If you enjoyed this post, youโll want to wander over to the full (growing!) list of recommended best period films and romantic and historical costume dramas, all sorted by era and theme, in The Period Films List. You may especially like our Best Period Dramas: Family Friendly List. Also see True Confessions of a Heartie, which chronicles the path to becoming a fan of Hallmarkโs โWhen Calls the Heart,โ and our list of Victorian Era Family Friendly Christmas Movies.
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