martes, 26 de abril de 2022

La Familia Ingalls T-10 E-3 El último adiós 1/12

Estamos listos para "Volver a Empezar" en el camino de Michael y Cindy se está abriendo "la Autopista al Cielo.
Con "Little House on the Prairie Michael Landon culminó otra etapa en su dilatada vida. Una vida que en el tiempo fue corta, más en el Amor es Eterna. Michael nos muestra claramente que dónde hay un final ahí mismo está el nuevo comienzo. Ls miembros básicos del equipo se reagrupan para abrir una nueva expresión. Las personas que forman el equipo se transforman, se renuevan, algunas se van y otras llegan para que las nueva ideas puedan ser expresadas en la forma. El Amor Incondicionado reagrupa formas y sigue su Expresión Enterna:¡sempre somos amor compartido!.
Kent McCray y Michael Landon trabajaban en equipo des de la producción de la serie "Bonanza" Ambos fichados por la cadena de Rdio/televisión NBC. El trabajo conjunto de Michael landon y Kent McCray nos ha lregalado un legado merecedor de ser honrado y cultivado. Contemplando las sereis que aún nos acomapañan y son realmente merecedoras de crear escuela para una mejor relación humana si es que algún día elegimos comunicarnos des de la Verdad de Ser. Ambos abrieron caminos a las nuevas generaciones, no solo en los EE.UU también para todos los que querian abrir el corazón y trabajar en equipo.
Michael Landon sentado en las escaleras del único edifició, del pueblo de Walnut Grove, que dejaron en pie al cancelar la serie Little House on the Prairie marzo 1974 Febrero 1984 siente. Quizás en este instante en que contempla el movimiento del vivir en los pasados diez añor de la vida compartida con el equipo con el que se realizó la serie, trabajo conjunto dónde se vivieron bellos momentos y otros qualificados con otros nombres/juicios, un nombre, una etiqueta, es un límite a la libre expresión de ser.
La Vida es una expresión continua de Sí misma o Eterna Exprsión Incondicionada de un Potencial Innominado al que nosotros queremos llama Unico-Dios- La expresión Espiritu-Hombre Mujer es bella y compleja, ni que el Amor es simple. Formulas de expresión muy sencillas para el Eterno Universo que al multiplcarse parecen complejas más siguen siendo simples. Solo la Expresión de la Vida Siendo en todo Instante. Nosotros somos libres de elegir como qualificamos lo que vivimos. 
La contiuïdad de la Vida no conoce de nuestras emociones, la Vida se expresa en la creación y toda creación manifestada por la pequeña mente mujer/hombre es cambiante. Emerge, se desarrolla y decrece desapareciendo.
Emitida en febrero de 1984
La Familia Ingalls 
T-10 E-3 El último adiós
El sorprendente cierre de "La casa de la Pradera o Little House on the Prairie. 
Michael Landon propuso a sus compañeros dinamitar los espacios más significativos del decorado de la serie. sus compañeros entendieron con más o menos amplitud su decisicón, pero lo permitieron.
Mike era  productor y director de la serie al servicio de la cadena NBC. También, en muchos episodios escritor. Al final de la serie un profundo desacuerdo con algunos gestores de la cadena le llevo a tomar la decisión de dinamitar el plató, el conjuntos de decor.ados que simulaban Woulnod Grow
Mike fue, es y será el hombre que muestra  al Espiritu que lo sostiene.

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Link para seguirloen la red: Youtube -Mr Caleb

Dirección del enlace  https://www.nytimes.com/1984/02/06/arts/prairie-set-is-dynamited-for-finale.html?smid=url-share

About the Archive

This is a digitized version of an article from The Times’s print archive, before the start of online publication in 1996. To preserve these articles as they originally appeared, The Times does not alter, edit or update them.
Occasionally the digitization process introduces transcription errors or other problems; we are continuing to work to improve these archived versions. 

Death comes to all things, including successful television series. When the inevitable occurs, most popular series like to go out with a bang, figuratively speaking. The bang, however, was literal when the cast and crew of NBC-TV's ''Little House on the Prairie'' filmed their last episode a few weeks ago.

''The Last Farewell'' will be seen tonight. It concludes with perhaps the most apocalyptic valedictory to any television series in history: the townspeople of the fictional hamlet Walnut Grove decide to blow their town to smithereens. And so the entire set that the company had inhabited for the last 10 years was actually dynamited for this finale.

During its first seven years on the air, ''Little House on the Prairie'' consistently scored in the top 10 in the Nielsen ratings. It was one of the rare family shows to continue to hold an audience in prime time. So the show's creators wanted to provide a memorable ending for its fans. A Ruthless Buyer

There were a couple of reasons for the fireworks, according to Michael Landon, the star of the show, who also wrote and directed the final episode. Ten years ago, NBC leased a large parcel of land in the Simi Valley, north of Los Angeles, from the Getty Oil Company and the Newhall Land and Development Corporation. Their agreement with the owners was that when they were through with the location they would restore it to its original state. So when Mr. Landon and the network jointly decided to cancel the show, they knew the elaborate sets would have to be destroyed. It was Mr. Landon's idea to incorporate that contractual obligation into the story and dismantle the sets on camera.

The plot he concocted has a ruthless robber-baron buying up the town; the only protest the residents can make is to destroy their own property rather than see it taken over by this unscrupulous rogue. ''I think it makes for a good strong pioneer ending,'' Mr. Landon said of this violent conflagration. ''It was also a nice catharsis for the cast and crew. There were lots of tears when we finally blew up the town. The actors had all become very attached to their own buildings, so it was very emotional.''

The idea that a program advocating violent destruction of property is an affirmation of American values may raise some eyebrows, but Mr. Landon was given a chance to realize his anarchic vision. Filming the sequence was logistically complicated. ''We did quite a few tests first to make sure nobody would get hurt,'' Mr. Landon explained. ''So when we finally blew everything up, it went off like clockwork. We did it all in one day.'' Pilot for New Series Written

Today, a visitor to the Simi Valley location would have no idea that this sleepy cow pasture was just a few weeks ago a thriving center of the Old West. But this reversion to a pristine state of nature is only temporary. The combine that owns the land plans to turn it into a large development of houses and condominiums. ''So people who want to live in Walnut Grove will be able to do so,'' Mr. Landon said with a chuckle.

Now that his work on this series is over, Mr. Landon has written a pilot for a new television series which he hopes to sell, and he has also completed a feature film called ''Sam's Son,'' which is scheduled to open in the summer, which he describes as ''a semi-autobiographical piece about my day as a javelin thrower in high school.''

He said he felt that ''Little House on the Prairie'' had run its course, partly because ratings were declining in the last season, and also because Melissa Gilbert, who played his daughter on the series, had grown from a young girl to a woman. ''I didn't think a married woman should still be coming to her father for advice,'' Mr. Landon explained. ''But when we started this show, we never imagined it would last this long.''

Although Walnut Grove has been destroyed, it will reappear one last time, thanks to the capriciousness of television programmers. An episode filmed earlier, when the town was still intact, will be shown next Christmas. At the last minute, NBC decided to reverse the order in which the shows were to have been shown. And how will they explain the town's resurrection? ''Mike will probably do a voice-over for the Christmas show,'' according to Bill Kiley, a publicity agent for NBC, ''saying that this happened a few weeks before the destruction of the town.''

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