The Winds of War (miniseries)
The Winds of War | |
---|---|
Genre | War Historical drama |
Based on | The Winds of War by Herman Wouk |
Written by | Herman Wouk |
Directed by | Dan Curtis |
Starring | Robert Mitchum Ali MacGraw Jan-Michael Vincent John Houseman Victoria Tennant |
Narrated by | William Woodson |
Composer | Bob Cobert |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 7 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Michael P. Schoenbrun |
Producer | Dan Curtis |
Production locations | Yugoslavia Austria Italy United Kingdom West Germany United States |
Cinematography | Charles Correll Stevan Larner |
Editors | John F. Burnett Bernard Gribble Jack Tucker Peter Zinner |
Running time | 883 minutes |
Production companies | Dan Curtis Productions Paramount Television Jadran Film |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | February 6 February 13, 1983 | –
Related | |
War and Remembrance |
The Winds of War is a 1983 American war drama television miniseries, based on the 1971 novel of the same name written by Herman Wouk. It was produced and directed by Dan Curtis, while Wouk adapted his own novel to screen. Like the novel, the series follows the lives of the fictional Henry and Jastrow families as they intersect with the major global events of the early years of World War II. The series also includes segments of documentary footage, narrated by William Woodson, to explain major events and important characters. It stars an ensemble cast, featuring Robert Mitchum, Ali MacGraw, Jan-Michael Vincent, John Houseman, Polly Bergen, Chaim Topol, Peter Graves, Jeremy Kemp, Victoria Tennant, and Ralph Bellamy.
The series was aired in seven installments between February 6 and February 13, 1983 on ABC. With 140 million viewers of part or all of Winds of War, it was the most-watched miniseries at that time.[1] It won three Primetime Emmy Awards (out of thirteen nominations[2]) and was nominated for four Golden Globe Awards,[3] including Best Miniseries or Television Film. The success of The Winds of War spawned a 1988 sequel miniseries, War and Remembrance, also based on a novel written by Wouk and also directed and produced by Curtis.[4]
Plot summary
[edit]The series follows the plot of Wouk's novel closely, depicting events from March 1939 until the entry of the United States into World War II in December 1941. It tells the story of Victor "Pug" Henry (played by Robert Mitchum), an American Naval attaché in Berlin and a confidant to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and his family, and their relationships with a mixture of real people and fictional characters. A significant subplot of the series follows the activities Adolf Hitler and the German General Staff, with the fictitious general Armin von Roon as a perspective character.
Cast
[edit]Starring
[edit]- Robert Mitchum as Victor "Pug" Henry
- Ali MacGraw as Natalie Jastrow
- Jan-Michael Vincent as Byron "Briny" Henry
- John Houseman as Aaron Jastrow
- Polly Bergen as Rhoda Henry
- Lisa Eilbacher as Madeline Henry
- David Dukes as Leslie Slote
- Topol as Berel Jastrow
- Ben Murphy as Warren Henry
- Peter Graves as Palmer "Fred" Kirby
- Jeremy Kemp as Brig. Gen. Armin von Roon
- Special appearance by
- Ralph Bellamy as President Franklin D. Roosevelt
- Introducing
- Victoria Tennant as Pamela Tudsbury
Guest stars
[edit]- Günter Meisner as Adolf Hitler
- Wolfgang Preiss as Field Marshal Walter von Brauchitsch
- Reinhard Kolldehoff as Hermann Göring
- Werner Kreindl as Col Gen Franz Halder
- Alexander Kerst as Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel
- Joachim Hansen as Field Marshal Alfred Jodl
- Anton Diffring as Joachim von Ribbentrop
- Howard Lang as Winston Churchill
- Joseph Hacker as Lt. Carter "Lady" Astor
- Michael Logan as Alistair Tudsbury
- Barry Morse as Wolf Stoller
- Deborah Winters as Janice Lacouture Henry
- Enzo G. Castellari as Benito Mussolini
- Sky du Mont as Count Ciano
- Edmund Purdom as Luigi Gianelli
- Lawrence Pressman as Bunky Thurston
- Scott Brady as Captain Red Tully
- Leo Gordon as General "Train" Anderson
- Ferdy Mayne as Ludwig Rosenthal
- John Dehner as Admiral Ernest King
- Andrew Duggan as Admiral Husband E. Kimmel
- Charles Lane as Admiral William Harrison Standley
- Logan Ramsey as Congressman Lacouture
- Patrick Allen as Air Marshal Hugh Dowding
- Hugh Gillin as Captain Jocko Larkin
- Ken Lynch as Rear Admiral Talbot Gray
- Richard X. Slattery as Admiral Bull Halsey
- Mickey Knox as Herb Rose
- Art Lund as Rear Admiral Moose Benton
- Allan Cuthbertson as Major General Tillet
- Barbara Steele as Frau Stoller
- George Murdock as Brigadier Gen. Fitzgerald
- William Berger as Phil Briggs
- Ben Piazza as Aloysius Whitman
- John Karlen as Ed
- Siegfried Rauch as Ernst Bayer
- Jacques Herlin as Paul Reynaud
Production
[edit]Development
[edit]Author Herman Wouk was exceedingly pessimistic about a film adaptation of his beloved and scrupulously researched novel, because he had been extremely unhappy with earlier film adaptations of his novels Marjorie Morningstar, The Caine Mutiny and Youngblood Hawke. He was convinced by Paramount Pictures and the ABC television network that a miniseries would allow the full breadth of his epic story to be brought to life onscreen.[5] Wouk required unusual control over the production in his contract, including considerable influence on the production and veto power over what products could be advertised during the miniseries and how many commercials would be allowed. Wouk also has a cameo as the archbishop of Siena.
I, Claudius screenwriter Jack Pulman was originally hired to adapt the novel. He and Wouk worked for months preparing an outline. After Pulman died suddenly in 1979, Wouk himself wrote the teleplay for the series.[6]
Casting
[edit]The casting of Lee Strasberg as Aaron Jastrow was publicly announced in February 1981.[7] Strasberg had to withdraw from the production before filming any scenes, due to ill health (he died in 1982). He was replaced by John Houseman.[8] Houseman later had to withdraw from the sequel miniseries, War and Remembrance, due to his own ill health (he died in 1988). He was replaced by John Gielgud.
Filming
[edit]Paramount produced the miniseries for $40 million ($122 million in 2023 dollars). ABC paid $32 million for the broadcast rights, then charged advertisers $175,000 for 30-second commercials and $350,000 for one-minute commercials. ABC expected simply to break even on the original broadcast and make any profits from later reruns and syndication.[9]
Principal photography began on December 1, 1980 aboard the RMS Queen Mary in Long Beach, California and was completed (except for miniature photography) on December 8, 1981, on US Navy vessels at Port Hueneme, California, with filming of the recreation of the Attack on Pearl Harbor.
The series was shot at 404 locations in Europe, California and Washington state over 14 months.[6] The 962-page script contained 1,785 scenes and 285 speaking parts.[6] The production involved 4,000 camera setups and shot a million feet of exposed film. The production had a 206-day shooting schedule and came in four days ahead of schedule.
Principal locations were Zagreb, Opatija and Rijeka in Yugoslavia; Berchtesgaden and Munich in West Germany; Siena, Florence, Milan and Rome, Italy; London, UK; Vienna, Austria; Naval Station Bremerton in Bremerton, Washington and throughout the Los Angeles area and Southern California.[6] Scenes were filmed onboard the USS Peleliu (LHA-5) and the USS Missouri (BB-63), the latter still in mothballs.
The opening scene sub-titled "Berlin" was actually filmed in and around the Hofburg in Vienna. The OpsRoom at RAF Uxbridge, from which the Battle of Britain fighter defenses were commanded, is only rarely made available to the public. In the beginning of part 6, the train scenes were filmed at the Orange Empire Railway Museum with Ventura County 2-6-2 number 2.
Nazi concentration camp-survivor Branko Lustig was an associate producer in the miniseries and also on Schindler's List.[10]
Music
[edit]The music was composed by Bob Cobert, a composer often associated with Curtis.
Use of stock footage
[edit]The production made use of battle scenes from other films during the attack scene on Pearl Harbor and during the German attacks on the Soviet Union, including scenes for both battles from Tora! Tora! Tora!
Episodes
[edit]The miniseries was shown by ABC in seven parts over seven evenings, between February 6 and February 13, 1983.[11] It had a runtime of 18 hours including commercials, or 14 hours 40 minutes excluding commercials. Parts One, Two, Six and Seven ran for three hours including commercials, while parts Three, Four and Five ran for two hours including commercials. It attracted an average of 80 million viewers per night.[12]
Part | Title | Original air date |
---|---|---|
1 | "The Winds Rise" | February 6, 1983 |
2 | "The Storm Breaks" | February 7, 1983 |
3 | "Cataclysm" | February 8, 1983 |
4 | "Defiance" | February 9, 1983 |
5 | "Of Love and War" | February 10, 1983 |
6 | "Changing of the Guard" | February 11, 1983 |
7 | "Into the Maelstrom" | February 13, 1983 |
Release
[edit]A premiere screening of the first episode was held in Washington, D.C. at the Kennedy Center on Thursday, February 3, 1983, three nights before airing on ABC. The screening was attended by members of the cast including Robert Mitchum, Ali MacGraw, John Houseman, Polly Bergen and Peter Graves. Producer/director Dan Curtis and writer and Washington resident Herman Wouk also attended, though Wouk refused all requests for interviews, saying "I'm a very private person." Also attending were Paramount owner Charles Bluhdorn, who hosted the event, as well as ABC Motion Pictures President Brandon Stoddard, Jack Valenti, Ted Kennedy, Robert McNamara, Art Buchwald, two senators, and numerous other Washington luminaries.[13]
After running a massive year-long advertising campaign, which cost an additional $23 million,[14] ABC reported that the miniseries had 140 million viewers for all or part of its eighteen hours, making it the most-watched miniseries up to that time.[1]
Reception
[edit]Critical response
[edit]New York Times TV critic John O'Connor said that the "hoopla on 'The Winds of War' has been nearly as massive as the project itself. The result, while not as artistically impressive as 'Brideshead Revisited,' is less manipulative than 'Holocaust' and at least as emotionally compelling as 'Roots.'" Mitchum, he said, "manages to carry the art of acting to the extremes of minimalism. He moves like an imposing battleship." Most of the actors, he said, are "at least 10 years older than the characters they are playing." Overall, O'Connor said, "the story does hold. It rumbles along, creating its own momentum, until it eventually becomes the television equivalent of a good read that can't be put down."[15]
Columnist Tom Shales of The Washington Post called the miniseries "bulbous and bloated" and said "a first-year film-school student could edit three or four hours out of the thing without hurting the flow at all." Watching Winds of War, he said, "ecstatic superlatives like 'competent' and 'acceptable' come to mind." He ridiculed the performances, and described the actors as too old for their roles.[16]
The show was a success throughout the United States and received many accolades, including Golden Globe nominations and various Emmy wins and nominations.[17]
Awards and nominations
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Lewis, Dan (February 16, 1983). "'Winds of War' Takes Ratings By Storm". The Record. Hackensack, New Jersey. p. D1. Retrieved February 9, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b "The Winds of War". Television Academy. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
- ^ a b "Winds of War, The". Golden Globes. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
- ^ The Winds of War, DVD-featurette.
- ^ Wouk, Herman (June 14, 1981). "Herman Wouk: 'A Faithful Adaptation'". The New York Times.
- ^ a b c d "ABC-TV, Paramount Studio go with 'Winds of War'". The Town Talk from Alexandria, Louisiana. February 5, 1983. p. 30.
- ^ "Disney shows To Appear On CBS-TV Next Season". The New York Times. Associated Press. February 26, 1981.
- ^ "A New Role for Houseman". Observer-Reporter. Washington, Penna. Associated Press. February 3, 1983. Retrieved February 9, 2023 – via news.google.com.
- ^ Clarke, Gerald (February 7, 1983). "The $40 Million Gamble: ABC goes all out on its epic The Winds of War". Time.
- ^ "The Winds of War". DVD-featurette.
- ^ "The Winds of War - episode list". IMDb. Accessed 2013-08-27.
- ^ "Winds of War". DVD Talk. Accessed 2013-08-27.
- ^ Bumiller, Elisabeth (February 4, 1983). "Hollywood at 'War'". The Washington Post. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
- ^ Bedell, Sally (April 24, 1983). "For the TV Networks, the Key to Success is a Long Story". The New York Times.
- ^ O'Connor, John (February 6, 1983). "TV View; 'the Winds of War'-Open to Question, but Often Impressive". The New York Times. Retrieved 2019-12-26.
- ^ Shales, Tom (February 6, 1983). "The Winds of War". The Washington Post. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
- ^ "The Winds of War: Awards", IMDb, 1983-02-06, retrieved 2016-01-17
External links
[edit]- Winds of War at IMDb
- The Winds of War opening titles on YouTube
- Cultural depictions of Adolf Hitler
- American Broadcasting Company original programming
- 1980s American television miniseries
- Cultural depictions of Winston Churchill
- American English-language television shows
- Films directed by Dan Curtis
- Films set in the 1930s
- Television shows based on American novels
- Television series by CBS Studios
- Holocaust films
- World War II television series
- World War II television drama series
- American World War II films
- Films shot in Croatia
- Films shot in Yugoslavia
- Films based on works by Herman Wouk
- Works about women in war
- Television series set in 1940
- Television series set in 1941