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The Waltons / 1975 The Estrangement - Revised Final Draft

$ 36.96

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Industry: Movies
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    THE WALTONS
    Episode Title: "The Estrangement":
    Script date: July 23rd, 1975
    Written By: Michael Russnow & Tony Kayden
    Description
    :
    "The Estrangement"
    is an Original Revised Final Draft Television Script used in
    the Hit Television Show "The Waltons"
    .
    This episode is from Season 4, Episode 12 which first aired December 4th, 1975.
    STORY LINE
    Young Wade (Richard Hatch)
    Walton's wife Vera and her baby return to Walton's Mountain, having run away from her unhappy marriage. She cites a drastic change in Wade's behavior since the government forced them off their property,
    which causes her to suspect Wade is cheating on her. In fact, he is transporting Moonshine
    for his grandfather Boone, and quits his other job in anger when his boss J. D. Paulsen (Burton Gilliam)
    speaks to him about his declining performance. After the sheriff arrests Wade, John-Boy persuades Boone to bail him out, and John offers him a new job making use of his woodworking skills, he comes to his senses and patches things up with his wife. Meanwhile, Ben starts a home business shipping individual pine seedlings, but has to stop after the sheriff tells him the seedlings were all too immature to thrive, and furthermore he has no sales license.
    (From Wikipedia)
    The Waltons
    is an American historical drama
    television series about a family in rural Virginia
    during the Great Depression
    and World War II.
    It was created by Earl Hamner Jr.,
    based on his 1961 book
    Spencer's Mountain
    and the 1963 film of the same name.
    The television movie
    The Homecoming: A Christmas Story
    was broadcast on December 19, 1971.
    Based on its success, the CBS
    television network ordered one season of episodes based on the same characters and that became the television series
    The Waltons
    .
    Beginning in September 1972, the series subsequently aired on CBS for nine seasons.
    PICTURE IS NOT INCLUDED, IT IS JUST BEING USED AS A VISUALREFERENCE.
    THIS IS BEING SOLD AS MOVIE MEMORABILIA ONLY, MEANING NO RIGHTS ARE GIVEN OR IMPLIED.
    THIS IS BEING SOLD FROM ONE COLLECTOR TO ANOTHER.
    PLEASE VIEW THE PICTURES CAREFULLY
    Message me if you have any questions BEFORE BIDDING, Thanks.
    NO RETURNS. All Sales Are Final
    All of the scripts that I own are original not reproductions or fakes. Some people, new to collecting, are confused about the word "Original." In terms of movie scripts, the term "Original" means that it was used by the production company in the early stages of production or that it was given to the cast and crew members during filming, and used at the time of production. Each film/television project has a different total number of scripts that are issued.
    An original movie or television script has a lot of character in the item itself and every one of them is different in some way or another. For example, all finished scripts begin as a First Draft Screenplay then through time the screenplay is edited or Revised into the Final Version of the Shooting Script. Any changes made to the screenplay during production are known as revisions. These revision pages are usually a different color like blue or pink and inserted into the Final Scripts that were issued to the cast and crew. Sometimes new writers are even brought in by the producers during the early stages for whatever reason to revise and make changes to the original script or come in with their own story ideas. Because of this a First Draft Screenplay can even go through multiple title changes on its way to becoming a Final Script. There is usually only one script given to each cast or crew member during
    production. Some crew and cast will make changes or add notes to their script copies as well.
    All these changes or revisions make original movie scripts very desirable because of how unique they are at various stages in the writing/editing/production process.