MovieChat Forums > The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (1955) Discussion > Why no 7th Season as the series ended wi...

Why no 7th Season as the series ended with everything up in air?!


Very good series, much better than I expected. The shootout at the OK Corral was depicted with some accuracy unlike the ludicrous movie "My Darling Clementine" where everything was fictionalized.

However, the sixth and last season ended with everything up in the air, and major fights coming with Brocious, Ringo, the Cowboys, and the shootings of Morgan and Virgil. Wyatt's last words on the show were "We're not dead yet". And off he went out the door. End of series.

Wondered if a 7th season was planned but for some reason canceled. It would have great.

Look for the 89 year old Hugh O'Brian on YouTube plugging his book "Hugh O'Brian - or What's Left of Him". Barely recognizable, but has all his marbles.

reply

Yea, I know this topic has been brought up before here, but I am hoping for new info.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0047750/board/flat/219934634?p=1

reply

Where would they have taken Wyatt in a 7th Season? They clearly were not going to have Morgan killed and show Wyatt turning into a vengeance-crazed vigilante. They didn't actually leave everything "up in the air," giving the impression that Wyatt's war with the Clanton gang ended with him arresting Curly Bill and Ringo. Total fiction of course, but not the grim truth.

reply

The last episode, the one right after the OK Corral shoot out, ended with the Earps in big trouble from the Cowboy gang and Wyatt saying "we're not dead yet". Hardly a conclusion.

In reality, Earp killed Brocious ands someone killed Ringo. Ike eventually got shoot and killed fleeing a lawman.

Wyatt did not have to be shown as a "crazed vigilante" but someone defending himself from ongoing attacks, which was left hanging as the series ended.

reply

Fair enough, although I'm not sure they could have gotten another season out of the aftermath and the Vendetta Ride. Maybe they could have with the series' usual mixture of fact and fiction; could have also continued the series in Colorado, with Wyatt and Doc trying to avoid extradition, or even an arc about the Dodge City Gamblers War.

reply

ABC canceled this series after six seasons and 229 episodes all in black and white. The final three episodes of the series left viewers in a cliffhanger. The sad part was the show that replaced it in the fall of 1961

"Calvin and the Colonel" which lasted a mere four months on the air and 22 episodes was the series that replaced "Wyatt Earp".

reply

I found the following article from 1961 that somewhat answers your question, troyens:

There are only six bullets in a Western revolver, and Hugh O'Brian figures six years is about the limit for a successful television horse opera. After completing his tenure in The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp this February, the actor said, "It's time for me to get off the horse while the getting's good. I'll miss Wyatt. I'm grateful for all he's done for me. And I hope I did him justice, too."

Playing the famed Western lawman for a half-dozen years has made the square-jawed actor one of the wealthiest young men in Hollywood. Thanks to the popularity of the series Hugh has had the wherewithal to invest wisely, establish himself as an actor, and corral a million dollars in assets. He owns extensive acreage in California, Florida and Nevada. He is part owner of the Whispering Waters Hotel in Palm Springs, holds large interests in four bowling alleys, and is up to his six gun in stocks and bonds. He also owns his home free and clear.

"Earp left me a hell of a legacy." Hugh grinned. "We had wonderful ratings from the beginning because we were the first adult Western series on the air. Now we're making a hit in other countries. "I'll be getting money from reruns in this country, in addition to first showings in England, Australia, Germany and South America. "But I'm glad the show is over. It's important lo leave when you're winning. And our last five shows will take us out in a blaze of gory glory."

O'Brian and company have planned one of TV's most unusual finales. The final five segments will be a five-part serial based on the battle of the 0. K. Corral. It seems the most logical place to end the series. "Arguably, that was the most dramatic moment in Earp's life, and was the last great gun battle of the gun fighter period," he explained. The actual battle itself was filmed in slow motion--another first. "The fight is so fast that it would be just a blur at normal speed. But in slow motion we demonstrate exactly how these men faced each other. We show the individual shots fired, why some of the bullets went astray and what happened when they hit their marks."

O'Brian acknowledges there are many more tales to be told about the legendary lawman. "He lived a long, colorful life, so we don't leave the characters neatly in a static place," the actor commented. "But those stories are for future writers to tell." The five-parter begins Tuesday, May 30, on ABC, and concludes June 27.

With the series behind him, O'Brian is looking forward to making movies, appearing in guest shots on other TV shows, and invading the Broadway stage. He was much cheered by favorable reviews for his recent appearance in "The Play of the Week" in which tough New York critics praised his performance. "I first started in the theater,' Hugh said, "and I'd like very much to go back to it." If he doesn't get the opportunity, Hugh can always buy a theater and put on his own shows- all thanks to to good old Wyatt Earp.

reply

I have looked everywhere for an answer to the reason the series ended like it did with no luck. I have read a short version of another reply stating Hugh O'Brian pulled the plug on the show that someone else provided in a reply to your question.

Another possible answer to the end of the show was a record number of westerns were cancelled after the 1960-61 season and O'Brian may have seen the handwriting on the wall.

In those days, there was no thought given to providing a season or series finale episode. For its day, the five episode run was very unique.

The last episode does give the viewer the feeling that future episodes were planned since it ended with Earp walking out the door with no resolution, which may mean the show was cancelled.

However, a season seven really had no where to go because 1960s TV shows did not end with major good characters getting wounded (Virgil), killed (Morgan), and the main character tracking down the bad guys and killing them without a trial. It also would only taken a handful of episodes for Earp to track the Cowboys.

I have not read the O'Brian autobiography to know if he touched on any thought to ending the series but it is doubtful since no answer has showed up on this thread and considering his age, he was probably the last living executive from the series.

My personal opinion is the show was cancelled without warning, which explains the sudden ending of the last episode.

reply