The National Dream (miniseries)

The National Dream, also known as The National Dream: Building the Impossible Railway, was a 1974 Canadian television docudrama miniseries based on Pierre Berton's 1970 book of the same name, plus Berton's 1971 follow-up book The Last Spike.[1] The television adaptation was written by William Whitehead and Timothy Findley. Berton is listed as a consultant on the credits.

The National Dream
Based onThe National Dream
The Last Spike
Written byWilliam Whitehead
Timothy Findley
Directed byJames Murray
Eric Till
StarringJohn Colicos
Gillie Fenwick
William Hutt
Joseph Shaw
Gerard Parkes
Chris Wiggins
Narrated byPierre Berton
Theme music composerLouis Applebaum
Country of originCanada
Original language(s)English
No. of episodes8
Production
Producer(s)James Murray
CinematographyHarry Makin, CSC
Editor(s)Don Haid
Arla Saare
Running time1 hour (time slot)
Budget$2,000,000
Release
Original networkCBC
Original release3 March 
28 April 1974

Production

The series portrayed the concept and construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway during the late 19th century, with Berton himself as narrator.[2] The National Dream combined dramatic reconstructions of the events (directed by Eric Till) with documentary content (directed by James Murray).[2][3] Production required two years and cost $2 million. Royal Trust, which was the executor of Cornelius Van Horne's estate, paid $400,000 to be a principal sponsor.[4]

CBC Television premiered the eight-part hour-long series on 30 March 1974[1] and aired its final instalment on 28 April 1974. The series' rated audience of three million within Canada set a record for CBC in terms of dramatic programming. The series was also dubbed in French and broadcast on Radio-Canada,[4] and was later seen in modified form on BBC in the United Kingdom.

Principal cast

List of episodes

  • The Great Lone Land
  • The Pacific Scandal
  • The Horrid B.C. Business
  • The Great Debate
  • The Railway General
  • The Sea of Mountains
  • The Desperate Days
  • The Last Spike

After initial release

The series was never intended for international sales to cover any significant portion of its production costs.[4] Berton, however, was believed to have earned at least $250,000 from it, as well as from a re-release of the related books.[4]

There has never been a home video release, but it is available to educational institutions in DVD on special order from the CBC.[5]

gollark: "Fun" is probably just some weird heuristic for novelty-seeking, but it manifests more as a terminal goal than some bad mental tool for navigating goals.
gollark: (or properly for situations it wasn't really optimized for)
gollark: It's an effective one, since you don't have to rely on a glitchy evolved heuristic which might not work properly.
gollark: Also decision making.
gollark: Yes, human intuitions about probability and also all other things ever are pretty apioform.

References

  1. "National Dream slated". Windsor Star. 22 February 1974. p. 17. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  2. "Rail-building Series Back". Leader-Post. 26 December 1975. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  3. "A Historical Series On TV to Camouflage American Domination". The Forge. 20 May 1976. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  4. MacDonald, L. Ian (7 February 1974). "Too late for Van Horne's Dream". Montreal Gazette. p. 27.
  5. "The National Dream". curio.ca. Retrieved 6 September 2014.


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