LOS ANGELES -- Wherever he goes, veteran movie producer Ken Wales hears the same question: "What now?"
Letters keep arriving asking what happened to Christy Huddleston, the heroine of Catherine Marshall's famous novel about a missionary teacher in the Great Smoky Mountains. In the last episode of the CBS series "Christy," Wales and crew left her facing a romantic cliffhanger. Did she choose the preacher or the doctor?
"Truth is, we hadn't really made up our minds," said Wales. "In the book, she chooses the doctor. ... In real life, the real Christy married the minister."
But there's the rub. Viewers may never know, because the network canceled the series. During a year of CBS ratings disasters, "Christy" maintained solid second-place numbers in various time slots, while generating record numbers of fan letters and calls. That wasn't enough.
"Obviously, the CBS people never quite understood what `Christy' was about. I don't think they wanted to understand," said Wales, who invested nearly 20 years of his time and money in the project. "They gave us five different time slots and never left us in one place more than a few weeks. Anybody who has worked in this town knows that the way you kill a show is to keep moving it."
So there's that question again: "What now?"
