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Cold Turkey: Iowa Time Machine January 30, 1971

  • Jan 30
  • 1 min read

Iowa Time Machine ⏰: On January 30, 1971, the film “Cold Turkey,” starring Dick Van Dyke and filmed in Iowa, debuted in theaters. Directed by Norman Lear, Randy Newman composed and performed original music for the film.



In the film, the fictional Valiant Tobacco Company offers $25 million tax-free dollars to any American town whose entire population can stop smoking cigarettes for a month as a publicity stunt. A charismatic preacher, Reverend Clayton Brooks, encourages the depressed small town of Eagle Rock, Iowa, to take on the challenge, but the town struggles to overcome its addiction to tobacco.



Shot mostly in Greenfield, Iowa, many locals appeared as extras in the film. Winterset is filmed in a few neighborhood shots, and the Methodist church in Orient, as well as the bank in Macksburg, all appear in the movie. The Grayson Mansion scenes were filmed at Terrace Hill, the official residence of the governor of Iowa, and other scenes were shot in Marshalltown.



Produced in 1969, the distributor shelved the film for 2 years due to concerns about its box-office potential. The film premiered on January 30, 1971, at the Galaxy Theatre in Des Moines, and opened in 30 Iowa theaterson February 3, 1971. Cold Turkey grossed $131,616 in its first five days in 30 theaters in seven towns. The film went on to earn $5.5 million in theatrical rentals in the United States and Canada. #Iowa #OTD #History #Movies #Hollywood



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