Entertainment

We've Dug Up Some Unexpected Secrets About Twin Peaks


What we thought was going to be an eternal mystery—what would Mark Frost and David Lynch have done with their creation if Twin Peaks had lasted longer than two seasons—was solved when Showtime brought the cult-classic drama and most of the original cast back for a third season in 2017.

Yet nothing will ever quite compare to how it all started 30 years ago, on April 8, 1990, when Twin Peaks‘ two-hour pilot premiered on ABC, posing the infamous question: Who killed Laura Palmer?

It wasn’t easy to convince the network to put the decidedly different drama on the air at all, but the response, when it did, was fairly rapturous. The eight-episode first season was promptly nominated for 14 Emmys and won two, and it was named Best TV Series, Drama, at the Golden Globes the following year. 

Dark, funny, endlessly surprising and ultimately way ahead of its time, the series didn’t turn out to be everyone’s cup of coffee and, after Laura’s killer was revealed in the middle of season two, was canceled after 30 episodes.

But it endured in the hearts and minds of superfans everywhere (a fanzine called Wrapped in Plastic published for 12 years, and now you can read all the issues online), and armchair analysis has been consuming the internet ever since.

So in honor of this damn fine show about murder, secrets, betrayal, love, family and hallucinatory dreams in a small town where it turns out nobody really knows each other, here are some secrets we dug up about the making of Twin Peaks:

ESC: Hollywood Glam, Halloween E!ssentials, Marilyn Monroe

Baron/Getty Images

David Lynch, Mark Frost, Twin Peaks

Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic

Kyle MacLachlan, Twin Peaks

Walt Disney Television via Getty Images

Laura Palmer, Twin Peaks

CBS Photo Archive/Getty Images

Twin Peaks

SHOWTIME

The Ennis House, Frank Lloyd Wright

Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Twin Peaks, Russ Tamblyn

Moviestore Collection/Shutterstock

Isabella Rossellini, Blue Velvet, Joan Chen, Twin Peaks

Walt Disney Television via Getty Images

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, Al Strobel, Michael J. Anderson

Moviestore/Shutterstock

Log Lady, Catherine Coulson, Twin Peaks

Walt Disney Television via Getty Images

Twin Peaks, Sheryl Lee

Walt Disney Television via Getty Images

Twin Peaks, Sheryl Lee, Lara Flynn Boyle, James Marshall

Walt Disney Television via Getty Images

Twin Peaks, Richard Beymer, David Patrick Kelly

ABC

Twin Peaks

ABC

Kyle MacLachlan, Twin Peaks

CBS Photo Archive/Getty Images

Lara Flynn Boyle, Kyle MacLachlan, Twin Peaks

ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images

Ray Wise, Twin Peaks

Walt Disney Television via Getty Images

TV Cliffhangers, Twin Peaks

ABC

David Lynch, Angelo Badalamenti, Julee Cruise, Twin Peaks

Michel Delsol/Getty Images

Twin Peaks, Sherilyn Fenn

Walt Disney Television via Getty Images

Twin Peaks, Peggy Lipton, Dana Ashbrook, Madchen Amick

Walt Disney Television via Getty Images

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, Miguel Ferrer,  Kyle Maclachlan, David Lynch, David Bowie

Moviestore/Shutterstock

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, Kiefer Sutherland, Chris Isaak

Moviestore/Shutterstock

All 30 episodes of Twin Peaks are streaming on Hulu.





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