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  • The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn – ThrowbackMachine.com

    The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn – ThrowbackMachine.com

    The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

    The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is an American children’s television series that originally aired on NBC from September 15th, 1968 through February 23rd, 1969.

    Produced by Hanna-Barbera and based on the classic Mark Twain characters, the program starred its three live-action heroes, Huck Finn (Michael Shea), Becky Thatcher (LuAnn Haslam), and Tom Sawyer (Kevin Schultz), navigating weekly adventures within an animated world as they attempted to outrun a vengeful “Injun Joe” (Ted Cassidy).  After the show’s original run, the series continued to air in reruns as part of The Banana Splits and Friends Show syndication package.
    The pilot episode opens with a live-action prologue which sets the premise for the series.  It’s late afternoon in Hannibal, Missouri and Twain’s classic characters, (Tom’s) Aunt Polly and Mrs. Thatcher (Becky’s mother) appear distressed in their concern for the youngsters who are said to be late arriving home.  Next, we see our three protagonists, Huckleberry Finn (Michael Shea), Becky Thatcher (LuAnn Haslam) and Tom Sawyer (Kevin Schultz) taking a short-cut home through the town’s graveyard when they encounter “Injun Joe” (Ted Cassidy).  Furious at the two boys for testifying in court to seeing him murder Doctor Robinson, Injun Joe chases the three children into McDougal’s cave.  Once inside, the three youngsters quickly become disoriented within the cave’s complicated mazes and find themselves lost.  As the spry children outrun him, an angry Injun Joe vows revenge, calling out to them “You’ll never get away from me!  No matter where you go, I’ll get you!”  This prologue would be re-edited with a voice-over by Michael Shea as Huck Finn summarizing the events, and would serve as the opening sequence for each subsequent episode.
    Although we never see the three youngsters emerge from the cave, it is presumed that they eventually find a way out since, as each episode proper begins, we join our three young live-action heroes as they now inhabit an animated world.  Throughout the series, the children embark on a quest to return to their families in Hannibul, Missouri, traveling to various exotic animated lands (Tropical islands; Egyptian deserts; Aztec cities; etc.) and make friendships with an array of fanciful animated characters (leprechauns; pirates; sorcerers, etc.).  In addition to the new friends they meet, each episode also features an evil animated antagonist who bears an uncanny resemblance to Injun Joe (voiced by Cassidy).  The likeness is not lost on the three children, who are routinely startled by the striking similarity to their nemesis back home, however, an explanation as to how, or why, Injun Joe is constantly able to remain one step ahead of them in order to assume these various identities is never provided.  As the series only lasted one season, an episode explaining how, or if, the three children ever make it back home, or if it may, in fact, all be some sort of surrealistic “dream”, is never seen.
    In February 1967, Hanna-Barbera Productions announced it was in the process of developing a record number of six new animated television series.  According to the Los Angeles Times, the six new series in various stages of production at the time were Moby Dick and Mighty Mightor, Zartan (aka: The Herculoids), Shazzan, Samson & Goliath, Fantastic four and The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.  Also nearing the end of post-production at the time was Hanna-Barbera’s Jack and the Beanstalk, an hour long special which featured Gene Kelly dancing alongside various cartoon characters and aired on February 26th, 1967.  Jack and the Beanstalk had served as a “trial run” for the technology of combining live-action with animation.  NBC had to be convinced that combining people with cartoon figures would work. It was a big success and so NBC went forward with the series.  At the time of production, The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was the first weekly television series to combine live-action performers and animation.  During development of the series, William Hanna and Joseph Barbera also stated the show was to be the most expensive half hour ever put on television.  In a July 1967 interview with columnist Hal Humphrey, William Hanna expressed high hopes for the innovative new concept, saying “When you say the word ‘cartoon,’ people think of children only, and we limit ourselves – although plenty of adults watch cartoons. We think combining the live action with the animation will give our company a special identification.”
    After NBC green-lit the series, preparations began to find the youngsters to portray the series’ three leads.  The show was produced by both Hanna-Barbera and NBC.  As a result there were a lot of people to make happy when it came to choosing the cast.  As its understood, Hanna-Barbera cast the show and sent some kind of screen test/pilot to the NBC executives in New York.  NBC didn’t like the choices that had been made.  They decided that they wanted the cast to be younger.  Hanna-Barbera had to start all over.  In casting their lead, Hanna-Barbera and NBC eventually found their ideal “Huck” in 14-year-old veteran child actor Michael Shea, reportedly selecting him out of 1,300 boys.  Fourteen-year-old newcomer LuAnn Haslam was chosen to play “Becky.”  In recounting how she landed the role, Haslam stated, “I got a call from my agent to go to Hanna-Barbera for an interview.  Carmen Sanchez was the casting director.  As I walked into her office she was on the telephone.  She turned, looked at me and said to the person on the telephone, ‘I have to go, Becky just walked in.’”  Rounding out the series live-action cast was 13-year-old Kevin Schultz who was cast as “Tom.”  At the time, Schultz was best known for starring on the television western series The Monroes alongside his twin brother Keith, who had reportedly also auditioned for the role of “Tom” before Kevin was selected.  And finally, character actor Ted Cassidy was cast to voice the role of the animated antagonist “Injun Joe.”  In an August 1967 interview with columnist Mel Heimer, Cassidy stated that he was looking forward to his upcoming role on the new series, saying, “I think I’ll get more of a chance to do some acting than I did in (The Addams Family).”
    With the series’ three young live-action stars in place, the complicated filming process began.  During the months the series was in production, each day of filming reportedly began at 9:00 a.m. Under California law at the time, child actors were required to attend school for three hours a day and periods of instruction had to last at least 20 minutes at a time.  When asked about the filming process, Michael Shea described an average day on the set, saying, “First we’d get made-up and dressed, and then we’d go to school while the shot was being set up.  By coincidence, we were all taking the exact same subjects, so we were tutored together.”  The young actors’ scenes were filmed in front of a royal blue backdrop and the cartoon background and characters were animated in later.  A technique still in its infancy, the young cast was required to master the art of engaging in conversational exchanges without having their animated co-stars to interact with.  Shea recalled, “Injun Joe, for instance, was a cartoon character, so when I had to talk to him, I’d run my eyes slowly up the blue screen until the director told me to stop.  Then I’d just try to remember where that point on the screen was.”  Since the voice-actors would record their audio tracks after principal filming, character actor Bruce Watson, whom Shea described as “the greatest dialogue coach in the world,” would perform the lines of all the animated characters for the young live-action stars to interact with during filming.  Each episode reportedly took approximately 4 hours to film and six months to animate.
  • 1970 Archives – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Then Came Bronson

    Then Came Bronson

    Then Came Bronson is an American adventure/drama television series starring Michael Parks that aired on NBC from 1969 to 1970, and was produced by MGM Television.  The series, created by Denne Bart Petitclerc, began with a movie pilot on Monday, March 24th, 1969.  The series was approved for one year and began its first run […]

    Room 222

    Room 222

    Room 222 is an American comedy-drama television series produced by 20th Century Fox Television.  The series aired on ABC for 112 episodes from September 17th, 1969 until January 11th, 1974. The series focused on an American history class at the fictional Walt Whitman High School in Los Angeles, California, although it also depicted other events […]

    The Courtship of Eddie’s Father

    The Courtship of Eddie's Father

     Debuted September 17th, 1969, and was last broadcast on March 1st, 1972.   The Courtship of Eddie’s Father is an American television sitcom based on the 1963 movie of the same name, which was based on the book written by Mark Toby (edited by Dorothy Wilson).  It tells the story of a widower, Tom Corbett (played by Bill Bixby), who […]

    The Johnny Cash Show

    The Johnny Cash Show

    The Johnny Cash Show was an American television music variety show hosted by Johnny Cash.  The Screen Gems 58-episode series ran from June 7th, 1969 to March 31st, 1971 on ABC; it was taped at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee.  The show reached No. 17 in the Nielsen ratings in 1970. Cash opened each […]

    This Is Tom Jones

    This is Tom Jones

    This Is Tom Jones was an ATV variety series starring Tom Jones. The series was exported to the United States by ITC Entertainment and was networked there by ABC. The series ran between 1969 and 1971 to total 65 color episodes. Jones was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for “Best Actor In a Television […]

    The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour

    The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour

    The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour is an American network television music and comedy variety show hosted by singer Glen Campbell from January 1969 through June 1972 on CBS. He was offered the show after he hosted a 1968 summer replacement for The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour.  Campbell used “Gentle on My Mind” as the theme song of the show.  The […]

    the Ghost and Mrs. Muir

    the Ghost and Mrs. Muir

    The Ghost & Mrs. Muir is an American situation comedy based on the 1947 film of the same name, which was based on the 1945 novel by R. A. Dick. Itpremiered in September 1968 on NBC.  After NBC canceled the series, it aired on ABC for one season before being canceled a final time. The series stars Hope Lange as Carolyn Muir, a young widow […]

    Here Come the Brides

    Here Come the Brides

    Here Come the Brides is an American comedy Western series from Screen Gems that aired on the ABC television network from September 25th, 1968 to April 3rd, 1970.   The series was loosely based upon the Mercer Girls, Asa Mercer‘s efforts to bring civilization to old Seattle by importing marriageable women from the east coast of the United States in the 1860s, where the ravages of the American Civil […]

    The Doris Day Show

    The Doris Day Show

    The Doris Day Show is an American sitcom that was originally broadcast on the CBS Television network from September 1968 until March 1973, remaining on the air for five seasons and 128 episodes. The Doris Day Show was also the title of her radio show which aired from Hollywood in 1952, with “It’s Magic” as […]

    The Mod Squad

    The Mod Squad

    A “hippie” undercover cop show that ran on ABC from September 24th, 1968, until August 23rd, 1973.   It starred Michael Cole as Pete Cochran, Peggy Lipton as Julie Barnes, Clarence Williams III as Linc Hayes, and Tige Andrews as Captain Adam Greer.  The executive producers of the series were Aaron Spelling and Danny Thomas. They were The Mod Squad (“One black, one white, one blond”), the hippest and first young undercover […]

    Lancer

    Lancer

    Lancer is an American Western series that aired on CBS from September 1968, to May 1970.  Lancer lasted for fifty-one hour-long episodes shot in color.  The series stars Andrew Duggan, James Stacy, and Wayne Maunder as a father with two half-brother sons, an arrangement similar to the more successful Bonanza on NBC. Duggan stars as […]

    Mayberry R.F.D.

    Mayberry RFD

    Mayberry R.F.D. is an American television series produced as a spin-off and direct continuation of The Andy Griffith Show.  When star Andy Griffith decided to leave his series, most of the supporting characters returned for the new program, which ran for three seasons (78 episodes) on the CBS Television Network from 1968–1971.   During the final season of The Andy Griffith Show, widower farmer Sam Jones (Ken […]

    Land of the Giants

    land of the giants

    Land of the Giants is an hour-long American science fiction television program lasting two seasons beginning on September 22nd, 1968, and ending on March 22nd, 1970. The show was created and produced by Irwin Allen.  Land of the Giants was the fourth of Allen’s science fiction TV series.  The show was aired on ABC and […]

    Adam-12

    Adam-12

    Adam-12 is a television police drama that followed two police officers of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD), Pete Malloy and Jim Reed, as they rode the streets of Los Angeles in their patrol unit, 1-Adam-12.  Created by R. A. Cinader and Jack Webb, who is known for creating Dragnet, the series captured a typical […]

    Julia

    Julia

    Julia is an American sitcom notable for being one of the first weekly series to depict an African American woman in a non-stereotypical role.  Previous television series featured African American lead characters, but the characters were usually servants.  The show stars actress and singer Diahann Carroll, and ran for 86 episodes on NBC from September 17th, 1968 to March 23rd, 1971. The series was produced […]

    Mission: Impossible

    Mission: Impossible

    This tape will self-destruct in 5 seconds…. Mission: Impossible is an American television series that was created and initially produced by Bruce Geller.  It chronicles the missions of a team of secret government agents known as the Impossible Missions Force (IMF).  In the first season, the team is led by Dan Briggs, played by Steven […]

    Family Affair

    Family Affair

    Family Affair is an American sitcom that aired on CBS from September 12th, 1966 to September 9th, 1971.  The series explored the trials of well-to-do civil engineer and bachelor Bill Davis (Brian Keith) as he attempted to raise his brother’s orphaned children in his luxury New York City apartment.  Davis’ traditional English gentleman’s gentleman, Mr. […]

    Get Smart

    get smart

    Get Smart is an American comedy television series created by Mel Brooks and Buck Henry that satirizes the secret agent genre.  It ran from September 18th, 1965, to May 15th, 1970. The show stars Don Adams (as Maxwell Smart, Agent 86), Barbara Feldon (as Agent 99), and Edward Platt (as Chief).  Henry said they created […]

    Daniel Boone

    Daniel Boone

    Daniel Boone is an American action-adventure television series starring Fess Parker as Daniel Boone that aired from September 24th, 1964 to September 10th, 1970 on NBC for 165 episodes, and was made by 20th Century Fox Television. Ed Ames co-starred as Mingo, Boone’s Cherokee friend, for the first four seasons of the series.  Albert Salmi […]

    Bewitched

    Bewitched

    Bewitched is an American TV situation comedy fantasy that was originally broadcast for eight seasons on ABC from 1964 to 1972.  It was created by Sol Saks under executive director Harry Ackerman, and starred actress Elizabeth Montgomery, Dick York (1964–1969), Dick Sargent (1969–1972), Agnes Moorehead, and David White. The show is about a witch who […]

  • The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin – ThrowbackMachine.com

    The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin – ThrowbackMachine.com

    The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin

    The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin is an American children’s television program.  The show ran for five seasons on ABC on Friday evenings from October 1954 to May 1959, airing 166 episodes.  ABC reran the series on late afternoons from September 1959 to September 1961.

    It starred child actor Lee Aaker as Rusty, a boy orphaned in an Indian raid, who was being raised by the soldiers at a US Cavalry post known as Fort Apache.  He and his German shepherd dog, Rin Tin Tin, helped the soldiers to establish order in the American West.  Texas-born actor James Brown appeared as Lieutenant Ripley “Rip” Masters.  Co-stars included veteran actor Joe Sawyer and actor Rand Brooks from Gone with the Wind fame.

    The character of Rin Tin Tin had appeared in movies and radio serials since 1922.  One dog who appeared briefly in the TV series was fourth in the bloodline of the original Rin Tin Tin silent film canine actor.  The main screen dog for the TV show was trainer Frank Barnes’s Flame, Jr., called JR (pronounced Jay Are) by Barnes.  Other dogs appearing as Rin Tin Tin included Barnes’s dog Blaze and Lee Duncan’s dog, Hey You.  Hey You descended from Rin Tin Tin, but was marred in appearance by an injury to an eye received in his youth.  Hey You served as a stunt dog in fight scenes.  The episodes were filmed northwest of Los Angeles in Simi Valley at Corriganville Movie Ranch on a low budget, limiting the film stock to black-and-white.  The show’s troupe of 12 character actors were often required to play multiple parts in the same episode, sometimes to the point of one actor fighting himself, wearing a cavalry uniform in one shot and an Apache outfit in another.

  • Throwback Machine

  • Stop the Music – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Stop the Music

    Stop the Music was a prime time television game show that aired for an hour on Thursday evenings on ABC from May 5th, 1949 to April 24th, 1952, and again for a half-hour from September 7th, 1954 to June 14th, 1956.  The show had also been broadcast on radio from 1948 to 1949.  
    The program aired at 9 pm ET on Thursdays for all five seasons except for the 1954-1955 year, when it was broadcast at 10:30 pm ET on Tuesdays.  Its competition in the 1951-1952 year was The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show and Amos ‘n’ Andy, both on CBS.  In its last season from 1955 to 1956, it was aired opposite Jackie Cooper’s The People’s Choice on NBC.  The show was created by Louis G. Cowan, previously known for creating the radio and TV series Quiz Kids and would later create the big money quiz show The $64,000 Question.  During its time on radio, one of the co-producers was Mark Goodson who with long-time partner Bill Todman created many hit game shows such as What’s My Line?, Beat the Clock, I’ve Got a Secret, To Tell the Truth, Password, Match Game, Family Feud, Card Sharks, and most notably The Price Is Right.
  • Adam-12 – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Adam-12 – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Adam-12

    Adam-12 is a television police drama that followed two police officers of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD), Pete Malloy and Jim Reed, as they rode the streets of Los Angeles in their patrol unit, 1-Adam-12.  Created by R. A. Cinader and Jack Webb, who is known for creating Dragnet, the series captured a typical day in the life of a police officer as realistically as possible.  The show originally ran from September 21st, 1968 through May 20th, 1975, and helped introduce police procedures and jargon to the general public in the United States.

    One Adam 12… One Adam 12
    Malloy:  You know what this is?    Reed:  Yes sir, it’s a police car.
    Malloy: This black and white patrol car has an overhead valve V8 engine. It develops 325 horsepower at 4800 RPM’s. It accelerates from 0 to 60 in seven seconds; it has a top speed of 120 miles an hour. It’s equipped with a multi channeled DFE radio and an electronic siren capable of admitting three variables, wale, yelp, and alert. It also serves as an outside radio speaker and public address system. The automobile has two shotgun racks, one attached to the bottom portion of the front seat, one in the vehicle trunk. Attached to the middle of the dash, illuminated by a single bulb is a hot sheet desk. Fastened to which you will always make sure is the latest one off the teletype before you ever roll.         Reed: Yes sir.
    Malloy:  It’s your life insurance and mine.  You take care of it and it’ll take care of you.
    Reed:  Yes sir.  You want me to drive?
  • TV Reader’s Digest – ThrowbackMachine.com

    TV Reader’s Digest – ThrowbackMachine.com

    TV Reader’s Digest

    TV Reader’s Digest is the title of a 30 minute American television anthology drama series which aired on the ABC from 1955 to 1956.

    Based on articles that appeared in Reader’s Digest magazine, the episodes based on true stories which were varied in their themes, plots and content.  Themes included crime, heroism, mystery, romance, and human interest.  Episode writers included Frederick Hazlitt Brennan, Cleveland Amory and Frank Gruber.
    Some of the actors who were cast in the episodes included: Claude Akins, Leon Askin, Jean Byron, Chuck Connors, Peter Graves, Tod Griffin, Francis McDonald, Max Showalter, John Howard, Lee Marvin, Gene Raymond, Jerry Paris, and Michael Winkelman.

     

  • Monday Archives – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Mayberry R.F.D.

    Mayberry RFD

    Mayberry R.F.D. is an American television series produced as a spin-off and direct continuation of The Andy Griffith Show.  When star Andy Griffith decided to leave his series, most of the supporting characters returned for the new program, which ran for three seasons (78 episodes) on the CBS Television Network from 1968–1971.   During the final season of The Andy Griffith Show, widower farmer Sam Jones (Ken […]

    Family Affair

    Family Affair

    Family Affair is an American sitcom that aired on CBS from September 12th, 1966 to September 9th, 1971.  The series explored the trials of well-to-do civil engineer and bachelor Bill Davis (Brian Keith) as he attempted to raise his brother’s orphaned children in his luxury New York City apartment.  Davis’ traditional English gentleman’s gentleman, Mr. […]

    The Rat Patrol

    rat patrol

    The Rat Patrol is an American television program that aired on ABC during the 1966–1968 seasons. A total of fifty-eight 30-minute episodes were produced by Mirisch-Rich Television Productions, a subsidiary of United Artists Television, in association with Tom Gries Productions Inc.  Just as The Man From U.N.C.L.E. episode titles included the word “Affair”, all Rat […]

    The John Forsythe Show

    The John Forsythe Show

    The John Forsythe Show began as a situation comedy in the fall of 1965 on NBC, but at mid-season it switched to a spy show. NBC advertising in February of ’65, gave a working title of The Mr. and The Misses.  In the first phase of the series, John Forsythe appeared as United States Air […]

    90 Bristol Court

    90 Bristol Court

    90 Bristol Court is the umbrella title of a short-lived NBC experiment comprising three situation comedies set in a Southern California apartment complex located at the title address.  The 90-minute block aired Monday nights and consisted of Karen (7:30-8:00pm), Harris Against the World (8:00-8:30pm), and Tom, Dick, and Mary (8:30-9:00pm). While they were promoted as […]

    Slattery’s People

    Slattery's People

    Slattery’s People is a 1964-1965 American television series about local politics starring Richard Crenna as title character James Slattery, a state legislator, co-starring Ed Asner and Tol Avery, and featuring Carroll O’Connor and Warren Oates in a couple of episodes each.  James E. Moser was executive producer.  The program, telecast on CBS, was nominated for […]

    Many Happy Returns

    Many Happy Returns

    Many Happy Returns is an American situation comedy that ran on CBS for twenty-six episodes, from September 21st, 1964 to April 12th, 1965, under the sponsorship of General Foods.  The Tagline of the show was Krockmeyer’s Appreciates Your Patronage. The show stars character actor John McGiver.  Known for his emphatic, precise, dogmatic bearing and firm […]

    12 O’Clock High

    12 O'Clock High

    12 O’Clock High (also known as Twelve O’Clock High) is an American drama series set in World War II.  This TV series originally broadcast on ABC for two-and-one-half seasons from September 18th, 1964, through January 13th, 1967 and was based on the motion picture Twelve O’Clock High (1949).  The series was a co-production of 20th […]

    The Bing Crosby Show

    The Bing Crosby Show

    The Bing Crosby Show is a 28-episode situation comedy television program starring crooner, film star, iconic phenomenon, and businessman Bing Crosby and actress Beverly Garland as a middle-aged couple, Bing and Ellie Collins, rearing two teenaged daughters during the early 1960s.  In this format, Crosby portrayed a former entertainer turned architectural designer with a penchant […]

    Wendy And Me

    Wendy And Me

    Wendy and Me is an American sitcom that aired on ABC during the 1964–1965 television season, primarily sponsored by Consolidated Cigar’s “El Producto.”  Principally starring George Burns and Connie Stevens, the series was Burns’ first major work following the death of his wife and professional partner, Gracie Allen, who had died of a heart attack […]

    No Time For Sergeants

    No Time For Sergeants

    No Time for Sergeants came to the small screen in the fall of 1964.  It starred Sammy Jackson who had had one line in the film version.  When Jackson read that Warner Brothers was going to produce a television sitcom version of No Time for Sergeants for ABC he wrote directly to Jack Warner saying […]

    Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea

    voyage to the bottom of the sea

    Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea is a 1960s American science fiction television series based on the 1961 film of the same name.  Both were created by Irwin Allen. Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea was the first of Irwin Allen’s four science fiction television series, as well as the longest running.  It […]

    The Andy Griffith Show

    The Andy Griffith Show

    The Andy Griffith Show is an American sitcom first televised on CBS between October 3rd, 1960 and April 1st, 1968.  Andy Griffith portrays the widowed sheriff of the fictional small community of Mayberry, North Carolina.  His life is complicated by an inept, but well-meaning deputy, Barney Fife (Don Knotts), a spinster aunt and housekeeper, Aunt […]

    Huntley – Brinkley Report

    The Huntley Brinkley Report

    The Huntley-Brinkley Report (sometimes known as The Texaco Huntley-Brinkley Report, for one of its early sponsors) was the NBC television network’s flagship evening news program from October 29th, 1956, until July 31st, 1970.  It was anchored by Chet Huntley in New York City, and David Brinkley in Washington, D.C.  It succeeded the Camel News Caravan, […]

    The Golden Touch of Frankie Carle

    The Golden Touch of Frankie Carle

    The Golden Touch of Frankie Carle was a short-lived musical variety television series broadcast in the United States by NBC from August to October 1956.  The Golden Touch of Frankie Carle featured the pianist and guest singers performing a variety of music, including popular standards and the current hits of the day. The program’s main […]

    The Adventures of Robin Hood

    250px-Robin_Hood_titlecard

    The Adventures of Robin Hood is a British television series comprising 143 half-hour, black and white episodes broadcast weekly between 1955 and 1959 on ITV. It stars Richard Greene as the outlaw Robin Hood and Alan Wheatley as his nemesis, the Sheriff of Nottingham.  The show followed the legendary character Robin Hood and his band of merry men in Sherwood Forest and the surrounding vicinity. While some episodes dramatised the traditional Robin Hood […]

    Medical Horizons

    Quincy Howe and John Daly

    Medical Horizons is a public affairs television series, focusing on advancements in medical technology, which aired on ABC from September 12th, 1955 to March 5th, 1956.  The program, broadcast live, sometimes offered surgical scenes as well as information about new medical equipment. The series was hosted for the first four episodes by Quincy Howe.  He […]

    Gunsmoke

    Gunsmoke

    Gunsmoke is an American radio and television Western drama series created by director Norman MacDonnell and writer John Meston.  The stories take place in and around Dodge City, Kansas, during the settlement of the American West.  The central character is lawman Marshal Matt Dillon, played by William Conrad on radio and James Arness on television. […]

    John Charles Daly and the News

    John Charles Daly and the News

    John Charles Patrick Croghan Daly (generally known as John Charles Daly or simply John Daly (February 20th, 1914 – February 24th, 1991) was an American journalist, game show host and radio personality, probably best known for hosting the panel show What’s My Line?.  He was the vice president of ABC during the 1950s.  On December […]

    TV Reader’s Digest

    TV Reader's Digest

    TV Reader’s Digest is the title of a 30 minute American television anthology drama series which aired on the ABC from 1955 to 1956. Based on articles that appeared in Reader’s Digest magazine, the episodes based on true stories which were varied in their themes, plots and content.  Themes included crime, heroism, mystery, romance, and […]

  • Crusader – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Crusader

    Crusader (sometimes erroneously listed as The Crusader) is a half-hour black-and-white American adventure/drama series that aired on CBS for two seasons from October 7th, 1955 to December 28th, 1956.

    The series stars Brian Keith as the fictitious free-lance journalist Matt Anders, whose mother’s death in a World War II Nazi concentration camp in German-occupied Poland propels him to combat injustices worldwide during the height of the Cold War.  Keith’s Crusader has been compared to Zorro, The Lone Ranger, or The Cisco Kid in that the principal character is devoted to altruism.  Anders is particularly interested in liberating oppressed peoples from communism.  The series began as Nikita S. Khrushchev emerged as the premier and the general secretary of the Communist Party in the former Soviet Union.  The 52-episode program, Keith’s first television series, aired on CBS at 9 p.m. Eastern on Fridays.
  • Gunsmoke – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Gunsmoke

    Gunsmoke is an American radio and television Western drama series created by director Norman MacDonnell and writer John Meston.  The stories take place in and around Dodge City, Kansas, during the settlement of the American West.  The central character is lawman Marshal Matt Dillon, played by William Conrad on radio and James Arness on television.

    The TV series ran from September 10th, 1955, to March 31st, 1975, on CBS with 635 total episodes.  The first twelve seasons aired Saturdays at 10 p.m., seasons 13 through 16 aired Mondays at 7:30 p.m.and the last four seasons aired Mondays at 8 p.m.  Its longevity has runners-up questioning its primacy as longest run.  It is the longest running, prime time series of the 20th century.  Today, it still has the highest number of scripted episodes for any, U.S. primetime, commercial live-action television series.  George Walsh, the announcer for Gunsmoke, began in 1952 on radio’s Gunsmoke and continued until television’s Gunsmoke was canceled in 1975. The first 7 seasons were jointly sponsored by L&M cigarettes and Remington shaving products.
    When Gunsmoke was adapted for television in 1955, the network did not appear interested in bringing either Conrad or his radio costars to the medium (his weight was rumored to be a deciding factor) despite a campaign to convince the network.  Denver Pyle was also considered for the role, as was Raymond Burr, who was ultimately also seen as too heavyset for the part.  Charles Warren, television Gunsmoke’s first director, said “His voice was fine but he was too big. When he stood up, his chair stood with him.”  The belief John Wayne was asked to pin on the badge is disputed by Warren.  Although he agrees Wayne encouraged Arness to take the role, Warren says, “I hired Jim Arness on the strength of a picture he’s done for me… I never thought for a moment of offering it to Wayne.”
    In the end, the primary roles were all recast, with Arness taking the lead role of Marshal Matt Dillon (on the recommendation of Wayne, who also introduced the pilot); Dennis Weaver playing Chester Goode; Milburn Stone being cast as Dr. G. “Doc” Adams (later Galen “Doc” Adams); and Amanda Blake taking on the role of Miss Kitty Russell.  MacDonnell became the associate producer of the TV show and later the producer.  Meston was named head writer.
    Chester and Festus Haggen are perhaps Dillon’s most recognizable sidekicks, though there were others who would become acting-deputies for two and a half to seven and a half year stints: Quint Asper (Burt Reynolds) (1962–1965), Thad Greenwood (Roger Ewing) (1966–1968), and Newly O’Brian (Buck Taylor) (1967–1975), who served as both back-up deputy and doctor-in-training, having some studies in medicine via his uncle which then continued under Doc Adams.

    In 1962, Burt Reynolds was added to the show’s lineup, as the “halfbreed” blacksmith Quint Asper and elipsed the span during characters Chester Goode and Festus Haggen.  Three of the actors, who played Dodge deputies, Ken Curtis, Roger Ewing and Buck Taylor, had previous guest roles.  Curtis, a big band and western singer (Tommy Dorsey Band, Shep Fields Band, Sons of the Pioneers), had 5 previous guest roles including one in 1963 as a shady ladies’ man named Kyle (“Lover Boy”, season 9, show 2).

    Curtis first appeared in the 1959 episode “Jayhawkers” (season 4, episode 21), where he played Phil Jacks, a Texas cowboy with Jack Elam as his boss during a cattle drive from Texas.  The second was another 1959 episode entitled “Change of Heart” (season 4, episode 32), where he played Brisco, which also starred James Drury as Jerry Cass.  The 3rd appearance is the 1960 episode “The Ex-Urbanites” (season 5, episode 30), where he plays Jesse with Robert Wilke as Pitt.  He also had a small role as an Indian named Scout in the episode “Speak Me Fair” (season 5, episode 34) in 1960.  Curtis, was reared in Las Animas, Colorado, and for a time a son-in-law of director John Ford.  In 1963, Weaver left the series to pursue a broader acting career in TV series and films.  In 1964 Curtis was signed as a regular to play the stubbornly illiterate hillbilly Festus Haggen.

    The character, heretofore a comic feature, came to town in a 1962 episode titled “Us Haggens”, to avenge the death of his twin brother Fergus, and decided to stay in Dodge when the deed was done.  Initially on the fringes of Dodge society, Festus was slowly phased-in as a reliable sidekick/ part-time deputy to Matt Dillon when Reynolds left in 1965.  In the episode “Alias Festus Haggen”, he is mistaken for a robber and killer whom he has to expose to free himself (both parts played by Curtis).  In a comic relief episode (“Mad Dog”), another case of mistaken identity forces Festus to fight three sons of a man killed by his cousin.  As a side note, there is only one episode that has all 3 Actors in it playing their respective roles.  It is the 1964 episode entitled “Prairie Wolfer” (season 9, episode 16), with Dennis Weaver as Chester, Burt Reynolds as Quint, and Ken Curtis as Festus.

    When Milburn Stone left the series for health reasons for several episodes in 1971, Pat Hingle played his temporary replacement, Dr. John Chapman, whose presence was at first roundly resisted by Festus, a bickersome but close friend of Doc Adams.
    The back stories of some of the main characters were largely left to the imagination of the viewer. Matt Dillon spent his early years in foster care, knew the Bible, was a wayward, brawling cowboy, and later mentored by a caring lawman.  Kitty Russell, born in New Orleans and reared by a flashy foster mother (who once visited Dodge), apparently had no living family.  Barkeep Sam was said to be married but no sightings of a wife were made (In the episode “Tafton”, he is seen side-by-side with a woman in a church singing).  Quint Asper’s white father was killed by white scavengers.  Thad Greenwood’s father, a storekeeper, was harassed to death by a trio of loathsome ne’er-do-well thieves.  Chester Goode was known to be one of many brothers raised by an aunt and uncle, and he mentions his mother on one occasion; he referred to past service in the cavalry, and years as a cattle driver in Texas.  The cause of Chester’s stiff right leg was never given, but it was shown as his own leg and not a prosthesis.  No direct reference was ever made to his disability in the script, although some oblique moments painted the free spirited, comic deputy with a darker tone.  Newly O’Brien was named after a physician uncle, who ignited his interest in medicine.
    While Dillon and Miss Kitty clearly had a close personal relationship, the two never married.”  In the episode “Waste”, featuring Johnny Whitaker as a boy with a prostitute mother, her madam questions Dillon as to why the law overlooks Miss Kitty’s enterprise.  It appears that bordellos could exist “at the law’s discretion” (meaning the marshal’s).  Miss Kitty was written out in 1974.  The actress sought more free time and reportedly missed her late co-star, Glenn Strange, who played her Long Branch barkeep, Sam.  When Blake decided not to return for the show’s 20th (and final) season, the character was said to have returned to New Orleans. She was replaced by the hoarse-voiced, matronly actress Fran Ryan (known to many as the second Doris Ziffel on CBS’ “Green Acres”).
    For over a decade on television, a sign hung over Doc’s office that read “Dr. G. Adams”. Milburn Stone was given free-rein to choose the character’s first name.  The actor chose the surname of an ancient Greek physician and medical researcher named Galen.  He is first referred to in this manner by Theodore Bikel in the season 10 episode, “Song for Dying”, aired February 13th, 1965.