Showing posts with label TV Series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TV Series. Show all posts

Saturday, January 8, 2011

TV Series From My Childhood - II

Wonder Woman (TV series)

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FormatAction/Adventure
Fantasy
Drama
Created byCharacters:
William Moulton Marston
(as Charles Moulton)
Developed byDouglas S. Cramer
Stanley Ralph Ross
StarringLynda Carter
Lyle Waggoner
Norman Burton
Richard Eastham
Beatrice Colen
Saundra Sharp
Theme music composerCharles Fox (music) and
Norman Gimbel (lyrics)
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasons3 (as a weekly series 1976 - 1979)
No. of episodes59 (List of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s)Douglas S. Cramer
Wilford Lloyd Baumes
Producer(s)Bruce Lansbury
(supervising producer, seasons 2-3)
Charles B. Fitzsimons
Mark Rodgers
Running time60 minutes
Broadcast
Original channelABC (season 1)
CBS (seasons 2-3)
Original runNovember 7, 1975 – September 11, 1979
Wonder Woman is an American television series based on the DC Comics comic book character Wonder Woman, created by William Moulton Marston. It starred Lynda Carter as Diana Prince/Wonder Woman and Lyle Waggoner as Steve Trevor.
A 1974 television movie entitled Wonder Woman (starring Cathy Lee Crosby) aired on American television. In this version the heroine did not resemble the superhero character. She exhibited no super powers and was blond. This movie did not translate to a series.
The series Wonder Woman had its origins in the television movie The New, Original Wonder Woman (1975) starring Carter. In the movie, set during World War II, Wonder Woman matched the original comic book character. It aired on ABC and its success led the network to order two more one hour episodes, which aired several weeks apart. That success led ABC to order an additional 11 episodes and place the show in regular rotation. The program aired weekly, on Wednesday nights in early 1976.
Although the show was successful on ABC, the network was reluctant to renew the series for a second season. Wonder Woman was set in the 1940s and was therefore more expensive to produce than a series set in the present day. CBS picked up the show in 1977 and retooled it, setting it in the present day. The show continued an additional two seasons on CBS.

Contents

  • 1 Early attempts
    • 1.1 Who's Afraid of Diana Prince?
    • 1.2 Animation
    • 1.3 Wonder Woman (1974)
  • 2 Lynda Carter as Wonder Woman
    • 2.1 The New Original Wonder Woman
      • 2.1.1 Plot synopsis
      • 2.1.2 Season
    • 2.2 The New Adventures of Wonder Woman
      • 2.2.1 Season 2
      • 2.2.3 Season 3
  • 3 Home video releases
  • 4 Merchandising


Early attempts

 Who's Afraid of Diana Prince?


Screen captures of the pilot
The first attempt to translate Wonder Woman to the small screen occurred in 1967. The success of the Batman television series led Batman producer William Dozier to commission a pilot script by Stan Hart and Larry Siegel. Batman writer Stanley Ralph Ross was then asked to perform a re-write, after Hart and Siegel's script was deemed unsuitable. A portion of the pilot, under five minutes in length, was filmed under the title Who's Afraid of Diana Prince? The piece starred Ellie Wood Walker (Robert Walker Jr.'s wife) as Diana Prince, Linda Harrison as Diana's Wonder Woman alter ego and Maudie Prickett as Diana's mother.
In the proposed series Diana Prince (not Wonder Woman) would have been the focus of the comedy. Diana, an awkward and rather plain young woman, lives with her mother close to a United States Air Force base. Much of the film consists of her mother berating Diana about not having a boyfriend. When her mother leaves the room, Diana changes into her Wonder Woman costume and admires her reflection in a mirror. What she sees is not Diana Prince, but rather a sexy super-heroic figure (played by Linda Harrison) who proceeds to preen and pose as the song "Oh, You Beautiful Doll" plays on the soundtrack. The pilot ends with Diana climbing out a window and flying away, indicating that, despite her apparent delusions regarding her alter ego, she does have some super powers. This pilot episode was never broadcast and the project was taken no further. The pilot has been circulated on the Internet and is of interest to Planet of the Apes fans for the early appearance of Linda Harrison, who would later go on to play Nova in the first two films of that series.

Animation


Wonder Woman's first televised appearance, "It's All Greek to Me"
‎Wonder Woman's first broadcast appearance was as a guest in an episode of The Brady Kids cartoon series in 1972, entitled "It's All Greek to Me". The Brady kids meet Wonder Woman and together they find themselves accidentally transported back to the time of the Ancient Olympic Games. The kids plan to compete in the marathon and beat the Greek athletes to qualify for the race. Wonder Woman convinces the kids to disqualify themselves, explaining that if they win the race they will change the course of history.
Shortly thereafter Wonder Woman was included in the Super Friends cartoon series, which enjoyed a long and successful run from 1973-1986. Not very long after the Super Friends series ended its run, Wonder Woman guest starred in the 1988 Ruby-Spears animated Superman TV series, in the episode entiled "Superman and Wonder Woman vs. The Sorceress of Time."
Wonder Woman would make her next animated appearance in the 2001-2006 animated series Justice League and Justice League Unlimited.

Wonder Woman (1974)


Cathy Lee Crosby in the first Wonder Woman film.
Wonder Woman's first appearance in live-action television was a television movie made in 1974 for ABC. Written by John D. F. Black, the TV movie resembles the Wonder Woman of the "I Ching period. " Wonder Woman (Cathy Lee Crosby) did not wear the comic book costume, demonstrated no superhuman abilities and her "secret identity" of Diana Prince was not all that secret. The film follows Wonder Woman, assistant to government agent Steve Trevor (Kaz Garas) as she pursues a villain named Abner Smith (Ricardo Montalban) who has stolen a set of code books containing classified information about U.S. government field agents.
The pilot aired originally on March 12, 1974 and was repeated on August 21 of that year. Ratings were described as "respectable but not exactly wondrous."ABC did not pick up the pilot, although Crosby would later claim she was offered the series that was eventually given to Lynda Carter. An ABC spokesperson would later acknowledge that the decision to update the character was a mistake and the pilot itself has been labeled one of the "hundred dumbest events in television."

 Lynda Carter as Wonder Woman

 The New Original Wonder Woman

Lynda Carter as Wonder Woman, displaying her ability to deflect bullets
Though not successful at the first attempt, ABC still felt a Wonder Woman series had potential, and within a year another pilot was in production. Keen to make a distinction from the last pilot, producers gave the pilot the rather paradoxical title The New Original Wonder Woman.
Scripting duties were given to Stanley Ralph Ross, who was instructed to be more faithful to the comic book and to create a subtle "high comedy." Ross set the pilot in World War II, the era in which the original comic book began.
After an intensive talent search, Lynda Carter, who had done a few prior acting jobs, and was a former beauty pageant winner and Bob Hope USO cast member, was chosen to play the lead role. For the role of Steve Trevor, the producers chose Lyle Waggoner, who at the time was better known as a comedic actor after several years co-starring in The Carol Burnett Show. He was also known to Ross as having been one of the leading candidates to play Batman a decade earlier. Waggoner was also considered a pin-up hunk, having done a semi-nude pictorial in the first issue of Playgirl.
Although the pilot followed the original comic book closely, in particular the aspect of Wonder Woman joining the military under the name Diana Prince, a number of elements were dropped. While the comic Diana obtains the credentials of a look-alike nurse, in the pilot Diana Prince appears as a Navy enlisted First Class Petty Officer Yeoman. As it was set during World War II, many of the episodes involved Nazis and war events.
Steve Trevor was played by Waggoner with his natural brown hair. Trevor was blond in the comic.
One change, which was later to become synonymous with the show, was the twirling Diana Prince did to become Wonder Woman. Producers were trying to figure out a way to show how Diana Prince became Wonder Woman, and Carter came up with the spinning move, which was incorporated into the show. This transformation has in recent years been added to both comics and future animated appearances such as The Superfriends.
During season one, Wonder Woman has the ability to impersonate anyone's voice, which came in handy over the telephone. She does not use this ability during the second and third seasons.
Unlike the earlier pilot, the comic book origins of the character were emphasized by the retention of the character's traditional costume and original setting, and through the use of comic book elements. The series' title sequence was animated in the form of a series of comic book panels featuring Wonder Woman performing a variety of heroic feats. Within the show, location and exposition were handled through comic book-style text panels. Transitions between scenes and commercial breaks were marked by animated starburst sequences.

 Plot synopsis

During World War II, American pilot Major Steve Trevor (Lyle Waggoner) bails out during an air battle over the Bermuda Triangle, location of Paradise Island. The island is home to the Amazons: beautiful, ageless women with great strength, agility, and intelligence. Amazon princess Diana (Lynda Carter) rescues the handsome Trevor and nurses him back to health. Her mother, the Amazon queen (Cloris Leachman), decrees that games shall be held to select one Amazon to return Trevor to the United States but she forbids Diana to participate. During the contest a blond woman shows exceptional skill and ties for first. The contest is decided through "Bullets and Bracelets," where each of the two take turns shooting at the other, who must try to deflect the bullets. The blond woman wins, very slightly injuring the opponent's arm. When she is pronounced the winner and presented with a golden belt, she removes her gold mask and headband, which reveals that she is Diana. Her mother realizes that she must go to America, as she is the strongest and fastest.
Diana's costume is designed to feature American emblems in the hope that she will be accepted in her new home, and her golden belt will be her source of strength and power. She retains her bullet-deflecting bracelets and also receives a golden lasso which is indestructible and forces people to obey and tell the truth when bound. Diana, as Wonder Woman, flies to Washington, D.C. in an invisible plane. After dropping Trevor off at a hospital, the heroine stumbles upon a bank robbery, which she stops. A theatrical agent who sees her in action invites her to take her Bullets and Bracelets act on the road as a theatrical attraction. Diana is hesitant, but needing money in this society, she agrees.
Meanwhile, Trevor's civilian secretary Marcia (Stella Stevens) is a double agent for the Nazis. She seeks to aid top spies in killing Trevor and opposing the new threat, Wonder Woman, although her first attempt — arranging for an audience member to fire a machine gun at Wonder Woman during her stage act — backfires when the Amazon easily deflects the multiple bullets. Later, at the hospital, Diana disguises herself as a nurse in order to keep an eye on Trevor. As spy activities increase, Trevor leaves the hospital and is captured, prompting his "nurse" to transform into Wonder Woman to rescue him. Wonder Woman defeats the spy ring. The film closes as Trevor meets his new secretary, Yeoman Diana Prince (Wonder Woman in disguise).

 Season 1

The pilot film, aired on November 7, 1975, was a ratings success, and ABC quickly authorized the production of two one-hour specials which aired the following April. Technically speaking, these three productions were the show's first season.
These episodes scored strong enough ratings that ABC commissioned a further 11 episodes for the 1976-77 season, several of which were used to fill in for The Bionic Woman when production on that show was suspended while its star, Lindsay Wagner, recovered from a car accident.
Few changes were made between the pilot episode and specials and the series itself. The most memorable change, indeed what became the 'signature moment' of the show, was the introduction of an explosion effect to the twirling transformation, to change Diana Prince into her super-heroic counterpart. This magical sequence, which appeared at least once in most episodes, has been incorporated into both the comic book and animated versions of the character.
In the original pilot and specials this sequence was performed by fading between two synchronized shots, both filmed with an over-cranked camera to create a slow motion effect. A twirling Diana's hair would fall loose around her shoulders and she would be shown starting to reach for removal of clothing, but quickly dissolve into Wonder Woman who appeared to finishing pulling off her garments and moving them to one arm where her full Navy uniform hangs. She then would stow the items in a closet or locker, then exit. This sequence was too expensive, in time and money, to maintain. Viewers and critics commented on the re-use of the same sequences to reduce costs in both specials. A camera would need to be 'locked off' (secured in place), and Carter's costume, make up and hair altered between shooting the two segments which made up the sequence. The "thunderclap" was added to mask the join between the two segments, allowing each segment to be shot independently, without need for a locked off camera, at more convenient points in the shooting schedule. The idea of returning to the same change point is unnecessary, and unlike the comic character, she can change to Wonder Woman in virtually any location. The original comic book character carried a medical bag (as a Lt. Nurse) in which she carried her costume and accessories; changes were always between panels. The character comments a few issues later that she now wears most of her costume under her clothes. In the office, her tiara, boots, and lasso are in a secret compartment in her desk. In the field, she carries these accessories in her handbag, but almost exclusively changed costumes at work or her apartment. By the late forties, she seems to have her accessories stowed somewhere, as she could change from elbow length gloves (to mask bracelets) and evening gowns into her costume at lightning speed. At first, like in the television specials, Diana must stow her clothing and return to the site to change back; later, she simply changes quickly and her clothing is not mentioned. The television visual effect of the magic instant transformation behind the ball of light and explosion was more convenient for the television continuity. To change back, as shown in one episode, she merely does a slow about face spin with her arms extended and is instantly Diana, with no special effect.
Apparently, the explosive sound effect is only audible to the audience and to Diana; she uses this change adjacent to a dormitory of sleeping women, in adjoining office spaces, backstage at a live show, in the woods behind a crowd of soldiers, and other locations where she would attract attention if the "boom" was heard. Additionally, there was a scene where she was explaining to Wonder Girl about her dual identity. During this scene,she started off in her Wonder Woman costume, then she started to spin. The camera cut to Wonder Girl for a moment, then cut back to Wonder Woman, who was now back in her Diana Prince military uniform. This transformation was not accompanied by any sound or light effects, and appeared to be effected by one simple about face type movement with her arms extended.
Another change involved the relationship between Steve Trevor and Wonder Woman. Although Carter and Waggoner had good chemistry, it was decided to play down the romantic aspects found in the comic, and, ultimately, the characters remained simply good friends. Executive producer Douglas S. Cramer noted the difficulties inherent in maintaining long-term romantic tension between leads, with the resolution of that tension often resulting in the cancellation of the series.
The series began at a time when violence on television was under intense scrutiny. As a result, Wonder Woman was less frequently shown punching or kicking people the way she did in the early episodes. The character would usually be shown pushing and throwing enemies, or using creativity to get them to somehow knock themselves out (jumping high into the air causing pursuers to collide). Despite the wartime circumstances, the character never resorted to deadly force (the only exception occurs in the pilot film when she sinks a Nazi submarine with an explosive plane, although the fate of the sailors aboard is never actually specified).
Wonder Woman herself was occasionally defeated by the Nazis, but she always came back in the second half of the show to save the day. Among the things the Nazis used on her were chloroform and poison gas. Her enemies also occasionally stole away her belt (leaving her without her super strength), her lasso, and her bracelets (leaving her defenseless against gunfire), but Wonder Woman always recovered the respective stolen component by the end of the episode.
Two stories (one of them a two-parter) introduced Debra Winger as Diana's younger sister, Druscilla, aka Wonder Girl, in one of her first on-screen roles. When the show switched to CBS for its second season Druscilla was absent, and was neither seen or referred to.

The New Adventures of Wonder Woman

Despite strong ratings, ABC stalled on commissioning a second season causing the show's frustrated production company Warner Bros. to offer Wonder Woman to CBS. While ABC dithered, CBS agreed to pick up the series on condition that the setting be updated to the modern day (the 1970s). Changing the title to The New Adventures of Wonder Woman, the series was nudged away from sophisticated humour towards a more conventional action/adventure take.
Diana Prince, ageless due to her Amazon nature, returns from Paradise Island after a 35-year absence to become an agent with the Inter-Agency Defense Command (IADC), a CIA-like organization fighting criminals and the occasional alien invasion. Infrequent references to her World War II experiences were made in early episodes.

 Season 2

Changes in the first CBS season included Wonder Woman's costume being redesigned. Her invisible plane became a jet aircraft, though it only appeared a couple of times. Lyle Waggoner returned as Wonder Woman's friend Steve Trevor; this time, however, he was now Steve Trevor Jr., who had grown up hearing stories of his late father's adventures with Wonder Woman during the war. As with the first season, the producers chose to downplay and later drop any suggestion that Steve and Wonder Woman were anything more than friends.
The theme song was re-written to remove references to the Axis, reflecting the series' new present-day setting, and the action depicted in the opening's animated comic book panels was similarly updated. Beginning with the episode "The Man Who Made Volcanoes", the opening title sequence was changed again to an instrumental and more traditional "action scenes" opening.
Trevor was promoted to a desk job midway through the season, leaving Diana to go out on solo missions in most episodes. By this time, Diana was no longer simply Trevor's assistant, but was now an accomplished solo agent.
Unlike the first season on ABC, Wonder Woman's sources of power (her belt, bracelets and lasso) were never stolen by villains in any of the CBS episodes. In the Season Two episode "The Man Who Could Move The World," she voluntarily removes her magical devices in order to persuade an adversary to trust her.
Several other changes occurred as the second season progressed. Joe Atkinson (Normann Burton), a weathered IADC agent, was dropped after the ninth episode, as was a regular segment showing Diana, Steve and Joe receiving orders from a "Charlie-like" character who is heard but never seen. Midway through the season, this was replaced with regular briefings by IRAC (Information Retrieval Associative Computer) (more informally known as "Ira"), the IADC's super-intelligent computer, who deduces Diana's secret identity. Saundra Sharp joined the cast as Eve, Steve's assistant (the job held by Diana at the start of the season). Towards the end of the season, in the episode "IRAC is Missing", a small mobile robot called Rover was added for comic relief. An offshoot of IRAC who performs duties such as delivering coffee and sorting mail, Rover speaks with a high-pitched voice, occasionally makes "Beep Beep" sounds (borrowed from the Road Runner cartoon series) and, like IRAC, is aware that Diana Prince and Wonder Woman are one and the same.
The character of Wonder Woman maintained her no-kill policy, although there were exceptions: in the episode "Anschluss '77" she destroys a clone of Adolf Hitler, and another episode made reference to a villain who was believed drowned following a previous unseen encounter with Diana/Wonder Woman.
Multiple costumes were also introduced. Wonder Woman still wears the red-white-and-blue cape for special events or appearances from the first season, but without the skirt. A diving costume is introduced, a navy-blue lycra body suit with matching gloves, gold bracelets, flat boots, and a flexible tiara is featured whenever aquatic activity is necessary. The same costume, with low-heeled boots and a gold helmet, is used to ride motorcycles. At first, Wonder Woman would change into these newer costumes by performing an extended spin in which she first changed from her Diana Prince clothes into the standard Wonder Woman costume, but then continued to spin until a second light explosion occurred and she would appear in one of the newer outfits. However, this extended spin device was dropped for expediency and Diana was then able to change into any of the Wonder Woman costumes in a single change.

 Season 3

With the beginning of the third season, further changes were made to target the show at a teenage audience. The title theme was re-recorded again to give it a disco beat, the use of gimmicky little robot 'Rover' was increased for comic effect, and episodes began to revolve around topical subjects like skateboarding, roller coasters and the environment. Teenagers or young adults were commonly used as main characters in the plot lines. The animated stars used before and after commercial breaks were dropped, and Eve disappeared from the cast although she is mentioned once or twice. Episodes during this season showed Diana on assignments by herself far more often (particularly outside of Washington DC), and Steve Trevor was seen less and less - often having nothing more than a phone conversation with Diana.
Wonder Woman was also allowed to become a bit more physical in the third season and could now be seen throwing the occasional punch or kicking. The writers also came up with several unusual ways for Diana to execute her spinning transformation, one of the most notable occurring in the episode "Stolen Faces" in which Diana makes the change while falling off a tall building.
Diana's powers were also increased, particularly in the third season episode "The Deadly Dolphin" in which she is shown communicating telepathically with animals and generating bursts of an unknown form of energy to scare away a killer shark.
In the final episode produced, the writers attempted a "relaunch" of sorts by having Diana reassigned to the Los Angeles bureau of IADC with a new supporting cast. Though done in anticipation of a fourth season, the revamp was seen for only a single episode ("The Man Who Could Not Die"), which set up an assortment of new supporting characters. These included Dale Hawthorn, Diana's new IADC boss, Bryce Candall, a genetically enhanced man who was indestructible (the titular character of the episode), as well as a streetwise youngster named T. Burton Phipps III who inexplicably is allowed to hang out at the IADC. Also added to the cast was a chimpanzee who, like Bryce, is also indestructible. This episode was actually the last to be produced and should have ended the third season, but was shown out of sequence with the two-parter "The Phantom of the Roller Coaster".
CBS ultimately decided to strengthen its sitcom offerings and no further episodes of Wonder Woman were produced.

 Home video releases

Columbia House with Warner Home Video released the series on VHS videotapes through their Wonder Woman: The Collector's Edition series from the late 1990s-early 2000s, which was only available through mail order subscriptions. Each volume contained two episodes. The Season Two episodes "The Pied Piper" and "Flight To Oblivion," however, were not included on the VHS releases. Warner Home Video has released all three seasons of Wonder Woman on DVD in various regions.
DVD NameEp #Release DateDetails
The Complete 1st Season14June 29, 2004All 14 episodes (including the pilot) with commentary by Lynda Carter and executive producer Douglas S. Cramer; New documentary retrospective.
The Complete 2nd Season22March 1, 200521 episodes plus a feature-length season premiere; Bonus documentary: "Revolutionizing a Classic: From Comic Book to Television."
The Complete 3rd Season24June 7, 2005Audio commentary by Lynda Carter on "My Teenage Idol is Missing"; Featurette:"Wonder Woman: The Ultimate Feminist Icon." The initial Region 1 release included a bonus DVD containing the first episode of the Captain Marvel television series Shazam!, "The Joy Riders".

 Merchandising

Mego Corporation released a line of dolls in 1976 to correspond with the TV series. The boxes originally featured Lynda Carter as Wonder Woman on the front flap. However, in 1977, her image on the box was dropped and the line was revamped with only the Wonder Woman doll being featured and revised. DC Direct (which creates merchandise for DC Comics) released a Wonder Woman statue in 2007 which is based upon the image created by Lynda Carter.
From Wikipedia , the free encyclopedia.


Lynda Carter Today

TV Series From My Childhood

Manimal



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Manimal
GenreAction/Adventure/Fantasy
Created byGlen A. Larson
Donald R. Boyle
Written byMichael Berk
Larry Brody
Sam Egan
Joseph Gunn
Paul Mason
Douglas Schwartz
Directed byChuck Bail
Georg Fenady
Daniel Haller
Sidney Hayers
Leslie H. Martinson
Russ Mayberry
StarringSimon MacCorkindale
Melody Anderson
Michael D. Roberts
Narrated byWilliam Conrad
Theme music composerPaul Chihara
Opening theme"Manimal"
Composer(s)Paul Chihara
Alan Silvestri
Country of originUnited States
Language(s)English
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes8
Production
Executive producer(s)Glen A. Larson
Paul Mason
Running time45 min
Production company(s)20th Century Fox Television
Glen A. Larson Productions
Broadcast
Original channelNBC
Original runSeptember 30, 1983 (1983-09-30) – December 17, 1983 (1983-12-17)
StatusEnded
Manimal is an American action–adventure series that ran from September 30 to December 17, 1983 on NBC. The show centers on the character Dr Jonathan Chase (Simon MacCorkindale), a shape-shifting man who possessed the ability to turn himself into any animal he chose. He used this ability to help the police solve crimes.

Contents

  • 1 Opening narration
  • 2 Overview
  • 3 Cast
  • 4 Reception and cancellation

Opening narration

For every episode except the pilot, actor William Conrad recites the opening narration that tells of Chase's wealthy present life and his early days in Africa with his missionary father.
Dr Jonathan Chase... wealthy, young, handsome. A man with the brightest of futures. A man with the darkest of pasts. From Africa's deepest recesses, to the rarefied peaks of Tibet, heir to his father's legacy and the world's darkest mysteries. Jonathan Chase, master of the secrets that divide man from animal, animal from man... Manimal!

 Overview

Manimal premiered as a 90-minute pilot that aired on September 30, 1983. The series featured the story of Dr Jonathan Chase, a shape-shifter who could turn himself into any animal he chose, and used this ability to help fight crime. Only two people were aware of Jonathan's secret, his friend Ty Earl and Police Detective Brooke Mackenzie. Jonathan and Ty would assist Brooke with a case she was working on, with Jonathan transforming himself into an animal when it became useful.
By modern standards the show's special effects, though plentiful, are low-quality. While Jonathan had the ability to change himself into any animal, he would transform into a hawk and a black panther in nearly every episode. In some episodes, he would transform into a third animal, such as a horse, dolphin, or bull, with the transformation taking place offscreen, though once he was shown becoming a snake. The transformation sequences were designed and created by the Academy Award-winning SFX artist Stan Winston.

 Cast

  • Simon MacCorkindale - Dr. Jonathan Chase
  • Melody Anderson - Brooke Mackenzie
  • Michael D. Roberts - Tyrone "Ty" C. Earl
  • Reni Santoni - Lt. Nick Rivera
  • William Conrad - Narrator (opening scene)
  • Glynn Turman - Tyrone "Ty" C. Earl (pilot episode)
  • Jack Greer - Young Jonathan Chase (pilot episode)

Reception and cancellation

Manimal was scheduled opposite CBS's popular soap opera Dallas, and was cancelled after eight episodes. However, Manimal was very popular in a number of other countries where it was broadcast.
Manimal was a part of NBC's 1983 fall line-up which also featured eight other series that were cancelled before their first seasons ended (including Jennifer Slept Here, Bay City Blues, and We Got it Made).



Fantasy Island

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Fantasy Island

FormatDrama/Fantasy
Created byGene Levitt
StarringRicardo Montalbán
Hervé Villechaize
Christopher Hewett
Wendy Schaal
Kimberly Beck
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasons7
No. of episodes158 (including 1977 pilot)
Production
Running time45–48 minutes
Production company(s)Spelling-Goldberg Productions
Sony Pictures Television
Broadcast
Original channelABC
Audio formatMonaural
Original runJanuary 14, 1978 (1978-01-14) – May 19, 1984 (1984-05-19)
StatusEnded
Fantasy Island is the title of two separate but related American fantasy television series, both originally airing on the ABC television network.

Contents

  • 1 Original series
    • 1.1 Mr. Roarke
    • 1.2 The Fantasy
      • 1.2.1 Cost
      • 1.2.2 Nature
      • 1.2.3 Risk
    • 1.3 Guest stars
  • 2 Production notes
    • 2.1 Filming locations
  • Reception
  • Parodies and cultural references



 Original series

Before it became a long-running original television show, Fantasy Island was introduced to viewers in 1977 through two highly-rated made-for-television films. Airing from 1978 to 1984, the original series starred Ricardo Montalbán as Mr. Roarke, the enigmatic overseer of a mysterious island somewhere in the Pacific Ocean, where people from all walks of life could come and live out their fantasies, albeit for a price.
Roarke was known for his white suit and cultured demeanor, and was initially accompanied by an energetic sidekick, Tattoo, played by Hervé Villechaize. Tattoo would run up the main bell tower to ring the bell and shout "The plane! The plane!" to announce the arrival of a new set of guests at the beginning of each episode. This line, shown at the beginning of the show's credits, became an unlikely catch phrase because of Villechaize's spirited delivery and French accent (he actually pronounced it, "Ze plane! Ze plane!"). In later seasons, he would arrive in his personal go-kart, sized for him, and recklessly driven to join Roarke for the visitor reception while staff scrambled to get out of his way. From 1980 to 1982, Wendy Schaal joined the cast as another assistant named Julie. In a highly unpopular move with both fans and the cast, the producers fired Villechaize from the series before the 1983–1984 season (which ended up being its last) and Tattoo was replaced by a more sedate butler type named Lawrence, played by Christopher Hewett. Lawrence's personality was exactly the opposite of Tattoo's in many ways. For instance, Lawrence was also responsible for the bell ringing, but instead of climbing to the tower he simply pushed a button outside to have the bell ring automatically.
A Grumman Widgeon aircraft was used for the series.As each visitor exited the plane Roarke would describe to Tattoo (or another assistant) the nature of their fantasy, usually with a cryptic comment suggesting the person's fantasy will not turn out as they expected. Roarke would then welcome his guests by lifting his glass and saying: "My dear guests, I am Mr. Roarke, your host. Welcome to Fantasy Island." This toast was usually followed with a warm smile but sometimes (depending on the nature of a guest or their fantasy) his eyes would show concern or worry for a guest's safety.
Roarke's personal vehicle was an orange Dodge Aspen station wagon with a Safari top with the stance of a modern-day sport utility vehicle.

Mr. Roarke

Very little is known about the man known as Mr. Roarke and it isn't clear if that's his first, last, or only name. Although most guests know him as "Mr." Roarke, many people close to him, including past lovers, have referred to him only as "Roarke", which suggests he may not have any other names. He is the sole owner and proprietor of Fantasy Island.
Roarke's actual age is a complete mystery. In the pilot movie, he comments how the guests who come to his island are "so mortal" and there are hints throughout the series that suggest Roarke may be immortal. In "Elizabeth", a woman from Roarke's past appears, but it's revealed that she died over three hundred years ago. Another episode even suggests that he was once intimate with Cleopatra. However old he is, Roarke has come to know many seemingly-immortal beings over his time on Earth, including ghosts ("The Ghost's Story"), a genie ("A Genie Named Joe"), the mermaid Nyah ("The Mermaid", "The Mermaid Returns", "The Mermaid and the Matchmaker"), the goddess Aphrodite ("Aphrodite"), and even Michael, the Angel of Death ("The Angel's Triangle"). In two episodes ("The Devil and Mandy Breems", "The Devil and Mr. Roarke"), Roarke even faces The Devil (played by Roddy McDowall), who has come to the island to challenge him for either a guest's immortal soul or his. It is mentioned this is not the first time they have confronted each other and Mr. Roarke has always been the winner. In the second story, the Devil himself was one of the island's guests, claiming he was only there to relax and had no interest in Roarke's soul at the time. However, this turned out to be yet another ruse.

Roarke had a strong moral code, but he was always merciful. He usually tried to teach his guests important life lessons through the medium of their fantasies, frequently in a manner that exposes the errors of their ways, and on occasions when the island hosted terminally ill guests he would allow them to live out one last wish. Roarke's fantasies were not without peril, but the greatest danger usually came from the guests themselves; in some cases people actually got themselves killed due to their own negligence, aggression or arrogance. When necessary, Roarke would directly intervene when the fantasy became dangerous to the guest. For instance, when Tattoo was given his own fantasy as a birthday gift, which ended up with him being chased by hostile natives in canoes, Mr. Roarke suddenly appeared in a motorboat, snared Tattoo's canoe with a grappling hook and towed it away at high speed to help his employee escape. With only a few exceptions, Roarke always made it quite clear that he was powerless to stop a fantasy once it had begun and that guests must play them out to their conclusion.
In the pilot movie, Roarke was actually a rather sinister figure, but once the series went into production he was depicted as more benevolent.
In later seasons, there were often supernatural overtones. Roarke also seemed to have his own supernatural powers of some sort (called the "Gift of the McNabs" in "Delphine"), although it was never explained how this came to be. In one episode, when a guest says "Thank God things worked out well", Roarke and Tattoo share a very odd look and Roarke says in a cryptic way "Thank God, indeed". In the same episode, Roarke uses some mysterious powers to help Tattoo with his magic act.
The usual format of each episode consisted of an introduction in which Roarke would describe to Tattoo (or another assistant) the nature of each person's fantasy, usually with a cryptic comment suggesting the person's fantasy will not turn out as they expected. The episode would then alternate between two or three independent story lines as the guests experienced their fantasies and interacted with Roarke. Often, the fantasies would turn out to be morality lessons for the guests (for example, one featured a man who clamored for the "good old days" to be taken back to the Salem witch trials), sometimes to the point of (apparently) putting their lives at risk, only to have Roarke step in at the last minute and reveal the deception. It is mentioned a few times that a condition of visiting Fantasy Island is that guests never reveal what goes on there. A small number of guests decided to make the irrevocable choice to stay permanently, living out their fantasy until death; one such person was an actor who had been in a Tarzan-type television series in the 1960s. Aside from a "clip show" ("Remember...When?") the only episode with a single storyline was "The Wedding", in which terminally-ill Helena Marsh returned to Fantasy Island to spend her last days as Roarke's wife.

 The Fantasy

 Cost

In the first movie, it was noted that each guest had paid $50,000 (about $185,000 in 2010 dollars) in advance for the fulfillment of their fantasies and that Fantasy Island was a business. In Return to Fantasy Island Roarke told Tattoo that he sometimes dropped the price when a guest couldn't afford the usual fee because he believed everyone should be given a chance to have their fantasies fulfilled. Afterwards, it became clear that the price a guest paid was substantial to him or her, and for one little girl whose father was one of Roarke's guests, she had emptied her piggy bank—less than ten dollars—to have her fantasy with her father fulfilled. On numerous occasions, a guest had not paid for the trip at all but instead won it as a result of a contest.

 Nature

The nature of a fantasy varied from story to story and were typically very personal to each guest on some level. They could be as harmless as wanting to be reunited with a lost love to something more dangerous like tracking down a cold-blooded killer that murdered someone close to the guest. Usually, the fantasy would take an unexpected turn and proceed down a quite different path than the guest expected. He or she would then leave with some new revelation or renewed interest about themselves or someone close to them. Many times Roarke would reveal in the end that someone they met during the course of their fantasy was another guest living a fantasy of their own. Both guests often left the island together. One guest, however, (Don Knotts) had no particular fantasy and was simply there to relax and enjoy himself.
Although some fantasies were rooted in the real world, many others involved supernatural (such as ghosts, demons, or witchcraft) or mythological (mermaids, genies, Greek goddesses) elements. Time-travel was often a required element - if not a specific request - to fulfill one's fantasy.

Risk

Often a fantasy might involve supernatural elements or even time-travel. Roarke often preceded particularly risky fantasies with a stern warning, word of caution, or even suggestion that the guest select another fantasy instead. He would then inform his guests that he was powerless to stop a fantasy once it had begun and must allow the fantasy to play out until its ultimate conclusion. However, in life-or-death cases, he would inevitably interfere and ensure his guests' safety.

Guest stars

  • Ron Ely
  • Barbi Benton
  • Ken Berry
  • Bill Bixby
  • Ray Bolger
  • Sonny Bono
  • William Boyett
  • Charo
  • Colby Chester
  • Iron Eyes Cody
  • Dennis Cole
  • Michael Cole
  • Bob Denver
  • David Doyle
  • Howard Duff
  • Anne Francis
  • Robert Fuller
  • Mickey Gilley
  • Robert Goulet
  • Sid Haig
  • David Hedison
  • Vince Howard
  • Tom Jones
  • Peter Lawford
  • Heather Locklear
  • Gloria Loring
  • Meredith MacRae
  • Randolph Mantooth
  • Leigh McCloskey
  • Trisha Noble
  • Randi Oakes
  • Cassandra Peterson
  • Michelle Phillips
  • Victoria Principal
  • Dack Rambo
  • Shanna Reed
  • Heather O'Rourke
  • Bobby Sherman
  • Bobby Troup
  • Tom Wopat

Production notes

The show was broadcast every Saturday night on ABC at 10 p.m., after The Love Boat, which was also produced by Aaron Spelling. Like several other series of the era, such as the previously mentioned The Love Boat and Murder, She Wrote, Fantasy Island employed many celebrity guest stars, often bringing them back repeatedly for different roles.

 Filming locations

The series was filmed primarily in Burbank, California with the opening scenes of the enchanting island coastline being that of Kauai, Hawaii. The house with the bell tower, where Tattoo rings the bell, is the Queen Anne Cottage, located in the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden in Arcadia. The plane, "arriving" with the guests, was filmed in the lagoon behind the Queen Anne Cottage. Sometimes, outdoor scenes were filmed at the Arboretum.

Reception
According to Entertainment Weekly Tattoo is one of the "greatest sidekicks."

Parodies and cultural references







  • In the 2002 episode of Family Guy titled "Stuck Together, Torn Apart", Peter is watching Magnum, P.I. in which Magnum insists on calling Higgins "Tattoo".
  • In the song "The Chronic (Intro)" by Dr. Dre featuring Snoop Dogg, Mr. Rourke and Tattoo are compared to Jerry Heller and Eazy-E in the line "Fuck Mr. Rourke and Tattoo, a.k.a. Jerry and Eazy". Eazy-E is compared to Tattoo because of his stature and Jerry is compared to Mr. Rourke, as he was one of the main businessmen at Ruthless Records (Eazy-E's record company that feuded with Dr. Dre's Death Row Records
  • Canada's comedy duo of Wayne and Shuster parodied Fantasy Island as Fantasy Motel. A bus dropped off the passengers, who stood looking around at the inside of the motel, wondering at the sights, while Roarke (Wayne) told "Juan-too" the fantasies of the guests. Juan-too, however, was very tall, and when one guest (Shuster) blurted that he thought Juan-too was supposed to be short, Roarke said it was Juan-too's fantasy to be tall and Juan-too apparently regularly threatens Mr. Roarke with a beating to keep it that way. This guest had everything, and his fantasy was to have something he didn't have. Roarke discovered the guest didn't think he was particularly handsome, so Roarke arranged for plastic surgery.
  • The Micallef Program contained a sketch entitled 'Fantasy Traffic Island' in which Shaun and Francis asked a pedestrian what his wildest fantasy was. He just wanted to get to the golf shop across the road.
  • In the Looney Tunes compilation Daffy Duck's Fantastic Island, Daffy Duck found a wishing well, and started charging people to make wishes. When the business took off, he started wearing a white suit. Speedy Gonzales took on the role of Tattoo.
  • SCTV produced a parody of Fantasy Island (presumably shown as advertised Thursday at 9 on SCTV). Eugene Levy played a Mr. Roarke-like character, & John Candy played Pattoo, a Tattoo-like character. Candy's image was miniaturized for television with special photography. Joe Flaherty & Dave Thomas played rock & roll musicians who came to the island to fulfill their fantasies of being great comedians (they wanted to be Cheech & Chong but Mr. Roarke made them Hope & Crosby). Andrea Martin played a violinist from the Philadelphia Philharmonic. John Candy also portrayed a Bogart-like "Rick" (from Casablanca) character in the final scene. Rick bogarts his cigarette, as noted by Andrea Martin's character. Pattoo also reveals that Roarke's fantasy is to "tie up women with rich Corinthian leather" -- a reference to commercials for Chrysler voiced by Ricardo Montalban.
  • In the episode The Cryonic Woman (2ACV19), Futurama makes a reference to some of its characters returning from Fantasy Planet, where "for one beautiful night", Doctor Zoidberg learns "what it was like to be a grandmother. Subjugated, yet honored."
  • In an episode of Nickelodeon cartoon Doug the title character has a dream sequence where he envisions himself as a Mr Roarke-like character and his main antagonist, Roger, as Tattoo.
  • In the entertainment TV show El Lavadero, on the Colombian TV network RCN, there is a section called Su Isla de la Fantasía (Spanish for "Your Fantasy Island"), which is presented by "Señor Ron" (a Mr. Roarke-like character; his name could be a pun on either the Spanish word for "Rum", or the channel name [RCN TV], or a pun on the word señorón, a pejorative form of mister) and Pelotú (pronounced pell-o-TOO, an imitation of Tattoo; his name is an apocope of "pelotudo" or stupid). In this parody, they talk about events that happen to people in Colombia and worldwide, and based on their talk, Mr. Ron says the guest has the fantasy to star in a certain movie or program.
  • In the video game Destroy All Humans: Big Willy Unleashed, one of the levels is called "Fantasy Atoll", where visitors live out their fantasies. The owner is a midget named "Porke" and his assistant, Ratpoo. It took place in the 1970s. One of the missions on the level is called "Hate Boat", as the show was aired after the show The Love Boat.
  • When I Love 1982 Strikes Back aired its segment on Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, it was teased with the line "Why is Captain Kirk so pissed off at Mr. Roarke?" an obvious in-joke about Ricardo Montalban's work on the TV series that was airing at the same time of the films release.
  • South Park has mentioned Fantasy Island three times. One episode has a reporter saying, "And from a man who looks an awful lot like Mr. Roarke" and then shows a reporter in the likeness of Roarke. Another episode, where the boys visit space, has an alien shape shifting into different characters and objects in order to appeal to the boys, and he briefly becomes Mr. Roarke and Tattoo. However, the boys yell, "NO!" In yet another episode, when the elementary school children are stranded on their bus, Cartman mentions that he's missing the new version of the show. That episode actually aired in June 1998, three months before the premiere of the revival. However, that could've been a writers gag, since Cartman also mentions missing "The New Barnaby Jones", a fictional series mentioned in a later episode.
  • A similar thing happened on an episode of The Jetsons. The Jetsons got fed up with their lifestyle, so they visited a planet where a man and his short sidekick (called Tee-Too) had two heads. Each of the Jetsons got to live their own fantasies, until it became too much for them to handle.
  • In the 2008 movie Meet Dave, Dave's attire was mistaken for being like "He stepped out of a Bee Gees concert. Number three said that all white clothing was not as standard as they thought, according to the only signal intercepted from Earth, which showed Tatoo saying "Ze plane, ze plane!"
  • In a MadTV sketch parodying the ABC drama, Lost, Roarke and Tattoo emerge from the jungle at the end of the skit, with Roarke welcoming them, and announcing that the survivors are actually on Fantasy Island. Tattoo, on seeing their downed plane, exclaims, "The Plane! The Plane is in the ocean!".
  • In The George Lopez Show, Vic is seen in a white tuxedo and George walks in and says, "Welcome to Fantasy Island," and making a series of remarks related to the show, such as, "Boss boss, de plane, de plane!"
  • In Robot Chicken, Mr. Roarke and Tattoo appear, with guests stating that they would like obscure, inappropriate fantasies, such as being able to have sex with a donkey or to administer a violent beating to Roarke.
  • In The Powerpuff Girls episode, "Boy Toys", when The Rowdyruff Boys look up and see Princess flying overhead, Boomer says, "De plane, de plane!" like Tattoo.
  • In A Night at the Roxbury, Chris Kattan's character Doug Watabi yells to his father "Are you seeing planes?...Is your name Tattoo because I swear to God you're living on Fantasy Island" Then Will Ferrell's character Steve says "Man, that was a sweet show!" In which Doug adds "Yeah it was, wasn't it?"
  • In the Entourage episode "Fantasy Island", Turtle can be heard saying "Ze plane, ze plane" to Vince as a plane flies overhead.
  • An episode of Phineas and Ferb is titled "De Plane, De Plane!"
  • In a episode of Codename: Kids Next Door, when they see the plane one of the operatives yells "De plane De plane".
  • In an episode of Phoenix Nights, Peter Kay's character Max the doorman refers to a visiting group of Bolton fans of diminutive staure as Tattoo.
  • In an episode of Bizarre, comedian John Byner plays Tattoo giving then-NBC executive Fred Silverman a wish. When Silverman asks for a decent line-up, Byner-as-Tattoo tells him "we only do fantasies, not friggin MIRACLES!"