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Route 66 (TV series)

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Route 66
Created byHerbert B. Leonard
Stirling Silliphant
StarringMartin Milner
George Maharis (1960-1963)
Glenn Corbett (1963-1964)
Country of originUSA
No. of seasons4
No. of episodes116 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producerHerbert B. Leonard
Running timeapprox. 52 mins. (per episode)
Production companiesLancer Productions
Edling Productions
Screen Gems
Original release
NetworkCBS
ReleaseOctober 7, 1960 –
March 20, 1964

Route 66 is an American television drama[1] that premiered on CBS on October 7, 1960, and ran until March 20, 1964, for a total of 116 episodes. The series was created by Herbert B. Leonard and Stirling Silliphant, who were also responsible for the ABC drama Naked City, from which Route 66 was indirectly spun off. Both series employed a format with elements of both traditional drama and anthology drama, but there was a difference in where the shows were set: Naked City was set in New York, while Route 66 had its setting change from week to week, with each episode being shot on location in the area in which it was set.

Route 66 followed two young men traversing the United States in a Chevrolet Corvette convertible, and the events and consequences surrounding their journeys. Martin Milner starred as Tod Stiles, a recent college graduate with no future prospects due to circumstances beyond his control. He was originally joined on his travels by Buz Murdock, a friend and former employee of his father (played by George Maharis), with the character leaving midway through the third season after contracting echovirus. Near the end of the third season Tod met a recently discharged Vietnam veteran named Lincoln Case, played by Glenn Corbett, who decided to follow Tod on his travels and stayed with him until the final episode.

Format and characters

Black-and-white (greyscale) photo of blond-haired man at the left of the U.S. Route 66 large sign and black-haired man at right
Martin Milner (left) and George Maharis, 1962

Route 66 was a hybrid between episodic television drama, which has continuing characters and situations, and the anthology format (e.g., The Twilight Zone), in which each week's show has a completely different cast and story. It was inspired by On the Road, written by Jack Kerouac. In this narrative format, dubbed "semi-anthology" by the trade paper Variety, the drama usually centers on the guest stars rather than the regular cast.[2] Series creator Stirling Silliphant's concurrently running drama, Naked City (1958–1963), also followed this semi-anthology format. Both shows were recognized for their literate scripts and rich characterizations. The open-ended format, featuring two roaming observers/facilitators, gave Silliphant and the other writers an almost unlimited landscape for presenting a wide variety of dramatic (or comedic) story lines. Virtually any tale could be adapted to the series. The two regulars merely had to be worked in and the setting tailored to fit the location. Like Richard Kimble from The Fugitive, the wanderers would move from place to place and get caught up in the struggles of the people there. Unlike Kimble, nothing was forcing them to stay on the move except their own sense of adventure, thus making it thematically closer to Run for Your Life, Maverick, Movin' On, and Then Came Bronson.

Original concept and trial pilot

In the original concept under discussion between Silliphant and producer Herbert Leonard, the two series leads were both to be ex-army men who had left the service, and were looking to re-establish themselves in American life. George Maharis was signed to a contract by Leonard before the Route 66 concept had even been fully developed, and was set to be a cast member from the very beginning. An actor named Bob Morris was set to be the other lead.

Morris was cast beside Maharis in a 1959 episode of Naked City that was written by Silliphant as a backdoor pilot to a potential spin-off series featuring two young travellers who were looking to find themselves. At that point. the Route 66 title was not yet decided upon, and the potential spin-off was tentatively entitled The Searchers. The Naked City episode that served as the Searchers pilot was called "Four Sweet Corners", and in it Maharis played "Johnny Gary", while Morris was "Link Ridgeway". Both were ex-servicemen. After spending most of the episode rescuing Johnny's kid sister from a shoplifting ring, the two friends decided that they were too restless to stay in New York City, and that there was more of the world that they had to see. Johnny and Link ended the episode by leaving Johnny's family's apartment building, setting out for parts unknown.

The half-hour pilot and the chemistry between the leads was judged to be good by the producers, although Herbert B. Leonard could not interest a network or a sponsor in the spin-off show. Morris died in 1960 of a cerebral hemorrhage.

The concept was subsequently reworked. The title of the series became Route 66, the leads became "Tod" and "Buz", and neither had ties to the army. Maharis was given the role of Buz, while Martin Milner beat out several actors (including Robert Redford) for the role of Tod. Leonard personally financed the shooting of a new hour-long pilot episode ("Black November", written by Silliphant) and CBS picked up the series in 1960.

Character profiles

Glenn Corbett, seen here, joined the series in 1963 as Lincoln "Linc" Case.

Tod and Buz (and later, Linc) symbolized restless youth searching for meaning in the early 1960s. The two men take odd jobs along their journey, like toiling in a California vineyard or manning a Maine lobster boat, bringing them in contact with dysfunctional families or troubled individuals in need of help. The lead characters are not always the focus of any given episode, and their backstories are revealed only in occasional references across widely spaced episodes.

Tod Stiles, portrayed by clean-cut Martin Milner, is the epitome of the decent, honest, all-American type. Tod came from a background of wealth and privilege; his father owned a shipping company, and Tod's early years were spent in New York and Connecticut. He attended Yale, but after the death of his father, Tod discovered that his father's business had essentially gone bankrupt. The only legacy left to Tod was a new Corvette.

Buz Murdock, meanwhile, was an orphan who had worked with Tod's father as a laborer on one of his ships in New York City. After the death of the senior Mr. Stiles, and the subsequent collapse of his business, Tod and Buz decided to drive across America in search of work, adventure, and themselves. The working-class Buz (George Maharis) is looser, hipper, and more Beat Generation in attitude than Tod, though the two characters share a mutual respect for each other. There were subtle indications the Buz character was intended to loosely embody Jack Kerouac in appearance and attitude. Kerouac, in fact, contemplated a lawsuit against Leonard, Silliphant, and Chevrolet for misappropriating the characters and theme from his iconic novel On the Road.[citation needed]

Towards the end of the second season, Maharis was absent for several episodes, due to a bout of infectious hepatitis. He returned for the start of the third season, but was again absent for a number of episodes before leaving the show entirely mid-way through season three. Consequently, in numerous episodes in late season two and early season three, Tod travels solo, while Buz is said to be in the hospital with "echovirus." Tod is often seen writing to Buz in these episodes, or having a one-sided phone conversation with him. In total, Tod appears solo in 13 episodes during seasons two and three.

Buz made his final appearance in a January 1963 episode, and was then written out of the show without a definitive explanation. Then, after five consecutive solo Tod stories, Tod gained a new traveling companion named Lincoln Case (Glenn Corbett) in March 1963. Case is a darker character than Buz Murdock, an army veteran haunted by his past. Tod met Linc in "Fifty Miles From Home", where Linc got into a fight with an aspiring basketball player outside a Houston bus station. Linc severely injured the young man, whom Tod was coaching and training, and the incensed Tod followed Linc to his hometown where he challenged him to a fistfight. After some prolonged, bloody, sweaty, pugilistic choreography, the two came to an understanding of where Linc had been in life. There, Linc became Tod's new traveling companion. Linc was more introspective than the happy-go-lucky Buz, with a sometimes explosive temper, but he is nonetheless a reliable companion as the duo continue their travels. Due to the similarity of names and backgrounds, Linc is more than a little reminiscent of "Link Ridgeway" from the Naked City episode "Four Sweet Corners" that had served as Route 66's back door pilot.

The series concluded in Tampa, Florida with the two-part episode "Where There's a Will, There's a Way," in which Tod Stiles got married, and Linc announced his intention to return home to his family in Texas, after a long period of estrangement. Tod was headed with his new wife back to Houston and offered to bring Linc, who had to remind Tod how small the car was. The scene ends with Linc walking up a hill after loading the couple's luggage on the Corvette. This episode made the series one of the earlier prime-time television dramas to have a planned series finale resolving the fate of its main characters.

The show was filmed and presented in black and white throughout its run.

Locations

Route 66 is well remembered for its cinematography and location filming. Writer-producer Stirling Silliphant traveled the country with a location manager (Sam Manners), scouting a wide range of locales and writing scripts to match the settings. The actors and film crew would arrive a few months later. Memorable locations include a logging camp, shrimp boats, an offshore oil rig, and Glen Canyon Dam, the latter while still under construction.

The show had little connection with the U.S. Highway providing its name. Most of the locations in the series were far from "The Mother Road," which passed through only eight states, while the series was filmed in 25 American states plus (one episode) Toronto, Canada[3] ( another episode featured a brief coda set in Mexico, but was filmed in California). U.S. Route 66 the highway was briefly referred to in just three early episodes of the series ("Black November," "Play It Glissando," and "An Absence of Tears"). The actual highway is even more rarely shown, as in the early first season episode, "The Strengthening Angels."

Route 66 is one of few series in the history of television to be filmed entirely on the road. This was done at a time when the United States was much less homogeneous than it is now. People, their accents, livelihoods, ethnic backgrounds, and attitudes varied widely from one location to the next. Scripted characters reflected a far less mobile, provincial society, in which people were more apt to spend their entire lives in one part of the country. Similarly, the places were very different from one another visually, environmentally, architecturally, in goods and services available, etc. Stars Martin Milner and George Maharis mentioned this in 1980s interviews. "Now you can go wherever you want," Maharis added by way of contrast, "and it's a Denny's."

Guest stars

Joe E. Brown and Buster Keaton in "Journey to Nineveh" (1962)

The roster of guest stars on Route 66 includes several actors who later went on to fame, as well as major stars on the downward side of their careers. One of the most historically significant episodes of the series in this respect was "Lizard's Leg and Owlet's Wing." It featured Lon Chaney, Jr., Peter Lorre and Boris Karloff as themselves, with the latter donning his famous Frankenstein monster make-up for the first time in twenty-five years and Chaney reprising his role as the Wolfman. The show was filmed at the O'Hare Inn, near O'Hare Airport, Chicago. Dutch singer Ronnie Tober had a small guest role with Sharon Russo, Junior Miss America.

Other notable guest stars were Elizabeth Ashley, Ed Asner, Lew Ayres, Diane Baker, Martin Balsam, Richard Basehart, Ed Begley, Theodore Bikel, Beulah Bondi, James Brown (of Leonard's previous show, "Rin Tin Tin," multiple times and the actual Rin Tin Tin dog once with a guest starring credit as a guide dog in "Absence of Tears"), Joe E. Brown, Edgar Buchanan, James Caan, James Coburn, Joan Crawford, James Dunn, Robert Duvall, Barbara Eden, Betty Field, Nina Foch, Anne Francis, Tammy Grimes, Signe Hasso, Sessue Hayakawa, Joey Heatherton, Steven Hill, Miriam Hopkins, David Janssen, Ben Johnson, Buster Keaton, Cloris Leachman, Robert Loggia, Jack Lord, Tina Louise, Dorothy Malone, E.G. Marshall, Lee Marvin, Walter Matthau, Kent McCord (who would later costar with Martin Milner in the TV series Adam-12.), Patty McCormack, Darren McGavin, Ralph Meeker, Dolores Michaels, Vera Miles, Roger Mobley, Chester Morris, Lois Nettleton, Leslie Nielsen, Arthur O'Connell, Susan Oliver, Nehemiah Persoff, Lee Philips, Suzanne Pleshette, Stefanie Powers, Robert Redford, Michael Rennie, Alejandro Rey, Madlyn Rhue, Jeannine Riley, Ruth Roman, Marion Ross, Janice Rule, Soupy Sales, Martha Scott, Martin Sheen, Sylvia Sidney, Lois Smith, Rod Steiger, Beatrice Straight, Barry Sullivan, Joan Tompkins, Rip Torn, Jo Van Fleet, Alex Viespi, Jessica Walter, Jack Warden, Tuesday Weld, Jack Weston, James Whitmore, and Dick York. Several appeared in more than one episode, sometimes as different characters. Julie Newmar is especially memorable as a motorcycle-riding free-spirit—a role she reprised in a later episode. William Shatner and DeForest Kelley (both of whom would later go on to fame by starring in the TV series Star Trek and appearing in seven Star Trek films.) also guest starred, in separate episodes. Two others were Logan Ramsey and Bruce Glover both later appeared in the three theatrical movies about Buford Pusser, Walking Tall, Walking Tall Part 2, and Walking Tall: Final Chapter. Ed Asner and Lois Nettleton, who appeared in the episode, "The Opponent," appeared in the 2006 Christmas movie, "The Christmas Card." Keir Dullea, Gene Hackman, Ron Howard, George Kennedy, and Burt Reynolds, among other future stars, appeared in small bit parts.

In a 1986 interview, Martin Milner reported that Lee Marvin credited him with helping his career by breaking Marvin's nose "just enough" to improve his look. This happened in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, during a scripted fistfight for "Mon Petit Chou," the second of two episodes with Marvin.

Two late third-season episodes, which aired one week apart, each featured a guest star in a bit part playing a character with a profession with which he would later become associated as the star of his own mega-hit television series. In "Shadows of an Afternoon," Michael Conrad was a uniformed policeman, years before he became famous as Police Sgt. Phil Esterhaus on Hill Street Blues. In "Soda Pop and Paper Flags," Alan Alda guest starred as a surgeon, a precursor to his career-defining role as Dr. Benjamin Franklin "Hawkeye" Pierce on M*A*S*H. Also in the first season episode, The Strengthening Angels, which aired November 4, 1960, Hal Smith, who played town drunk Otis Campbell in The Andy Griffith Show, also played a drunk named Howard and was listed in the credits as "Drunk."

A 4th season episode, "Is It True There Are Poxies at the Bottom of Landfair Lake?", featured guest stars Geoffrey Horne and Collin Wilcox. In the episode's story line, Wilcox's character pretended to get married to Horne's, although it turned out to be a practical joke. A few years after appearing in this episode, Horne and Wilcox would be briefly married to each other in real life.

A noteworthy in-joke occurs during the 4th season episode, "Where Are the Sounds of Celli Brahams?" In this segment, Horace McMahon guest stars as a Minneapolis, Minnesota, festival promoter. His character confesses to Linc his failed ambition to be a policeman. Linc remarks that he looks like a policeman Linc once knew in New York City. McMahon had starred as Lt. Mike Parker on the New York-based police drama Naked City from 1958 to '63, another TV series overseen by the creative team of Stirling Silliphant and Herbert B. Leonard.

Production notes

  • The original working title of the series was The Searchers (See Rosin, Route 66: The Television Series 1960-1964, and Alvey "Wanderlust and Wire Wheels" in Suggested Readings). That was the title of the 1956 film The Searchers directed by John Ford and starring John Wayne, so the series was renamed.
  • The episode "I'm Here to Kill a King," about a potential assassination, was originally scheduled to air on November 29, 1963. It was removed from the schedule because of President John F. Kennedy's assassination one week earlier, and (according to TV schedule listings published at the time) was not aired until the series went into syndication. This episode was filmed and set in Niagara Falls, New York, but also features a few shots taken from across the US border in Niagara Falls, Canada. This episode and "A Long Way from St. Louie" (which was set and filmed entirely in Toronto) are the only episodes of Route 66 featuring footage filmed outside the US.

Scripts

Route 66 was officially created by producer Herbert B. Leonard and writer Stirling Silliphant, though Silliphant wrote the majority of the episodes (including the pilot) while Leonard did not write at all. It was notable for its dark story lines and exceptional realism. Tod and Buz would frequently become involved with individuals whose almost nihilistic world view made for occasionally frightening TV. Some 50 years after its premiere, Route 66 is still one of the few TV series to offer such a range of socially conscious stories, including mercy killing, the threat of nuclear annihilation, terrorism, runaways, and orphans. Other episodes dealt with the mentally ill, lupus, drug addiction, or gang violence. Some stories were lighthearted, such as a memorable episode featuring Richard Basehart as a folklorist trying to record the music of an isolated Appalachian community, and a Halloween episode called "Lizard's Leg and Owlet's Wing."

Even more unusual is the way it served up a kind of soaring dialog that has been referred to as "Shakespearean" and free-verse poetry. For instance, the boys encounter a Nazi hunter named Bartlett on the offshore oil drilling rig where they work. Bartlett describes the horrors of World War II and the Holocaust thus: "Tod, I hope you live a long life and never know the blistering forces that sear and destroy, turn men into enemies and sweep past the last frontiers of compassion" and "Once you've seen that dark, unceasing tide of faces...of the victims...the last spark of dignity so obliterated that not one face is lifted to heaven, not one voice is raised in protest even as they died..." (from episode #4, "The Man on the Monkey Board").

The quirky, textured writing extended to episode titles, which included such oddities as "How Much a Pound is Albatross?" and "Ever Ride the Waves in Oklahoma?" the latter causing a sensation as a 'surfing story' where Buz oddly berates a surf bum for existing without purpose. Other episode titles were drawn from a wide range of literary sources, such as Shakespeare ("A Lance of Straw," "Hell is Empty, All the Devils are Here") or Alfred, Lord Tennyson ("A Fury Slinging Flame").

Many of the stories were character studies, like the above-mentioned one featuring Richard Basehart as a man who uses people then tosses them away. The episode titled "You Can't Pick Cotton in Tahiti" refers to small-town America as both a far-away, exotic Tahiti and the "real America" compared to "phony-baloney" Hollywood. Many episodes offer moving soliloquies, into which future Academy-Award-winning writer Stirling Silliphant (In the Heat of the Night) poured his deepest thoughts.

Despite all the adventure, travelogue, drama, and poetry, the real subject of the series was the human condition, with Tod and Buz often cast as a kind of roving Greek chorus, observers and mentors to broken-down prizefighters and rodeo clowns, sadists and iron-willed matrons, surfers and heiresses, runaway kids and orphans, and other people from all walks of life, forced by circumstances to confront their demons.

One hallmark of the show was the way it introduced viewers to new ways of life and new cultures, for instance, a view of a shrimper's life in episode 2 of season 1, "A Lance of Straw," and a look at Cleveland, Ohio's Polish community in episode 35, "First Class Mouliak." Here the young are pushed by their parents into careers and marriages they may not want, in an effort to hold community and family together, albeit at the expense of the happiness and well-being of the kids. This story featured Robert Redford, Martin Balsam, Nehemiah Persoff, and Nancy Malone as guest stars.

One of the legacies Route 66 left behind is a dramatic and photographic portrait of early 1960s America as a less crowded and less complicated era — if not a less violent one — in which altruism and optimism still had a place. That place was filled by two young men who seemed to represent the best in us, the willingness to stand up for the weak, old-fashioned values like honesty, and the physical courage necessary to fight in their own and others' defense. In their role of wanderers, they appeared to be peaceful rebels who rejected, at least for a time, material possessions and the American dream of owning a home. The boys were de facto orphans adrift in American society; as such, they embodied facets of Jack Kerouac's Beat Generation, a little bit of Marlon Brando's wild side from The Wild One, James Dean's inability to settle down and fit in from Rebel Without a Cause, and the wanderlust of the above-mentioned Jim Bronson, the traveling writer and loner who toured the USA on a motorcycle in the 1969-1970 series Then Came Bronson. While often cited as a reference point, Kerouac was not necessarily a supportive fellow traveler of the series, having contemplated filing a lawsuit against the producers and Chevrolet for infringement and misappropriation of his themes and characters from his iconic On The Road novel. The use of the Corvette on Route 66, not only as the boys' transportation but as their marquee and symbol of their wandering spirit, created a link between America's Sports Car and America's highways that endures to this day.

Theme song

Nelson Riddle was commissioned to write the instrumental theme when CBS decided to have a new song, rather than pay royalties for the Bobby Troup song "(Get Your Kicks on) Route 66." Riddle's theme, however, offers an unmistakable homage to the latter's piano solo (as originally recorded by Nat King Cole) throughout the number. Riddle's "Route 66 Theme"[4] instrumental was one of the first television themes[5] to make Billboard magazine's Top 30,[6] following Ray Anthony's "Dragnet Theme" (in 1953) and Henry Mancini's "Mr. Lucky Theme" (in 1960). The song earned two Grammy nominations in 1962.[7] A vocal version, retitled "Open Highway" and featuring lyrics by Stanley Styne, was recorded by jazz singer Teri Thornton and reached #150 in the Music Vendor survey of October 1963.

Car

1962 Chevrolet Corvette

George Maharis reported in a 1986 Nick at Nite interview that people often ask about "the red Corvette." According to Maharis, the Corvette was never red. (The misconception may stem from the box illustration on the official board game, released by Transogram in 1962, which showed Tod and Buz in a red-colored model.) It was light blue the first season (in which a 1960 Corvette appeared in the pilot episode, and a 1961 Corvette was used in all subsequent first-season episodes), and Fawn Beige for the second season (on a 1962) — although in the episode "To Walk with the Serpent" it is described as green — and Saddle Tan (on 1963 and 1964 Corvette Sting Rays) for the third and fourth seasons. Those colors were chosen to photograph well in black and white, but the show's cinematographer complained that the powder blue car reflected too much light. The Corvette was replaced with a newer model annually by series' sponsor Chevrolet, but the show never mentioned or explained the technicality, though the series' travels apparently took them through St. Louis, (where Corvettes were then assembled). The model update made a particular splash in the third season, when the new Corvette Sting Ray introduced the then-revolutionary design change of headlights that rotated into the hoodline when not in use. Virtually every car and truck driven by each episode's characters, and used in street scenes, were different variations of Chevrolets. Chevrolet also supplied the trucks that transported the show's company, and a Chevrolet Corvair Greenbrier van for Milner and his family. Yet, George Maharis claimed in a radio interview, Chevrolet never allowed Milner nor Maharis to use the Corvette other than in film shooting. Maharis thought it may have been for insurance reasons.

Awards and nominations

  • In 1962, guest star Ethel Waters was nominated[8] for an Emmy Award in the category "Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Series" for her performance in the episode "Good Night, Sweet Blues." It was the first ever Emmy nomination for an African-American actress.[9]
  • Also in 1962, George Maharis was nominated for "Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actor in a Series" (Best Actor)[10] for his role as Buz.
  • In 1963, the Writers Guild of America presented writer Larry Marcus the "Best Episodic Drama" award for his screenplay for the episode "Man Out of Time."

Broadcast History

Route 66 aired Friday at 8:30-9:30 PM on CBS its entire run.

Episode list

First season (1960-1961)

Ep. Season Title Airdate Writer(s) Location
1 1 "Black November" October 7, 1960 Stirling Silliphant Garth, Mississippi
(actual filming location: Concord, Kentucky)
Car trouble strands Tod and Buz in an isolated but hostile Mississippi lumber town named for and dominated by its unscrupulous ruler (Everett Sloane) and haunted by a secret dating back to World War II.[11] George Kennedy, Patty McCormack and Keir Dullea also featured.
2 2 "A Lance of Straw" October 14, 1960 Stirling Silliphant Grand Isle, Louisiana
Tod and Buz crew a shrimp trawler while its fiercely independent captain (Janice Rule) deals with a hurricane and a jealous boyfriend (Nico Minardos).
3 3 "The Swan Bed" October 21, 1960 Stirling Silliphant New Orleans, Louisiana
A young woman (Zina Bethune) living with her embittered mother (Betty Field) inadvertently interferes with a bird smuggling ring at the center of a psittacosis outbreak.
4 4 "The Man on the Monkey Board" October 28, 1960 Stirling Silliphant Venice, Louisiana
While working on an oil platform, Tod and Buz assist a peculiar co-worker with his mission after discovering that he is an undercover Nazi hunter (Lew Ayres).
5 5 "The Strengthening Angels" November 4, 1960 Stirling Silliphant Hastings, Sparrow Falls and River Rock
(state not mentioned, but in Western USA)
(actual filming location: Port Hueneme, California)
Buz attempts to prove to a small-town sheriff (John Larch) that the killing of the latter's younger brother by a single mother (Suzanne Pleshette) was in self-defense by searching for the lone witness.[12]
6 6 "Ten Drops of Water" November 11, 1960 Howard Rodman Kanab, Utah
Three orphaned ranchers (Burt Brinckerhoff, Deborah Walley and Tony Haig) stubbornly fight a losing battle against chronic drought conditions.
7 7 "Three Sides" November 18, 1960 Stirling Silliphant Grants Pass, Oregon
Tod and Buz help a hops farmer (E. G. Marshall) reluctant to instill discipline in his spoiled son and daughter (Stephen Bolster and Joey Heatherton).
8 8 "Legacy for Lucia" November 25, 1960 Stirling Silliphant, Melvin Levy Merlin, Oregon
A Sicilian woman (Arline Sax) tries to finance a new Virgin Mary statue for her church in Palagonia by selling all of Oregon "bequeathed" to her by an American soldier during World War II.
9 9 "Layout at Glen Canyon" December 2, 1960 Stirling Silliphant Page, Arizona
Marital problems between a chaperone (Bethel Leslie) for four young models and a foreman (Charles McGraw) are revealed during a fashion shoot at the Glen Canyon Dam construction site.
10 10 "The Beryllium Eater" December 9, 1960 Richard Collins Page, Arizona
After an elderly prospector (Edgar Buchanan) discovers beryllium ore in the Colorado Plateau, Tod and Buz protect his mining claim despite intimidation from their mining company employer (Edward Binns) and his enforcers.
11 11 "A Fury Slinging Flame" December 30, 1960 Stirling Silliphant Carlsbad Caverns National Park, New Mexico
Based on perceived clues from a mysterious stranger, an atomic physicist (Leslie Nielsen) and his handpicked followers take cover in Carlsbad Caverns fearing a possible nuclear attack at sunset on New Year's Day.[1]
12 12 "Sheba" January 6, 1961 Stirling Silliphant El Paso, Texas
Tod and Buz search for the truth behind a "David and Bathsheba" situation between a paroled widow (Whitney Blake) and a manipulative cowboy (Lee Marvin) who had framed her for embezzlement.
13 13 "The Quick and the Dead" January 13, 1961 Stirling Silliphant, Charles Beaumont and Jerry Sohl Riverside, California
The fearful wife (Betsy Jones-Moreland) of an aging racer (Frank Overton) asks Tod to substitute for him at the United States Grand Prix at Riverside International Raceway despite objections from their daughter (Susan Kohner).
14 14 "Play It Glissando" January 20, 1961 Stirling Silliphant Malibu, California
Tod and Buz's vacation is interrupted when they get caught between a violently possessive jazz trumpet virtuoso (Jack Lord) and his heiress wife (Anne Francis) who is trying to escape from him.
15 15 "The Clover Throne" January 27, 1961 Herman Meadow Indio, California
A date grower (Jack Warden) fights to prevent highway construction from running through his property while holding on to his attractive but flirtatious ward (Anne Helm) whom he wants to eventually marry.
16 16 "Fly Away Home (Part 1)" February 10, 1961 Stirling Silliphant Phoenix, Arizona
The widow owner (Cathy Lewis) of a crop dusting company, her daughter (Jenny Maxwell) and a veteran pilot (Michael Rennie) with a "Jonah" complex dissuade Tod from joining their flyer ranks.[13]
17 17 "Fly Away Home (Part 2)" February 17, 1961 Stirling Silliphant Phoenix, Arizona
His ex-wife (Dorothy Malone) romantically involved with Buz, the veteran pilot tries to save the financially troubled business by undertaking a job involving sulfur application, just like the one that killed the owner's husband.[14]
18 18 "Sleep on Four Pillows" February 24, 1961 Stirling Silliphant Los Angeles, California
Feeling neglected by her rich parents, a teenager (Patty McCormack) latches on to UCLA computer programming student Tod and door-to-door cosmetics salesman Buz while faking her own kidnapping.[15]
19 19 "An Absence of Tears" March 3, 1961 Stirling Silliphant Los Angeles, California
A totally blind dance instructor (Martha Hyer), accompanied by her guide dog (Rin Tin Tin), is motivated to avenge her newlywed husband's murder at a filling station by attempting to kill the three perpetrators.[16]
20 20 "Like a Motherless Child" March 17, 1961 Howard Rodman, Betty Andrews Fallon, Nevada
Buz confronts his past in separate encounters in western Nevada with a runaway orphan boy and an alcoholic chorus girl chaperone (Sylvia Sidney) still torturing herself over abandoning her infant son decades earlier.
21 21 "Effigy in Snow" March 24, 1961 Stirling Silliphant Olympic Valley, California
Vengeful over his mother's infidelity, a ski-jumping psychiatric hospital escapee (Scott Marlowe) strangles a woman to death on the slopes of Squaw Valley Ski Resort and targets the ski shop's widowed proprietor (Jeanne Bal).
22 22 "Eleven, the Hard Way" April 7, 1961 George Clayton Johnson Reno, Nevada
Tod and Buz assist a gambler (Walter Matthau) and a paymaster (Edward Andrews) who are both going to Reno hoping to win enough money at the craps table to save their economically depressed Nevada mining town.[1]
23 23 "Most Vanquished, Most Victorious" April 14, 1961 Stirling Silliphant Los Angeles, California
Fulfilling the final request of his dying destitute aunt (Beatrice Straight), Tod searches for and learns about his inspirational cousin but also confronts the gang responsible for her murder.
24 24 "Don't Count Stars" April 28, 1961 Stirling Silliphant San Diego, California
A 9-year-old hotel heiress (Susan Melvin) enlists Tod and Buz to help her with a child custody case to stay with her gambling, alcoholic "uncle" who is actually her widowed biological father (Dan Duryea).
25 25 "The Newborn" May 5, 1961 Stirling Silliphant, Herb Purdum New Mexico
Tod and Buz transport the newborn son of a mother (Arline Sax) who died after childbirth to her father at a New Mexico Pueblo while pursued by the infant's other grandfather, a ruthless cattle baron (Albert Dekker). Guest star Robert Duvall.
26 26 "A Skill for Hunting" May 12, 1961 Jack Turley, Milton Gelman New Mexico
A driven, unprincipled Oklahoman (Gene Evans) frames Tod and Buz for poaching and fights to seize control of a trucking company from his business partner who is also its majority owner (Harold J. Stone) in New Mexico. Guest star Joanna Moore.
27 27 "Trap at Cordova" May 26, 1961 Stirling Silliphant, Joseph Vogel Las Cruces, New Mexico
The patrón (Thomas Gomez) of a New Mexico village defies a state government order to bus its schoolchildren to a new facility in Las Cruces. Special appearance by then-State Senate Majority Leader Fabian Chavez.[17]
28 28 "The Opponent" June 2, 1961 Stirling Silliphant, Leonard Freeman Youngstown, Ohio
Realizing that a professional boxer (Darren McGavin) whom he has idolized since boyhood is way past his prime, Buz, along with the pugilist's girlfriend (Lois Nettleton), encourages him to end his career positively. Ed Asner & Al Lewis also guest star.
29 29 "Welcome to Amity" June 9, 1961 Will Lorin Amity, Ohio
(actual filming location: Kinsman, Ohio)
A native (Susan Oliver) returning to her small Ohio town gets Tod and Buz to help relocate her mother's remains from a potter's field to the adjacent cemetery, but meets resistance from townspeople due to the decedent's pariah status.
30 30 "Incident on a Bridge" June 16, 1961 Stirling Silliphant Cleveland, Ohio
Two sand & gravel workers, one jealous (Allan Melvin) and the other compassionate (Nehemiah Persoff), violently contend for the affections of their boss' oppressed mute daughter (Lois Smith) in Cleveland's Russian community.[18]

Second season (1961-1962)

Ep. Season Title Airdate Writer Location
31 1 "A Month of Sundays" September 22, 1961 Stirling Silliphant Butte, Montana
A terminally ill Broadway star (Anne Francis), secretly abandoning her career to return to her Montana hometown, copes with her oncoming death as she is courted by Buz who is unaware of her condition.[19]
32 2 "Blue Murder" September 29, 1961 Teleplay: Stirling Silliphant
Based on a story by: Wilbur Daniel Steele
Jefferson County, Montana
A farrier (Claude Akins) exploits the violent reputation of an untamed stallion to murder his two affluent brothers in order to gain the affections of the wife (Suzanne Pleshette) of his rancher sibling (Gene Evans).
33 3 "Goodnight Sweet Blues" October 6, 1961 Teleplay: Will Lorin
Story: Leonard Freeman and Will Lorin
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
A dying singer (Ethel Waters) reunites with a jazz band (Roy Eldridge, Bill Gunn, Coleman Hawkins, Juano Hernández, Jo Jones and Frederick O'Neal) with which she last performed thirty years earlier.[20]
34 4 "Bird Cage on My Foot" October 13, 1961 Teleplay: Stirling Silliphant
Story: Stirling Silliphant and Elliot Silverstein
Boston, Massachusetts
Motivated by a traumatic experience during his adolescence, Buz overcomes his initial refusal to help a heroin addict (Robert Duvall) go cold turkey after the latter's attempted theft of Tod's Corvette.[21] Mike Kellin as Lieutenant Calder
35 5 "First-Class Mouliak" October 20, 1961 John Vlahos Cleveland, Ohio
The son (Robert Redford) of Tod and Buz's supervisor (Nehemiah Persoff) is involved in the accidental death of the daughter of the latter's colleague and best friend (Martin Balsam). Directed By William Conrad.
36 6 "Once to Every Man" October 27, 1961 Frank L. Moss Gloucester, Massachusetts
Tod is engaged to a jet-set shipyard heiress (Janice Rule), but is unaware of her intentions to close the business. Special appearance by the Mako Shark concept car.
37 7 "The Mud Nest" November 10, 1961 Teleplay: Stirling Silliphant
Story: Leonard Freeman
Baltimore, Maryland
(opening scenes set in the fictional town of Hester, Maryland but filmed near Sunnybrook and Hess, Maryland )[22]
An encounter with a rural Maryland family (Lon Chaney, Jr. and Maharis siblings Cleopatra, Harold and Paul) bearing a striking resemblance to him leads Buz to Baltimore where, with the help of a police detective (Edward Asner), he searches for the woman who might be his mother (Betty Field).[23]
38 8 "A Bridge Across Five Days" November 17, 1961 Howard Rodman Baltimore, Maryland
A newly hired secretary (Nina Foch) at a Baltimore shipyard struggles with both her bipolar disorder and readjusting to normal life after spending eighteen years at Spring Grove State Hospital.[23]
39 9 "Mon Petit Chou" November 24, 1961 Stirling Silliphant Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Tod falls for a chanteuse (Macha Méril), but also confronts her domineering mentor (Lee Marvin) still embittered by his ex-wife's infidelity. Directed by Sam Peckinpah.[24]
40 10 "Some of the People, Some of the Time" December 1, 1961 Stirling Silliphant Carlisle, Pennsylvania
Tod and Buz are employed by a hustler (Keenan Wynn), who is operating a traveling beauty contest promising movie roles to its winners. Directed by Robert Altman.[25][26]
41 11 "The Thin White Line" December 8, 1961 Teleplay: Leonard Freeman
Story: Jordan Brotman and Bill Stine
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Buz and the police search for a temporarily psychotic Tod, who is on the loose in Philadelphia after inadvertently drinking a beer spiked with an experimental hallucinogen intended for someone else at a party.
42 12 "...And the Cat Jumped Over the Moon" December 15, 1961 Teleplay: Stirling Silliphant
Story: Frank L. Moss
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Buz convinces a defector (James Caan) from a gang to avenge the death of a mentor friend (Milt Kamen) to both by challenging its leader (Martin Sheen) to a game of rooftop chicken.
43 13 "Burning for Burning" December 29, 1961 Stirling Silliphant Boiling Springs, Pennsylvania
Visiting her in-laws' poultry farm, a widow (Inger Stevens) with an infant son is blamed for her husband's death by his domineering mother (Beulah Bondi) and older brother (Pat Hingle).
44 14 "To Walk with the Serpent" January 5, 1962 Will Lorin Boston, Massachusetts
Tod and Buz assist in stopping a hate group leader (Dan O'Herlihy) after being recruited by FBI agents (Simon Oakland and Joseph Campanella) and the target's father (Judson Laire).
45 15 "A Long Piece of Mischief" January 19, 1962 Teleplay: Stirling Silliphant
Story: Richard Shapiro and Esther Mayesh
Mesquite, Texas
A rodeo clown (Albert Salmi) nurses a love for a trick rider (Audrey Totter) while fending off torment from a pair of competing cowboys (Ben Johnson and Slim Pickens) at the Mesquite Rodeo.
46 16 "1800 Days to Justice" January 26, 1962 Jo Pagano Harcourt Juncture, Texas
(actual filming location: Crandall, Texas)
An ex-convict (John Ericson) seizes his small North Texas hometown to hold a kangaroo court to vindicate himself against the man (DeForest Kelley) who framed him for a bank robbery five years earlier.
47 17 "City of Wheels" February 2, 1962 Frank Chase Long Beach, California
While working at a Veterans Administration Hospital with Tod, Buz strives to romantically unite an embittered, self-pitying paraplegic (Steven Hill) and the nurse (Bethel Leslie) who loves him.[1]
48 18 "How Much a Pound Is Albatross?" February 9, 1962 Stirling Silliphant Tucson, Arizona
The free-spirit approach to life of Vicki Russell (Julie Newmar), a motorcycle-riding heiress who lost her entire family in an aviation accident, mirrors that of Tod and Buz . First of two appearances by Newmar in the same role.[27]
49 19 "Aren't You Surprised to See Me?" February 16, 1962 Stirling Silliphant Dallas, Texas
A religious fanatic/serial killer (David Wayne) kidnaps Buz at the Trade Mart and threatens to murder him unless everyone in Dallas obeys all Ten Commandments for 24 hours.[1][28]
50 20 "You Never Had It So Good" February 23, 1962 Teleplay: Stirling Silliphant and Frank L. Moss
Story: Frank L. Moss
Phoenix, Arizona
An executive assistant (Patricia Barry) plotting for a vice presidency at a real estate development firm employs Buz, who is unaware of her relationship with the company's president (Peter Graves).
51 21 "Shoulder the Sky, My Lad" March 2, 1962 Mort Thaw Phoenix, Arizona
Nearing his Bar Mitzvah, a Jewish boy (Michael McGreevey) has a crisis of faith after his father (Edward Asner) is murdered in a mugging.
52 22 "Blues for the Left Foot" March 9, 1962 Leonard Freeman Los Angeles, California
Widowed after the death of her abusive, alcoholic husband, a dancer (Elizabeth Seal) who was Tod's first crush attempts a comeback by auditioning for a variety show's dance troupe at CBS Television City. Ms. Seal's second husband, Zack Matalon, also appears (as Pete).
53 23 "Go Read the River" March 16, 1962 Stirling Silliphant Lake Havasu City, Arizona
Tod works with a Lake Havasu-based speedboat engine designer (John Larch) whose exceptional commitment to his work, which had cost him his marriage, obstructs a reconciliation with his estranged daughter (Lois Smith).
54 24 "Even Stones Have Eyes" March 30, 1962 Barry Trivers Austin, Texas and Kerrville, Texas
Fearing that his total blindness from a construction accident is permanent, Buz learns to adjust to the disability at the Texas Lions Camp in Kerrville, where his instructor (Barbara Barrie) falls in love with him.[29]
55 25 "Love is a Skinny Kid" April 6, 1962 Stirling Silliphant Kilkenny, Texas
(actual filming location: Lewisville, Texas)
Returning to her North Texas hometown wearing a mask, a woman (Tuesday Weld) seeks vengeance against the mother (Cloris Leachman) who had committed her to a psychiatric hospital and falsified her death.
56 26 "Kiss the Maiden All Forlorn" April 13, 1962 Stirling Silliphant Dallas, Texas
An international fugitive embezzler (Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.) risks recapture by slipping into Dallas to dissuade his daughter (Zina Bethune) from becoming a nun.
57 27 "Two on the House" April 20, 1962 Gil Ralston Cleveland, Ohio
A 12-year-old boy (Brad Herrman) fakes his own kidnapping after feeling neglected by his construction tycoon father (Ralph Meeker) who is preoccupied with a project in Morocco.
58 28 "There I Am - There I Always Am" May 4, 1962 Stirling Silliphant Santa Catalina Island, California
While Tod is on a three-hour errand, Buz struggles to rescue from a rising tide a jet setter (Joanna Moore) whose left foot is stuck in the rocks at a beach that is deserted for the winter.
59 29 "Between Hello and Goodbye" May 11, 1962 Stirling Silliphant Santa Monica, California
Tod and a psychiatrist (Herschel Bernardi) race through Pacific Ocean Park to prevent a woman (Susan Oliver) with a split personality from committing suicide. First of four consecutive episodes without Maharis; Buz is referenced as being in a hospital in Pacoima, California with an unspecified ailment.
60 30 "A Feat of Strength" May 18, 1962 Teleplay: Howard Rodman and Joseph Petracca
Story: Everett De Baun
Pacoima, California
A Hungarian professional wrestler/political prisoner (Jack Warden) gains his freedom after his wife (Signe Hasso) makes a deal for his release, but the resulting debt relegates him to a role as a jobber. Tod visits the Pacoima hospital where Buz is staying, but neither he nor we get to actually see him.
61 31 "Hell is Empty, All the Devils Are Here" May 25, 1962 Stirling Silliphant Thousand Oaks, California
Tod's employer at Jungleland USA is an animal trainer (Peter Graves) plotting revenge against the man (Michael Pate) he believes was responsible for his first wife's death.
62 32 "From an Enchantress Fleeing" June 1, 1962 Teleplay: Stirling Silliphant
Story: Abram S. Ginnes
Malibu, California
(later scenes set in an unnamed village in Mexico)
Tod empathizes with a henpecked, eccentric inventor (Arthur O'Connell) retreating from his marriage despite working for the latter's wife (June Vincent) who's an assertive, self-sufficient dentist in Southern California. Anne Helm as their daughter Lorre, Tod's romantic interest.

Third season (1962-1963)

Ep. Season Title Airdate Writer Location
63 1 "One Tiger to a Hill" September 21, 1962 Stirling Silliphant Astoria, Oregon
Tod's relationship with the daughter (Laura Devon) of his employer (Signe Hasso) draws the wrath of a fisherman (David Janssen) still haunted by a fatal decision he made during World War II.
64 2 "Journey to Nineveh" September 28, 1962 William R. Cox Gladstone Landing, Missouri
(actual filming location: Calabasas, California)
While traveling through the Missouri Ozarks, Tod and Buz befriend a local jinx named Jonah (Buster Keaton) who unwittingly has an engagement ring that can get his brother (Joe E. Brown) released from jail.
65 3 "Man Out of Time" October 5, 1962 Larry Marcus Chicago, Illinois
Taxicab drivers Tod and Buz encounter a Prohibition-era gangster (Luther Adler) returning to Chicago after serving 32 years in prison who believes someone from his past wants to kill him.
66 4 "Ever Ride the Waves in Oklahoma?" October 12, 1962 Teleplay: Stirling Silliphant
Story: Borden Chase and Frank Chase
Huntington Beach, California
Offended by the callous reaction of the local surfer king (Jeremy Slate) to the death of a young challenger shooting a pier, Buz takes up the challenge.
67 5 "Voice at the End of the Line" October 19, 1962 Larry Marcus Chicago, Illinois
An unwitting accomplice to a practical joke that humiliates a Chicago shipping clerk (Sorrell Booke), Buz, along with a reluctant Tod, makes amends by helping to advance the victim's telephone romance with a woman he has never seen.
68 6 "Lizard's Leg and Owlet's Wing" October 26, 1962 Stirling Silliphant Chicago, Illinois
Uncertain about whether their classic brand of horror is still effective for a new generation, Lon Chaney, Jr., Boris Karloff and Peter Lorre execute Tod's suggestion of testing it at a secretaries convention at the O'Hare Inn.[30]
69 7 "Across Walnuts and Wine" November 2, 1962 Stirling Silliphant Oregon City, Oregon
Tod and Buz board at a house occupied by a psychic reader (Betty Field), her unemployed husband (James Dunn), her recently fired sister (Nina Foch) and her nephew (Robert Walker, Jr.) who threatens to evict them all.
70 8 "Welcome to the Wedding" November 9, 1962 Howard Rodman Cleveland, Ohio
While awaiting the delayed arrival of the maid of honor in Cleveland Union Terminal, Tod is taken hostage by a cold-blooded killer (Rod Steiger) who murdered his custody officer (Edward Asner) to escape a prison transfer.[31][32]
71 9 "Every Father's Daughter" November 16, 1962 Anthony Lawrence Cleveland, Ohio
An attempt by a road-construction boss (Jack Kruschen) to pay employee Buz to begin a relationship with his terminally ill daughter (Madlyn Rhue) is met with strong disapproval from his son (Robert Drivas).
72 10 "Poor Little Kangaroo Rat" November 23, 1962 Les Pine Palos Verdes, California
Tod and Buz work at Marineland of the Pacific with a shark-hunting scientist (Leslie Nielsen) whose obsession with his cholesterol research estranges him from his wife (Joanne Linville) and son (Ron Howard).
73 11 "Hey, Moth, Come Eat the Flame" November 30, 1962 Stirling Silliphant St. Louis, Missouri
Tod and Buz try to help a young boy (Mickey Sholdar) cope with the alcoholism of his piano-playing widower father (Harry Guardino) who was also being tempted into participating in a payroll heist. Debut of the Corvette Stingray.
74 12 "Only by Cunning Glimpses" December 7, 1962 Teleplay: Stirling Silliphant
Story: Stirling Silliphant, Preston Wood
Cleveland, Ohio
At odds with her father (Theodore Bikel) over her occupation, a mentalist (Lois Smith) makes a haunting prediction of Tod's involvement in Buz's death in a fire.
75 13 "Where is Chick Lorimer, Where Has She Gone?" December 14, 1962 Teleplay: Larry Marcus
Story: Bert Lambert
St. Charles, Missouri
(opening scene set in Oklahoma)
After unwittingly helping a striptease performer (Vera Miles) escape from her bail bondsman (Robert Emhardt), Tod tracks her down in her hometown where her acquaintances are oblivious to her occupation. First of four consecutive episodes without Maharis; Buz is said to be in a hospital in Cleveland, suffering from an "echo-virus".
76 14 "Give the Old Cat a Tender Mouse" December 21, 1962 Stirling Silliphant Memphis, Tennessee
Tod accumulates driving violations while pursuing Vicki Russell (Julie Newmar), who is busy courting a cotton baron (Robert Webber). Second of two appearances by Newmar in the same role.[27]
77 15 "A Bunch of Lonely Pagliaccis" January 4, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Hernando, Mississippi
Tod works as an assistant to a famous novelist (Barry Sullivan) whose daughter (Laura Devon) is on trial for shooting her husband. But what at first appears to be the simple, brutal act of a jealous wife gaining revenge on her cheating spouse, slowly reveals itself to be something much more complex.
78 16 "You Can't Pick Cotton in Tahiti" January 11, 1963 Shimon Wincelberg Lake Chisholm, Tennessee
(actual filming location: Arlington, Tennessee)
Upon arrival in a Tennessee town, a Hollywood songwriter/runaway groom (Richard Basehart) steals the heart of the girlfriend (Jena Engstrom) of Tod's cotton gin plant colleague (William Bramlette), but gets "cold feet" again.
79 17 "A Gift for a Warrior" January 18, 1963 Television Story and Teleplay: Larry Marcus
Based on a story by: Harlan Ellison
Chula Vista, California
Thinking that his mother was abandoned by his American father (James Whitmore) after World War II, a young German matrose (Lars Passgård) jumps ship with the intention of killing him, but not knowing what actually happened. Final series appearances (in original airdate order) for Maharis and the C1 Corvette, both suggesting that the episode was actually filmed in advance of the third season.
80 18 "Suppose I Said I Was the Queen of Spain" February 8, 1963 Teleplay: Stirling Silliphant
Story: Jerome B. Thomas
Los Angeles, California
Tod falls for a mysterious woman (Lois Nettleton) who steals his credit card and changes her identity. Robert Duvall and Harvey Korman also featured.
81 19 "Somehow It Gets to Be Tomorrow" February 15, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Corpus Christi, Texas
A self-reliant 13-year-old (Roger Mobley), along with his younger sister (Leslye Hunter), attempt to escape from their foster parents and latch on with Tod while evading a social worker (Martin Balsam).
82 20 "...Shall Forfeit His Dog and Ten Shillings to the King" February 22, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Apache Junction, Arizona
After witnessing the robbery/murder of an elderly millionaire near Superstition Mountain, Tod joins a posse to track down the killer, along with the deceased's trophy wife (Kathleen Crowley), a greyhound trainer (Steve Cochran) who is a friend of the family, and a retired U.S. Cavalry general (John Anderson).
83 21 "In the Closing of a Trunk" March 8, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Lobos Island, Texas
(actual filming location: Port Aransas, Texas)
A Texas Gulf Coast fisherman (Ed Begley) and his grandson (Don Dubbins) use Tod as a pawn in psychological battle with a woman (Ruth Roman) who was recently released from prison after 27 years, having murdered her father.[33]
84 22 "The Cage Around Maria" March 15, 1963 Jesse Sandler Houston, Texas
A mentally unstable young woman (Elizabeth Ashley) rescued from the Houston Zoo bear pit by Tod accuses her riding master stepfather (Mario Alcalde) of plotting to kill her wealthy mother (Beatrice Straight).[34]
85 23 "Fifty Miles from Home" March 22, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Houston, Texas
(later scenes set in Landor, Texas)
Lincoln Case, an Army Green Beret/Purple Heart recipient returning to Houston after serving in Vietnam, declines to accept a hero's welcome in his hometown to join Tod in searching for the meaning of his life. Glenn Corbett's debut as series regular.
86 24 "Narcissus on an Old Red Fire Engine" March 29, 1963 Joel Carpenter Galveston, Texas.
Linc becomes involved with a troubled, self-obsessed young debutante (Anne Helm). Alan Hale, Jr. also featured.[35]
87 25 "The Cruelest Sea of All" April 5, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Weeki Wachee, Florida and Crystal River, Florida
Tod is attracted to a young exceptional swimmer (Diane Baker), but refuses to believe that she just might be a real mermaid.[36]
88 26 "Peace, Pity, Pardon" April 12, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Tampa, Florida
With Linc's aid, a jai alai player (Alejandro Rey), attempts to execute the defection of the daughter of his Cuban army colonel brother (Michael Tolan) over the objections of his other brother (Victor Gabriel Junquera) and Tod.
89 27 "What a Shining Young Man Was Our Gallant Lieutenant" April 26, 1963 Howard Rodman Tampa, Florida
After the guys are shortchanged on the docks in Tampa, Linc pays a visit to his former commanding officer (Dick York) only to find that head wounds suffered in combat have regressed him back into an 8-year-old boy.
90 28 "But What Do You Do In March?" May 3, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Tierra Verde, Florida
The rivalry between two spoiled Chicago heiresses (Susan Kohner and Janice Rule) is manifest when Tod and Linc are opposing racers in a speedboat challenge arranged by Guy Lombardo. Carmen Lombardo also featured.
91 29 "Who Will Cheer My Bonnie Bride?" May 10, 1963 Shimon Wincelberg Cape Coral, Florida
During a motel robbery/shooting, a shanghaied Linc becomes the getaway driver for two holdup men (Rip Torn and Albert Salmi), one of whom intends to crash his ex-girlfriend's wedding. Gene Hackman also featured.
92 30 "Shadows of an Afternoon" May 17, 1963 Teleplay: Leonard Freeman and Alvin Sargent
Story: Leonard Freeman and Eric Scott
Punta Gorda, Florida
Linc is jailed and held without bail after a prominent townswoman (Miriam Hopkins) alleges to have seen him slashing a dachshund with pruning shears. Ralph Meeker, Michael Conrad and Richard Mulligan also featured.
93 31 "Soda Pop and Paper Flags" May 31, 1963 John McGreevey Mapleton, Missouri and Martinsdale (state not mentioned)
(actual filming locations: St. Louis, Missouri and St. Petersburg, Florida)
A hobo (Chester Morris), accused of being a carrier of a rare type of sleeping sickness, is protected by Tod and his rubber processing company boss (Frank Overton) from confrontational citizens in a small Missouri town. In a different town, novice salesman Linc meets his first potential customer (Tom Bosley). Joseph Campanella and Alan Alda also featured. All of Corbett's scenes filmed in Florida.

Fourth season (1963-1964)

Ep. Season Title Airdate Writer Location
94 1 "Two Strangers and an Old Enemy" September 27, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Cape Coral, Florida and Everglades National Park
While Tod and Linc attempt to rescue a suicidal World War II flying ace (Jack Warden) who had plunged his plane into the Everglades, a Japanese adversary (Sessue Hayakawa) from a classic dogfight tries to revive the hero's will to live. Anthony Zerbe also featured.
95 2 "Same Picture, Different Frame" October 4, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Poland Spring, Maine
Camp counselor Linc protects an equestrienne (Joan Crawford) from being stalked by her painter husband/psychiatric hospital escapee (Patrick O'Neal); social director Tod dodges the teen daughter (Jacqueline Courtney) of a doctor (Tom Bosley).

Arthur Anderson features as Deputy Stone.

96 3 "Come Out, Come Out, Wherever You Are!" October 11, 1963 Teleplay: Anthony Basta, Stirling Silliphant
Story: Richard Jessup
an unnamed town in Maine
(actual filming locations: Mechanic Falls, Maine and Poland, Maine and Lewiston, Maine)
The daughter (Diane Baker) of a French Canadian boarding house proprietor (Lon Chaney, Jr.) has relationships with Linc and a sailor (Alex Viespi), but both are brief due to her not having any idea of what she wants out of life.
97 4 "Where Are the Sounds of Celli Brahms?" October 18, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Minneapolis, Minnesota
Hotel public relations assistant Tod struggles to keep up with a dedicated acoustical engineer (Tammy Grimes) striving to become a vice president; Aquatennial beauty pageant judge Linc agonizes over voting for a longshot contestant (Kelly Peters). Harry Bellaver, Horace McMahon and University of Minnesota Memorial Stadium also featured.
98 5 "Build Your Houses With Their Backs to the Sea" October 25, 1963 Frank R. Pierson South Portland, Maine
(also filmed in Cape Elizabeth, Maine)
After a year away from his family which still didn't accept his wife (Louise Sorel) as a member, a stubborn son (William Shatner) returns to confront his equally obstinate lobster fisherman father (Pat Hingle) over the drowning death of his aquaphobic brother. Audra Lindley also featured.
99 6 "And Make Thunder His Tribute" November 1, 1963 Lewis John Carlino Lilydale, Minnesota
Tod and Linc work for an eccentric but feisty Italian-American raspberry grower (J. Carrol Naish) who is at odds with his son (Lou Antonio) over both his farmland and outmoded methods.
100 7 "The Stone Guest" November 8, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Central City, Colorado
A mine collapse that trapped Linc's troublemaking Army colleague (Lee Philips) underground with an out-of-town spinster (Jo Van Fleet) parallels the local performance of Mozart's Don Giovanni. Marion Ross and Harold Gould also featured.
101 8 "I Wouldn't Start From Here" November 15, 1963 Ernest Kinoy Newfane, Vermont
Forced by bankruptcy to auction off all of his property, an elderly farmer (Parker Fennelly) retains his two horses for a pulling competition in a last-ditch attempt to keep his farm.
102 9 "A Cage in Search of a Bird" November 29, 1963 § Stirling Silliphant Golden, Colorado and Denver, Colorado
A moll (Stefanie Powers), hounded by her con artist ex-boyfriend (Alex Viespi) for stealing from his poker pot, receives an offer from her uncle (Dan Duryea) to collect a monetary reward by turning him in to the police for his role in a long-forgotten bank heist.
103 10 "I'm Here to Kill a King" unaired in original network run § Stirling Silliphant Niagara Falls, New York
Coincidence brings Tod together with a political assassin (Milner in a dual role) who is his doppelgänger. A few scenes in this episode – particularly the opening shot of the Seagram Tower – were filmed from Niagara Falls, Ontario. However, Tod, Linc and the entire cast (including guest stars Robert Loggia and Tina Louise) stay exclusively on the American side of the border throughout.
104 11 "A Long Way From St. Louie" December 6, 1963 Stirling Silliphant Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Enthusiastic Linc, grumpy Tod and a skirt-chasing helicopter pilot (Hedley Mattingly) help a St. Louis-based progressive jazz quintet (Lynda Day, Patricia Harty, Susan Ringwood, Jessica Walter and Virginia Wing) in dire need of a gig after their agent absconded with all of their money. Al Lewis and Exhibition Stadium also featured.
105 12 "Come Home Greta Inger Gruenschaffen" December 13, 1963 Joel Carpenter Mount Snow, Vermont
In love with fellow Buffalo, New York Turner/chapter president (Chad Everett) but objecting to being sent away on a two-year solo mission, Greta (Tammy Grimes) escapes to Snow Lake Lodge where motel receptionist Tod and maintenance man Linc vie for her affections. Buffalo Central Terminal also featured.
106 13 "93 Per Cent in Smiling" December 20, 1963 Teleplay: Alvin Sargent
Story: Walter Brough, Alvin Sargent
Lewiston, New York
Tired of the bickering between their parents (Albert Salmi and Olga Bellin) and of living in a trailer park, two young children (John and Susan Howell) kidnap their infant brother and set up their own "family" in a vacant house in a more affluent side of town. Jean Stapleton also featured.
107 14 "Child of a Night" January 3, 1964 Stirling Silliphant Savannah, Georgia
Tod and Linc are enlisted by a dying airplane crash victim (Herschel Bernardi) to search for the child (Diana Van der Vlis) he had abandoned over two decades earlier to whom they would present his life's savings. Sylvia Sidney, Joanna Pettet and Dan Travanti also featured.
108 15 "Is it True There Are Poxies at the Bottom of Landfair Lake?" January 10, 1964 Alvin Sargent Clausen, Georgia
(actual filming location: outside Savannah, Georgia)
A bitter young farmer (Geoffrey Horne) seeks to publicly humiliate a woman (Collin Wilcox) who was the instrument of a cruel practical joke perpetrated on him while he was in the Army. Graham Jarvis also featured.
109 16 "Like This It Means Father...Like This - Bitter...Like This - Tiger..." January 17, 1964 Stirling Silliphant Savannah, Georgia
Seeking vengeful justice, Linc confronts a former member (Larry Blyden) of his Vietnam unit who was never punished for his cowardice causing the deaths of two fellow soldiers in combat.
110 17 "Kiss the Monster - Make Him Sleep" January 24, 1964 Stanley R. Greenberg Minneapolis, Minnesota
Linc has a full plate when his mother (Linda Watkins) visits to convince him to reconcile with his estranged father, while carrying on a relationship with the reckless younger sister (Barbara Mattes) of a Norwegian-American construction magnate (James Coburn).
111 19 "Cries of Persons Close to One" January 31, 1964 Teleplay: Howard Rodman
Story: William Kelley
Green Park, Florida and Maurie, Florida
(actual filming location: Daytona Beach, Florida)
Linc helps an uneducated & alcoholic itinerant boxer (Michael Parks) and his faithful girlfriend (Ellen Madison) by substituting for the former whose inebriation precluded him from fighting in a bout. James Farentino also featured.
112 20 "Who in His Right Mind Needs a Nice Girl" February 7, 1964 Joel Carpenter Daytona Beach, Florida and Ormond Beach, Florida
A shy and naive young librarian (Lois Smith) becomes infatuated with a dashing stranger (Lee Philips), unaware that he is being sought by the police for a double murder on the open seas.
113 21 "This is Going to Hurt Me More Than It Hurts You" February 14, 1964 Stirling Silliphant St. Augustine, Florida
Tod gets involved with a former Yale classmate/millionaire (Soupy Sales) attempting to ditch his playboy lifestyle for a wife and a young woman (Dawn Nickerson) in search of a husband with help from her gold-digging mother (Bibi Osterwald). Lee Meriwether also featured.
114 22 "Follow the White Dove With the Broken Wing" February 21, 1964 Alvin Sargent St. Augustine, Florida and Vilano Beach, Florida
A studious teenage outsider (Lee Kinsolving) takes Tod and Linc hostage, but eventually is forced to confront his high school classmates acting as vigilantes over his accidental killing of a policeman (Victor Arnold) they all highly respected.
115 23 "Where There's a Will, There's a Way" (Part One) March 6, 1964 Stirling Silliphant Tampa, Florida, St. Petersburg, Florida and Clearwater, Florida
Fulfilling one of the bizarre terms of a tycoon's will, Tod's marriage to the daughter (Barbara Eden) of the deceased sets in motion a contention over a $4 million estate also involving the bride's disingenuous uncles (Roger C. Carmel, Alex Viespi and Patrick O'Neal) and aunt (Nina Foch), with the executor (Chill Wills) entrusted with the final decision. Louis Zorich also featured.
116 24 "Where There's a Will, There's a Way" (Part Two) March 13, 1964 Stirling Silliphant Tampa, Florida, St. Petersburg, Florida and Clearwater, Florida
After surviving an attempt on his life, Tod, along with his bride, Linc and the executor, collaborate to keep the estate out of the hands of the other four disingenuous inheritance-seekers who had colluded to eliminate him. The eventual beneficiary was an unlikely party stipulated in the terms of the will.

§: "A Cage in Search of a Bird" and "I'm Here to Kill a King" were originally scheduled to air on November 22 and 29, 1963 respectively. CBS' coverage of the assassination of John F. Kennedy necessitated the programming changes.[37] "A Cage In Search Of A Bird" was simply moved back one week, but as "I'm Here To Kill A King" dealt with the topic of political assassination, it was unsuitable for broadcast in the immediate wake of Kennedy's death. Some sources indicate that "I'm Here To Kill A King" aired on CBS on March 20, 1964, one week after the series finale. However, contemporary television listings in The New York Times and other U.S. newspapers list the episode of March 20 as a re-run of season three's "Hey, Moth, Come Eat the Flame". "I'm Here To Kill A King" was made available in syndication when Route 66 was syndicated starting in the 1964/65 season.

DVD releases

Roxbury Entertainment released the first three seasons of Route 66 on DVD in Region 1 between 2008-2010. As of November 2011, these releases are now out of print as Roxbury Entertainment no longer possesses the rights to the series.

On November 7, 2011, Shout! Factory announced that it had acquired the exclusive rights to the series, including the home entertainment rights. It planned on releasing the series through multiple platforms, including DVD releases.[38] It subsequently announced that it would release Route 66--The Complete Series on DVD in Region 1 on May 22, 2012.[39] The 24-disc collectors box set would feature all 116 episodes of the series as well as special bonus features.

Title Ep # Release Date
Complete First Season 30 August 5, 2008
Complete Second Season 32 October 21, 2008
Season Three, Volume One 16 July 21, 2009
Season Three, Volume Two 15 October 20, 2009
Complete Third Season 31 January 12, 2010
Complete Fourth Season 23 April 2, 2013[40]
The Complete Series 116 May 22, 2012

Cultural impact

  • The series was lampooned in the April 1962 issue of Mad magazine. The parody, entitled "Route 67," followed the publication's established practice of irreverently satirizing current popular programs and motion pictures in comic strip format. The send-up features an appearance by the character Mary Worth, who chides the boys for trying to usurp her role as the nation's chief do-gooder.
  • According to biographer Dennis McNally (Desolate Angel: Jack Kerouac, The Beat Generation, and America), Jack Kerouac tried to sue the show's producer Stirling Silliphant, claiming that it plagiarized his novel On the Road, which also featured two buddies traveling America's byways in search of adventure. McNally said Kerouac was "appalled by the show's violence," but the lawyers he contacted convinced him that he could never win a lawsuit. (page 272, Desolate Angel, McNally)
  • Route 66 was featured on the cover of TV Guide four times.
  • In 2001, Pixar's working title of the movie Cars was Route 66. In 2002, however, the title was changed to prevent people from thinking it was related to the television series.
  • In a 1963 episode of the popular situation comedy Leave It to Beaver, the character Eddie Haskell obtains a summer job on an Alaskan fishing boat and likens himself to "the guys on Route 66." Beaver was at the time airing on the rival ABC network.
  • In a 1977 episode of SCTV a space age satire of the show called Galaxy 66 stars Joe Flaherty and Dave Thomas as Micron and Antar, two guys who prowl the galaxies looking for adventure, and find it when a mutant thug (John Candy) accosts a human girl (Catherine O'Hara), whom they rescue. Later on in the show, they are seen at the end of another skit tying pyramids to their heads to keep from being hit by meteoroids.
  • In the Alien Nation episode "Gimmee, Gimmee," Albert gives Matt a vintage Corvette, whereupon the series theme by Nelson Riddle is heard.
  • Actor Martin Milner toured the real Route 66 for the 2002 video production Route 66: Return to the Road with Martin Milner.

Sequel

A revival/sequel to the original Route 66 aired on NBC in 1993. Premiering on June 8 of that year, the premise of the series was that a son of Buz, Nick Lewis (James Wilder), had inherited a Corvette from his father (apparently ignoring the events following George Maharis' departure from the original series). Using it to travel the country, he picked up a hitchhiker named Arthur Clark (Dan Cortese) and he became his traveling partner much like Tod was to Buz (only, in this case, with the roles reversed). NBC aired only four episodes before cancelling the revival due to low ratings. A pilot featuring different casting was also produced.

Further reading

  • Rosin, James. Route 66: The Television Series 1960-1964. The Autumn Road Company, Philadelphia. ISBN 0-9728684-2-9, ISBN 978-0-9728684-2-6
  • Alvey, Mark. "“Wanderlust and Wire Wheels: the Existential Search of Route 66," in The Road Movie Book, ed. Steven Cohan and Ina Rae Hark (Routledge, 1997).
  • Alvey, Mark. "Route 66." Encyclopedia of Television. http://www.museum.tv/eotv/route66.htm

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Neil Genzlinger (May 18, 2012). "A Half-Century-Old Road to Today". The New York Times.
  2. ^ Alvey, Mark (2000). "The Independents: Rethinking the Television Studio System," in Television: The Critical View, 6th. ed. Edited by Horace Newcomb. Oxford. p. 44.
  3. ^ Alvey, Mark. "Route 66". Encyclopedia of Television. Museum of Broadcast Communications. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  4. ^ "Route 66 Theme". Nelson Riddle - The Official Website. Retrieved 2012-04-24.
  5. ^ "Nelson Riddle". Nelson Riddle - The Official Website. Retrieved 2012-04-24.
  6. ^ "Hard To Find Orchestral Instrumentals | Volume 2". Eric Records. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  7. ^ 1962 Grammy Nominations.
  8. ^ "Awards Search". Television Academy: Emmys. Retrieved January 11, 2016.
  9. ^ Ethel Waters.
  10. ^ Emmy Awards: 1962.
  11. ^ "Beaulieu, David. "Wolf Tree," About.com, Tuesday, March 2, 2010". Landscaping.about.com. 2010-03-02. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  12. ^ ""The Strengthening Angels" –". Ohio66.com. 1960-11-04. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  13. ^ tophatblue June 22nd, 2010 (2010-06-22). "''Route 66'': "Fly Away Home (Part 1)" – LiveJournal.com". Tophatblue.livejournal.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ tophatblue June 28th, 2010 (2010-06-28). "''Route 66'': "Fly Away Home (Part 2)" – LiveJournal.com". Tophatblue.livejournal.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ tophatblue August 29th, 2010 (2010-08-29). "''Route 66'': "Sleep on Four Pillows" – LiveJournal.com". Tophatblue.livejournal.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ tophatblue September 18th, 2010 (2010-09-18). "''Route 66'': "An Absence of Tears" – LiveJournal.com". Tophatblue.livejournal.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  17. ^ Wednesday, Jul 24, 2013 (2007-10-02). ""10:15am – And Starring Fabian Chavez As Himself," ''Albuquerque Journal'', Wednesday, February 6, 2008". Abqjournal.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  18. ^ "Kane, Russell W. "TV Stunt Men Battle in Flats as 'Route 66' Leaves Beaten Track," ''The Plain Dealer'' (Cleveland, OH), Thursday, May 25, 1961". Ohio66.com. 1961-05-25. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  19. ^ "Newspaper Clippings: Butte, Montana –". Ohio66.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  20. ^ University of Minnesota Press: (2012-04-12). "Devlin, Paul. "Papa Jo Jones, Jazz Drummer and...Actor?" University of Minnesota Press, Thursday, April 12, 2012". Uminnpressblog.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  21. ^ "Whalen, John M. "Getting His Kicks on Route 66," ''Outré'' (magazine), 2001". Ohio66.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  22. ^ http://www.ohio66.com/mud_nest/
  23. ^ a b Frederick N. Rasmussen (2012-06-03). "Rasmussen, Frederick N. "Heading back down Route 66," ''The Baltimore Sun'', Sunday, June 3, 2012". Articles.baltimoresun.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  24. ^ Bowie, Stephen (2012-09-23). "Bowie, Stephen. "Hilda & Hildy," The Classic TV History Blog, Monday, February 7, 2011". Classictvhistory.wordpress.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  25. ^ McGilligan, Patrick. ''Robert Altman: Jumping Off the Cliff''. New York City: St. Martin's Press, 1989. Books.google.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  26. ^ "Westminster Service Station, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, 1961 –". Ohio66.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  27. ^ a b "Ventura, Michael. "Letters at 3AM: 'Suppose I Said I Was the Queen of Spain?'" ''The Austin'' (TX) ''Chronicle'', Friday, June 15, 2012". Austinchronicle.com. 2012-06-15. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  28. ^ "Bark, Ed. "Road trip! ''Route 66'' rides again in new complete series collection," Uncle Barky's Bytes, Monday, May 21, 2012". Unclebarky.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  29. ^ "Ventura, Michael. "Letters at 3AM: 'Ever Ride the Waves in Oklahoma?'" ''The Austin'' (TX) ''Chronicle'', Friday, June 1, 2012". Austinchronicle.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  30. ^ Smith, Don G. ''Lon Chaney, Jr.: Horror Film Star, 1906–1973''. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, Inc., 1996. Books.google.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  31. ^ "''Route 66'': Welcome to the Wedding (TV) – The Paley Center for Media". Paleycenter.org. 1962-11-09. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  32. ^ "Welcome to the Wedding, Cleveland, Ohio –". Ohio66.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  33. ^ ""In the Closing of a Trunk" January 1963 (''Route 66'') – Ralph's Cinema Trek". Senensky.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  34. ^ Hill, Brian. "Hill, Brian. "Zoo Tube," Houston (TX) Zoo, Friday, January 4, 2013". Houstonzooblogs.org. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  35. ^ ""Narcissus on an Old Red Fire Engine" March 1963 (''Route 66'') – Ralph's Cinema Trek". Senensky.com. 2013-02-07. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  36. ^ "The Cruelest Sea of All, Crystal River, Florida –". Ohio66.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  37. ^ "''Route 66'', Season 4 (CBS, 1963–64) – The Classic TV Archive". Ctva.biz. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  38. ^ "Route 66 DVD news: Press Release about Shout! Factory Acquisition". TVShowsOnDVD.com. 2007-05-25. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  39. ^ "Route 66 DVD news: Press Release for Route 66 - The Complete Series". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  40. ^ "Route 66 DVD news: Announcement for Route 66 - The Complete 4th Season". TVShowsOnDVD.com. 2007-05-25. Retrieved 2013-07-25.

Notes

  • Actor interviews, aired on Nick at Nite, 1986
  • Steinberg, Cobbit S. TV Facts. New York: Facts on File, 1980. ISBN 0-87196-312-4