Cast members Robert Colbert, Lee Meriwether, and James Darren--from Terry's private collection. |
-- From the opening credits for Irwin Allen’s The Time Tunnel, spoken by Dick Tufeld, best known as the voice of “the Robot” in Lost
in Space, with a theme song by John Williams. Seriously, even the credits have star power. They do not make television like they used
to.
While science fiction television in the 1960s might be best
remembered for Gene Roddenberry’s Star
Trek, the backbone of most of the best TV series of that decade was Irwin
Allen. Allen was responsible for Lost in Space, Voyage to the Bottom of the
Sea, and Land of the Giants. But my personal favorite, launched in 1966,
was The Time Tunnel, which aired on
Friday nights on ABC (right after The
Green Hornet!) for one season. While
it was Allen’s shortest-lived series, many of us who were kids (or adults!) at
the time have fond memories of the Tunnel!
The Time Tunnel set. |
Then, at a critical moment, the two scientists are yanked from 1912
into another year, beginning a weekly jumping from one historical event to the
next. Meanwhile, back at the Tunnel's headquarters,
staff members General Haywood Kirk (Whit Bissel, in charge), with Dr. Raymond
Swain (John Zaremba) and Dr. Ann MacGregor (Lee Meriwether), are running the
science part of the show (and pretty much making up time rules from one week to
the next).
There are several reasons that The Time
Tunnel appealed to many of us as kids. First, Tony and Doug got to go
back in time to see famous events, along with a few imagined ones in the
future. History you learned about in
school was dramatically presented each week!
It was educational! Second,
producer Irwin Allen used scenes from Fox theatrical films to dress up the
production, so it looked much more expensive than many series of the day. So
for the Titanic episode mentioned above, there were scenes from A Night to Remember (1958) with a believable
sinking. Another favorite episode about a
war between Greeks and Trojans, "Revenge of the Gods," used clips from
Fox’s 1962 film, The 300 Spartans.
A novelization by Murray Leinster. |
Now, I do think that, for most of these “imagined” episodes, the series relied on props and monsters from
other Allen shows. So when you thought
that aluminum foil clad alien looked familiar from last week’s episode of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, you may
have been right! But then, that’s what
made these shows so much fun! I remember
having discussions with my childhood friends on Saturday mornings about the
previous night’s episode and what we liked about it.
A rare image from the View-Master set that shows Tony and Doug home again. |
Insert a sad face here. The Time Tunnel was cancelled before the last episode was finished. ABC felt it had room for only one drama in
their 1967-1968 season, and replaced Allen's series with The Legend of Custer. Who is writing a blog post about that show now?
Irwin Allen never lost his fascination with time travel He attempted two more time-travelling series
before he passed away in 1991. His wife,
actress Sheila Mathews Allen, along with producer Kevin Burns, produced a Time Tunnel pilot for a new series for
Fox in 2002. They tried again in 2006, but
didn't get a pilot made.
Lee Meriwether, aka Dr. Ann MacGregor, signs an autograph for Terry. |
This Café exclusive was written by guest blogger and Irwin Allen authority TerryB. You can "like" Terry on Facebook.
Terry, what an awesome post! As a young girl of the sixties, it was also cool that Lee Meriwether was a doctor and lovely, too. I have always loved science fiction and the thought of time travel is both exciting and scary. View masters were a lot of fun because it was like you could see a snippet of film or television wherever you wanted. Thanks for sharing a fabulous trip into "The Time Tunnel" with everyone at the Cafe!
ReplyDeleteToto2, I still have my View-master collection from my childhood and my projector. Maybe I should break out the slides and have shows on my building!
DeleteThe ship in the pilot episode was the R.M.S. Titanic Terry, not H.M.S. Titanic. R.M.S. stands for Royal Mail Ship. I loved that series because I learned so much history. History in school was really boring. But the same history presented on Time Tunnel was great. The show also served as the launching points of many great careers such Robert Duvall and Mako. It also served to gives us one last viewing of great actors such as Michael Rennie.
ReplyDeleteSorry, Tom. Funny, the newspaper that Doug takes back to try to convince everyone the ship will sink was headlined: "S. S. TITANIC WRECKED ON MAIDEN VOYAGE." A guy gets confused!
ReplyDeleteOne of my favorite shows as a kid. Yeah, the aliens looked the same on all of Irwin's shows. Maybe they were the same alien race!
ReplyDeleteTerrific post, Terry, on what has become a big cult TV series. My favorite episode may be the one where Doug and Tony go back to Hawaii just before Pearl Harbor and we are introduced to a young Tony Newman! And doesn't an ancestor of General Kirk show up in another episode? Finally, I think the STARGATE SG-1 set owes quite a lot to THE TIME TUNNEL--only it's not as cool.
ReplyDeleteI watched this as a 12 year old kid. Loved it. Now, 50 years later...Total "Cheese-Fest". Oh, and the acting is over the top "Hammy". Of course I'm hooked!
ReplyDeleteI was only a kid of maybe 8 or 10 but I loved the time tunnel I never met another person since who remembers it I think. What a dilemma they were in falling through the time tunnel absolutely unmatchable drama.
ReplyDeleteBest show back in my day too.
ReplyDeleteToo bad we never got a final episode bring Doug and Tony home.
They are probably still lost in Time. Lol.
The time tunnel and its control room looks a lot like the set created for The Man in the High Castle. I suspect time tunnel inspired it.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely loved it then and now..I may be wrong, but when they got involved with the Trojan War, the Greeks were using the Roman names for their gods!!
ReplyDelete