Café: I have read where Bruce Geller created the role of Cinnamon Carter on Mission: Impossible for you. How did that come about? And were you and then-husband Martin Landau cast at the same time?
Martin Landau and Barbara Bain. |
Café: You mentioned Bruce Geller was in your acting class. Did he aspire to be an actor at one time?
Barbara Bain: Never, never. Bruce Geller could hardly say three words in a row. He was the most taciturn human being I have ever known. He was in the class solely as a writer. There were a number of writers in the class. At the time, Martin and others had this idea to try to get the writers to understand and develop a relationship with the actor's process. The same thing for directors. Directors are looking for results and actors are going through a process to get those results. The writer, director, and actor have to all try to understand each other in some way to create something. That was the intent. Chinatown writer Robert Towne--Bobby Towne, we called him at the time--was in that class. Nicholson was, too. It was quite a wonderful time for all of us. We would talk through the night after class. We were just so full of ourselves at the time, if you know know what I mean (laughs).
Cinnamon disguised as a blind princess. |
Barbara Bain: There wasn't a woman in that regard on television at the time. Young women were writing to me and saying: "I never thought of becoming a so-and-so, but because of watching you on Mission: Impossible, I'm going to get my degree." As the years have gone on, I have gotten a lot of comments like that. For example, I just received a letter from a woman who has retired from NASA and said that she was inspired to pursue her dream because of watching me on Mission: Impossible. I'm just extraordinarily moved by all of this. You're not sure of the impact you have while you're doing it. I'm forever being stopped in markets and told these stories, which is just great.
Café: What was your favorite episode of Mission: Impossible and why?
The "racy little costume." |
Café: I also liked "The Seal," in which a cat was used to steal a jade seal from the bad guys.
Barbara Bain: That was brilliant. This person had a trained cat that would do what he wanted him to.
Café: Why did you and Martin Landau leave Mission: Impossible at the end of three highly-successful seasons?
Barbara Bain: It's a sad and very difficult thing to explain. It had nothing to do with us leaving together. Some new people took over the show and they wanted to cut down the shooting schedule. They were very eager to have Bruce Geller leave, who was the heart and soul of the show. Martin had a year-to-year contract. The studio didn't like that and wanted to sign him to a longer contract. He did not want to sign one once he knew Bruce was leaving. He wanted to stay for a year and see who was taking over the show. He had that option. I had no option. I had a contract to fulfill. There was extraordinary confusion and misunderstanding on the part of "them"--a long list of names. So, I was caught up in this mess that had to do with Martin's contract. So they put out a lot of publicity that the two of us were standing at the studio gates and holding out for more money. It was never a money question. It was a contract question with Martin. I got caught in it...and it was totally awful. But the true story was only told once, about a year later in a TV Guide article. That's about as much as I want to talk about it. I did want to clarify that it never had to do with money.
Café: Although the last four years of Mission: Impossible still featured some good episodes, the series was never the same after you and Martin Landau departed.
Barbara Bain: They removed Bruce Geller from it. Bruce was the center of it. He was the one that understood every single moment of it. He was the one who wrote most of the scripts for the first year. You can't remove that person and expect it to remain the same. And, of course, the two of us departed and it was a different show.
Café: Before we move on to another topic, I want to ask about the replacement of Steven Hill with Peter Graves as the IMF leader after the first season.
The IMF Team in the second and third seasons. |
Café: It always seemed like such a tight team.
Barbara Bain: It was. And we kept it tight even in that first year, though it was more difficult to do so.
Café: How would you describe your experience starring as Dr. Helena Russell with Martin Landau in the British science fiction series Space: 1999?
As Dr. Russell in Space: 1999. |
Café: Your 1972 made-for-TV movie Goodnight, My Love, co-starring Richard Boone, has become something of a cult film. What was it like playing a femme fatale in a throwback 1940s film noir?
A publicity still with Richard Boone and Michael Dunn. |
Café: I recall it being a very good film. It's hard to see these days, as I don't believe it's been released on DVD. There's currently a print on YouTube, although the quality isn't great.
Barbara Bain: It's nice to know that the things you did a long time ago still resonate. It feels good.
Café: You have been actively involved in children’s literacy for many years. How did the non-profit Storyline Online (storylineonline.net) come about and what is its mission?
Reading The Kissing Hand for Storyline Online. |
Café: It's a wonderful way to promote children reading.
Barbara Bain: It was so important to me. I remember getting my first library card and it had my name on it. It made me a very important person.
Café: You have been involved in the Los Angeles theater scene for many years—as an actress, director, and mentor to drama students. Which do you find more fulfilling: your stage work or your work in film and television?
Barbara Bain: You know, I love it all. I love the process. All these years later, I'm enamored with this ephemeral thing where you're trying to grab air all the time. In so doing, you're coming together with all these people and trying to make something. It's my second love affair. My first love affair was dance. I'm still dancing and taking classes. There are still things about dance class that I just love.
Café: Didn't you go to New York to study with choreographer Martha Graham?
Barbara Bain: Yes. My first love was dance. And then, I segued into acting, which became my life, which was wonderful. I don't have a complaint in the universe. I've just had an extraordinary time and I'm still doing what I want to do.
Café: What can you tell us about your forthcoming appearance in Sofia Coppola’s On the Rocks, co-starring Bill Murray and Rashida Jones?
Barbara Bain: You know as much about it as I'm allowed to speak about it. I had to sign a non-disclosure agreement, so I can't say anything until they start releasing press about it. Before I spoke with you, I asked if I could talk about it. And they said: "No. Not yet." So, my lips are sealed. But yes, it was great fun. Sofia Coppola is just a darling person. It was a wonderful experience.
Café: Are there other upcoming projects you’d like to share with our readers?
Barbara Bain: I have a short film we did last summer, which is in a festival this weekend. It called Take My Hand, and will probably start hitting the festival circuit. I find short films very interesting to work on because they're mostly made by young people trying to get a feature film made. So, you can get a sense of what's on their mind, what they've written, and what kinds of things they're cooking up. Take My Hand stars Sondra Currie and Eileen Grubba and is directed by Alan J. Levi, who probably directed 500 television shows. He's a very knowledgeable director. We all know each other by working in The Actors Studio. It was something that Eileen started writing there for the two of us. It's great.
Café: We look forward to seeing it. Thank you again for taking the time to talk with us and for sharing your love of acting and your passion for children's literacy.
Editor notes:
1. The Mission: Impossible episode in which Cinnamon was captured may have been "The Exchange" from the third season.
2. Breakaway: 2019, a Space: 1999 convention, will take place September 12-15, 2019, in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Click here for details.
3. Reference the Mission: Impossible shooting schedule during the first season, Steven Hill left the set early on Friday afternoons and did not work on Saturday because he was an Orthodox Jew.
Like many tv movies, Goodnight my Love was a busted pilot. Peter Hyams served as his own director of photography, I believe, and it has his diffused lighting.
ReplyDeleteThis interview is delightful. Along with my admiration for Ms. Bain, I now add affection.
ReplyDeleteWhat an absolute joy to read! I love Cinnamon Carter and was thrilled with her work on the IMF team. Ms. Bain paved the way for all young ladies! This interview touched my heart also because of her work with literacy. Well done, Rick, and an enthusiastic thank you to the lovely and gracious Barbara Bain.
ReplyDeleteLoved this interview. So much info about two seminal shows....and the wonderful actress in them! xxxooo
ReplyDeleteWould have liked to read about her relationship with Martin and his death, but otherwise a lovely article.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this compelling and informative chat with the lovely and talented Ms. Bain. A great read!
ReplyDeleteWhat a great interview! I always loved Barbara Bain and her work both in Mission Impossible and so many many television roles. She mentions that she was relatively unknown at the time of being cast in MI but she really did a lot of TV guest appearences before 1966 including a good spot in Perry Mason. I'm glad she talked about her non-profit, too.
ReplyDeleteShe is such a beautiful lady, and always so gracious. Thank you for this interview.
ReplyDeleteReally nice interview. It just so happens that I have been making my way (slowly) through Season 1 of Mission. Barbara was, of course, marvelous, as were all the other actors and actresses. Steven Hill was a bit strange, and I always wondered why he didn't return for S2. Also, having grown up in LA it is strange watching how the Production Designer(s) found so many different, and inexpensive ways, to shoot exteriors in and around 1960s LA and make it look like foreign countries. The best one was the old (pre-renovation) Museum of Science and Industry standing for a prison in an early episode involving trying to break a scientist out. Great stuff.
ReplyDeleteBarbara Bain is a class act all the way. Great interview by someone who knows how to ask the interesting questions, the good questions.
ReplyDeleteLoved this interview. Barbara is such a classy lady and a real star. Loved hearing about her Mission Impossible years. You think you know everything of Barbara but along comes a new interview and you find out something new. Thanks Rick for a great interview and thank you Barbara for sharing it with us
ReplyDeleteLoved this interview. I have been in awe of Barbara Bain's sheer class in Mission Impossible and love the re-runs when I can find them
ReplyDeleteMiss Barbara Bain is the real deal. She is a lady of class and substance. Her talent is to the moon and back. The best shows of Mission: Impossible are the first three years when she and Martin Landau starred in it. When they left the show, so did the "spice." A fabulous interview.
ReplyDeleteMet both Juliet Landau and Martin Landau (shout out to Chiller Con), but never Ms. Bain (yet). Would love to, as she's always epitomized elegance. And if she hasn't been cast in a movie as Michelle Pfeiffer's mom, someone (universe) make that happen ASAP.
ReplyDeleteAgree. I saw an episode of Mission Impossible and I had to look twice. She looks so much like Michelle Pfeiffer that I looked up to see if they were related and your comment was what I found.
ReplyDelete