Saturday, December 22, 2012

TWO SHADES OF GREY


Earlier this week, our ASOTV showcase featured two ghostly figures played by Joel Grey - the Ghost of Christmas Past from the Patrick Stewart version of "A Christmas Carol" and Adam, from the series finale for the original 'Dallas'. It was our contention that they were the same character.....

Here are video clips of them both (although the Ghost of Christmas Past is among other versions of the character, including Muppet and Disney toon versions.....)



A WORZEL GUMMIDGE CHRISTMAS


Since it's the Christmas season, I thought we might as well enjoy the Christmas episode of 'Worzel Gummidge', today's ASOTV showcase.....



AS SEEN ON TV: WORZEL GUMMIDGE


WORZEL GUMMIDGE

AS SEEN IN:
'Worzel Gummidge'
&
'Worzel Gummidge Down Under'

CREATED BY:
Barbara Euphan Todd

PORTRAYED BY:
Jon Pertwee
(The Third Doctor)

TV DIMENSION:
Earth Prime-Time

From Wikipedia:
Worzel Gummidge is a character in British children's fiction who originally appeared in a series of books by the novelist Barbara Euphan Todd. A walking, talking scarecrow, Gummidge has a set of interchangeable turnip, mangel worzel and swede heads, each of which suit a particular occasion or endow him with a specific skill.

Worzel Gummidge was a scarecrow that could come to life on Scatterbrook Farm. Worzel spent more time trying to win the affections of Aunt Sally than actually protecting the farm from crows. Aunt Sally was a fairground doll who Worzel fell in love with. He also befriended John and Susan, two children who often had to cover up after him and help him get out of trouble. Worzel had a collection of interchangeable heads; each suiting a particular occasion or allowing him to perform a certain task. More often than not Worzel's plans and adventures ended in mishap for all involved.


The books were adapted for radio and television a number of times, most successfully with former 'Doctor Who' actor Jon Pertwee taking the lead role from 1979 to 1981 on ITV; originally produced in the UK, but later in New Zealand.  Southern Television's production for ITV was written by Keith Waterhouse and Willis Hall, and starred Jon Pertwee as Worzel, with Una Stubbs as Aunt Sally, a life-size fairground doll and Worzel's femme fatale. This was a significant change from the original books, where Aunt Sally is, in fact, Worzel's aunt.

The Crowman, who made Worzel and some of his other scarecrow friends, was played by Geoffrey Bayldon better known for his starring role as the title character of 
Catweazle. Bill Maynard also appeared as a scarecrow called Sergeant Beetroot.

BCnU!

Friday, December 21, 2012

AS SEEN ON TV: "THE FAMOUS FIVE"


More literary TV goodness with Patrick Troughton!






AS SEEN ON TV II: THE LITERARY TROUGHTON



Just because I've chosen certain literary characters for each of the actors who played the lead role in 'Doctor Who', that doesn't mean those were the only literary characters they portrayed. (Well, for some, maybe.....)

For example:
  • Christopher Eccleston was in an episode of 'Poirot', while Paul McGann appeared in an episode of 'Marple'.
  • Peter Davison had the lead role in 'All Creatures Great And Small' and was featured earlier this year for his portrayal of Albert Campion.
  • And although it's in the Cineverse, Sylvester McCoy can be currently seen on the big screen as Radagast the Brown in "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" (even though the character appears in "The Lord Of The Rings".)
But of them all, I think Patrick Troughton had the greatest number of literary TV characters to his credit, from lead roles to co-starring roles to guest appearances. And some of those were in shows that were only loosely based on the original source from BookWorld.

Here's a list of his other literary TV characters (besides today's ASOTV feature), and I doubt that it even comes close to a full account......

LEAD ROLES
Dr. Manette - 'A Tale Of Two Cities'
Daniel Quilp - 'The Old Curiousity Shop'
Sir Andrew ffoulkes - 'The Scarlet Pimpernel'

CO-STARRING ROLES
Israel Hands - 'Treasure Island'
Councillor Doone - 'Lorna Doone'
Uncle Cap - 'Hawkeye, The Pathfinder'
Mr. March - 'Little Women'
Hindley - "Wuthering Heights"
Alan Breck - 'Kidnapped'
Captain Luke Settle - 'The Splendid Spur'
Simon Kenton - 'The Cabin In The Clearing'

GUEST APPEARANCES
George Jackson - 'Inspector Morse' ("The Dead Of Jericho")
The Pawnbroker - 'David Copperfield ("The Long Journey")
Mr. Bronckhurst - 'The Indian Tales Of Rudyard Kipling' ("The Bronckhurst Divorce Case")
Luigi Carvossa - 'The Third Man' ("A Question Of Ice")
Mr. Stick - 'The Famous Five' ("Five Run Away Together")
Judge Jeffreys - 'Lorna Doone' ("A Summons To London")
[This was a different, earlier production than the one mentioned above.]
Gaston Meurant - 'Maigret' ("Raise Your Right Hand")
Vignole - 'Ivanhoe' ("The Kidnapping")
Inspector Gambetti - 'The Saint' ("Interlude In Venice")
Pete - 'The New Adventures Of Charlie Chan' ("Something Old, Something New")
Roddy - 'All Creatures Great And Small' ("Hair Of The Dog")
Frank Belfield - 'Thorndyke' ("The Old Lag")
Vito - 'The Four Just Men' ("The Moment Of Truth")
Inspector Nardi - 'The Four Just Men' ("The Night Of The Precious Stones")
Vickers - 'The Invisible Man' ("Strange Partners")
Mortimer Tregennis - 'Sherlock Holmes' ("The Devil's Foot")

BCnU!

AS SEEN ON TV: COLE HAWLINGS


The first of our Christmas-themed entries in this last theme for the 2012 "ASOTV" showcase.....

COLE HAWLINGS

AS SEEN IN:
'The Box Of Delights'

CREATED BY:
John Masefield

PORTRAYED BY:
Patrick Troughton
(The Second Doctor)

TV DIMENSION:
Earth Prime-Time

From Wikipedia:
"The Box of Delights" is a children's fantasy novel by John Masefield. It is a sequel to "The Midnight Folk", and was first published in 1935.


The central character is Kay Harker who, on returning from boarding school, finds himself mixed up in a battle to possess a magical box, which allows the owner to go small (shrink) and go swift (fly), experience magical wonders contained within the box and go into the past.


The owner of the box is an old Punch and Judy man called Cole Hawlings, whom Kay meets at a railway station. They develop an instant rapport, and this leads Cole to confide that he is being chased by a man called Abner Brown and his gang. For safety, Cole entrusts the box to Kay, who then goes on to have many adventures.

"The Box of Delights" was adapted for television by the BBC in 1984, featuring Patrick Troughton and Robert Stephens. It was broadcast November–December, in six parts, with the last episode transmitted on Christmas Eve. Starring Devin Stanfield as Kay and directed by Renny Rye, it used an innovative mixture of live action and animation, with Quantel Paintbox and chroma key effects to bring the adventure alive. Noted for its yuletide atmosphere (it is set during Christmas), the series has become something of a nostalgic treat for followers of cult TV.


The seasonal theme music is Victor Hely-Hutchinson's orchestral arrangement of "The First Nowell" from his "Carol Symphony".

The novel contains more magical adventures or events than appeared in the BBC version. This was presumably because of budgeting and special effect constraints; however, the BBC did not otherwise alter the plot significantly. The novel describes Kay as using the box on more occasions than those depicted in the television adaptation. The following incidents occur only in the novel:
  • After the Punch and Judy show the children are shown various magic tricks that include a miniature army of soldiers that walk out of the wainscot and drill.
  • Kay Harker and the Jones children take refuge from Abner's men in a tree by a river bank. They are also shown around the tree and the various animal and insect dwellings within it. There is also a scene where the children dance with fairies.
  • Kay is taken to witness a medieval jousting match.
  • More detail is provided as to how the Box of Delights found its way into the possession of Cole Hawlings. The novel states that the Box came to England as an antiquity and found its way into the hands of a Countess. Cole Hawlings then discovered the hiding place of the Box. Abner Brown also discovered the Box's location but only after Cole had taken it. The BBC adaptation suggests that Cole was given the box by its creator Arnold of Todi.
  • Arnold of Todi is convinced to come back out of the past. However, he has no interest in re-claiming the box. He attends the Midnight Service towards the end of the book.

O'BSERVATIONS:
Troughton looks so much like Robin Williams in that first picture that I think Williams would be a good choice to play the British actor if ever the need arose.....

BCnU!

Thursday, December 20, 2012

AS SEEN ON TV: INSPECTOR ROBERTS


INSPECTOR ROBERTS

AS SEEN IN:
'The Edgar Wallace Mysteries'
["To Have And To Hold"]

CREATED BY:
Edgar Wallace
(based on the novel "Breaking Point")

PORTRAYED BY:
William Hartnell
(The First Doctor)

TV DIMENSION:
The Borderlands (with the Cineverse)

From Wikipedia:
Richard Horatio Edgar Wallace (1 April 1875 – 10 February 1932) was an English crime writer, journalist, novelist, screenwriter, and playwright, who wrote 175 novels, 24 plays, and numerous articles in newspapers and journals.


Over 160 films have been made of his novels. In the 1920s, one of Wallace's publishers claimed that a quarter of all books read in England were written by him. He is most famous today as the co-creator of "King Kong", writing the early screenplay and story for the movie, as well as a short story "King Kong" (1933) credited to him and Draycott Dell. He was known for the J. G. Reeder detective stories, "The Four Just Men", "The Ringer", and for creating the Green Archer character during his lifetime.


From the IMDb.com:
Originally, in September 1963 ["To Have And To Hold"] was first released in Great Britain as second feature to "Tamahine". It was then repackaged as an episode for export to Europe and America as a TV series.

O'BSERVATIONS:
"To Have And To Hold" was based on a novel from 1927, "Breaking Point".

Since this was a movie in one country, but treated as an episode in the anthology series for other countries, I thought it best to keep it in the Borderlands.


BCnU!

PROGRAMMING NOTE - WHO'S IN THE ASOTV GALLERY


From now until the end of the year (excluding Christmas), the literary edition of the "As Seen On TV" showcase will be running a very special theme.

Can you guess Who will be involved?

That's right, 11 out of the 12 remaining entries for this year will be literary characters portrayed by the actors who played the Time Lord of 'Doctor Who'. From the great classics, children's books, murder mysteries, adventure stories and a dusty old museum piece, the ASOTV Gallery will have an interesting entry for each of them. And three of them will be Christmas oriented!

It's all a promotional stunt to lead into the "Who's On First" marathon on New Year's Day........

Enjoy!



Wednesday, December 19, 2012

TVXOHOF, 12/2012: TOY STORIES



Sometimes December has two inductees into the TV Crossover Hall of Fame - the standard entry, hopefully of a holiday nature, and an Honors List inductee on Christmas Day which is supposed to be from the Multiverse.

We've got one of those for December 25th, so today we're honoring the traditional inductee. And we're taking on an entire geographical location!

No, not the North Pole.... It's been done.

THE ISLAND OF MISFIT TOYS!

From Wikipedia:
The "Island of Misfit Toys", another addition to the original story, is an island sanctuary where defective and unwanted toys are sent. It is during the initial scene on the Island that Johnny Marks standard, "The Most Wonderful Day of the Year" is performed by the inhabitants. Toy versions of nearly every character from this show were produced in the 1990s. Among its inhabitants are:
  • King Moonracer is voiced by Stan Francis.
  • Charlie-In-The-Box is voiced by Alfie Scopp and is a misnamed, but otherwise seemingly normal jack-in-the-box who acts as the island's sentry.
  • Spotted Elephant is a polka dotted elephant and also is the the King's footman.
  • Dolly is voiced by Corinne Conley and is a seemingly normal girl rag doll with red hair and a red gingham dress. Her misfit problem is never explained on the special, but was possibly revealed on NPR's Wait Wait… Don't Tell Me! news quiz show (broadcast December 8, 2007). The show revealed that Rudolph's producer, Arthur Rankin Jr., says Dolly's problem was psychological, caused from being abandoned by her mistress and suffering depression from feeling unloved.
Other toys (all voiced by Carl Banas) include a toy bird who swims instead of flies, a cowboy who rides an ostrich, a train with square wheels on its caboose, a toy boat that sinks rather than floats, a squirt gun that shoots grape jelly, an airplane that cannot fly, and a scooter with an unknown flaw.




 


And for good measure......


Although we only see Charlie in the Box during the AFLAC commercial, we can take it for granted that the other island castoffs (rather than castaways) exist just outside the frame.

I think there are plenty of bad toys to be found in Skitlandia, especially thanks to those fake 'Saturday Night Live' blipverts (Think "Big Red" and "Happy Fun Ball") that would eventually find a home on the island. 

 But in the meantime, these instances (save for the Romney "ad" of course) are all that was required to give these misfit toys a proper home.....

BCnU!

AS SEEN ON TV: THE GHOST OF CHRISTMAS PAST


'Are you the Spirit, sir, whose coming was foretold to me?' asked Scrooge.
'I am.'
The voice was soft and gentle. Singularly low, as if instead of being so close beside him, it were at a distance.
'Who, and what are you.' Scrooge demanded.
'I am the Ghost of Christmas Past.'
'Long Past.' inquired Scrooge: observant of its dwarfish stature.
'No. Your past.'"
"A Christmas Carol", [Stave 2: The First of the Three Spirits]

THE GHOST OF CHRISTMAS PAST

AS SEEN IN:
"A Christmas Carol" (1999)

CREATED BY:
Charles Dickens

PORTRAYED BY:
Joel Grey

TV STATUS:
Recastaway of the Multiverse

TV DIMENSION:
TBD


From Wikipedia:
The Ghost of Christmas Past is a character in the well-known work "A Christmas Carol" by the English novelist Charles Dickens.

The Ghost of Christmas Past was the first of the three spirits (after the visitation by Jacob Marley) that haunted the miser, Ebenezer Scrooge in order to prompt him to repent. It showed him scenes from his past that occurred on or around Christmas, in order to demonstrate to him the necessity of changing his ways, as well as to show the reader how Scrooge came to be the person he was and his particular dislike for Christmas – most of the events which negatively affected Scrooge occurred around the Christmas holiday season.

According to Dickens' novel, the Ghost of Christmas Past appears to Scrooge as a white-robed, androgynous figure of indeterminate age. It had on its head a blazing light, reminiscent of a candle flame, and carried a metal cap, made in the shape of a candle extinguisher. While the ghost is often portrayed as a woman in most dramatic adaptations, Dickens describes the Ghost of Christmas Past only as “it”, and gives a curious description of it "being now a thing with one arm, now with one leg, now with twenty legs, now a pair of legs without a head, now a head without a body: of which dissolving parts, no outline would be visible in the dense gloom wherein they melted away."


In the 1999 made-for-television version of "A Christmas Carol", the Ghost is portrayed as a being of indeterminate age, as described in the 1843 novel.

But that would not be the last we would see of this phantasm.....

From Wikipedia
"Conundrum" is the two hour series finale of the television series 'Dallas'. The episode originally aired on CBS on May 3, 1991, and in subsequent reruns in syndication, "Conundrum" aired as two-part one hour episodes.


Nearing the point of suicide, J.R. Ewing is visited by Adam, who takes him on an "It's a Wonderful Life"-style journey to see what would have become of the Ewings, had he never existed.

After being taken through this journey J.R. is encouraged by Adam to pull the trigger and kill himself. J.R. scoffs at the idea, saying that Adam's boss would not be happy— implying that Adam is an angel. However, Adam reveals himself to be not a true spirit, but actually a demon sent by Satan himself.



O'BSERVATIONS:
Both the Ghost of Christmas Past (in this production, anyway) and Adam were played by Joel Grey........

What happens to such a ghost when their services are no longer needed? This ghost was only Scrooge's ghost, geared toward his past life. So when Scrooge died, the ghost must have ended up on the ectoplasmic dole.

Rather than fade away and/or accept a transition to the next stage of the after-life, perhaps to angelic status, this ghost found employ with the other team in another TV dimension. Taking the name of Adam (a hated name this week certainly), he would have been able to keep busy with a variety of cases, including J.R. Ewing, instead of just the one, Ebenezer Scrooge.


BCnU!

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

ALL THAT JAZBO



Because I list several episodes of 'The Twilight Zone' into certain categories, I should point out:

SPOILERS AHEAD!!!!!!

Most of the episodes from 'The Twilight Zone' take place on Earth Prime-Time, Past ("Mr. Denton On Doomsday"), Present ("What You Need"), or Future ("The Trade-Ins") or some combination of the three ("A Hundred Yards Over The Rim", "The Rip Van Winkle Caper", "Once Upon A Time", "Back There").

Other stories take place on other planets ("Elegy", "Eye Of The Beholder", "People Are Alike All Over", "Number Twelve Looks Just Like You" - which takes place on Mondas). Some take place in the After-Life ("The Hunt", "The Passersby", "A Nice Place To Visit") and many of the rest take place in alternate TV dimensions ("The Midnight Sun", "The Parallel", "A World Of Difference").

I bring this up because it's time to once again dip into the files of Della Street.....

Oh, and there'll be more SPOILERS AHEAD as well.......

'PERRY MASON'
"THE CASE OF THE FRUSTRATED FOLKSINGER"

When Amy Jo Jennings nearly threw away her inheritance at a chance for stardom, the only one who was looking out for her was Jazbo Williams, the owner of a small club in Los Angeles and like Amy Jo, a frustrated singer-songwriter. Such concern paid off by the end - it looked like Jazbo was going to return to Amy Jo's hometown and write jingles for her family company. And although he might not have been ready to admit it in public, it looked like he would be marrying the Home Remedy heiress as well.

So everything worked out pretty sweetly for Jazbo Williams... in Earth Prime-Time.

But it appears that Jazbo had a doppelganger in an alternate TV dimension who couldn't escape his destiny as it played out in a folk song......


Over in the Evil Toobworld, it looks like Jazbo's real first name could have been Floyd. But his birth parents died when he was an infant and so he was adopted and raised by relatives who gave him a new last name - Burney. Like his counterpart in the main Toobworld, Floyd Burney became a folksinger, but with a small amount of fame as "The Rock-A-Billy Kid".

Floyd Burney visited some backwoods area in search of a new song to record and unfortunately for him he found it in "Come Wander With Me". Soon, he found his life echoing the events described in the song and he paid dearly for the musical discovery.


BCnU!

AS SEEN ON TV: EVA DELECTORSKAYA


EVA DELECTORSKAYA
aka
EVE DALTON
aka
SALLY GILMARTIN

AS SEEN IN:
'Restless'

CREATED BY:
William Boyd

PORTRAYED BY:
Hayley Atwell

Charlotte Rampling


TV STATUS:
Recastaway
(Due to aging)

TV DIMENSION:
Earth Prime-Time

From Wikipedia:
SPOILERS AHEAD!
"Restless" is an espionage novel written by William Boyd, published in 2006. It won the Costa Prize for fiction.

The novel depicts the tale of a young woman who discovers that her mother was recruited as a spy during World War II. The book continually switches between time periods and, in doing so, from first to third person.

According to the author, it is one of the first novels to deal with the British Security Coordination service in New York. The book gained general public interest when it was chosen for inclusion in 'Book Club 2007', on the UK television show 'Richard & Judy', and was a commercial success.

In the novel, Boyd tells the story of Eva, a young Russian woman, who is recruited after her brother's death to work for the British secret service. During this time she falls for her mentor and boss, Lucas Romer. But all is not as it seems as Romer is working as a double agent which ultimately leads to the attempted murder of Eva, alongside the deaths of other agents.

The tale is interlinked with the present day story of Eva's daughter and how she comes to terms with the discovery of her mother's secret life. The setting of the novel is in London, Oxford, Scotland, Europe, and the United States.

BCnU!

Monday, December 17, 2012

THE "MONTY PYTHON" ACID TRIP



There are times when characters from other TV dimensions, most notably the Tooniverse, can cross over into the main Toobworld... sometimes even to other TV dimensions as well. And yet the majority of characters who live in Earth Prime-Time aren't aware that those "toons" are living beings in their world. They are just considered to be characters in cartoons.

'Monty Python's Flying Circus' was a combination of the Tooniverse and Skitlandia, separate but equal. Terry Gilliam's animations actually exist in that cartoon world, while the live-action segments would be found in the sketch comedy dimension.

But taken as a whole, the British comedy classic is considered just a TV show by Toobworld folk.  ('Farscape', 'Hawaii Five-O', 'Stargate SG-1', 'Studio 60', 'Community', 'Eli Stone', 'The Middleman' etc......)


I bring this up because we found out last week that Dr. Walter Bishop of 'Fringe' used to watch 'Monty Python's Flying Circus'. In the "Black Blotter" episode, we were privy to his thought process as he struggled to remember a password that could save their lives. And that train of thought was acted out as a pastiche of Gilliam's cartoon style.


Walter's avatar was accompanied by animal companions, each of whom had special meaning to Walter. He's seen riding Gene the cow who lived in the lab back in the early part of the new millennium; the frog comes from a Terry Gilliam animation for 'Monty Python'; the seahorse is one of the glyphs in the 'Fringe' code; and the terrier must be Toto from "The Wizard of Oz".


Here are the main references to 'Monty Python' to be found in Walter's mind:


And here are most of the influences from 'Monty Python':


There was a better version of the floating mouth, with the guy chasing after it once it escaped, but I couldn't find it.

At any rate, this was definitely one of the highlights for the year in Toobworld!


BCnU!

AS SEEN ON TV: INSPECTOR JAVERT


INSPECTOR JAVERT

AS SEEN IN:
"Les Miserables"

CREATED BY:
Victor Hugo

PORTRAYED BY:
Anthony Perkins

TV STATUS:
Recastaway

TV DIMENSION:
Land of Remakes

From Wikipedia:
Javert (c. 1775-1832) is a fictional character from the novel Les Misérables by Victor Hugo. He is a prison guard, and later policeman, who devotes his life to the law. He is always referred to simply as "Javert" or "Inspector Javert" by the narrator and other characters throughout the novel; his first name is never mentioned. Javert is the main antagonist of the novel, to Jean Valjean, the novel's protagonist.

Some consider Javert misguided rather than evil, although his inflexibility and cruelty throughout the novel moves in parallel to Jean Valjean's kindness. Those who consider Javert misguided believe that the distinction of pure evil in the novel more appropriately belongs to the greedy and treacherous Thénardiers. Javert may also be regarded as one who seeks only blind justice. Javert refuses to acknowledge repentance and will imprison those that break the law or parole, as Jean Valjean did. Others consider the Thénardiers dishonest, petty criminals, whose actual negative impact on the protagonists is minor compared to the significant levels of spite and mercilessness Javert inflicts on those he encounters.

O'BSERVATIONS:
The Javert for Earth Prime-Time would be portrayed by Anthony Bate in a 1967 British mini-series.

"There is no God. There is only the Law.
Good and Evil do not exist outside the Law."
Javert


BCnU!

Sunday, December 16, 2012

TIS THE VIEWING SEASON


I have a friend who posts his poetry on Facebook, covering a wide array of topics - mostly of the world's social situation and Life in general.

Recently, he turned his attention to the TV fare during the Christmas season:

The Christmas movies have begun
The season now grows warm and mellow
Oh, the joy, the glee, the fun
It makes a person want to bellow
Here’s the plot that’s number one,

A girl’s engaged to the wrong fellow.
A relative, an aging male
Encounters a young lonely guy
And it will follow without fail
He’ll drag him home for Christmas pie
And there he’ll meet the gorgeous frail
They fall in love, and by and by
She dumps the party of the first part
He isn’t right for her, you know
Meanwhile the new guy breaks her heart
Because, it seems, he has to go
And this is when the wise old fart
Sends her off to chase her beau.
She goes dashing helter-skelter
For the airport or the train
While the fluffy snowflakes pelt ‘er
Only minutes still remain
Then with a kiss that makes us swelter
She is in his arms again
Cue the family, cue the tree
Cue the cute precocious child
Staring most adorably
At the presents neatly piled
Cue the lovers, cue the glee
Cue yours truly, driven wild!
- John O'Creagh
2012

Thanks, John!

THE "DOCTOR WHO" BLIPVERT FOR CHRISTMAS


Can't end the weekend without some "Who" content.....


RUDOLPH BLIPVERTS


Time to pay the bills.....

I consider this to be Tooniverse canon:


It also links to that Island of Misfit Toys blipvert:



ELEVATOR PRANK PART TWO


Oh, those saucy Brazilians, they're at it again!


It was nice to see the "corpse" get his comeuppance at one point......

BCnU!

AS SEEN ON TV: JAMES BOND, BACK FOR MOORE


My thanks to Jose Ricardo Bondoc of the Facebook Crossovers Forum for finding this!

JAMES BOND

AS SEEN IN:
'Mainly Millicent'

CREATED BY:
Ian Fleming

PORTRAYED BY:
Roger Moore

TV STATUS:
Recastaway

TV DIMENSION:
Skitlandia

From Wikipedia:
Because of his successful television shows, in particular the long-lasting series 'The Saint', Roger Moore was unavailable for the James Bond franchise for a considerable time. His participation in 'The Saint' was not only as actor, but also as a producer and director, and he also became involved in developing the series 'The Persuaders!'.

Moore stated in his autobiography "My Word Is My Bond" (2008) that he had neither been approached to play James Bond in "Dr. No", nor does he feel that he had ever been considered. It was only after Sean Connery had declared in 1966 that he would not play Bond any longer that Moore became aware that he might be a contender for the role.

But after George Lazenby was cast instead and then Connery played Bond again, he didn't consider the possibility until it seemed abundantly clear that Connery had in fact stepped down as Bond for good. At that point he was indeed approached and accepted the producer's offer in August 1972.

Moore says in his autobiography that he had to cut his hair and lose weight, but although he resented that, he was finally cast as James Bond in "Live and Let Die" (1973).
Moore played Bond in "Live and Let Die" (1973); "The Man with the Golden Gun" (1974); "The Spy Who Loved Me" (1977); "Moonraker" (1979); "For Your Eyes Only" (1981); "Octopussy" (1983); and "A View to a Kill" (1985).

Moore is the longest-serving James Bond actor, having spent twelve years in the role (from his debut in 1973, to his retirement from the role in 1985), and having made seven official films in a row. Moore is the oldest actor to have played Bond - he was 45 in "Live and Let Die" (1973), and 58 when he announced his retirement on 3 December 1985.

Moore's Bond was very different than the character created by Fleming. Screenwriters like George MacDonald Fraser provided scenarios in which 007 was a kind of seasoned, debonair playboy who would always have a trick or gadget in stock when he needed it. This was designed to serve the contemporary taste in the 1970s.


O'BSERVATIONS:
When we celebrated James Bond's fifty years on movie screens back in October, we never did have a showcase for Roger Moore's incarnation of 007 as seen on TV. Well, now we do - even if it is in Skitlandia - and he became Bond a decade earlier than he did in the Cineverse.

We don't know who this James Bond was really in his previous life, but Simon Templar is always a possibility.

BCnU!