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    #143 Jeff Bond talking Bat-movie music? Oh buoy!

    enOctober 01, 2020
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    About this Episode

    The Duo on the Buoy

    Nelson Riddle’s score for Batman, including the 1966 film Batman: The Motion Picture, features energetic, swing-influenced cues that adhere to the action like a Carl Stalling Looney Tunes score, and opera-esque motifs for each villain and each Bat-vehicle. As incidental music tends to be, it’s probably the most underappreciated aspect of the series.

    In this episode, film music commentator Jeff Bond, who wrote the liner notes for Film Score Monthly’s CD release of the Batman film’s music in 2000, joins us to talk about what Nelson Riddle brought to the Bat-table.

    Also, your response to our Julie Newmar/Eartha Kitt comparison in episode 140!

    Recent Episodes from To The Batpoles! Batman 1966

    #214 “Mr. Terrific”: A tough pill to swallow? Pt 2

    #214 “Mr. Terrific”: A tough pill to swallow? Pt 2

    Stanley takes his pill

    Mr. Terrific was cancelled after half a season, but… was it really a terrible show? Is star Stephen Strimpell partly to blame? This time, we push back on Thirteen Week Theatre’s take on Strimpell, consider why pill popping was such a common way to get superpowers in the Sixties, and the show’s …. agressive … laugh track. Also, were the network execs commissioning superhero sitcoms really trying to imitate Batman, or just cash in?

    Plus, The Music Within’s bass guitar cover of the Batman theme, more from Adam and Burt on Hour Magazine, and e-mail from our listeners!

    Excerpt from Outré magazine's Stephen Strimpell interview (ilovegetsmart.com)

    To The Batpoles! Batman 1966
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    #213 “Mr. Terrific”: A tough pill to swallow? Pt 1

    #213 “Mr. Terrific”: A tough pill to swallow? Pt 1

    Mr Terrific

    This time we look at the other sitcom that tried to cash in on Batman, CBS’s Mr. Terrific. It’s goofier than Captain Nice and not as funny (although the laugh track clearly doesn’t think that!), but with a surprisingly good cast. We discuss the unaired pilot, and the first 8 episodes of the 17-episode series, which is quite different from the pilot, with an utterly different cast and different situation for Mr. T’s alter ego, Stanley Beamish

    Plus: Max Diaz Music’s “punk” version of the theme, Adam and Burt appearing on Hour Magazine in 1984, and your response to our discussion of the Batman cast reunion on Fox’s Late Night with Ross Shafer, in episode 211! 

    #212 That’s no bat, boy, that’s Captain Nice!

    #212 That’s no bat, boy, that’s Captain Nice!

    Captain Nice

    When Batman hit in early 1966, it set a trend of superheroes in pop culture that many rushed to emulate. By the time many of these bat-mimics were ready for public consumption, the trend was on its way out. One such wave-rider was Captain Nice, created by Buck Henry, and repeating some gags from Henry’s hit Get Smart. While Captain Nice brought some really funny moments, it failed to catch on with audiences. Was this simply because the bat-bubble had burst? Or was it that Henry wasn’t the right person to grab the lightning in a bottle that Lorenzo Semple, Jr., had captured? We look at the strengths and weaknesses of the show, the possible reasons for its failure, and whether Captain Nice was meant to be a bat-clone, or a conventional sitcom starring a superhero.

    Plus, the Solid Ghost Band theme version, MTV looks at a party commemorating 20 years since the last Batman primetime episode, and ChrisBCritter explains how Dr. Somnambula’s stethescope worked!

    Watch Captain Nice on Archive.org

    Batman Reunion Party, 1988

    Sold Ghost Band theme version

     

    #211 Holy overbooking! The Late Show’s Batman reunion

    #211 Holy overbooking! The Late Show’s Batman reunion

    Adam and Burt with Ross Shafer

    On April 28, 1988, the then-fledgling Fox Network’s The Late Show with Ross Shafer hosted a Batman reunion. However, due to poor time management and a second-rate host, among other problems, the reunion can be a bit of a tough watch - especially the way Alan Napier was shortchanged on airtime at the end as he and Shafer struggled to communicate with each other. Video of the episode, unavailable when we looked for it years ago, surfaced last year, and this time we discuss the problems as well as the interesting bits that we did pick up from the bat-cast.

    ALSO: The WDR Big Band version of the theme, and we read your mail on episodes 208 and 209.

    WDR Big Band

     

    The Late Show with Ross Shafer's Batman reunion

     

    To The Batpoles! Batman 1966
    enDecember 07, 2023

    #210 The Sandman Cometh Alone (part 2)

    #210 The Sandman Cometh Alone (part 2)

    Sandman in noodles

    We conclude our look at Ellis St. Joseph’s original Sandman script with the sleepwalker-filled second part of the arc, originally titled “A Stitch in Time.” We discuss our impressions of the script, the episode we got instead, and which one we might have preferred. We also share more impressions of the script from the denizens of the ’66 Batman message board, and listen to the world’s most enthusiastic kid, “The Colour Boo”, sing a mostly original song about the Caped Crusader.

    The Sandman Cometh, First Draft, Final Draft

    Joel Eisner talks with Ellis St. Joseph

    Message Board thread on this script

    To The Batpoles! Batman 1966
    enNovember 23, 2023

    #209 The Sandman Cometh Alone (part 1)

    #209 The Sandman Cometh Alone (part 1)

    Michael Rennie as Sandman

    Midway through Season Two, Julie Newmar appeared along with Michael Rennie as guest villains Catwoman and Sandman in The Sandman Cometh. But originally, this script by Ellis St. Joseph featured only the Sandman, with Robert Morely picked to play the role. This time, we get into how the teamup came about as we begin a look at St. Joseph’s original draft script.

    Also, Below the Staff Music takes a stab at a jazz version of Hefti’s Batman theme, Adam West and Burt Ward cameo on the SImpsons, and we read your mail on the Bat Bible and Buck Henry’s rejection of camp!

    The Sandman Cometh, First Draft, Final Draft

    Joel Eisner talks with Ellis St. Joseph

    Message Board thread on this script | On episode #207 (Bat Bible and Buck Henry)

    "1966 Batman Theme - But It's Jazz," by Below the Staff Music

    Adam and Burt on The Simpsons

    To The Batpoles! Batman 1966
    enNovember 09, 2023

    #208 The Pilot Audience Report: Why did Batman seem “kind of stupid”?

    #208 The Pilot Audience Report: Why did Batman seem “kind of stupid”?

    Even after Batman made ABC’s “second season” schedule, to start in January 1966, there was still concern about how audiences would react. Will they get the joke? Should a laugh track be used? In a memo dated January 14, 1966 - the day after the second episode, Smack in the Middle, was first broadcast — Joseph Schrier, Director of Program Development at ABC, reports on audience testing on the pilot. While some adults got the joke, others weren’t quite sure if the show was meant to be funny. Audience reaction to Batman and Robin was mixed, as well, with some noticing that Robin was solving all the Riddler’s riddles while Batman seemed to be flailing. This time, we look at that report, discuss why Batman could be perceived as rather dense in the pilot, and how well the report’s recommendations were followed.

    PLUS: Musician Noiselund shows creativity and voluminous Bat-knowledge with his music video “Buttercup”; a 1989 report about Michael Keaton’s casting as Batman, and Adam West’s reaction to it; and we read your mail about our episode on the life of Neil Hamilton.

    Read the draft of The Sandman Cometh, and comment on it for our next episode!

     

    #207 The Bat-bible, and Buck Henry’s rejection of camp

    #207 The Bat-bible, and Buck Henry’s rejection of camp

    In television, a show’s “bible” is a collection of the rules for the world of a particular show, to keep writers on track with their scripts. The makeshift bible that Lorenzo Semple, Jr., wrote for Batman is lost to history, but what might have been in it? What are the rules that we can see the show following? Tim has compiled some and presents them here — and asks for your suggestions.

    In a recent Bat Inbox, we discussed some comments writer Buck Henry made about Batman and camp shortly after the show premiered. The comments struck Paul as being off-target and showing a poor understanding of what camp is. Is camp not comedy? Was Henry’s co-creation Get Smart not a campy show? Paul’s given it some more thought and research, and furthers that discussion in this episode.

    Plus, the Kydoniai Orchestra version of the theme, the conclusion of Adam West’s Cinefix interview from 2014, and your response to our second Batman/Star Trek act-off.

    "Gilligan and Captain Kirk have more in common than you think: 1960s Camp TV as an alternative geneology for cult TV" by W.D. Phillips and Isabel Pinedo

    #206 Neil Hamilton: From silent film star to Gotham’s top cop

    #206 Neil Hamilton: From silent film star to Gotham’s top cop

    He’s best remembered as the Gotham City Police Department’s Commissioner Gordon, the Dynamic Duo’s #1 cheerleader. But Neil Hamilton had a long Hollywood career decades before Batman, dating back to the silent film era. This time, we talk about the hills and valleys of his decades in film and television, capped off with the Batman role that earned him the funds to retire.

    PLUS: More of Adam West’s 2014 appearance on the YouTube channel Cinefix, the Scott Community High School Band version of the theme, and your response to our discussion of the Rembrandt III treatment!

     

    Hamilton as model for a J.C. Leyendecker cover for Saturday Evening Post (scroll about halfway down the page)

    Robert S. Ray commentary on Hamilton

    Hamilton-related documents (including TV Guide article), courtesy of High C

    A clip from Dawn Patrol

    The life-size FAB1 car