Honey West | |
---|---|
Honey West complete series DVD cover (UK version) |
|
Genre | Crime drama Action |
Starring | Anne Francis John Ericson |
Theme music composer | Joseph Mullendore |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 30 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Aaron Spelling |
Producer(s) | Richard Newton |
Camera setup | Single camera |
Running time | 22–24 minutes |
Production company(s) | Four Star Television |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | ABC |
Picture format | Black-and-white |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original run | September 17, 1965 | – April 8, 1966
Chronology | |
Related shows | Burke's Law |
Honey West is an American crime drama television series that aired on ABC during the 1965-1966 television season. The series stars Anne Francis as female private detective Honey West and John Ericson as her partner Sam Bolt.
Only 30 episodes were produced. The entire first season is available on DVD.
Contents |
The Honey West character was created by Gloria and Forrest E. "Skip" Fickling under the pseudonym "G.G. Fickling" in the late 1950s. Skip had been a United States Army Air Forces Air Gunner during World War II, then enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve after the war where he was called back into active service during the Korean War.[1] The G.G. represented the initials of his wife, Gloria Gautraud who he married in 1949 with initials being used so the sex of the author would remain vague. Though Gloria said that most of the writing was done by Forrest, Forrest said Gloria's ideas were used to make a plausible female character with Gloria also providing Honey's dress sense. Forrest told the Los Angeles Times "I first thought of Marilyn Monroe, and then I thought of [fictional detective] Mike Hammer and decided to put the two together...We thought the most used name for someone you really like is Honey. And she lives in the West, so there was her name."[2]
West was one of the first female "private eyes" to ever appear on television. Francis first played West in the second season episode of Burke's Law entitled "Who Killed the Jackpot?", broadcast on April 2, 1965, which led to this series being commissioned as a spin-off. Honey West was intended to be the American equivalent of the popular characters Emma Peel and Cathy Gale in the British series The Avengers.
Produced by Aaron Spelling, his first choice for the role of Honey was Honor Blackman who Spelling had seen when he was in England where she played Cathy Gale on The Avengers and Pussy Galore in Goldfinger. Blackman turned the role down.[3] Anne Francis' fashions in the Honey role were by Nolan Miller[4] with her action scenes choreographed by Gene LeBell.[5]
West has a partner and man-Friday, Sam Bolt (John Ericson), who communicates with Honey via a radio hidden in her lipstick case. She keeps an exotic pet ocelot named Bruce. (In "The Fun-Fun Killer," which originally aired on March 4, 1966, the African series Daktari is showing on Honey's TV, and Honey asks, "Oh Bruce, why do we always have to watch your show?")
Honey's alluring feline qualities were reflected in her animal-print wardrobe and apartment decor. For sneaking around at night and engaging in energetic fight scenes, she wears a black fabric bodystocking reminiscent of Emma Peel's leather jumpsuit. Like Peel's Lotus Elan sports car, Honey's similar-looking AC Cobra convertible emphasized her independence and vitality. Although the racy content of the novels was excised for television, West often goes on solo undercover missions that required a provocative or revealing outfit.
She uses a number of James Bond-like gimmicks: a high-tech surveillance van, an exploding compact, a garter-belt gas mask, and tear-gas earrings. West is a black-belt in Judo, as is Sam.
Honey West was cancelled after just one season. This came down to two factors -- first, competition from Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.. Second, the network reportedly decided it would be cheaper to import The Avengers and run it in the same time slot than to keep producing Honey West.[6] Francis nonetheless received a Golden Globe Award and a Best Actress Emmy nomination for her performance.
Ep # | Title | Airdate |
---|---|---|
1 | "The Swingin' Mrs. Jones" | September 17, 1965 |
2 | "The Owl and the Eye" | September 24, 1965 |
3 | "The Abominable Snowman" | October 1, 1965 |
4 | "A Matter of Wife and Death" | October 8, 1965 |
5 | "Live a Little, Kill a Little" | October 15, 1965 |
6 | "Whatever Lola Wants...." | October 22, 1965 |
7 | "The Princess and the Paupers" | October 29, 1965 |
8 | "In the Bag" | November 5, 1965 |
9 | "The Flame and the Pussycat" | November 12, 1965 |
10 | "A Neat Little Package" | November 19, 1965 |
11 | "A Stitch in Crime" | November 26, 1965 |
12 | "A Million Bucks in Anybody's Language" | December 3, 1965 |
13 | "The Gray Lady" | December 10, 1965 |
14 | "Invitation to Limbo" | December 17, 1965 |
15 | "Rockabye the Hard Way" | December 24, 1965 |
16 | "A Nice Little Till to Tap" | December 31, 1965 |
17 | "How Brillig, O, Beamish Boy" | January 7, 1966 |
18 | "King of the Mountain" | January 14, 1966 |
19 | "It's Earlier Than You Think" | January 21, 1966 |
20 | "The Perfect Un-Crime" | January 28, 1966 |
21 | "Like Visions and Omens and All That Jazz" | February 4, 1966 |
22 | "Don't Look Now, But Isn't That Me" | February 11, 1966 |
23 | "Come to Me, My Litigation Baby" | February 18, 1966 |
24 | "Slay, Gypsy, Slay" | February 25, 1966 |
25 | "The Fun-Fun Killer" | March 4, 1966 |
26 | "Pop Goes the Easel" | March 11, 1966 |
27 | "Little Green Robin Hood" | March 18, 1966 |
28 | "Just the Bear Facts, Ma'am" | March 25, 1966 |
29 | "There's a Long, Long, Fuse A'Burning" | April 1, 1966 |
30 | "An Eerie, Airy, Thing" | April 8, 1966 |
Honey West currently airs on Me-TV early on Sunday mornings.
In 2006, Delta Home Entertainment released the entire series on Region 0 DVD in the UK.[7]
VCI Entertainment issued a North American Region 1 DVD release of the series in September 2008.[8]