F
FredLeonard
Guest
The references to the Honeymooners reminded me that in several episodes Ed Norton talked about "Captain Video." In one, he even watches the show wearing a Captain Video helmet.
Not only was Captain Video a real show (five nights a week on the Dumont Network, original home of the Jackie Gleason Show and where they filmed the "classic 39) but a space helmet was an actual premium offered by the show. I had one. It didn't look much like the one Ed Norton wore on the show. It cost several boxtops from Post cereals (the show's sponsor) and a dollar (which was very expensive for a premium back then). The helmet was even integrated into story lines: The bad guy turns off the air in the Captain's ship. He can't breathe. He staggers into the next cabin saying, "If only I can get to my space helmet in time." Fade to black. Commercial for helmet. Tune in tomorrow.
The show was done live (so few kinescopes exist) from an unused floor of Wanamaker's Department Store in Greenwich Village (which burned down in 1955). When the show needed props they'd borrow stuff from the store. Al Hodge played the Captain (he'd earlier been the Green Hornet on radio). It was one of several space operas on early TV. They were all gone by the mid 50s and we had to wait more than 10 years for Gene Roddenberry to give us another one. We never saw it mentioned but I bet Ed Norton would have been a Trekker.
Not only was Captain Video a real show (five nights a week on the Dumont Network, original home of the Jackie Gleason Show and where they filmed the "classic 39) but a space helmet was an actual premium offered by the show. I had one. It didn't look much like the one Ed Norton wore on the show. It cost several boxtops from Post cereals (the show's sponsor) and a dollar (which was very expensive for a premium back then). The helmet was even integrated into story lines: The bad guy turns off the air in the Captain's ship. He can't breathe. He staggers into the next cabin saying, "If only I can get to my space helmet in time." Fade to black. Commercial for helmet. Tune in tomorrow.
The show was done live (so few kinescopes exist) from an unused floor of Wanamaker's Department Store in Greenwich Village (which burned down in 1955). When the show needed props they'd borrow stuff from the store. Al Hodge played the Captain (he'd earlier been the Green Hornet on radio). It was one of several space operas on early TV. They were all gone by the mid 50s and we had to wait more than 10 years for Gene Roddenberry to give us another one. We never saw it mentioned but I bet Ed Norton would have been a Trekker.