We did this back in 2017. Here we are, back again, with all new entries.
Below is a list of characters from popular culture. But how
did they become popular? See the box on the right? All the characters
began life in one of those media. See if you can match 'em up. Be
warned: there isn't a one-to-one match up, meaning exactly one character started
in a TV show, etc.
Answers below.
Bambi
The Lone Ranger
Radar O'Reilly
Jimmy Olsen
Raylan Givens
The Mighty Casey
Stuart (Stu) Bailey
Lamont Cranston
Mack the Knife
Alexander Waverly
Bambi. Novel. Austrian novelist Felix Salten (an enthusiastic hunter, by the way) wrote Bambi: A Life in the Woods. It
was more or less what we would today call a Young Adult novel. Published in 1922 and became an immediate success. British
novelist John Galsworthy called it a "little masterpiece." The Disney
film version came out in 1942. By the way, Thumper the Rabbit broke
into show biz through the movies. He is part of the Disneyfication process, not appearing in the book.
The Lone Ranger. Radio. The mysterious masked man started
life on the radio in 1933. I bring him up because of a story that has
spread in recent years that the character was inspired by Bass Reeves,
a legendary (though very real) hero, the first African-American U.S.
Marshal in the west. A biography of Reeves suggested that he inspired
the Lone Ranger, but there is zero evidence that the creators of the
show had ever heard of Reeves.
Radar O'Reilly. Novel. The very first character to appear
in the novel MASH by Richard Hooker (real name Hiester Richard Hornberger Jr.) is
Radar O'Reilly of Ottumwa, Iowa. In the movie he was played by Gary
Burghoff, who went on to repeat the role in the TV series. The only
other actor I could think of who brought a character from the flicks to
the small screen was Richard Widmark with Madigan, but it turns out there have been others.
Jimmy Olsen. Radio. The eternal cub reporter, Superman's Pal, first appeared on The Adventures of Superman
radio show in 1940. He was created basically so the hero would have
someone to talk to. We all need that from time to time, don't we? Jimmy made it into the comics a year later. Since then
he has been in TV and movies as well as having his own comic book.
Raylan Givens. Novel. The Deputy U.S. Marshal first appeared as a supporting character in Elmore Leonard's Pronto. He also showed up in Riding the Rap,
before getting a starring role in the short story "Fire in the Hole."
This story, in which Givens is punished for an iffy killing by being
assigned to his home state of Kentucky, inspired the TV series Justified.
The producers were so dedicated to making a work in the Elmore Leonard
mold that they gave out bracelets to the crew that read What Would Elmore Do? Most critics agreed that they succeeded and Leonard was inspired to write Raylan,
supposedly a novel, but essentially designed to be broken up into three
episodes of the series. In fact, two parts were used that way.
The Mighty Casey. Newspaper. Ernest L. Thayer's poem
"Casey at the Bat," first appeared in a San Francisco newspaper on June
8, 1888. It happened to be read by Arch Gunter, a visiting novelist nd
playwright. He was so taken with the work that he clipped it out. When
he arrived in New York he shared it with a theatrical producer who
asked his star comedian, DeWolf Hopper, to memorize it and recite it
during that evening's performance. Thus Hopper began a new career as
the prime interpreter of the poem for forty years, on stage, radio,
records, and movies. It does make you wonder what minor masterpieces are buried in a century of newspapers....
Stuart (Stu) Bailey. Novel. Roy Huggins created private eye Stu Bailey in The Double Take. He
felt the character was so clearly a ripoff of Philip Marlowe that he
sent a copy to Raymond Chandler with an apology. Chandler apparently
replied that he'd seen worse. When Huggins moved to television Bailey
became one of the P.I.'s who worked at 77 Sunset Strip. Of course, Huggins also created Maverick, and The Rockford Files.
Lamont Cranston. Magazine. I just know I'm going to get an argument over this one. Bear with me. In 1930 the Street and Smith company decided to create a radio show to promote their Detective Story Magazine. The narrator was a mysterious character called The Shadow.
Pretty
soon listeners were going to the newsstand and asking for "the Shadow
magazine," which didn't exist. There is a modern MBA rule that says:
Let your customer tell you what business you are in. Street and
Smith tookthe hint. They founded The Shadow Magazine and magician Walter B. Gibson filled it with a new novel twice a month (he had to be a magician, don't you think?), writing under the name Maxwell Grant. He wrote 282 of the tales over 20 years.
In
the pulp magazine the Shadow's real identity was Kent Allard but he
sometimes pretended to be other people, including man-about-town Lamont
Cranston, who was frequently out of the country. In the radio version,
the Allard name was dropped and the S-man was simply Cranston. Simple,
right?
Mack the Knife. Opera. Yes, but which opera? The popular song is a bowdlerized version of the song from Kurt Weill and Bertold Brecht's Three Penny Opera. But the song tells the story of Macheath, who first appeared in John Gay's Beggar's Opera, written two hundred years earlier (and inspired by an idea of Jonathan Swift's!).
Alexander Waverly. Television. The regional head of the United Network Command for Law and Enforcement was created for The Man From UNCLE, although some see a strong resemblance to the Professor, a spymaster who appears in North by Northwest. Of course, both characters were played by the wonderful Leo G. Carroll.
Waverly and Carroll almost missed their big chance. In the pilot for
the series the boss was Mr. Allison, played by Will Kuluva. However,
the network executives told the producers to get rid of the guy whose
name began with K, so Kuluva was replaced by Carroll. Turns out the
network had really wanted to dump Russian spy Ilya Kuryakin, played by
David McCallum. Fortunately for the show (and thousands of adoring young
women) Ilya dodged death, not for the last time.
Carroll, in his seventies.
had health problems during production. When you see papers scattered
across Waverly's desk, some of them are Carroll's script, available for
easy reference. At one point he told the producers that his
grandchildren complained that Mr. Waverly never did anything but talk,
so they created a scene in which he karate-chopped a bad guy. When he
nailed it the whole crew cheered.
Oh! Here's a bonus question for you. The star of The man From UNCLE was, of course, Robert Vaughn. But do you know what he did in his spare time during production? The astonishing answer is here.
18 December 2019
Breaking into Showbiz II
Labels:
characters,
Lamont Cranston,
Lopresti,
Man from UNCLE,
MASH,
popular culture,
The Shadow
9 comments:
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Fun quiz, Rob. I'm glad they didn't get rid of Ilya. And that's fascinating about Robert Vaughn's thesis. I'm very interested in that era and the blacklisting, etc. But had no idea that he'd done that.
ReplyDeleteInteresting listing and good information.
ReplyDeleteNice to know print rules!
ReplyDeleteInteresting column, Rob. I missed Casey, Cranston, and Mack the Knife. God help me, I can still hum the theme from 77 Sunset Strip.
ReplyDeleteI knew there was a reason I liked Robert Vaughn. But I too swooned over Ilya Kuryakin. And, to be fair to Carroll - he was in his late 70s during filming. But oh, what a storied career he had.
ReplyDeleteI knew that about Beggar's Opera, but then I read the darnedest things.
Great column, Rob!
THanks for the comments. If you watched Mad Men you may remember how affected one young woman was by Ilya Kuryakin. Kiernan Shipka, who played Sally Draper was, I think an exceptional child actress, and her character was of great interest to me because she was essentially the same age I would have been (that is, the character and I were born int he same year).
ReplyDeleteI'm pleased to have 5 correct. And I might have to buy the book.
ReplyDeleteI almost matched John, missing Olsen, Cranston, and Mack.
ReplyDeleteMy younger brother looked remarkably like the childhood version of Ilya kuryaken. UNCLE wouldn't have been the same without him.
Never played a Match the Media quiz before. Great original concept, Rob. Kicking myself for missing Radar (I picked “movie”).
ReplyDelete