Mister Ed is an American television sitcom produced by Filmways originally broadcast in syndication from 5 January to 2 July 1961, and then on CBS from October 1, 1961, to February 6 , 1966. The title character of the show - the talking horse - originally appeared in a short story by Walter R. Brooks.
Mister Ed is one of several series to debut in syndication and is picked up by major networks for prime time. All 143 episodes were filmed in black and white.
Video Mister Ed
Starter
The Mister Ed concept event comes from a series of short stories by children's author Walter R. Brooks, beginning with The Talking Horse in the Sept. 18, 1937, Liberty . Brooks is otherwise known for the children's novel series Freddy the Pig , which also features talking animals that interact with humans. Sonia Chernus, secretary of director Arthur Lubin, introduced Lubin to Brooks stories and was credited with developing the concept for television.
The concept of the show resembles the films of Francis the Talking Mule where the title character of the horse tells a story, but only for one person, causing various opportunities and frustrations. The first six films Francis (1950-55) were also directed by Lubin.
Lubin wanted to make the TV series Francis but could not secure his rights. But someone told him about a series of Brooks stories. He chose this for TV.
Comedian George Burns financed the original pilot for Mister Ed shot at his McCadden Studio in Hollywood for $ 70,000. Scott McKay plays Wilbur. Jack Benny is also involved behind the scenes. Unable to sell the show to the network, Lubin decides to sell the show to the syndication first. He managed to get a single sponsor identification for this program at over 100 stations. The event was rearranged with Alan Young in the lead. Production began in November 1960, although Lubin did not direct the initial episode because he worked in Europe on a film. The first 26 episodes were received well enough for the event to be captured by CBS.
Maps Mister Ed
Synopsis
The current show has two leads that operate as a comedy team. The role of the title Mister Ed, the talking palomino, was played by the Bamboo Harvester Massacre and voiced by former Western movie actor Allan Lane. The role of owner Ed, a genuine but somewhat klutzy architect named Wilbur Post, is played by Alan Young. Many of the program's jokes stem from Mr. Ed's tendency to speak only to Wilbur, his skills as a troublemaker, and man-like behavior that nowadays extends beyond anything that is around Wilbur expected from a horse. A joke is another character listening to Wilbur talking to Ed and asking who he is talking to. Another joke center that runs on Wilbur becomes accident-prone and inadvertently causes damage to himself and others. According to Lubin, Young was chosen for the lead role because he "just looks like the kind of person to be talked to by the horse".
The other main character in the series is Wilbur's tolerant young wife, Carol (Connie Hines). The writings also had two pairs of neighbors, to whom Ed liked to make Wilbur seem as eccentric as possible. They include Addison, Roger (Larry Keating) and his wife Kay (Edna Skinner), both of which emerged from the pilot episode until Keating's death in 1963; after that, Skinner continues to appear as Kay, without mentioning Roger's absence, until neighbors reconstruct. During this period, Kay's brother, Paul Fenton (Jack Albertson), who had performed occasionally before, appeared. After Addisons, Post's new neighbor was Colonel Gordon Kirkwood, USAF (Ret.), Former commander of Wilbur (Leon Ames) officer, and his wife Winnie (Florence MacMichael). They appeared in the series from 1963 to 1965. In the last season, Kirkwoods was removed, while Carol's grumpy and uptight father, Mr. Higgins (Barry Kelley), who appears occasionally throughout the series, apparently moved to Wilbur and Carol during the last episode. Wilbur and his father-in-law did not get along at all because Mr. Higgins hated Wilbur, whose unique eccentricity and klutzynya, a friendly half-hearted effort always clashed with his emotionless and tense personality. Higgins. Carol's father never stopped trying to persuade him to divorce Wilbur, whom he often called and publicly referred to as "kook" because of Wilbur's awkwardness. Alan Young did double duty during the last season of the series, also directing almost all episodes.
Ed's ability to speak is never explained, or has ever contemplated many things on the show. In the first episode, when Wilbur expressed an inability to understand the situation, Ed offered the only statement on the show: "Do not try. It's bigger than the two of us!"
The shipment is located at 17230 Valley Spring Road in San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles.
Cast
- The main character
- Allan Lane as Mister Ed (sound only)
- Alan Young as Wilbur Post
- Connie Hines as Carol Post
- Bamboo Harvester as Mister Ed (credited as "Own", like the standard for non-human characters in movieway production)
- Support player
- Larry Keating as Roger Addison (1961-63); Season 1-3
- Edna Skinner as Kay Addison (1961-63); Season 1-4
- Leon Ames as Gordon Kirkwood (1963-65); Season 4-5
- Florence MacMichael as Winnie Kirkwood (1963-65); Season 4-5
- Jack Albertson as Paul Fenton (sometimes 1961-63); Season 2-4
- Barry Kelley as Carol's Father, Mr. Higgins (sometimes 1962-65, repeating 1965-66)
Guest star
Some celebrity guest stars appear as themselves during the series:
- Mae West
- Clint Eastwood in "Clint Eastwood Meet Mr. Ed"
- George Burns
- Zsa Zsa Gabor
- Leo Durocher
- Jon Provost
- Sebastian Cabot
- Jack LaLanne appears in cameo near the beginning of the episode "Psychoanalyst Show" season 1, where Ed watches the training event.
Other notable players appear in character roles:
- Donna Douglas appeared in three episodes, first as "Lady Godiva" model on "Busy Wife", then as Blanche in "Ed the Jumper" and then as Clint Eastwood's girlfriend in "Clint Eastwood Meets Mister Ed"
- Irene Ryan
- Raymond Bailey
- Alan Hale Jr.
- Neil Hamilton
- Hayden Rorke
- William Bendix
- Sharon Tate
Episode
Production notes
The uncivilized early pilot for the series was entitled "Wilbur Pope and Mister Ed" and featured an unrelated big-band instrumental theme (with Studebaker Lark's car footage pushed under credit opening). In pilots, who use scripts that are almost identical to those used in the inaugural series, use a completely different cast. Scott McKay played the title of Wilbur Pope (the family name was changed to "Post" before the series made him on the air) and Sandra White played the role of Wilbur's wife.
The first horse to play Mister Ed for the first pilot episode that did not ring was a chestnut hunter. The horse proved to be difficult to control and replaced with a horse named Bamboo Harvester (1949-1970), American horses Saddlebred, Arabic, and class. The second pilot episode was filmed and Bamboo Harvester remained with the series until the cancellation.
Make Ed "speak"
Producer Mister Ed ' left the talent performing the unsafe title role. Mister Ed's registered event credit is only played by "Own".
The voice actor for Ed's pronunciation is Allan "Rocky" Lane, a former C-B-movie star. Sheldon Allman gave Ed sing a voice in the episode; His solo line ("I am Mister Ed") on the closing theme song of the show was given by his composer, Jay Livingston. Allan Lane was alluded to by the producers only as "actors who prefer to remain anonymous." After the show became a hit, Lane campaigned for producers to get credit but never received it.
The Harvester Bamboo Horse photographed Ed along the run. Ed's stablemate, a quarterhorse named Pumpkin, also served as a double stunt Bamboo Harvester for the show. The horse then reappears on the Green Acres television series.
Coach Bamboo Harvester is Les Hilton. To create the impression that Ed was having a conversation, Hilton initially used the thread technique he used for Lubie's previous movies Mule ; in time, this becomes unnecessary. As actor Alan Young puts it: "Initially it was done by putting a piece of nylon thread in his mouth, but Ed really learned to move his lips as the trainer touched his feet, even he learned to do it when I stopped talking during the scene!
Reports circulated during and after the show went that the speaking effect was achieved by crew members applying peanut butter to horse gums. Alan Young said in an interview later that he found the story. "Al Simon and Arthur Lubin, the producers, suggest that we keep the method [making horses appear to speak] a secret because they think children will be disappointed if they find technical details about how it's done, so I make peanut butter stories, and everyone bought it. "
Young adds that Bamboo Harvester saw Les Hilton's trainer as a disciplined father figure. When scolded by Hilton for losing his cue, the horse will move to Young for comfort, treating the actor as a mother figure. Hilton tells Young this is a positive development.
Death
There are conflicting stories involving the death of Bamboo Harvester, the horse that Mr. Ed has played.
Alan Young says that he often visits the Harvester in retirement. He claimed that the horse had accidentally died of a sedative, given when he was in a cage at Sparks Street in Burbank, California, where he lives with his coach Lester Hilton. Young says Hilton is out of town visiting relatives, and temporary caregivers may have seen Bamboo Harvester rolling around on the ground, struggling to get up. Young says Harvester is a heavy horse, and he is not always strong enough to rise without a struggle. He pointed out that the nanny thought the horse was in trouble, given a sedative and, for unknown reasons, the horse died within hours. Remnants were cremated and scattered by Hilton in the Los Angeles area in a place known only to him.
Another story claims that in 1968 Bamboo Harvester, which suffered from age-related diseases, was euthanized in 1970 without publicity and was buried at Snodgrass Farm in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.
The third story claims that after Mr. Ed, the health of Bamboo Harvester failed. She suffered from arthritis and kidney problems, and had to be euthanized at age 19.
The different horses who died in Oklahoma in February 1979 were widely regarded as the Harvester Bamboo, but this horse, in fact, the horse pose for the silent image Mister Ed used by the production company for the press performances of the show. This horse is unofficially known as "Mr. Ed", which led him to be reported as such (including santonic comments on Saturday Night Live Weekend Update) after his own death.
Theme song
The theme song, titled "Mister Ed", was written by songwriting teams Jay Livingston and Ray Evans and sung by Livingston himself. The first seven episodes only use instrumental music to open the show; after that a version with lyrics is used. Livingston agrees to sing the song itself until a professional singer can be found; producers liked the song vocalist and kept it on the broadcast. During most of the runs the theme song covers only used instrumental music. But in some episodes, the theme song was sung during cover credits.
The theme song got a new publicity twenty years after the show began when Jim Brown, a preacher from South Point, Ohio, claimed in May 1986 that it contained a "demon message" when heard in reverse. Brown and colleague Greg Hudson claim that the phrase "Somebody sings this song to Satan" and "its source is Satan" will be heard. On orders of their teenage children burned over 300 records and secular music tapes with alleged satanic messages. Teenagers did not burn copies of Greatest Hits TV, but Brown insisted that "Satan can be influenced whether they [the songwriters] know it or not We do not think they intentionally do it, and we will not give up on > Mister Ed . "
Sponsor
The series was sponsored from 1961 to 1963 by Studebaker-Packard Corporation and Studebaker Corporation. At first, the sponsorship came from the Studebaker dealers association, with a corporate sponsorship coming from South Bend so the series has been taken by CBS. The readers of the book displayed prominently in the show during this period. The displayed script has a 1962 Lark convertible, and the company uses a publicity image featuring Post and Mister Ed with their product (various cast members also appear in "integrated ads" for Lark at the end of the program). When another Lark convertible served as an official race car at Indianapolis Indianapolis in 1962, Connie Hines attended the race as part of a promotion.
Studebaker sales dropped dramatically in 1961 and, despite their exposure through sponsoring the program, never recovered. Studebaker ended the production of US motor vehicles on December 20, 1963. Then the Studebaker sponsorship and the vehicle supply agreement expired, and The Ford Motor Company provided the vehicle seen in front of the cameras beginning in early 1965. (Studebaker vehicle production ended in March 1966.)
DVD release
MGM Home Entertainment released two of the best-of-Mister Ed collection on DVD in Region 1. Volume 1 (released January 13, 2004) contains 21 episodes and Volume 2 (released March 8 , 2005) contains 20 episodes. Due to bad sales, further volumes were not released.
MGM also released a single-disc release titled Mister Ed's Barnyard Favorites on July 26, 2005 which contains the first eight episodes featured in Volume One.
Yelling! The factory announced in June 2009 that it had earned the right to release Mister Ed on DVD, and then released six seasons on DVD in Region 1 in the US. Specifically, Seasons 4 and 5 are not available outside the continental US The sixth and last season was released on May 12, 2015.
The syndicated version of eight episodes is used for the release of DVD Season One. All other DVD releases contain unedited full-length versions.
One episode (second season episode "Ed the Beneficiary") has been transformed into a public domain. Also in the public domain is a 19-minute production from the US Treasury Department, performed in the episode style of Ed Mister with a full-fledged show player (but without laughter), promoting the Savings Bond, and the original uncivilized pilot, issued without a copyright notice.
On December 9, 2014, Shout! Factory released the Mister Ed-Complete Series on DVD in Region 1. The 22-disc set contains all 143 episodes of the series as well as bonus features.
? - Shout! Factory Exclusives title, dijual secara eksklusif melalui toko online Shout
Remake
In 2004, a remake was planned for the Fox network, with Sherman Hemsley as the voice of Mister Ed, David Alan Basche as Wilbur, and Sherilyn Fenn as Carol.
In 2012, Waterman Entertainment announced that they are developing new feature films based on Mister Ed .
Legacy
A race horse named after a character on a television show took part in a grand leap of the 1994 National Grand Prix at Aintree, England, but did not complete the course.
In 2007, it was reported that the housing developer intended to create a community near Tahlequah, Oklahoma, was built around the final resting place of Mister Ed (who died in 1970). It is meant to be themed with the style of the show and the period.
References
External links
- Mister Ed on IMDb
- Mister Ed on TV.com
- The movie clip "Ed the Beneficiary" is available on the Internet Archive
- Movie clip "Wilbur Got a Message... About Payroll Saving!" available on Internet Archive
- Movie clips "Unpaired Mr. Ed and Wilbur Pope Pilot" available on Internet Archive
- How did they get Mr. Ed talking? from Straight Dope
- Mister Ed on Acres TV
- Interview with Alan Young, October 17, 2007
- 1 DVD Season review and production history
- "Photo Mr. Ed and director Arthur Lubin". June 7, 2013.
- Mister Ed in IMDb (remake 2004)
Source of the article : Wikipedia