Showing posts with label guy williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guy williams. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Happy (Belated) Birthday, June!



Yesterday was the 99th birthday of beloved actress, June Lockhart. While she had a number of memorable roles throughout her long career (starting in 1938 with “A Christmas Carol”), she will always be Maureen Robinson to me. From 1965-1968, she played everyone’s favorite space-age mother on “Lost in Space.” Unlike many of the other early TV-moms, Maureen Robinson had a career as a doctor, often challenging and pushing back (successfully!) against some of the stubborn males in the show. ALWAYS with love, though!



In the first episode, she passes out when her body is re-animated from the Jupiter 2’s freezing tubes. It would be one of the few times that her character was helpless.



She brought a warmth, strength, and dash of comedy to all her roles. It was somewhat disappointing that the campy Dr. Smith (Jonathan Harris) overshadowed the central heart of the show, Maureen and John Robinson (Guy Williams). When that occurred, a promising drama about the space family Robinson descended into a silly hour of having to listen to Harris’ character mug, moan, and eventually have to be rescued. My caption for the photo below would be Harris telling Lockhart and Williams:

OK, here’s how it’s going to be. I’m going to ad lib my role and endear myself to producer Irwin Allen, while you two will end up in the background. Got it?



Below is a behind the scenes shot from the Shirley Temple movie, “Miss Annie Rooney” (1942).



Seated at the table, you can see the back of June’s head at left, then Shirley, and Dickie Moore. Gloria Holden and Jonathan Hale are in back.



June’s character, Stella Bainbridge, is a snotty young rich girl and rival to Shirley. Dickie Moore’s character, Marty White, refers to her as “an old drizzle puss!” Here she is in a screenshot from the movie (far left), looking disapprovingly at Shirley’s wrong-side-of-the-tracks character, Annie Rooney.



Miss Annie Rooney wins out in the end. Marty’s parents, played by Hale and Holden, are won over by Annie’s dance moves. The drizzle puss is left out.



Before June and Shirley made “Rooney,” they attended school together. As June recalled in a Time article written when Shirley died in 2014:

I was at Westlake School for Girls in Los Angeles and in 1941, Shirley joined as a freshman. It was her first school experience with other students because up until that time she’d been tutored on the set at Fox. Her contract had run out, so she had the opportunity to go to a real school and interact with the girls. We wore uniforms at Westlake and she integrated very easily into the student body once she learned about uniform compliance. It turned out that I being a junior at the time was one of the people on the committee that had to watch them all go into morning assembly and I had to make sure that the skirts weren’t too short, and that there was absolutely no lipstick and no rouge. So once Shirley got the hang of having to take off her lipstick and rouge every morning, she was fine. But of course, this is something she’d been so used to all her life. She was very charming about it though. I joined the military drill team at Westlake and was a captain, so she joined too and we both agreed it was really great fun—we’re talking early war here, 1941. We agreed that it was really rhythmic movement, with dance steps, to a military tempo. So she had no problem getting the hang of that. The next year, we made a movie together, Miss Annie Rooney. I played the snotty girl and she was, of course, the leading lady. And Dickie Moore was in it, and he gave her her first on-screen kiss—a most chaste kiss. We were the only two Guild Members at school and to have a chance to work together that way was really nice. But she was a good student, I remember the principal telling me about her—she was working when we were taking our chemistry tests, so she had to do them later, and she graduated with her class but my memory of it is that she had to come in alone and take her chemistry test in the lab—which she passed with flying colors.

June also had a minor role in the Judy Garland film, “Meet Me In St. Louis” (1944). Her character, Lucille Ballard, was an off-screen villain for most of the movie. Once she is introduced, we realized it was all a figment of sisters Esther (Judy) and Rose Smith’s (Lucille Bremer) imaginations.



It is Lucille who plays matchmaker and selflessly gives up her date so that Rose can be with the one she loves.



In real life, June was hardly a drizzle puss or a doormat. Bill Mumy, who played her son Will on “Lost in Space,” called her a “rock and roll goddess.” You can see what he has to say about her at the 40 minute mark of this video:



I hope that June had an incredible birthday yesterday!

See more “Lost in Space” photos at my main website.

Tuesday, February 01, 2022

Temple Tuesday: Lois Lane and Maureen Robinson



In the 1942 film “Miss Annie Rooney,” Shirley Temple plays a teen from the wrong side of the tracks who catches the interest of a young man (Dickie Moore) who comes from money. Lots of money. He decides to go against his parent’s wishes (Gloria Holden and Jonathan Hale) and invite her to his birthday party. When she arrives, Mother is not pleased that the arrangements for twelve will now have to squeeze in another. AWKWARD! The snooty girls at the party look down on poor Shirley until she teaches the old drizzle-pusses how to dance.



Recognize anyone in these photos?



On the far left is Noel Neill, best known as Lois Lane from the 1950’s “Superman” TV series. The girl on the right in this shot is Shirley’s stand-in, Mary Lou Isleib, who finally got a few seconds of screentime.



Noel with George Reeves, as we best remember her:



On the far right of the previous shot is June Lockhart, wearing a somewhat ill-fitting dress and looking extremely bored.



Some twenty years later, June would play the smartest sexiest space mom ever, Dr. Maureen Robinson, in “Lost in Space,” shown here with TV husband Guy Williams.



NOBODY made science (and silver lame) look as appealing as June!



See more teenage Shirley Temple photos at my main website.

Thursday, November 04, 2021

Safe Again!



Thanks to the annual goof of my hosting company screwing up my SSL Certificate renewal, my site was down for the last day or so. This also meant all the photos in my blog were inaccessible, too. Oh the joys of running a website. Today I celebrate one of my very favorite classic TV shows, “Lost in Space.” A friend tipped me off to the publication of a book by Angela Cartwright and Bill Mumy (aka Penny and Will Robinson) called Lost (and found) In Space 2: The Expanded Edition. I’m glad I missed the first edition, because this one is chock full of new photos and updated text. If you’re a fan of the show, do not miss ordering this from Angela’s website!

On her Instagram, Cartwright also announced that Heritage auctions is selling a number of the original costumes from the show, including this one worn by Guy Williams in one of my favorite episodes, “The Anti-Matter Man” from Season 3. By this time, most of the episodes focused on Dr. Smith and Will, with a lot of silly and campy situations. This one departed from that, and returned to the original balanced core of the series which was the Robinson family and dramatic situations. The art direction (Frank O. Barnette and Jack Martin Smith) and cinematography (Frank Carson) on “The Anti-Matter Man” is amazing, too. From the auction site description:



Guy Williams "John Robinson," "Anti-Matter Man" Costume from Season 3 of Lost in Space (CBS TV, 1965-1968). Vintage original 1-piece character jumpsuit constructed of black and ivory color-blocked sparkle fabric with standing short ring collar, split snap-wrist cuffs, and zipper front closure from neck to fly. Signed on the interior collar, "Guy, Sept 67" and retaining the studio cleaning tag. Highly visible worn in the fan favorite Season 3, Episode 15: "The Anti-Matter Man." Exhibiting minor age and production wear with some small breaches to legs. In vintage Fine condition. Accompanied by a LOA from renowned collector James Comisar. Comes with a COA from Heritage Auctions.



At an opening bid of $7,000, I might have to miss this one! Even at $5,000, Williams’ groovy Season 3 tunic is out of my range.



Christmas is around the corner; any generous readers out there?

See more “Lost in Space” photos at my main website.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

TPE: Frontierland, Good vs. Evil



In the laws of life, you have to have both good and evil, and Frontierland at Disneyland is no exception. Those afraid to journey back to early Frontierland can feel safe to know that there's a U.S. Marshal here...AND he can shoe my horse!



Oops...zooming in, I can see I picked a bad day for my visit. This attraction is closed!



I am digging this vintage signage. It is so perfectly done to theme.



Sheriff Lucky doesn't seem too busy in this photo; perhaps it's time for a trip to the nail salon?



Uh oh...trouble has just entered the picture; it's Black Bart! He obviously has hoodwinked these two poor women with his charms.



If only the photographer had panned to the right a bit more...



I guess Sheriff Lucky has arrested Black Bart. He makes an example of Bart by parading him in front of the Golden Horseshoe Saloon.





Uh oh...Bart is on the loose. He hides behind Lafitte's Anchor, located at this time on New Orleans Street:





Could this young guest be a protégé of Bart's?



Sheriff Lucky is in the background on the right, enjoying the antics of Bart.



Good and Evil, all in one shot.



In this August 1958 photo, it would appear that Lucky is being played by a different cast member.



Meanwhile, on top of the Golden Horseshoe, Wally Boag entertains the guests below with his antics:





In August 1960, the stars of "Zorro" put on a show for Disneyland guests.



Chances are the fights on top of the Saloon and The Twain were performed by stunt actors, while the real stars (Guy Williams and Britt Lomand) came out afterwards to circulate among the guests.













Guy Williams, also known as Professor John Robinson from "Lost in Space" duels with a young guest...



and signs autographs for his adoring fans.



See more vintage & current Disneyland Frontierland photos on my Frontierland web page.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Screen Gem Saturdays: Lost in Space—still my fave



Picture this: the cheesiest of props…ham acting…juvenile (sometimes) scripts, and the most heart-warming sentimental drivel this side of whatever planet you care to name. And yet, it still remains one of my favorite shows. Irwin Allen sure knew how to stretch a dollar, and often enough it shows on “Lost in Space.” With a fantastic ensemble cast and just about every kind of alien imagineable, LIS has achieved a legendary cult status that continues to grow. The initial pilot was very serious in tone, and any laughs were strictly unintended. Dr. Smith, played by eternal guest star status Jonathan Harris, began on the show as 100% evil, with very few (if any) redeeming qualities. Realizing this could mean a short shelf-life for his character, Harris injected a bit of camp into his character and it paid off in spades. Unfortunately, by the 3rd season, the entire show degenerated into a campfest and lost any grounding that it originally had. Even so, it was a lot of fun. And I still love to watch it!

Didn’t every kid wish they could have their own Jupiter 2?



And I’m sure that most kids wished their parents were as cool as Maureen & John Robinson. The things she could whip up with a few alien ingredients! She put Betty Crocker to shame—and knew how to use a laser to boot!



Who could forget the dashing Major West (played by Mark Goddard), who had the extremely watered-down "relationship" with Judy Robinson:



This photo shows Bill Mumy, who portrayed Will Robinson, with his stand-in. Yup...a female stood in for the young Mumy who eventually did a comic-book version of the classic 1960’s Irwin Allen TV show. Stand-ins do a lot of the grunt work; dressed in similar costumes, they make sure all of the lighting is correct before the star steps on the set.



See more “Lost in Space” photos at my main website.