About Me
Set in the future, the series followed the adventures of a group of fighters for truth and justice, the Video Rangers, led by Captain Video. The Rangers operated from a secret base on a mountain top. Their uniforms resembled US Army surplus with lightning bolts sewn on.
The Captain had a teenaged sidekick who was always called only The Video Ranger. A bit like Batman, Captain Video took his orders from the Commissioner of Public Safety, whose responsibilities seemingly took in the entire solar system as well as human colonies around other stars. As his name indicated, the Captain was the very first adventure hero explicitly designed (by DuMont's idea-man Larry Menkin) for early live television. "Tobor" the robot was an important character on the program, and represents the first appearance of a robot in live televised science fiction.
The series was broadcast live five to six days a week and was extremely popular with both children and adults. Because of the large adult audience, the usual network broadcast time of the daily series was 7 to 7:30 p.m. EST, leading off the "prime evening" time-block. The production was always hampered by a very low budget, and the Captain did not originally have a space ship of his own.
Until 1953, Captain Video's live adventures occupied about 15 minutes of each day's 30 minute running time. To fill in the rest, a Video Ranger communications officer, acting as a typical small-town children's show master of ceremonies, showed about 15 minutes of old theatrical films; specifically, old cowboy movies. These were described by the communications officer, Ranger Rogers, as the adventures of Captain Video's "undercover agents" on Earth. During the 1953 - 1954 broadcast season there was in addition a spinoff series, Secret Files of Captain Video (5 September 1953 to 29 May 1954), alternating every other Saturday with Tom Corbett, Space Cadet. Each of these 30-minute Saturday broadcasts told a story complete in itself.
There were very few special effects seen on the series until the team of Russell and Haberstroh was hired in September of 1952. For the rest of the program's episodes they provided surprisingly effective model and effects work, prefilmed in 16 mm format and cut into the live broadcast as needed.
Captain Video's early opponent was Dr. Pauli, an inventor who wore gangster-style pinstripe suits but who spoke with the snarl of a cinema Nazi or Soviet. Like the last few theatrical serials, the TV series' plots often involved wildly implausible inventions created by scientific genius Captain Video or evil genius Dr. Pauli, but obviously made from hardware store odds and ends, with much circumstantial double talk regarding their use. As the series was originally broadcast from a studio located in the building occupied by the Wanamaker's department store, when props were needed, the crew would simply go downstairs for them, often just minutes before the show went on the air. In the early days of the program, only three Rangers were seen, The Video Ranger, Ranger Rogers the communications officer, and Ranger Gallagher. (These are also the only Rangers who appear in the film serial version of the series.) As the budget slowly increased, a fairly large roster of Rangers was referred to and briefly seen on TV.
In the early days of the series, scripts tended to be somewhat incoherent, and were often derided by critics of the day, but many of the scripts after 1952 were written by major science fiction writers active at the time, including Damon Knight, James Blish, Jack Vance and Arthur C. Clarke; these displayed rather more intelligence, discipline and imagination than most of the other children's sci-fi series scripts. Other well-known authors who wrote for the program from time to time include Isaac Asimov, Cyril M. Kornbluth, Milt Lesser, Walter M. Miller, Jr., Robert Sheckley, J. T. McIntosh and Dr. Robert S. Richardson.Captain Video's Galaxy II, 1953 - 1955
Captain Video eventually had three different space ships. In the first version, the X-9 (later replaced briefly by the X-10) the crew at takeoff lay upon tilted bunk beds and on their elbows, a posture based perhaps upon some space-travel theories of the time. Later, the V-2 rocket-like Galaxy had an aircraft-style cockpit with reclining seats. The Captain's final craft, after early 1953, was the beautiful Galaxy II.
The other two space-adventure series of the period were Tom Corbett, which was also broadcast live from New York City, and Space Patrol, broadcast live from California. There were some suspicious occasions of plot-similarities between these three programs — indeed, there were times when Space Patrol seemed to be putting on a West-Coast recreation of Captain Video's latest adventure.
Al Hodge, who had created the role of Britt Reid, The Green Hornet on the radio, was the best remembered actor to play Captain Video (1950-55); the Video Ranger was played during the entire (1949-55) run of the series by young Don Hastings, who went on to be a Soap opera star. The first Captain Video was Richard Coogan, who played the exhausting role for 17 months.
Many premiums were offered by sponsors of the show, including space helmets, secret code guns, flying saucer rings, decoder badges, photo-printing rings, and Viking rockets complete with launchers.
The show's theme song was Richard Wagner's Overture to The Flying Dutchman (Der Fliegende Hollaender).
Columbia also made a theatrical serial starring Judd Holdren, under the name Captain Video: Master of the Stratosphere (1951) and it displayed only marginally better sets and props than its TV inspiration. The series is also mentioned in the first episode of the 39 independent episodes of The Honeymooners.Captain Video comic book #2 1951, published by Fawcett Comics.
Six issues of a Captain Video comic book were published by Fawcett Comics in 1951. The rival space adventure programs Tom Corbett and Space Patrol shortly thereafter had their own comic books as well. Some of these comics were used as the basis for a British TV Annual, a hardcover collection produced in time for Christmas, which made the then-ludicrous claim that man would go into outer space for real in 1970 and would reach the moon by 2000. Tom Corbett also had a syndicated daily newspaper strip, and a set of juvenile series books published by Grossett and Dunlap. Furthermore, Tom Corbett and Space Patrol were also heard on ABC network radio. DuMont, with no radio network, never provided a radio version of Captain Video's adventures.
Captain Video comes quite close to being a lost series. Only five 30-minute episodes, three featuring Richard Coogan and two featuring Al Hodge, are available to the public in various video compilations. DuMont destroyed almost all of its kinescope (16 mm) and Electronicam (35 mm) library in the late 1950s, thus nearly dooming all its pioneering TV series to oblivion. There are also a very few carbons of Captain Video scripts in various collections. As a result, it is not even clear in what time period the series is supposed to take place. The Fawcett comic adventures evidently are supposed to take place at the time of publication, 1951. The surviving kinescopes could take place in 1950, as when Dr. Pauli plots to rob a bank in Shanghai, or alternately in the very distant future, as when Captain Video seeks to establish a reliable mail service for far-flung interstellar colonies, or struggles to prevent the many space stations circling Pluto from being destroyed by an approaching comet.