View Full Version : Anyone remember "Mr. Terrific" or "Captain Nice"?
JonUrban
12-17-2004, 04:25 PM
I'm not sure what made me think of these, as they were quite forgettable.
NOTE: These were CBS and NBC's answer the "Batman".
Michael
12-17-2004, 04:37 PM
..Stanley Beemish!!! (SP?):goodie:
pdenny
12-17-2004, 04:38 PM
He's Dickens, I'm Fenster?
Ed Bishop
12-17-2004, 04:41 PM
There weren't a lot of episodes of either, were there? Do remember them vaguely, no more than that, though....
:ed:
Lord Hawthorne
12-17-2004, 04:43 PM
I remember them both as being on the air briefly. I liked the one who flapped his wings.
Ted Bell
12-17-2004, 04:45 PM
At age 11, I found those shows hilarious (I favored Captain Nice). So when are the DVDs coming out?
Michael
12-17-2004, 04:51 PM
He's Dickens, I'm Fenster?
"I'm Dickens, He's Fenster"...starring John Astin and marty Ingels..show ran from 1962-63...I loved it!
Michael
12-17-2004, 04:54 PM
...both Mr. Terrific & Captain Nice debuted on January 9th 1967 and were cancelled on August 28th 1968...
eelkiller
12-17-2004, 05:04 PM
I remember them both as being on the air briefly. I liked the one who flapped his wings.
Was that Mr. Terrific who flapped his arms,can't remember for sure?
Michael
12-17-2004, 05:12 PM
Was that Mr. Terrific who flapped his arms,can't remember for sure?
Yup...
Gardo
12-18-2004, 07:43 AM
Wow, haven't thought of these in ages. I loved them as a ten-year-old. Two questions come to mind: which one got his power by taking a little pill, and which one had a female sidekick named Candy Kane?
JonUrban
12-18-2004, 09:13 AM
Wow, haven't thought of these in ages. I loved them as a ten-year-old. Two questions come to mind: which one got his power by taking a little pill, and which one had a female sidekick named Candy Kane?
I remembered them, but I don't remember them that well. I think that Captain Nice lived with his mom. I can barely remember Mr Terrific.......... :eek:
crimsoncing
12-18-2004, 11:20 AM
Damn you guys brought up some memories. I was 10 and I loved Batman so the more superheroes the better. I loved both shows but I seem to remember one going off the air faster than the other one. Don't ask me which one...wasn't Wally Cox one of the heroes?
crimsoncing
12-18-2004, 11:27 AM
Ok Now you got me looking and here is more information than anyone would ever need about these two shows along with a few comments from "Fans"
THE MR. TERRIFIC
THEME SONG:
A scientist both wise and bold
Set out to cure the common cold
Instead he found a power pill
Which he said most certainly will
Change a lamb into a lion
Like an eagle he'll be flyin
Solid steel will be like putty
It'll work on anybody.
Then it was found this power pill
Made the strongest men quite ill
So the secret search began
To find the one and only man
Who can take this power pill specific
And turn into the most prolific, terrific, Mr. Terrific!
What they found made them squeamish
For only Stanley Beamish
A weak and droopy daffodil
Can take this potent power pill
That sent him soaring through the skies
Fighting foes and fighting spies.
When he took the pill specific,
He became the most prolific, Hydrolific, MR. TERRIFIC!!!
For the record, the recitation of these immortal words was performed by the late, great cartoon voicemaster, Paul Frees.
- Michael Scholl
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"I saw them both and frankly can't believe your comments about Mr. Terrific. I found it to be about as cornball as any TV sitcom could possible be. Perhaps production values were high but quality of writing and comedy was not!
"On the other hand, Captain Nice was an outstanding program, particularly the comedy writing and situations. In my opinion, Captain Nice was quite a bit funnier than Buck Henry's own Get Smart.
"It is sad if you can actually occasionally see reruns or snippets of Mr. Terrific (what a bore) and I have never seen anything of Captain Nice after it went off the air. Is there any video anywhere of any episode?"
- David Gortner
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"In Germany 'Mr. Terrific' was a "must view" when we were kids...
"Indelible impression... it was called 'Immer wenn er Pillen nahm' (Whenever he took pills) and ran together with 'MaxwellSmart', 'Moonbase Alpha', and 'Raumpatroille'."
- norb
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"Mr. Terrific", "Run Buddy Run" and Mel Brooks' "When things Were Rotten" are among my fondest TV show memories from my early childhood.
"Since you have the original song from Mr. Terrific on your site, here's the German version (I was living in Germany at the time):
"The show was titled "Immer wenn ER Pillen nahm" (sort of "Whenever he was taking pills"):
Ein Wissenschaftler um die Natur zu verbiegen
wollte schlichtweg den Schnupfen besiegen.
ER rŸhrte, quirlte und mixte.
ER fand eine Pille,
doch eine verflixte:
Denn ein SchŠfchen das sie zufŠllig schluckte
sich kurz darauf als Lšwe entpuppte.
Kein StahlgerŸst hielt seiner Schlagkraft stand.
DAs war der Tag an dem man die Superpille erfand.
Doch Menschen schienen nicht empfŠnglich; die Pille machte sie eher krŠnklich.
Mit grossen Computern stark und klug suchte man einen der sie vertrug.
Es dauerte monatelang bis man ihn endlich fand:
Tankwart Stanley Beamish war der einzige im Land.
Und seine grosse Stunde kam
immer wenn ER Pillen nahm!
- B'rgds, Rolf
"About your forgotten shows, I remember liking the TV show "Mr. Terrific" with Wally Cox. I always believed this to be the forerunner of the "Underdog" cartoon series. I don't know this as a fact, but always enjoyed thinking this." - Tom Ludwick
Mr. Terrific debuted on CBS January 9, 1967 and ran until August 28 of that same year - but it was Stephen Stimpell that starred as gas station geek turned superhero Stanley Beamish, not Wally Cox.
Wally Cox actually starred in a show called Mr. Peepers fifteen years earlier, and no doubt served as the meek and mild model for the Beamish character. He was also the voice of TV's Underdog.
Batman was the number one show in the nation at the beginning of 1967; two shows debuted mid-season to try to cash in on the 'camp' superhero craze but both Mr. Terrific and Captain Nice were gone by fall.
Mr. Terrific told the story of nerdy Stanley Beamish, who, as part of his job with the Bureau of Special Projects in Washington DC, swallows an enormous jawbreaker sized "Power Pill" that turns him (and only him) into a superhero with tremendous powers - for one hour.
Trouble comes when the pill wears off and timid Stanley Beamish is forced to face the crooks without his mighty powers. Mr. Terrific can even fly during his brief hour of power - but he has to flap his arms to do it!
Also appearing on the series were Dick Gautier ('Hymie the Robot' from Get Smart) as Beamish's partner in the gas station Hal and John McGiver as the head of the government Bureau.
Typical plots: Stanley finds himself with a miniature transmitter implanted in his tooth when he visits a spy dentist, while the president's plane flashes an SOS. In another tale, Stanley Beamish is busy seeing a psychiatrist about his inability to fly and in another episode he impersonates a safe cracker that is his exact double. (I told you they were typical plots!)
You can still see Mr. Terrific occasionally - several episodes of the show were combined to make a TV-movie currently offered in syndication called 'The Pill Caper.'
The episodes are generally entertaining and the production values are far and above even some of the best shows on television today. Unfortunately, because the main character gets his powers by taking drugs, this show has never been offered by the studio for syndication.
The very same night that Mr. Terrific debuted (right after it went off the air in fact), Captain Nice hit the airwaves over on NBC, brought to you by the creators of Get Smart.
This show starred William Daniels (St. Elsewhere) as Carter Nash, a police chemist that develops a serum giving him basically the same powers as Mr. Terrific, except Captain Nice didn't have to flap his arms to maneuver the friendly skies. Oh, and it was Carter's mom who made his dopey-looking costume.
The pilot was written by creator Buck Henry. Alice Ghostley co-starred as Nash's mother and Ann Prentiss portrayed policewoman Candy Kane, the Lois Lane type.
In a bizarre twist, Ann Prentiss (sister of star Paula from He & She) was convicted by a Santa Monica, CA court of battery in 1998 - for assaulting her 86 year old father, solicitation of murder, assault with a firearm and making terrorists threats toward Richard Benjamin, Paula Prentiss' husband and TV co-star.
Typical plots for Captain Nice: a psychotic doctor kidnaps Candy Cane, injecting her with a lethal tropical poison and Carter tries to become Captain Nice, only to find his mother drank all of the formula.
Captain Nice went off the air on August 28, 1967, the same night Mr. Terrific flapped his last.
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Here's how viewers
remember the show:
"A regular gimmick on Mr. Terrific was the photographic and sound effects used when Stanley took the power pill. His face would turn various colors and smoke would come from his mouth/ears (a la Mr. Drysdale drinking Granny's moonshine).
"When MT's buddy Hal or anyone else would take the pill, instead of becoming super-powered, lens effects were used to make their head shots briefly become wider/thinner. Very clever for 1967 TV.
"Another running gag was the "jet blast" effects with unfortunate results whenever MT took off. It was corny, yes, but very amusing all the same. Captain Nice had very few scenes of the cap flying. The producers must have had budget or production problems. When he did fly, usually shown in very short spurts, there was a good sound effect, a bit like that of Hanna-Barbera/Alex Toth's Mighty Mightor.
"The movie Boogie Nights had a scene in which an extra was dressed in a Captain Nice costume! This little homage blew me away when I saw it, that anyone would remember and care enough to do that, knowing that very few viewers would 'get it'."
- David Kaufman
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"Do you know how Captain Nice/Carter Nash got his super hero name? The initial chemical explosion conveniently ripped Carter's business suit down to cutoff pants over long johns (that his overbearing mother made him wear) and his suit coat was reduced to a swatch of cloth hanging down his back. A witness to his first adventure pointed out and asked him about his monogrammed 'C.N.' belt buckle.
"Carter made up the name Captain Nice off the top of his head (and almost immediately regretted doing so). His mom made his dorky costume and made him wear it before letting him go on his next mission."
- d.j.
Michael
12-18-2004, 11:31 AM
Damn you guys brought up some memories. I was 10 and I loved Batman so the more superheroes the better. I loved both shows but I seem to remember one going off the air faster than the other one. Don't ask me which one...wasn't Wally Cox one of the heroes?
No, Mr. Terrific (Stanley Beamish) was played by Stephen Strimpell.
Carter Nash-Captain Nice was played by Williams Daniels.
Michael
12-18-2004, 11:33 AM
OOPS! DJ, I missed your above posting...:laugh:
JonUrban
12-18-2004, 01:02 PM
Great Job, D.J. That really fills in the blanks.
Now all I have to do is wonder what made me think of these two relics in the first place! :D
(They made a movie out of Mr Terrific episodes? :eek: :eek: )
Michael
12-18-2004, 02:38 PM
Great Job, D.J. That really fills in the blanks.
Now all I have to do is wonder what made me think of these two relics in the first place! :D
...nostalgia of course.
JonUrban
12-19-2004, 06:04 AM
It's amazing what you can find on the Internet!
Michael
12-19-2004, 04:34 PM
...and a nice cast photo of Mr.Terrific.
JonUrban
12-19-2004, 05:46 PM
"Kill the light, Hymie" :D
Michael
12-19-2004, 05:57 PM
Would'nt the complete Mr.Terrific & Captain Nice together in a DVD box set be great! Up next, My Mother The Car! Oh yea!!!
Ready Steady Go
12-19-2004, 11:39 PM
Cool - found an episode of "Captain Nice" in my video archieves. If you love "Get Smart," you'll dig "Captain Nice."
The episode involves the threat of Captain Nice's true identity being exposed by a blackmailing arsonist (played by Vic Tayback, Mel on the "Alice" series). In a funny courtroom finale twist, Captain Nice's mother (Alice Ghostley) saves the day AND protects her son's super hero alter ego from being revealed.
Any 60's show with Vic Tayback, Alice Ghostley and Buck Henry involved in the episode is guaranteed a chuckle.
FredCamp
12-20-2004, 03:33 AM
Wow, haven't thought of these in ages. I loved them as a ten-year-old. Two questions come to mind: which one got his power by taking a little pill, and which one had a female sidekick named Candy Kane?
Seems to me that Mr. Terrific took one pill that lasted an hour, then he had two thirty-minute boosters. I remember one episode in which he dropped one of the boosters onto a conveyor belt of cookies in production and it was identical to the garnish on the other cookies. He ate a bunch of them to find the pill.
"Tha's no nut boy. That's Captain Nice"
Gardo
12-20-2004, 06:24 AM
Seems to me that Mr. Terrific took one pill that lasted an hour, then he had two thirty-minute boosters. I remember one episode in which he dropped one of the boosters onto a conveyor belt of cookies in production and it was identical to the garnish on the other cookies. He ate a bunch of them to find the pill.
"Tha's no nut boy. That's Captain Nice"
Ah yes, the booster pills! It all comes back to me now. I remember pretending that my Vitamin C pills were Mr. Terrific pills--lucky I never overdosed on the little suckers. :cool:
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