The Gallant Men | |
---|---|
Created by | Richard Bluel |
Starring | |
Country of origin | USA |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 26 |
Production | |
Executive producer | William T. Orr |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | October 5, 1962 – March 30, 1963 |
The Gallant Men is a 1962–1963 ABC Warner Bros. Television series which depicted an infantry company of American soldiers fighting their way through Italy in World War II.
Description
The Gallant Men dramatized the experiences of the fictional Able Company within the 36th Infantry Division, Fifth Army, beginning with the division's amphibious landing at Salerno, Italy, on September 9, 1943.[1] The pilot episode was directed by Robert Altman.[2]
The company's commander was Capt. Jim Benedict, played by William Reynolds, who later appeared in the series, The F.B.I. Their exploits were narrated by a newspaper correspondent — Conley Wright, played by Robert McQueeney — who accompanied them on their missions. The show lasted only one season. It succumbed to tough competition from the other networks and tepid responses from critics and audiences. The show also faced unfavorable comparisons with ABC's other World War II series launched the same year, Combat!.
The Gallant Men tended to be formulaic in plotting and characterization, with such stereotypes as ladies' man PFC Pete D'Angelo (played by Eddie Fontaine), hard-as-nails Sgt. John McKenna (Richard X. Slattery), and inseparable buddies Pvt. Ernie Lucavich (Roland La Starza) and Pvt. Sam Hanson (Robert Gothie). The regular cast would unrealistically dispatch large numbers of German troops while experiencing minimal or no injuries themselves in the Italian campaign, where historically the Allies suffered heavy casualties from determined German resistance that lasted until the end of World War II in Europe. Although promotional materials for the series promised a dramatization of the Italian campaign from Salerno to Rome,[3] the series played out nearly in real time. Its 26 episodes take place between September 1943 and early spring 1944.[4]
The series blended original footage with shots from wartime newsreels and stock footage from Warner Bros. war films such as Force of Arms, Darby's Rangers and A Walk in the Sun.
Regular cast
Actor/Character | |
---|---|
William Reynolds | Capt. Jim Benedict |
Robert McQueeney | Conley Wright |
Robert Ridgely | Lt. Frank Kimbro |
Richard X. Slattery | 1st Sgt. John McKenna |
Eddie Fontaine | PFC Pete D'Angelo |
Roland La Starza | Pvt. Ernie Lucavich |
Roger Davis | Pvt. Roger Gibson |
Robert Gothie | Pvt. Sam Hanson |
Episodes
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Battle Zone" | Robert Altman | Story by : James Merriam Moore Teleplay by : Halsted Welles | October 5, 1962 |
2 | "Retreat to Concord" | Richard C. Sarafian | Story by : Leonard Brown Teleplay by : William Bruckner | October 12, 1962 |
3 | "And Cain Cried Out" | Charles R. Rondeau | Ken Pettus | October 19, 1962 |
4 | "The Ninety-Eight Cent Man" | Richard C. Sarafian | Richard L. Adams | October 26, 1962 |
5 | "One Moderately Peaceful Sunday" | Richard C. Sarafian | Montgomery Pittman | November 2, 1962 |
6 | "Lesson for a Lover" | Charles R. Rondeau | Story by : Richard M. Bluel Teleplay by : Richard Landau & Jerry Davis | November 9, 1962 |
7 | "And the End of Evil Things" | Richard C. Sarafian | David Lang | November 16, 1962 |
8 | "Some Tears Fall Dry" | Charles R. Rondeau | Don Tait | November 23, 1962 |
9 | "Fury in a Quiet Village" | Richard C. Sarafian | Stephen Lord | November 30, 1962 |
10 | "Signals for an End Run" | Richard C. Sarafian | Story by : Arthur Fitz-Richard & William D'Angelo Teleplay by : David Giler & Berne Giler | December 7, 1962 |
11 | "Robertino" | Charles R. Rondeau | Herman Groves | December 14, 1962 |
12 | "A Place to Die" | Unknown | Unknown | December 21, 1962 |
13 | "Advance and Be Recognized" | Unknown | Unknown | December 29, 1962 |
14 | "To Hold Up a Mirror" | Unknown | Unknown | January 5, 1963 |
15 | "Boast Not of Tomorrow" | Unknown | Unknown | January 12, 1963 |
16 | "The Dogs of War" | Unknown | Unknown | January 19, 1963 |
17 | "The Bridge" | Unknown | Unknown | January 26, 1963 |
18 | "The Leathernecks" | Unknown | Unknown | February 2, 1963 |
19 | "Next of Kin" | Unknown | Ken Pettus | February 9, 1963 |
20 | "Operation Secret" | Unknown | Unknown | February 16, 1963 |
21 | "The Warriors" | Unknown | Unknown | February 23, 1963 |
22 | "One Puka Puka" | Leslie H. Martinson | David Lang | March 2, 1963 |
23 | "Ol' Buddy" | Richard L. Bare | William Koenig | March 9, 1963 |
24 | "A Taste of Peace" | Unknown | Unknown | March 16, 1963 |
25 | "The Crucible" | Charles R. Rondeau | Story by : William L. Stuart Teleplay by : Don Tait | March 23, 1963 |
26 | "Tommy" | Charles R. Rondeau | Unknown | March 30, 1963 |
Development
Warner Bros. television producer William T. Orr tried as early as 1960 to generate interest in a weekly dramatic series set in World War II. The early concept was called Battle Zone. The reception he found from the three major TV networks was lukewarm at best. "It wasn't that the networks were hostile to the idea," Orr told The New York Times in 1962. "They seemed to be in a kind of morass of indecision about it."[5] Orr also predicted that, if Gallant Men were successful, networks would warm to more series set during the war. Looking for more original programming in its 1962-63 TV season, ABC gave the green light to Battle Zone, which was re-titled The Gallant Men.
The pilot episode was budgeted at $170,000 ($1.46 million in 2020 dollars).[6] In preparation for shooting, director Robert Altman and story editor Richard Bluel screened John Huston's 1945 documentary The Battle of San Pietro. Eight days were spent on production, broken down into one day each for tests and post-production, and six shooting days. Primary filming took place in December 1961 and January 1962.[7] Warner Bros. offered Altman a contract to continue directing the series, but the director found himself dissatisfied with Warner's production style and accepted an offer from Combat! executive producer Selig J. Seligman instead.[7]
Members of the principal cast received basic military training on the Warner backlot over the spring of 1962, led by two veterans of the Italian campaign, Maj. Richard Lauer and SFC Robert McClintic.[8] The cast familiarized themselves with action sequences using trenches and bomb craters dug by studio special effects personnel.[9]
In May 1962,[10] Army Lt. Col. David Sisco was tapped to be the series' military adviser. By coincidence, Sisco was friends with. Maj. Homer Jones, the technical adviser for Combat![11] Sisco served in the 36th Infantry Division in Italy, the group depicted in The Gallant Men. His job wasn't just limited to teaching the actors how to properly shoot; at times, Sisco and his Army superiors nixed or altered storylines so as not to cast soldiers or the Army itself in a negative light.[11] At least one television critic said such changes weakened the show.[12]
Cancellation and syndication
In December 1962 ABC cancelled The Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Show, opening an hour-long gap (7:30 - 8:30 p.m. ET) in the network's Saturday primetime schedule. Gallant Men was moved into that timeslot.[13] By February 1963, doubtful reports began to circulate about The Gallant Men's future.[14] Late that month, ABC announced it would not order a second season, and the same week William T. Orr was removed as head of Warner's television division.[15][16] Warner Bros. then tried to sell commissioned but unproduced episode scripts to Combat![17] That effort may have borne fruit, as three episodes from the second season of Combat! are credited to Gallant Men writers.[16]
Before the year was out, Warner Bros. was selling the series' 26 episodes to local stations across the country as part of its syndicated program offerings. A magazine ad in February 1964 claimed Gallant Men reruns beat first-run network programming in the New York City television market, and that the series was running in 20 markets across the United States.[18] The series remained part of Warner Bros.' television syndication package until at least 1968.[19]
Home media
On July 24, 2012, Warner Bros. released The Gallant Men: The Complete Series on DVD in Region 1 via their Warner Archive Collection.[20] This is a Manufacture-on-Demand (MOD) release, available exclusively in the US and only through Warner's online store.
Tie-ins
- Eddie Fontaine sang lyrics to Sy Miller's end title song "My Heart Belongs to You" on one episode with Warner Bros. Records releasing the song on 45rpm
- The Louis Marx and Company released a 1963 military playset with character figures from the show joining the usual American toy soldiers.[21]
- In 1966, Senator Everett McKinley Dirksen recorded the song "Gallant Men." It became a hit in the U.S., reaching #29 on the Billboard Hot 100 during the winter of 1967.[22] It also reached #100 in Canada.[23]
- In 1963, Dell Publishing produced one issue of a comic book based on the show. The comic book contained two original standalone stories not drawn from the broadcast episodes.
References
- ↑ Welles, Halsted (October 5, 1962). "The Gallant Men (pilot)". The Gallant Men. Season 1. Episode 1. ABC.
- ↑ Davidsmeyer, Jo (2011). "Robert Altman". CombatFan.com. Retrieved January 18, 2020.
- ↑ No byline (May 7, 1962). "How Many Americans Will Relive This Story on October 5, 1962?". Broadcasting. Broadcasting Publications, Inc.
- ↑ Tait, Don (March 23, 1963). "The Crucible". The Gallant Men. Season 1. Episode 25. ABC.
- ↑ Schumach, Murray (24 August 1962). "2 TV FILM GROUPS PLAN WAR SERIES: Warner Brothers and A.B.C See Future in Subject". The New York Times. p. 14.
- ↑ "CPI Inflation Calculator". Bureau of Labor Statistics. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
- 1 2 McGilligan, Patrick (1989). Robert Altman: Jumping Off the Cliff. St. Martin's Press. p. 184.
- ↑ No byline (1 July 1962). "'Gallant Men' Actors Undergo GI Training". Hartford Courant. p. 5G.
- ↑ No byline (6 October 1962). "In Hollywood, This Means War". TV Guide.
- ↑ No byline (26 May 1962). "Battle Veteran to Aid Gallant Men Fighting". Los Angeles Times. p. B2.
- 1 2 Humphrey, Hal (21 December 1962). "War in Hollywood Is Hell for Adviser". The Washington Post. p. 14.
- ↑ No byline (12 January 1963). "TV Scout: Palmer Sports Has New Flare". Nashville Tennessean. p. 16.
- ↑ Adams, Val (26 November 1962). "A.B.C. TO CANCEL ROY ROGERS SHOW: Program Realignment Will Affect 4 TV Programs". The New York Times. p. 59.
- ↑ No byline (February 18, 1963). "Next Season? More of the Same for TV". Broadcasting. Broadcasting Publications, Inc.
- ↑ Schumach, Murray (14 March 1963). "TV OFFICIAL GIVES AUTONOMY PLEDGE: Warner's Cites Inducements to Creative Talent". The New York Times.
- 1 2 Bowie, Stephen (2 April 2013). "The Gallant Men". The Classic History TV Blog. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
- ↑ No byline (20 February 1963). "Sudden Death for W.B.'s Gallant Men". Variety.
- ↑ No byline (February 17, 1964). "The Gallant Men Beats Network Competition in New York". Broadcasting. Broadcasting Publications, Inc.
- ↑ No byline (January 22, 1968). "Off-Network Series From Warner Bros.-Seven Arts". Broadcasting. Broadcasting Publications, Inc.
- ↑ Gallant Men, The: Complete Collection
- ↑ Playset Magazine, Issue 68, March/April 2013, "The Gallant Men Play Sets."
- ↑ Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles 1955–1990 - ISBN 0-89820-089-X
- ↑ "Item Display - RPM - Library and Archives Canada". Collectionscanada.gc.ca. 1967-01-02. Retrieved 2019-02-17.