Stand By for Action (Stingray)

Last updated

"Stand By for Action"
Stingray episode
Episode no.Episode 25
Directed by Alan Pattillo
Written by Dennis Spooner
Cinematography byPaddy Seale
Editing byEric Pask
Production code17 [1]
Original air date21 March 1965 (1965-03-21)
Guest character voices
Episode chronology
 Previous
"Treasure Down Below"
Next 
"Pink Ice"
List of episodes

"Stand By for Action" is the 25th episode of Stingray, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and produced by their company AP Films (APF) for ITC Entertainment. Written by Dennis Spooner and directed by Alan Pattillo, it was first broadcast on 21 March 1965 on the Anglia, ATV London, Grampian and Southern franchises of the ITV network. [1] [2] It subsequently aired on ATV Midlands on 24 March 1965. [2]

Contents

The series follows the missions of the World Aquanaut Security Patrol (WASP), an organisation responsible for policing the Earth's oceans in the 2060s. Headquartered at the self-contained city of Marineville on the West Coast of North America, the WASP operates a fleet of vessels led by Stingray: a combat submarine crewed by Captain Troy Tempest, Lieutenant "Phones" and Marina, a mute young woman from under the sea. Stingray's adventures bring it into contact with undersea civilisations – some friendly, others hostile – as well as mysterious natural phenomena. The WASP's most powerful enemy is King Titan, ruler of the ocean floor city of Titanica.

In "Stand By for Action", the WASP are working with a film production company to make an action movie based on Stingray's exploits, unaware that it is part of an elaborate plot by Titan's agent X-2-Zero to kill Troy.

Plot

A film studio, Goggleheimer Productions, is turning Stingray's exploits into an action movie. Most of the WASP personnel are cast as themselves, but the director, Marty, is unhappy with Captain Troy Tempest as the lead and replaces him with prima donna Hollywood actor Johnny Swoonara. The heart-throb's arrival at Marineville causes Troy to lose the admiration of Marina and Lieutenant Atlanta Shore, who idolise Swoonara and repeatedly faint in his presence.

The producer, Mr Goggleheimer, is actually Titan's disguised agent X-2-Zero, who is financing the film as part of his latest scheme to kill Troy. After missing an opportunity to shoot him in the back with a handgun, X-2-Zero uses a knife to cut the ropes on an overhead lighting rig, causing it to fall to the floor and almost crush Troy. Joined by Lieutenant "Phones", Troy commandeers Swoonara's hovercar and pursues X-2-Zero to his house on Lemoy Island. However, by changing into a new disguise, X-2-Zero passes himself off as an innocent local, and the officers return to Marineville empty-handed.

Angered by X-2-Zero's failure, Titan orders him to destroy Stingray. Piloting his submersible, X-2-Zero intercepts Stingray during a location shoot and cripples it with a torpedo. Swoonara, playing Troy, cannot deal with the situation and suffers a nervous breakdown. Reaching his comrades by sea scooter, Troy takes charge and helps Phones navigate Stingray back to Marineville. Atlanta and Marina get over Swoonara and acknowledge Troy as their true hero.

Regular voice cast

Production

Most of the incidental music was recycled from earlier Stingray episodes, as well as episodes of Supercar and Fireball XL5 . [1] [2] The only original music cue was a series of electronic chords that serve to identify X-2-Zero masquerading as "Mr Goggleheimer". [2]

The Johnny Swoonara puppet was originally Colonel Steve Zodiac in Fireball XL5, altered for its appearance in this episode with a darker wig of hair. [3] Swoonara's arrival at Marineville is accompanied by a fanfare that was originally composed for the Fireball XL5 episode "Flying Zodiac". [1] The hovercar that X-2-Zero uses to make his getaway first appeared as Zodiac's car in the same series. [2]

The puppet playing director Marty was modelled on Abe Mandell, a producer with ITC's New York branch. Gerry Anderson deduced that APF's puppet sculptors must have "clocked" Mandell during one of his visits to the UK. [1] [2] [4]

The Goggleheimer studio set used props from the Black Rock desert base featured in Supercar. [2] According to Anderson, the overhead lights that fall on Troy were not miniature models, but actual working lights from APF's studios. [4]

Reception

In his DVD audio commentary for the episode, Anderson remembered "Stand By for Action" as a particularly fun episode to film. He noted that the guest characters are parodies of film actors and production crew, remarking that moments like Atlanta and Marina's swooning were intended to "take the mickey out of our thespian friends". He thought that such behaviour was reminiscent of the hysterical reactions of screaming fans to contemporary stars like Frank Sinatra. [4]

Ian Fryer, who notes that the episode lampoons film stars, writes that the caricatured look of the Steve Zodiac puppet – modelled to serve as a "handsome, all-American hero" for Fireball XL5 – made it an ideal object of parody in Stingray, whose puppet cast had been sculpted with greater realism. [5]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Supermarionation</span> Style of television and film production

Supermarionation is a style of television and film production employed by British company AP Films in its puppet TV series and feature films of the 1960s. These productions were created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed at APF's studios on the Slough Trading Estate. The characters were played by electronic marionettes with a moveable lower lip, which opened and closed in time with pre-recorded dialogue by means of a solenoid in the puppet's head or chest. The productions were mostly science fiction with the puppetry supervised by Christine Glanville, art direction by either Bob Bell or Keith Wilson, and music composed by Barry Gray. They also made extensive use of scale model special effects, directed by Derek Meddings.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gerry Anderson</span> English producer and director (1929–2012)

Gerald Alexander Anderson was an English television and film producer, director, writer and occasional voice artist, who is known for his futuristic television programmes, especially his 1960s productions filmed with "Supermarionation".

<i>Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons</i> 1960s British television series

Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons, often shortened to Captain Scarlet, is a British science fiction television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company Century 21 Productions for distributor ITC Entertainment. It is one of several Anderson series that were filmed using a form of electronic marionette puppetry dubbed "Supermarionation" combined with scale model special effects sequences. Running to thirty-two 25-minute episodes, it was first broadcast on ITV regional franchises between 1967 and 1968 and has since been transmitted in more than 40 other countries, including the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Japan.

Barry Gray was a British musician and composer best known for his collaborations with television and film producer Gerry Anderson.

<i>Stingray</i> (1964 TV series) British childrens science fiction television series

Stingray is a British children's science fiction television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and produced by AP Films (APF) for ITC Entertainment. Filmed in 1963 using a combination of electronic marionette puppetry and scale model special effects, it was APF's sixth puppet series and the third to be produced under the banner of "Supermarionation". It premiered in October 1964 and ran for 39 half-hour episodes.

<i>Supercar</i> (TV series) British television series, 1961–1962

Supercar is a British children's science fiction television series produced by Gerry Anderson and Arthur Provis' AP Films (APF) for Associated Television and ITC Entertainment. Two series totalling 39 episodes were filmed between September 1960 and January 1962. Budgeted at £2,000 per episode, it was Anderson's first half-hour series as well as his first science fiction production.

<i>Fireball XL5</i> British childrens TV series

Fireball XL5 is a 1960s British children's science-fiction puppet television series about the missions of Fireball XL5, a vessel of the World Space Patrol that polices the cosmos in the year 2062. Commanded by Colonel Steve Zodiac, XL5 defends Earth from interstellar threats while encountering a wide variety of alien civilisations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AP Films</span>

AP Films or APF was a British independent film production company of the 1950s until the early 1970s. The company became internationally known for its imaginative children's action-adventure marionette television series – most significantly Thunderbirds – produced for British ITV network companies Associated-Rediffusion, Granada, ABC and ATV. At its height, the company employed more than 200 staff.

<i>Zero-X</i> Fictional spacecraft

Zero-X is a fictional Earth spacecraft that first appeared in two of Gerry and Sylvia Anderson's Supermarionation productions, the 1966 film Thunderbirds Are Go and the 1967 television series Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons. Although publicity material for the various Supermarionation series, and the TV Century 21 comic, made references to connections between the Thunderbirds and Captain Scarlet canons, Zero-X is the only official link between the two series.

Derek Meddings was a British film and television special effects designer. He was initially noted for his work on the "Supermarionation" TV puppet series produced by Gerry Anderson, and later for the 1970s and 1980s James Bond and Superman film series.

<i>Thunderbirds Are Go</i> 1966 film directed by David Lane

Thunderbirds Are Go is a 1966 British science-fiction puppet film based on Thunderbirds, a Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and produced by their company Century 21 Productions. Written by the Andersons and directed by David Lane, Thunderbirds Are Go concerns spacecraft Zero-X and its human mission to Mars. When Zero-X suffers a malfunction during re-entry, it is up to life-saving organisation International Rescue, supported by its technologically-advanced Thunderbird machines, to activate the trapped crew's escape pod before the spacecraft hits the ground.

Christine Glanville was an English puppeteer who spent much of her professional life contributing to television series produced by Gerry Anderson.

TV Century 21, later renamed TV21, TV21 and Tornado, TV21 and Joe 90, and TV21 again, was a weekly British children's comic published by City Magazines during the latter half of the 1960s. Originally produced in partnership with Gerry and Sylvia Anderson's Century 21 Productions, it promoted the company's many science-fiction television series. The comic was published in the style of a newspaper of the future, with the front page usually dedicated to fictional news stories set in the worlds of Fireball XL5, Stingray, Thunderbirds, Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons and other stories. The front covers were also in colour, with photographs from one or more of the Anderson series or occasionally of the stars of the back-page feature.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Plant of Doom</span> Episode of Stingray

"Plant of Doom" is an episode of Stingray, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and produced by their company AP Films for ITC Entertainment. Written by Alan Fennell and directed by David Elliott, it was the second episode to be filmed but was first broadcast as the 34th episode, late in the series' original run, on 23 May 1965 on ATV London.

"The Ghost Ship" is the third episode of Stingray, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films (APF) for ITC Entertainment. Written by Alan Fennell and directed by Desmond Saunders, it was the eighth episode filmed and was first broadcast on 18 October 1964 on the Anglia, ATV London, Border, Grampian and Southern franchises of the ITV network. It subsequently aired on ATV Midlands, Channel and Westward on 20 October.

"The Big Gun" is the 17th episode of Stingray, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and produced by their company AP Films for ITC Entertainment. Written by Alan Fennell and directed by David Elliott, it was first broadcast on 24 January 1965 on the Anglia, Border, Grampian, ATV London and Southern franchises of the ITV network. It subsequently aired on ATV Midlands on 26 January 1965.

"Titan Goes Pop" is an episode of Stingray, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films (APF) for ITC Entertainment. Written by Dennis Spooner and directed by Alan Pattillo, it was the 29th episode to be filmed and was first broadcast on 6 December 1964 by the on the Anglia, ATV London, Border, Grampian and Southern franchises of the ITV network. It subsequently aired on ATV Midlands, Channel and Westward on 8 December.

<i>Filmed in Supermarionation</i> 2014 British film

Filmed in Supermarionation is a 2014 documentary film about Gerry Anderson, Sylvia Anderson and the struggling group of filmmakers who found success producing space-age puppet television series such as Supercar, Joe 90, Fireball XL5, Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons and Thunderbirds. Directed by Stephen La Rivière, and based on his book of the same name, the film was favorably received by critics. It was released theatrically in the UK on 11 October 2014, having been premiered at the British Film Institute on 30 September 2014. It was subsequently released on DVD and Blu-ray.

"Tom Thumb Tempest" is the 22nd episode of Stingray, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and produced by their company AP Films (APF) for ITC Entertainment. Written by Alan Fennell and directed by Alan Pattillo, it was first broadcast on 28 February 1965 on the Anglia, ATV London, Grampian and Southern franchises of the ITV network. It subsequently aired on ATV Midlands on 3 March 1965.

"Stingray", alternatively titled The Pilot, is the first episode of Stingray, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and produced by their company AP Films (APF) for ITC Entertainment. Written by the Andersons and directed by Alan Pattillo, it was first broadcast in Japan on 7 September 1964 and in the UK in October.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Bentley, Chris (2008) [2001]. The Complete Gerry Anderson: The Authorised Episode Guide (4th ed.). Reynolds & Hearn. p. 86. ISBN   978-1-905287-74-1.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Pixley, Andrew (2022). Stingray: Adventures in Videcolor. Network Distributing. pp. 268–269. 7958280.
  3. Rogers, Dave; Marriott, John; Drake, Chris; Bassett, Graeme (1993). Supermarionation Classics: Stingray, Thunderbirds and Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons. Boxtree. p. 54. ISBN   978-1-85283-900-0.
  4. 1 2 3 Anderson, Gerry (2001). "Stand By for Action" DVD audio commentary. Granada Ventures (ITV DVD). 5037115012333 (EAN).
  5. Fryer, Ian (2016). The Worlds of Gerry and Sylvia Anderson: The Story Behind International Rescue. Fonthill Media. p. 83. ISBN   978-1-78155-504-0.