Mister Ed

Mister Ed

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Mister Ed

GenreSitcom
Created byWalter R. Brooks
Directed by
Starring
Voices ofAllan "Rocky" Lane
Theme music composer
Opening theme"Mister Ed" by Jay Livingston
Composer(s)
  • Raoul Krushaar
  • Jack Cookerly
  • Marlin Skiles
  • Dave Kahn
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
No.of seasons6
No.of episodes143 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s)Al Simon
Producer(s)Arthur Lubin
Cinematography
Running time28 mins.
Production company(s)The Mister Ed Company
Filmways
DistributorMGM Television
Release
Original network
Original releaseJanuary 5, 1961 – February 6, 1966
Chronology
Related showsMister Ed (2004)

Mister Ed is an American television sitcom produced by Filmways[1] which originally aired in syndication from January 5 to July 2, 1961, and then on CBS from October 1, 1961, to February 6, 1966.[2] The show's title character - a talking horse, originally appearing in short stories by Walter R. Brooks.

Mister Ed is one of the few series to debut in syndication and be picked up by a major network for prime time.[2]

Beginnings[edit]

The Mister Ed show concept was derived from a series of short stories by children's author Walter R. Brooks, which began with The Talking Horse in the September 18, 1937, issue of Liberty magazine.[3] Brooks is otherwise best known for the Freddy the Pig series of children's novels, which likewise featured talking animals that interact with humans. Sonia Chernus, secretary to director Arthur Lubin, introduced Lubin to the Brooks stories and is credited with developing the concept for television.

The show's concept resembles that of the Francis the Talking Mule movies in which an equine title character talks, but only to one person, thus causing a variety of opportunities and frustrations. The first six Francis films (1950–55) were also directed by Lubin.[4]

Lubin wanted to make a Francis TV series but had been unable to secure the rights. However someone told him about Brooks' series of stories. He optioned these for TV.[5]

Comedian George Burns financed the original pilot for Mister Ed which was shot at his McCadden Studio in Hollywood at a cost of $70,000.[5] Scott McKay played Wilbur. Jack Benny was also involved behind the scenes.[6] Unable to sell the show to a network, Lubin decided to sell the show into syndication first. He managed to get single sponsor identification for the program on over 100 stations. The show was recast with Alan Young in the lead. Production began in November 1960, although Lubin did not direct early episodes because he was working in Europe on a film. The first 26 episodes were well received enough for the show to be picked up by CBS.[5][7]

Synopsis[edit]

The show in effect had two leads operating as a comedy team. The title role of Mister Ed, a talking palomino, was played by gelding Bamboo Harvester and voiced by former Western film actor Allan Lane. The role of Ed's owner, a genial but somewhat klutzy architect named Wilbur Post, was played by Alan Young. Many of the program's gags follow from Mister Ed's tendency to talk only to Wilbur, his skills as a troublemaker, and his precociously human-like behaviour that far exceeds anything those around Wilbur expect of a horse. A running gag is other characters hearing Wilbur talking to Ed and asking to whom he is talking. Another running gag centers on Wilbur being accident-prone and inadvertently causing harm to himself and others. According to Lubin, Young was chosen for the lead role because he "just seemed like the sort of guy a horse would talk to".[4]

The other main character throughout the series is Wilbur's generally tolerant young wife, Carol (Connie Hines). The Posts also have two sets of neighbors, to whom Ed delights in making Wilbur appear as eccentric as possible. They included the Addisons, Roger (Larry Keating) and his wife Kay (Edna Skinner), who both appeared from the pilot episode until Keating's death in 1963; thereafter, Skinner continued appearing as Kay, without mention of Roger's absence, until the neighbors were recast. During this period, Kay's brother Paul Fenton (Jack Albertson), who had made occasional appearances before, appears. Following the Addisons, the Posts' new neighbors were Col. Gordon Kirkwood, USAF (Ret.), Wilbur's former commanding officer (Leon Ames), and his wife Winnie (Florence MacMichael). They appeared on the series from 1963 to 1965.[2] In the final season, the Kirkwoods were phased out, while Carol's grumpy and uptight father, Mr. Higgins (Barry Kelley), who appeared occasionally throughout the entire series, apparently moved in with Wilbur and Carol during the final episodes. Wilbur and his father-in-law did not get along at all because Mr. Higgins loathed Wilbur, whose quirky eccentricity and klutzy, half-hearted attempts to be friendly always clashed with Mr. Higgins's emotionless and uptight personality. Carol's father never stopped trying to persuade her to divorce Wilbur, whom he often and openly referred to as a "kook" because of Wilbur's clumsiness. Alan Young performed double duty during the final season of the series, also directing nearly all episodes.

Ed's ability to talk was never explained, or ever contemplated much on the show. In the first episode, when Wilbur expresses an inability to understand the situation, Ed offers the show's only remark on the subject: "Don't try. It's bigger than both of us!"

The Posts resided at 17230 Valley Spring Road in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles.[8]

Cast[edit]

Main cast
Supporting cast
  • Larry Keating as Roger Addison (1961–63); Seasons 1–3
  • Edna Skinner as Kay Addison (1961–63); Seasons 1–4
  • Leon Ames as Gordon Kirkwood (1963–65); Seasons 4–5
  • Florence MacMichael as Winnie Kirkwood (1963–65); Seasons 4–5
  • Jack Albertson as Paul Fenton (occasionally 1961–63); Seasons 2–4
  • Barry Kelley as Carol's Father, Mr. Higgins (occasionally 1962–65, recurring 1965-66)

Guest stars[edit]

Several celebrity guest stars appeared as themselves during the course of the series:

Other known performers appeared in character roles:

Episodes[edit]

Production notes[edit]

The original, unaired pilot for the series was titled "Wilbur Pope and Mister Ed" and featured an unrelated instrumental big-band theme (with footage of Studebaker Lark automobiles being driven underneath the opening credits). In the pilot, which used a script that was nearly identical to that which would be used on the series premiere, used a totally different cast. Scott McKay played the title part of Wilbur Pope (surname later changed to "Post" prior to the series making it to air) and Sandra White played the role of Wilbur's wife.

The first horse that played Mister Ed for the first, unaired pilot episode was a chestnut gelding.[15] The horse proved to be unruly and difficult to work with and was replaced with the horse named Bamboo Harvester (1949–1970), a crossbred gelding of American Saddlebred, Arabian and grade ancestry.[16] A second pilot episode was filmed and Bamboo Harvester remained with the series until its cancellation.

Making Ed "talk"[edit]

Mister Ed's producers left the talents that performed the title role uncredited. The show's credits listed Mister Ed as being played only by "Himself".

The voice actor for Ed's spoken lines was Allan "Rocky" Lane, a former B-movie cowboy star. Sheldon Allman provided Ed's singing voice in episodes; his solo line ("I am Mister Ed") at the close of the show's theme song was provided by its composer, Jay Livingston. Allan Lane was alluded to by the producers only as "an actor who prefers to remain nameless." After the show became a hit, Lane campaigned the producers for credit but never received it.

The horse Bamboo Harvester portrayed Ed throughout the run. Ed's stablemate, a quarterhorse named Pumpkin, also served as Bamboo Harvester's stunt double for the show. This horse later appeared again in the television series Green Acres.

Bamboo Harvester's trainer was Les Hilton. To create the impression that Ed was having a conversation, Hilton initially used a thread technique he had employed for Lubin's earlier Mule films; in time, though, this became unnecessary. As actor Alan Young recounted: "It was initially done by putting a piece of nylon thread in his mouth. But Ed actually learned to move his lips on cue when the trainer touched his hoof. In fact, he soon learned to do it when I stopped talking during a scene! Ed was very smart."[17]

Reports circulated during and after the show's run that the talking effect was achieved by crew members applying peanut butter to the horse's gums. Alan Young said in later interviews that he invented the story. "Al Simon and Arthur Lubin, the producers, suggested we keep the method [of making the horse appear to talk] a secret because they thought kids would be disappointed if they found out the technical details of how it was done, so I made up the peanut butter story, and everyone bought it."[17][18]

Young added that Bamboo Harvester saw trainer Les Hilton as the disciplinarian father figure. When scolded by Hilton for missing a cue, the horse would move to Young for comfort, treating the actor as a mother figure. Hilton told Young this was a positive development.[19]

Death[edit]

There are conflicting stories involving of the death of Bamboo Harvester, the horse that played Mister Ed.

Alan Young said he had frequently visited Harvester in retirement. He states that Bamboo Harvester died from an inadvertent tranquilizer administered while he was in a stable on Sparks Street in Burbank, California, where he lived with his trainer Lester Hilton. Young says Hilton was out of town visiting relatives, and a temporary caregiver might have seen Bamboo Harvester rolling on the ground, struggling to get up. Young said Harvester was a heavy horse, and he was not always strong enough to get back on his feet without struggling. The theory is, the caregiver thought the horse was in distress, administered a tranquilizer, and, for unknown reasons, the horse died within hours. The remains were cremated and scattered by Hilton in the Los Angeles area at a spot known only to him.[20]

Another story claims that by 1968 Bamboo Harvester suffering old age ailments and was euthanized in 1970, with no publicity, and buried at Snodgrass Farm in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.[21]

A third story claims that after Mr. Ed Bamboo Harvester's health was failing, that he suffered from arthritis and kidney problems, and had to be euthanized at the age of 19.[22]

A different horse who died in Oklahoma in February 1979 was widely thought to be Bamboo Harvester, but this horse was, in fact, a horse that posed for the still pictures of Mister Ed used by the production company for the show's press kits. This horse was unofficially known as "Mister Ed", which led to his being reported as such (including sardonic comments on Saturday Night Live's Weekend Update) following his own death.[23]

Theme song[edit]

The theme song, titled "Mister Ed", was written by the songwriting team of Jay Livingston and Ray Evans and sung by Livingston himself. The melody is derived from that of a German Romantic-era song by Emile Waldteufel. The first seven episodes used only instrumental music to open the show; thereafter the version with lyrics was used. Livingston agreed to sing the song himself until a professional singer could be found; the producers liked the songwriter's vocals and kept them on the broadcast.

The theme song received renewed publicity twenty years after the show went off the air when Jim Brown, a preacher from South Point, Ohio, claimed in May 1986 that it contained "satanic messages" if heard in reverse. Brown and his colleague Greg Hudson claimed that the phrases "Someone sung this song for Satan" and "the source is Satan" would be audible. At their behest teenagers burned over 300 records and cassettes of secular music with alleged satanic messages. The teens did not burn a copy of Television's Greatest Hits, but Brown asserted that "Satan can be an influence whether they [the songwriters] know it or not. We don't think they did it on purpose and we're not getting down on Mister Ed."[24]

Sponsorship[edit]

The series was sponsored from 1961 to 1963 by Studebaker-Packard Corporation and Studebaker Corporation.[25] At first, sponsorship came from Studebaker's dealer association, with corporate sponsorship coming from South Bend once the series had been picked up by CBS. Studebakers were featured prominently in the show during this period. The Posts are shown owning a 1962 Lark convertible, and the company used publicity shots featuring the Posts and Mister Ed with their product (various cast members also appeared in "integrated commercials" for Lark at the end of the program). When another Lark convertible served as the official pace car at the 1962 Indianapolis 500, Connie Hines attended the race as part of the promotion.

Studebaker's sales dropped dramatically in 1961 and, despite their exposure via sponsoring this program, never recovered. Studebaker ended U.S. motor vehicle production on December 20, 1963. Later, Studebaker's sponsorship and vehicle-supply agreement ended, and The Ford Motor Company provided the vehicles seen on-camera starting at the beginning of 1965. (Studebaker vehicle production ended in March 1966.)

DVD releases[edit]

MGM Home Entertainment released two Best-of collections of Mister Ed on DVD in Region 1. Volume 1 (released January 13, 2004) contains 21 episodes and Volume 2 (released March 8, 2005) contains 20 episodes. Due to poor sales,[26] further volumes were not released.

MGM also released a single-disc release entitled Mister Ed's Barnyard Favorites on July 26, 2005 which contains the first eight episodes featured on Volume One.

Shout! Factory announced in June 2009 that they had acquired the rights to release Mister Ed on DVD, and subsequently released the six seasons on DVD in Region 1 in the U.S. Notably, Seasons 4 and 5 are not available outside of the continental U.S. The sixth and final season was released on May 12, 2015.[27]

Syndicated versions of eight episodes were utilized for Season One DVD release. All other DVD releases contain unedited, full-length versions.[28]

One episode (the second-season episode "Ed the Beneficiary") has lapsed into the public domain. Also in the public domain is a 19-minute production of the United States Department of the Treasury, done in the style of a Mister Ed episode with the show's full cast (but without a laugh track), promoting Savings Bonds, and the original unaired pilot, which was published without a copyright notice.

On December 9, 2014, Shout! Factory released Mister Ed- Complete Series on DVD in Region 1.[29] The 22-disc set contains all 143 episodes of the series as well as bonus features.

DVD NameEp #Release Date
Season One/The Complete First Season26October 6, 2009
The Complete Second Season26February 2, 2010
The Complete Third Season26June 1, 2010
The Complete Fourth Season♦26November 16, 2010[30]
The Complete Fifth Season♦26June 21, 2011[31]
The Final Season/The Complete Sixth Season13May 12, 2015[32]
The Complete Series143December 9, 2014

♦- Shout! Factory select title, sold exclusively through Shout's online store

Remakes[edit]

In 2004, a remake was planned for the Fox network, with Sherman Hemsley as the voice of Mister Ed, David Alan Basche as Wilbur, and Sherilyn Fenn as Carol.[33] The pilot was filmed but was not picked up by Fox. The show's writer and producer, Drake Sather, committed suicide shortly before the pilot's completion.[citation needed]

In 2012, Waterman Entertainment announced they were developing a new feature film based on Mister Ed.[34]

Legacy[edit]

A race horse named after the character in the television show took part in the 1994 Grand National steeplechase at Aintree, England but did not complete the course.

In 2007, it was reported that a housing developer intended to create a community near Tahlequah, Oklahoma, built around the supposed final resting place of Mister Ed (who died in 1970). It was intended to be themed to the style of the show and its period.[35]

In popular culture[edit]

Films[edit]

  • Talking horses are featured in other live action films such as the Monkees' Head (1968), Hot to Trot (1988), and Ready to Run (2000).
  • In the film Dr. Dolittle (1998), while the titular doctor is committed to a mental hospital, he watches an episode of Mister Ed with two of the hospital's orderlies, who discuss their theories of how Mister Ed was trained to move his lips and "talk".

Games[edit]

  • In the videogame Dragon Quest IV for the Nintendo DS, there is a town where many NPCs with names reminiscent of famous people can be. The town features a talking horse named Mr. Ed.

Music[edit]

  • The Beastie Boys use a sample of Mister Ed's voice in their song "Time To Get Ill" from the album Licensed to Ill (1987).
  • The song "Mr. Klaw" by They Might Be Giants features lyrics based on those of the show's theme. The song appeared on the album Miscellaneous T.[36]
  • "Now That I Am Dead" by French Frith Kaiser Thompson features a Mister Ed impersonation on the line "I Am Mister Dead".
  • A tribute music CD called Mister Ed Unplugged was released, featuring new recordings of the "Theme From Mister Ed" and longer versions of "The Pretty Little Filly" and "Empty Feedbag Blues", which were both written by Sheldon Allman, the original singing voice of Mister Ed.
  • Dell Comics published Mister Ed in Four Color #1295[37]

Television[edit]

  • In the All in the Family episode "Edith's Conversion" (Season 4, Episode 9), in which Mike and Gloria feed the Bunkers horse meat without telling them but later cave in and tell Edith about it, Edith exclaims, "I keep thinking about Mr. Ed!"
  • In the Back at the Barnyard episode "Saving Mrs. Beady", Mister Ed was the last animal to jump into the hospital Mrs. Beady was in, but then looks at her and says "Wait a minute, you're not Aunt Mabel." He appears again later in the episode as Dr. Furtwangler's 4:00 patient.
  • A sketch from Chappelle's Show parodying the documentary series Frontline "profiles" racist Hollywood animals, one of which was Mister Ed, who was shown belittling a black actress with racial slurs.
    • The Mister Ed clip from this sketch was later posted to the Internet without context and claimed to be a legitimate clip from the original series, leading to a brief surge in the mistaken belief that the Mister Ed TV show had been racist.[38]
  • In the sitcom Dinosaurs, one of Earl Sinclair's favorite shows is Mister Ugh, a parody of Mister Ed featuring a caveman instead of a horse.
  • In the Green Acres episode "The Birthday Gift", Mr. Haney tries to sell a talking horse (voice of Rich Little) named "Mr. Fred" to Mrs. Douglas.
  • Histeria! featured a recurring character in the form of a talking horse who spoke like Mister Ed: in the episode "20th Century Presidents", a parody of the theme song is featured.
  • British sketch comedy show Harry Enfield's Television Programme featured a Grotesque character called "Mister Dead", a talking human corpse who travels around with his living friend and often helps him get out of troublesome situations, such as in one sketch where he avoids a speeding ticket by pretending to rush Mister Dead to the mortuary.
  • In the episode of the same name of Mr. Show, David Cross finds a "talking junkie named Mister Junkie", in a sketch that parodies Mister Ed, including a parody of the theme song.

References[edit]

  1. Jump up ^ The New York Times Encyclopedia of Television by Les Brown (Times Books, a division of Quadrangle/The New York Times Book Company, Inc., 1977), ISBN 0-8129-0721-3, p. 277
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c Brooks, Tim; Marsh, Earle F. (2009). The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946-Present (9 ed.). Random House LLC. p. 905. ISBN 0-307-48320-7. 
  3. Jump up ^ PARTNERS SLATE TV COMEDY SERIES: Lubin, Hamilton Pian 'Ed and Wilbur Pope' Films' --'Playhouse 90' Cast By OSCAR GODBOUT Special to The New York Times.. New York Times (1923-Current file) [New York, N.Y] Oct 16, 1957: 70.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "Mr. Ed and Arthur Lubin – Framework – Photos and Video – Visual Storytelling from the Los Angeles Times". June 7, 2013. Retrieved 2013-06-08. 
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c Jack Gaver (26 July 1961). "Nag Talked Way Onto the Network". The Washington Post, Times Herald. p. B7. 
  6. Jump up ^ Wolters, Larry (8 Aug 1958). "WHERE TO DIAL TODAY: Hope Signs Keel for 'Roberta'". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 17. 
  7. Jump up ^ Hopper, Hedda (23 Sep 1960). "Juliet Prowse Is Wanted for Noel Coward Picture". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. d2. 
  8. Jump up ^ Ed, the Jumper @ ~2:25 http://www.hulu.com/watch/197686
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b Mister Ed: Season 2, Episode 25 Clint Eastwood Meets Mister Ed (22 Apr. 1962) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0649770/
  10. Jump up ^ Psychoanalyst Show (20 Apr. 1961) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0649856/
  11. Jump up ^ "Watch Mister Ed Online - Psychoanalyst Show - Hulu". Hulu. 
  12. Jump up ^ Season 1, Episode 3 Busy Wife (19 Jan. 1961) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0649768/fullcredits?ref_=tt_cl_sm#cast
  13. Jump up ^ "Watch Mister Ed Online - Busy Wife - Hulu". Hulu. 
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b Season 2, Episode 5 Ed the Jumper (29 Oct. 1961) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0649800/
  15. Jump up ^ "18 Famous TV Roles Originally Played by Someone Else". Mental Floss. 
  16. Jump up ^ "Bamboo Harvester Palomino". 
  17. ^ Jump up to: a b "Alan Young talks about Mister Ed and Hollywood lore". My Daily Find. December 1, 2009. Retrieved 2013-06-08. 
  18. Jump up ^ John Clark (January 4, 2004). "Interview with Alan Young". Sfgate.com. Retrieved 2009-11-25. 
  19. Jump up ^ "Archive of American Television Interview with Alan Young – Google Videos". Video.google.com. Retrieved 2009-11-25. 
  20. Jump up ^ Young, Alan. "Mister Ed and Me" 1994, St. Martins Press, New York, ISBN 0-312-11852-X, pp. 181–3
  21. Jump up ^ Ronald Leon (January 1, 2001). "Mister 'Mr. Ed' Ed (1949-1970) – Find a Grave Memorial". Find a Grave. Retrieved 2009-11-25. 
  22. Jump up ^ "Manes & Tails Organization Horse Rescue - The Famous Mr. Ed". www.manesandtailsorganization.org. Retrieved 2016-12-26. 
  23. Jump up ^ Curtis, Gene (October 5, 2007). "Only in Oklahoma: The famous Mister Ed still keeps 'em talking". Tulsa World. Retrieved 2016-12-26. 
  24. Jump up ^ Mitchell, Justin (May 8, 1986). "Satan Taking Mr. Ed Along For The Ride?". chicagotribune.com. 
  25. Jump up ^ Foster, Patrick (2008). Studebaker: The Complete History. MotorBooks International. p. 158. ISBN 1-616-73018-8. 
  26. Jump up ^ Lewis, Hilary (1 July 2008). "Dead "Mister Ed" Creator Sues MGM For DVD Royalties". Business Insider. Retrieved 8 June 2015. 
  27. Jump up ^ "Date, Package Revealed for 'The Complete 6th and Final Season'". 
  28. Jump up ^ "Mister Ed: The Complete First Season: DVD Talk Review of the DVD Video". Dvdtalk.com. Retrieved 2009-11-25. 
  29. Jump up ^ "Mister Ed DVD news: Announcement for Mister Ed - The Complete Series - TVShowsOnDVD.com". 
  30. Jump up ^ "Shout! Factory Store". Shout! Factory Store. June 21, 2011. Retrieved 2013-06-08. 
  31. Jump up ^ "Shout! Factory Store". Shout! Factory Store. Retrieved 2013-06-08. 
  32. Jump up ^ "Shout! Factory - Mister Ed: The Final Season". 
  33. Jump up ^ "'Mister Ed' gets a new voice". cnn.com. February 17, 2004. 
  34. Jump up ^ "Mister Ed Movie Goes Into Development, Of Course, Of Course". Cinemablend.com. September 21, 2012. Retrieved 2013-06-08. 
  35. Jump up ^ Gene Curtis, "Only in Oklahoma: The famous Mister Ed still keeps 'em talking", Tulsa World, October 5, 2007.
  36. Jump up ^ "Mr. Klaw". 
  37. Jump up ^ "Four Color #1295 – (comic book issue)". Comic Vine. March 1, 1962. Retrieved 2013-06-08. 
  38. Jump up ^ snopes (December 8, 2015). "Mister Ed is Racist : snopes.com". snopes.

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