"Stand By for Action" | |
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Stingray episode | |
Episode no. | Episode 25 |
Directed by | Alan Pattillo |
Written by | Dennis Spooner |
Cinematography by | Paddy Seale |
Editing by | Eric Pask |
Production code | 17[1] |
Original air date | 21 March 1965 |
Guest character voices | |
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"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]
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 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 WASP 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.
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]
References
- 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.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Pixley, Andrew (2022). Stingray: Adventures in Videcolor. Network Distributing. pp. 268–269. 7958280.
- ↑ 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.
- 1 2 3 Anderson, Gerry (2001). "Stand By for Action" DVD audio commentary. Granada Ventures (ITV DVD). 5037115012333 (EAN).
- ↑ 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.