Buck Rogers
Buck Rogers is the central character of Philip Francis Nowlan's story Armageddon 2419 A. D., which appeared in the August 1928 issue of the pulp magazine Amazing Stories. The full title of most of his appearances in various media is Buck Rogers in the 25th Century. In the original novella, Rogers was not known as "Buck" Rogers; the nickname was given to the character when the comic strip debuted in 1929. The name `Buck Rogers' was taken from an old Western fiction cowboy story scenario which included characters called Buck Rogers and Tom Mix and a horse called Trigger.
Buck Rogers, an American air force officer, fell into a coma and was awakened in the 25th century. Together with his comrades, the beautiful Wilma Deering and intrepid Dr. Huer, he struggled to rid the world of evil warlords and "Mongol" hordes.
Comics, second story and radio show
In January 1929, under the guidance of John F. Dille, the story was turned into a comic strip that would run for 38 years (1929-1967) and be credited with launching the "golden age" of the comic strip. It was the first comic strip organized around a science fiction theme.
The launch of the comic strip was followed by the release of the second Buck Rogers novella, The Airlords of Han, which appeared in the March 1929 issue of Amazing Stories. The enemy force in this story, the Han, were later renamed Mongols.
In 1932, the Buck Rogers radio program began, the first science fiction show on radio. It aired four times weekly. The show ran for 15 years (1932-1947). Matt Crowley, Curtis Arnall, Carl Frank and John Larkin as Buck Rogers voiced the character at various times.
First movie
John Dille Jr. - the son of John F. Dille, the man behind the Buck Rogers comic strip - starred in Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: An Interplanetary Battle with the Tiger Men of Mars. This ten-minute film premiered at the 1933-34 World's Fair in Chicago.
Second movie
1939 saw a twelve part movie serial of Buck Rogers, starring Buster Crabbe who had previously played Flash Gordon along with Constance Moore as the only woman in the film, Lieutenant Wilma Deering, and Jackie Moran as Buddy Wade, a character not seen in the other media. This serial marked the only time that Anthony Warde, who had portrayed the top underling of the boss villain in other serials, played the boss villain himself, Killer Kane, a gangster who was also a dictator. The noted serial stuntman David Sharpe also plays in this film.
Notably, Philson Ahn plays Prince Tallen, a Saturnian native who befriends Buck Rogers. This is because the plot of the original story was that the Han (Chinese) had conquered North America. However, the other Saturnians are played by Caucasians. Racism does appear in that the workers of the planet Saturn, who are called Zugs, are ugly, dark hulking brutes (played by Caucasians in makeup) who not only cannot think for themselves but who immediately worship and attend to a catatonically brainwashed Earthman.
This film saved money on special effects by using background shots from the futuristic musical of 1930, Just Imagine, to depict the city of the future. The garish stenciled walls of Kane's penthouse suite derive from Azura's palace in Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars. The mockups of the flying machines were derived from the "Strato-Sleds" of the later movie as well. (Those made for the musical had already appeared in the Flash Gordon series.)
The serial was later edited as a movie and released in 1953 as Planet Outlaws and for television in 1965 as Destination Saturn.
First television series
Kem Dibbs and Robert Pastene acted Buck Rogers in his first television series in 1950-1951. The show was acted live and no known copies of the program exist.
Third movie and second television series
In 1979, the character was revived and updated for a prime-time television series for NBC Television. The pilot film was initially shown in theaters in the spring to strong box office, leading NBC to commission a full series, which debuted in September 1979 with a modified version of the pilot film which had the death of one character eliminated (in order to allow him to return in the series), and additional footage added to help launch the series.
The new series centered around the character of Captain William Anthony "Buck" Rogers, played by Gil Gerard, a US Air Force pilot who commands Ranger 3, a space shuttle that is launched in 1987. Due to a freak combination of gases, Captain Rogers is frozen in space for 500 years and is revived in the 25th century. There, Captain Rogers learns that the Earth has been united following a devastating nuclear war in the late 20th century and is now under the protection of the Earth Defense Forces.
The series followed Rogers as he tried to fit (not always successfully) into 25th Century culture, while helping Earth Defense foil assorted evil plots to destroy the planet. (In many respects, the new Rogers had more similarities with James Bond or Col. Steve Austin than Nowlan's original character.) Rogers is aided in his adventures by his friend and semi-romantic interest, Colonel Wilma Deering, played by Erin Gray, and his comic sidekick robot, Twiki, played by the voice of Mel Blanc (who had previously voiced Daffy Duck as Duck Dodgers in spoofs of the early Buck Rogers and other science fiction serials).
Twiki, a pint-sized robot, tended to express himself with the dispeptic ejaculation ”biddi-biddi-biddi.” followed by a 20th Century cliche or catchphrase he picked up from Buck (although he already knew quite a few by the time he first met Buck). Dr Theopolis ("city of God"), another chatty robot who consisted of only an illuminated face, was housed in a large medallion worn by Twiki and was considered one of the planet's scientific leaders. During the first season, Rogers and Deering took their orders from Dr. Elias Huer (Tim O'Connor), the de facto leader of Earth.
Buck Rogers' best-known nemesis during the first season was the sexy Princess Ardala of Draconia, played by Pamela Hensley, whose insatiable desire was to conquer and possess both the Earth and Captain Rogers.
Production of the second season was delayed by several months due to an actors' strike. When production resumed in the fall of 1980, the format of the series was changed with Buck, Wilma and Twiki joining the crew of an earth spaceship in search of lost pockets of humanity (borrowing themes from the earlier Battlestar Galactica). The characters of Dr. Huer and recurring villain/love interest Ardala were eliminated. With a concurrent move towards more serious stories, the series lost much of its appeal and it was soon cancelled.
The show ran for 32 episodes aired from 1979 to 1981 and was later shown in reruns on the Sci-Fi Channel. A North American DVD set of the complete series was released on November 16, 2004.
The show also aired in South Africa where it was dubbed into Afrikaans.
According to Erin Gray, her character Col. Wilma Deering, despite her sexy costumes and somewhat flighty demeanor in some episodes (no pun intended), became a major role model for young girls. She still receives letters from women who entered the military or other fields in part because of the inspiration of Wilma Deering.
Gray also said that she never actually met Eric Server, the actor who provided the voice of Dr. Theopolis, until many years after the series ended when she found herself sitting next to him on an airplane.
Cast
- Gil Gerard - Captain William Buck Rogers
- Erin Gray - Colonel Wilma Deering
- Tim O'Connor - Dr. Elias Huer (first season)
- Wilfrid Hyde-White - Dr. Goodfellow (second season)
- Thom Christopher - Hawk (second season)
- Felix Silla - Twiki
- Mel Blanc - Voice of Twiki (episodes 1-24, 32-37)
- Bob Elyea - Voice of Twiki (episodes 25-32)
- Patty Maloney - Voice of Twiki (unknown episodes)
- Eric Server - Voice of Dr. Theopolis
- Jay Gardner - Admiral Asimov (second season)
- Jeff David - Voice of Crichton (second season)
- William Conrad - Narrator (first season)
After the decision was made to produce a weekly television series following the success of the movie, it was not certain if Erin Gray would return as Wilma Deering. Juanin Clay was cast in the role as a replacement, but ultimately Gray returned. Clay subsequently played a very Wilma Deering-like character in the episode "Vegas in Space."
Episodes
Season 1 (1979-1980)
- "Awakening" (September 20, 1979) - two-hour episode, a revised version of the theatrical release Buck Rogers in the 25th Century with a different opening credits sequence and additional scenes. Syndicated as a two-part episode. (Note: the theatrical version of the pilot, not the TV version, is included in the 2004 DVD release.)
- "Planet of the Slave Girls" (September 27, 1979) - two-hour episode, later syndicated as a two-part episode.
- "Vegas in Space" (October 7, 1979)
- "Plot to Kill a City, Part 1" (October 11, 1979)
- "Plot to Kill a City, Part 2" (October 17, 1979)
- "Return of the Fighting 69th" (October 25, 1979)
- "Unchained Woman" (November 1, 1979)
- "Planet of the Amazon Women (November 8, 1979)
- "Cosmic Wiz Kid" (November 15, 1979)
- "Escape from Wedded Bliss" (November 29, 1979)
- "Cruise Ship to the Stars" (December 27, 1979)
- "Space Vampire" (January 3, 1980)
- "Happy Birthday, Buck" (January 10, 1980)
- "A Blast for Buck" (January 17, 1980) - this episode takes place prior to "Happy Birthday, Buck" but was aired out of sequence.
- "Ardala Returns" (January 27, 1980)
- "Twiki is Missing" (January 31, 1980)
- "Olympiad" (February 7, 1980)
- "A Dream of Jennifer" (February 14, 1980)
- "Space Rockers" (February 21, 1980)
- "Buck's Duel to the Death" (March 20, 1980)
- "Flight of the War Witch" ([[March 27, 1980) - two-hour episode, later syndicated as a two-part episode.
Season 2 (1981)
- "Time of the Hawk" (January 15, 1981) - two-hour episode, later syndicated as a two-part episode.
- "Journey to Oasis" (January 22, 1981) - two-hour episode, later syndicated as a two-part episode.
- "The Guardians" (January 29, 1981)
- "Mark of the Saurian" (February 5, 1981)
- "The Golden Man" (February 19, 1981)
- "The Crystals" (March 5, 1981)
- "The Satyr" (March 12, 1981)
- "Shgorapchx!" (March 19, 1981)
- "The Hand of Goral" (March 26, 1981)
- "Testimony of a Traitor" (April 9, 1981)
- "The Dorian Secret" (April 16, 1981)
Books and comics
Two novels were published based upon this series, both by Addison E. Steele. The first was a novelization of the pilot film, while the second, That Man on Beta, was adapted from an unproduced episode script.
Gold Key Comics, meanwhile, published more than a dozen issues of a Buck Rogers in the 25th Century comic book based upon the show. The comic outlived the series by several months.
Buck Rogers games
A Buck Rogers board game was produced in the 1980s. The game was a space-based wargame similar to Risk, in which the players moved playing pieces representing starships around the board trying to eliminate one another.
Buck Rogers also featured in a role playing game from TSR, Inc. and associated books published from 1988-1995. In it the player characters were allied to Buck Rogers and NEO (the New Earth Organisation) in their fight against RAM (a Russian-American corporation based on Mars). The games also extensively featured "genies" (genetically enhanced organisms). Strategic Simulations, Inc. produced two computer role-playing games based on this setting: Countdown to Doomsday and Matrix Cubed.
Sega released the arcade video game Buck Rogers: Planet of Zoom in 1983. The user controls a spaceship that must destroy enemy ships and avoid obstacles; Buck himself is never seen, and its only real connections to Buck Rogers are the use of the name and the outer space setting. Home versions were released for the Atari 2600, Atari 5200, Atari XE, Colecovision, Intellivision, and Sega Master System video game systems, and the Commodore VIC-20, Commodore 64, Texas Instruments TI-99/4A, and ZX Spectrum computers. Its only real connections to Buck Rogers are the use of the name and the outer space setting.
Later novels
Numerous novelists have "reinvented" the Buck Rogers mythos over the years, including M.S. Murdock who wrote a trilogy of novels in the early 1990s, and Martin Caidin, who wrote a standalone novel retelling the original story. A series of novels based upon the Buck Rogers role playing game has also been published.
Future adaptations
As of 1997, the film rights for Buck Rogers belonged to the Walt Disney Company, but as of 2004 no new film or TV adaptation has emerged, and it is not known if Disney still owns the rights. An announcement in the summer of 2004 that a new Flash Gordon film was in the planning stages suggests a new Buck Rogers film may follow eventually.