SPACE ACADEMY
(CBS, September 10-Decmeber 17, 1977)
Filmation Associates
MAIN CAST:
Jonathan
Harris – Commander Isaac Gampu
Pamelyn
Ferdin – Laura Gentry
Ric
Carrott – Chris Gentry
Maggie
Cooper – Adrian Pryce-Jones
Brian
Tochi – Tee Gar Soom
Ty
Henderson – Paul Jerome
Eric
Greene – Loki
Space Academy was a
live-action science fiction show produced by Filmation Associates.
Set sometime in the 38th Century, the series was centered on the
Space Academy built on an asteroid and established in 3732. It brought together
the best and brightest cadets from across the galaxy to study and explore the
mysteries of space.
Head of the academy was Commander Isaac
Gampu (Jonathan Harris). His countless space explorations had retarded his
aging, leaving him well over 300-years-old. He personally oversaw the
activities of three student teams: the Red, Gold and Blue Team. The Blue Team,
the primary focus of the show, was comprised of siblings Chris (Ric Carrot) and
Laura Gentry (Pamelyn Ferdin), who possessed a variety of psychic powers and
were co-leaders of the team (initially they were meant to be twins, but the
actors’ height difference necessitated the change); Adrian Pryce-Jones (Maggie
Cooper), the third-in-command on the team who often worked directly with Gampu
and was Chris’ love interest; Paul Jerome (Ty Henderson), a highly-intelligent
transferee from the Red Team who was raised on an Earth colony; Tee Gar Soom
(Brian Tochi), possessor of superhuman strength and continued the martial arts
traditions of his ancestors while incorporating new techniques learned from
other planets; and Loki (Eric Greene), a young orphan discovered on a mission
who could teleport and see on different spectrums others couldn’t. Offering
support was a small robot named Peepo (Erika Scheimer, speaking through a
pitch-shifter with regenerative delay).
The series was initially conceived
as a radio drama by Allen
Ducovny in 1969 while he was a producer for Filmation. When
he became the Vice President in charge of children’s programming for CBS, he suggested adapting
the idea into a live-action program to producer Lou Scheimer.
Production of the show began in early 1977. The Ark II prop from Filmation’s
previous series, Ark II, was repurposed as the spaceships commonly used
on the series called “Seekers”. Setting the series on an asteroid allowed them
to circumvent the expense of trying to duplicate weightlessness, and “invisible
force fields” allowed them to traverse inhospitable environments without the
need for additional suits. However, production ran down to the wire as when Starlog
Magazine writer David Houston
visited the set in August, no full episodes or scripts had been completed yet; only
stock special effects and various scenes were finished. This likely led to the
early series discrepancy of Loki joining the team in the first episode and
being a long-time member in the second, while Soom was a member in the first
and just joined in the second.
Nonetheless, Space Academy made
its debut on CBS on September 10, 1977. The series was largely similar in
structure to Star
Trek (on which both Tochi and
Ferdin appeared together in an episode), with the added morality lessons and
educational content Filmation had become known for; overseen by Dr. Gordon L. Berry
from UCLA.
The series was written by Samuel
A. Peeples, Martha
Humphreys, Jack
Paritz, Ted
Pedersen, Lynn
Barker, Susan
Dworski, Don
Heckman, Marianne
Mosner, Peter
Packer, Howard
Rayfiel, Martin
Roth,
Robert Specht
and Tom
Swale, with Arthur Nadel
serving as producer and story editor. Horta-Mahana Corp. supplied the sound
effects while Ray
Ellis (as Yvette Blais) and producer Norm Prescott
(as Jeff Michael) composed the music. Space Academy had the distinction
of being the most expensive Saturday morning program produced at the time,
clocking in at around $150,000 per episode.
The series only lasted a single
season of 15 episodes, airing in frequent repeats until September of 1979. To
continue making use of the sets and special effects already created, Filmation
produced a spin-off called Jason of Star Command, which was said to take
place in a special section of the Space Academy. Scheimer kept the Peepo robot
prop as one of the rare souvenirs he collected from his programs.
As the show was airing, Aviva Toy Company
offered a set of four
8 ½” dolls based on Gampu, Tee Gar Soom, Chris and Loki through F.W. Woolworth,
as well as additional adventure outfits for them. In 2007, BCI/Eclipse
released the complete
series to DVD with uncut, remastered episodes and special
features. The following year, they released the series again in a box
set
along with Jason of Star Command and Ark II.
EPISODE GUIDE:
“The Survivors of Zalon” (9/10/77) – The cadets
discover a small boy with powers on a planet due to explode.
“Castaways in Time and Space” (9/17/77) – Chris has
to use his mindlink with Laura to find her and Gampu after they’re pulled into
a black hole.
“Hide and Seek” (9/24/77) – After the school is
saved from an asteroid, members of the team begin to disappear.
“Countdown” (10/1/77) – The cadets are sent to clean
up the remnants from a war, and not only does one of the combatants awaken but
a mine attaches itself to their ship.
“There’s No Place Like Home” (10/8/77) – An alien
bribes Loki with information about his home planet if he’ll help him retrieve a
file.
“The Rocks of Janus” (10/15/77) – When the team
investigates two comets headed for the school, they discover they are sentient
beings and one of them was coming to warn them about the other.
“Monkey Business” (10/22/77) – When a space mirror
stops rotating Prof. Bolt and Tee Gar become in danger of freezing, and their
would-be rescuers end up no better off.
“The Phantom Planet” (10/29/77) – The team goes to
investigate a phantom sighting at an asteroid due for demolition.
“Planet of Fire” (11/5/77) – Tee Gar brings his new
instant-freeze invention with him on a mission to test further, not knowing
what he froze has since exploded.
“Life Begins at 300” (11/12/77) – And error that
almost injures Paul has Gampu considering retirement.
“The Cheat” (11/19/77) – Despite being investigated
for safety violations, Cadet Matt Prentiss is sent to contain a leaking reactor
on an asteroid with Blue Team to help him.
“My Favorite Marcia” (11/26/77) – When the team
answers a distress call from Gampu’s former flame, a rogue robot war machine
traps them all in a solar system whose star is about to explode.
“Space Hooky” (12/3/77) – Skipping class leads Loki
to being possessed by two energy beings, who go on to possess Paul and Gampu.
“Star Legend” (12/10/77) – Investigating the Alderan
Triangle, Blue Team discovers the millennium-old Starship Hope, whose captain
has a warning for them.
“Johnny Sunseed” (12/17/77) – Gampu’s
technology-phobic brother must work with Peepo when Paul’s genetically-altered
food causes mass hallucinations and strange behavior.
1 comment:
Loved this show! I was a 3rd grader obsessed with Star Wars at the time but felt I was better suited to be a SA cadet rather than member of the Rebel Alliance or searching for earth on the Galactica. Much safer on the Academy. Also, it seemed to have better defenses than any other space ship in the sci-fi world!
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