THE
GREEN HORNET (1966)
The Green Hornet was a radio
serial character created in 1936 by WXYZ (now WXYT) owner George W. Trendle
and writer Fran
Striker, with input from radio director James Jewell.
He was the alter-ego of Britt Reid (Al Hodge, Donovan Faust, Bob
Hall & Jack McCarthy), the wealthy young publisher of The Daily
Sentinel newspaper and a descendent of The
Lone Ranger, whom Trendle and Striker also created. He and his loyal
partner and confidant Kato (Tokutaro Hayashi, Rollon Parker & Michael Tolan) patrolled the
city at night with a variety of gadgets and a technologically advanced car, The
Black Beauty. They pose as criminals in order to better infiltrate the criminal
underworld. The Green Hornet ran from 1936-1950, then again for 2 months
in 1952. In that time, it was adapted into two serials by Universal Pictures and a comic book series
that began with Henlit Comics (aka Holyoke) in 1940
and ended with Harvey
Comics in 1949.
Green Hornet, Kato and the Black Beauty.
Trendle had attempted to pitch the
character for television in 1951 and 1958, but nobody was interested in it
until Batman became
a success on ABC. The network decided to take
on The Green Hornet and put it in the hands of Batman producer William Dozier. Unlike Batman,
The Green Hornet was played straight. The Hornet was once again publisher
Britt Reid (Van Williams)
with his trusty sidekick, martial-artist Kato (Bruce
Lee), dedicated to fighting crime after his father was framed, imprisoned
and killed. Only two other people knew their secret: Reid’s secretary Lenore
“Casey” Case (Wende Wagner),
as she did in the later years of the radio show, and District Attorney Frank P.
Scanlon (Walter Brooke),
changed from being a police commissioner in order to minimize comparisons to Batman.
Sentinel police reporter Michael Axford (Lloyd Gough), no longer Britt’s
bodyguard, was determined to get the scoop on the Hornet. Additional
differences between previous versions were Hornet and Kato wore masks molded to
their faces rather than one that covered the full face or goggles, Hornet
carried a vibrational weapon called the Hornet’s Sting as well as a knockout
gas gun, and Kato had darts hidden up his sleeve.
The Green Hornet meets Batman and Robin.
The Green Hornet debuted on
ABC, who owned WXYZ since 1946, on September 6, 1966. Nikolai
Rimsky-Korsakov’s orchestral interlude, “Flight of the Bumblebee”,
had become synonymous with the character through the radio series, so the TV
show used a similar jazz-styled theme arranged by series composer Billy May, conducted by Lionel Newman, and a trumpet
solo by Al Hirt. Dozier served
as the series’ narrator as he did on Batman, and the characters would
cross over twice. Unfortunately, The Green Hornet did not duplicate Batman’s
success for the network and they cancelled it after a single season. However,
it left a lasting impression thanks to Lee as it introduced both him and true
martial arts to American audiences, increasing the popularity of both and
propelling Lee into a movie career. ABC aired reruns of the series until July
1967, and since then it has made sporadic rounds on various networks.
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