I must admit, I’ve always felt sorry for Linda Thorson (Tara King). She was actually quite a babe; she just suffered in comparison to Diana Rigg (Emma Peel), whom no one could really replace.
It didn’t help much that the writing on the series descended into pure camp at the same time she became Steed’s partner.
She was only 20 when she started, so she had no gravitas, no acting experience, and no believability as a partner for a man twice her age. She was a victim of the teeny-bopper mentality that the old men in charge of things thought would save them from their cultural obsolescence. It couldn’t possibly work, and it didn’t.
I loved Mrs Peel but let’s not forget Steed’s first partner, the delectable Cathy Gale played by Honor Blackman, who went on to play Pussy Galore in Goldfinger.
I actually first watched the show in its incarnation as Police Surgeon in 1961. Ian Hendry played the title role and Steed was introduced as the shadowy secret agent who helped him solve his fiancee’s murder and smash the drug ring behind it. It was a pretty nondescript show and no one (certainly not me) would have foreseen the huge hit it became when the format and title were changed for the second series and McNee became the star. Writer Brian Clemens had much to do with the show’s success too. He wrote some great stories both for this and other thriller shows from the 60s onwards.
And RIP, Patrick, you’ll live long in cultural memory.
IIRC, she was also one of the producers’ girlfriend. Nothing like being thrown into the deep end of the swimming pool without first learning how to swim. :smack:
I was reading the Trivia section at this link, and they mentioned the scene with the gag writer being almost identical to the one in the Pythons’ “Funniest Joke in the World” sketch.
The gag writer was Bernard Cribbins, who later played Mr Hutchinson in “The Hotel Inspectors” episode of Cleese’s Fawlty Towers!
It must be twenty years since I last saw that episode, but when I read the description of that scene I had an immediate flashback to it, and I mean *every *detail. Then it slowly dawned on me … was that … could it be … naaaaaaaah, I must be imagining things … WHOA! It *is *him! I was right!
Start watching The Avengers again; it’s full of moments like that. I’ve seen Margo Leadbetter (Penelope Keith on Good Neighbors) and Cuthbert Rumbold (Nicholas Smith on Are You Being Served). No doubt a careful watching would yield more.
Bernard Cribbins I recognized because I’ve recognized him before. Was watching Casino Royale (the 1967 one) some time ago, saw the cab driver and thought “I’ve seen that guy in something else…”
I think almost everybody who worked in British TV and cinema at one time or another did The Avengers.
I watched most of the post-CG episodes in the '60s, all of them in the '80s, and then most of them again in the '90s. I’ve only seen a few with Mrs Gale, on-line. The same for the first season with Ian Hendry (hardly any of those survive).
I spotted Penelope Keith right away; she was one of the blushing brides in the episode about the marriage agency. She was on-screen for all of about five seconds.
If true, this wouldn’t be the first time or the first millionth time in show biz. But I’ve read everything about the *Avengers *and I don’t remember this.
Dave Rogers writes in The Complete Avengers:
The other two were 5 and 13 years older, with lots more screen experience, so they might have been better fits.
IMDb shows her in three episodes, one in which she appears uncredited (the one you saw), one in which she’s credited but doesn’t appear, and the one I saw. It’s a Tara[sup]*[/sup] episode; she and Steed are following a briefcase that’s being passed from one person to another, with the goal of finding it’s final recipient. Keith is quite recognizable, has dialog and everything.
I didn’t say “ra-boom-de-ay”.
Tracy Reed was in Dr. Strangelove and A Shot in the Dark (both 1964), might have been an interesting choice.
It’s hard to say quite why Thorson didn’t work on the show. I’ve seen a few of her episodes recently, and there’s nothing blatantly wrong with them. And Thorson has had a pretty steady career since then. Maybe Diana Rigg was just so iconic as Emma Peel that no one could have followed her.
Years ago, I saw Macnee being interviewed on TV, and he said that his mother was a lesbian, and that she and her lover tried hard to raise Patrick as a girl, dressing him in girls’ clothing for much of his childhood. He said it was rather amazing that he’d grown up to be as conventionally “normal” as he was.
Was he putting the interviewer on, or was that true?
Actually, I think it was more an effort to appeal to the “youth” segment of the audience. This was rife in the '60s, especially after The Monkees became a big hit.
It wasn’t just females that were affected, either. Chekov was added to the cast of Star Trek in 1967 for precisely the same reason. (He was also originally planned to be British, not Russian.)