Misfits of Science
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Misfits of Science | |
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Genre | |
Created by | James D. Parriott |
Starring |
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Opening theme | "Feels Like Science", performed by Karen Lawrence |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 16 |
Production | |
Executive producer | James D. Parriott |
Production locations | Universal Studios, Universal City, California |
Running time | 44 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | NBC |
Release | October 4, 1985 February 21, 1986 | –
Misfits of Science is an American science fiction comedy-drama television series created by James D. Parriott that aired on NBC from October 4, 1985, to February 21, 1986.
Plot
[edit]The series featured super-powered humans and their madcap adventures. The team is formed by Dr. Billy Hayes, a research scientist at the Humanidyne Institute who specializes in "human anomalies". He works with shrinking Dr. Elvin "El" Lincoln, and together they recruit electrically powered Johnny Bukowski, a rock-and-roll musician, and Gloria Dinallo, a telekinetic teenager.
Production
[edit]A double-length TV pilot and 15 additional episodes were produced; however, one episode did not air before the show was cancelled due to low ratings.
The name "Misfits of Science" and other conceptual ideas were the brainchild of then-president of NBC Entertainment, Brandon Tartikoff. He explained of the series "We'll rely on the National Enquirer for story ideas. It's loosely inspired by the dynamics we saw in Ghostbusters... sort of a kick-back, Friday type of show."[1]
The ninth episode was the first paid writing job for Tim Kring, who later originated and produced the thematically similar Heroes in 2006.
Title sequence
[edit]The main title sequence and its theme song were unusual for TV shows of the era. Donald Todd, head writer and story editor, described them as follows:
The main titles are fun. It's still kind of... it's really forward-looking. Jim [Parriott] was forward-looking in many ways, and we fought a lot about that, but it starts off with Bobby Short doing the theme, and then there's the kicking over of the TV and into the more contemporary version of the theme. He was trying to say, "We're not doing that show, we're doing this show, and it's more hip." And I remember the people at Universal going, "Why don't you do it without the TV? We don't like the TV!" And I don't think they gave him the budget for it. I think we had to find it ourselves. It's a really cheap thing, it's just a guy playing piano and then a foot kicking over a TV, but it was really controversial, because back then nobody did anything interesting with the main titles. You just showed the characters sliding into frame. But I remember that was pretty cool. And Jim wrote it.[2]
Cast and characters
[edit]- Dean Paul Martin as Dr. Billy Hayes, the leader of the team (who has no superpowers). He is a young research scientist at the Humanidyne Institute who specializes in "human anomalies" and a fast-talking but good-hearted schemer full of boyish enthusiasm who often gets the team into as much trouble as he gets them out of. Although easily distracted whenever an attractive woman walks by, he is honestly interested in getting involved in a serious relationship with Jane Miller even after she showed up pregnant by another man.
- Kevin Peter Hall as Dr. Elvin "El" Lincoln, Billy's colleague and close friend. He has the ability to shrink for minutes at a time from his height of 7 ft 4 in (224 cm) to 11 in (28 cm) via hormonal treatments which he activates by pressing a nerve on the back of his neck. A recurring joke after such transformations is that he always has to put on the tiny change of clothes he carries with him for his small size. The character is shy and struggles socially, and despite being so tall, he is a very bad basketball player.
- Mark Thomas Miller as Johnny "Johnny B" Bukowski, a rock and roll musician who was electrically shocked on stage which resulted in disturbing electrical powers. He continually drains any electrically charged items in his surroundings, forcing him to live in isolation. He wears sunglasses because his eyes glow when he is fully charged. He can throw lightning bolts forcefully and run at superhuman speed, easily outracing in one episode a parody of the Six Million Dollar Man, but he is vulnerable to water which short-circuits him and burns his skin. He is a big Chuck Berry fan.
- Courteney Cox as Gloria Dinallo, a troubled telekinetic teenager with a history of juvenile delinquency and a mother in a mental institution who claims Gloria's father is from outer space. She has a crush on Johnny. Gloria can only use her telekinesis on things that she can see: using a blindfold on her renders her powerless.
- Diane Civita as Miss Nance, the scientists' secretary. Although she usually seems more interested in doing her nails, going on her coffee break, and watching her soap operas, she is actually the one who keeps their department running and is always there at the end of the series to turn off the lights and say goodnight to the rabbits in their cages.
- Jennifer Holmes as Jane Miller, Gloria's probation officer. Although attracted to Billy, she is often put off by his eccentric behavior. Her character appears only in the earlier episodes, disappearing after the first 7 episodes. (Although Holmes is still in the opening credits through episode 12.)
- Max Wright as Dick Stetmeyer, the uptight director of the Humanidyne Institute. Unlike the other cast members, he isn't actually considered to be one of the Misfits.
- Mickey Jones as Arnold "Beef"/"Ice Man" Beifneiter, who got his power to freeze anything he touches from placing himself in an experimental cryogenic cold storage unit back in the year of 1937 due to grief caused by the loss of his beloved Amelia Earhart. The team drives around in an ice cream truck (International Metro Mite M-800) because the lumbering and now rather simple-minded Ice Man dies if he gets too warm, so they keep him in the freezer. Beef only appears in the pilot episode due to legal objections from Marvel Comics, who publish a similarly named character in X-Men, but the characters continue to use the ice cream truck.
Episodes
[edit]No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
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1 | "Deep Freeze" | James D. Parriott | James D. Parriott | October 4, 1985 | 83516 |
90-minute series pilot: Billy and El, scientists for the Human Investigation Team, put together a team of super-powered individuals to deal with a secret government project to create a neutron beam cannon. Larry Linville and Edward Winter guest star. | |||||
2 | "Your Place or Mayan?" | Alan J. Levi | Donald Todd | October 18, 1985 | 60803 |
On behalf of a dead friend of Billy's, an archaeologist, the Misfits set out to prove the existence of buried Mayan treasure beneath Beverly Hills. | |||||
3 | "Guess What's Coming to Dinner?" | Burt Brinckerhoff | Morrie Ruvinsky | October 25, 1985 | 60802 |
A friend of the Misfits claims to have made contact with aliens from Mars. Problems arise when the authorities try to prevent him from continuing his contact. | |||||
4 | "Lost Link" | Christopher Leitch | Mark Jones | November 1, 1985 | 60806 |
A primitive in a loin cloth comes ashore at Venice Beach and no one knows who he is — in fact it's believed he may be a caveman. It turns out that the man, "Link," is in fact an Aborigine from a lost tribe in New Guinea and the Misfits help him to set free the spirit of his deceased child by placing a small totem aboard the space shuttle. | |||||
5 | "Sort of Looking for Gina" | Jeffrey Hayden | Michael Cassutt | November 8, 1985 | 60804 |
Johnny's efforts to get a date with an attractive woman, Gina, go amiss when it turns out she's involved with crooks and the Misfits have to mastermind a bank robbery to help her out. | |||||
6 | "Sonar… and Yet So Far" | Burt Brinckerhoff | Donald Todd | November 15, 1985 | 60807 |
A marine biologist and friend of Billy's who works with dolphins believes they can talk, making him the target of drug smugglers who need the help of his dolphin friends to recover a sunken cache of cocaine. | |||||
7 | "Steer Crazy" | John Tracy | James D. Parriott | November 29, 1985 | 60801 |
A trio of senior citizens end up with super-powers from irradiated hamburgers, and the Misfits have to both help them out and restrain them from injuring themselves. | |||||
8 | "Fumble on the One" | Bob Sweeney | Blaze Forrester | December 6, 1985 | 60811 |
The Misfits assist Brick Tyler, a part-bionic CIA agent (and Billy's college friend) who has managed to lose the "football" — the President's briefcase containing the nation's nuclear launch codes. | |||||
9 | "Twin Engines" | Burt Brinckerhoff | Story by : R. Timothy Kring Teleplay by : Donald Todd | December 13, 1985 | 60808 |
Johnny's friend Lonnie (Joel Polis) begins having premonitions of danger, but it turns out in fact he's related to his previously unknown twin Dwayne, a motorcycle racer, and the Misfits have to help them both out. | |||||
10 | "Grand Theft Bunny" | Michael Switzer | Pamela Norris | December 27, 1985 | 60810 |
Bad guys manipulate the Misfits into helping them unleash a plague on Los Angeles with the help of a contaminated rabbit. | |||||
11 | "Grand Elusion" | Bernard McEveety | Morrie Ruvinsky | January 10, 1986 | 60812 |
Billy recruits the gang to help a fellow scientist's daughter defect when she and her father tour America as part of a Russian girl's gymnast team. The gang takes the place of the magician hired to perform for the tour thanks to a judicious use of super-powers, but the daughter refuses to leave without her father. Complicating matters, the KGB minder Galenkov has sworn to make sure the scientist Nikolai never gets away. The Misfits have to pull off an elaborate bait-and-switch to make sure that both Nikolai and Tatyana manage to escape. | |||||
12 | "Once Upon a Night" | Barbara Peeters | Linda Campanelli & M.M. Shelly Moore | January 17, 1986 | 60813 |
Gloria's pen pal Jaye is the object of a hunt by unknown assailants. Gloria is kidnapped. | |||||
13 | "Center of Attention" | Burt Brinckerhoff | Sara Parriott | January 31, 1986 | 60817 |
El goes undercover as an incredibly talented basketball player (with some help from Gloria) to expose a crooked owner who is having his players throw their games. | |||||
14 | "Against All Oz" | Michael Switzer | Morrie Ruvinsky | February 7, 1986 | 60819 |
Suffering exhaustion, Billy takes a nap and wakes up in an alternate reality, believing his adventures with the Misfits were a dream. Clips from prior episodes are shown as he tells his co-workers at a nuclear project of their counterparts in the dream. | |||||
15 | "The Avenging Angel" | Bernard McEveety | Dan Distefano | February 21, 1986 | 60816 |
Gloria helps out an aspiring pro wrestler with the use of her telekinetic powers without telling him; the wrestler, Milt, soon decides he does have super powers and Gloria needs to keep helping him out when he decides to go after crooks trying to sell him protection. | |||||
16 | "Three Days of the Blender" | Michael Switzer | Donald Todd | Unaired | 60814 |
When a blender is accidentally delivered to Billy, he ends up getting arrested as a spy and Stetmeyer gets targeted by the FBI. |
International broadcast
[edit]In France, the series was known as Superminds, in Germany, as Die Spezialisten unterwegs (The Specialists On The Way), in Brazil, as "Curto-Circuito" ("Short Circuit"), in Mexico, Colombia, Peru and rest of Latin America as Los Cientificos Rebeldes (The Rebel Scientists).
DVD releases
[edit]On January 25, 2008, the series was released in Germany as a 5-disc DVD box set (Region 2) with all episodes (including the final episode, which was originally unaired on NBC but broadcast in Germany) with both English and German audios and German subtitles. The release was entitled “Die Spezialisten Unterwegs”, translates literally to “The Specialists On The Go”.
On September 19, 2012, the series was released on DVD in France as Superminds.
References
[edit]- ^ Holloway, Diane (8 July 1985). "NBC Tests 'High Concept' With 'Misfits of Science'". The Palm Beach Post. Cox News Service. Retrieved 2014-11-09.
- ^ Harris, Will (2013). Misfits of Science: An Oral History. SED Productions. ASIN B00CH7QHQ0.
External links
[edit]- Misfits of Science at IMDb
- Misfits of Science at internationalhero.co.uk
- Misfits of Science at the Friday @ 8/7 Central blog
- 1980s American comedy-drama television series
- 1980s American comic science fiction television series
- 1985 American television series debuts
- 1986 American television series endings
- American superhero comedy television series
- American English-language television shows
- NBC comedy-dramas
- Television series by Universal Television
- Television shows filmed in California
- Television shows set in California