As a kid, there was one day of the week we longed for more than any other and that was Saturday. (Still do!) Now I look forward to getting out and doing something, but as a tyke it was all about planting myself
in front of the TV with a bowl of cereal or a stack of pancakes and watching a long string of cartoons or the occasional live-action program. As far as the latter is concerned, 1974's
Shazam! was a favorite. In it, a young man named Billy Batson traveled the
world nearby California locales along with his mentor in an RV, righting various wrongs and saving young people from trouble at every opportunity. Usually, in order to accomplish this, he transformed into Captain Marvel by uttering the immortal word SHAZAM!
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Things had become confused because the original, hugely-popular Captain Marvel of the 1940s had stopped appearing in print after 1953 (thanks in part to lawsuits over similarities to Superman.) In the interim, Marvel Comics had introduced their own Captain Marvel. So, in 1973, when DC comics purchased and reintroduced the "original" Captain Marvel, they were prevented from using the name on their comics, opting instead for the title "Shazam!" The TV show followed that lead.
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Mentor was played by radio-voiced actor Les Tremayne while Billy was essayed by 23 year-old "teen" Michael Gray.
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Often, at the first sign of concern or confusion, Gray would close his eyes and consult with The Elders, a collection of godlike figures whose initials (Solomon, Hercules, Atlas, Zeus, Achilles and Mercury) formed the title exclamation. These folks were animated (of a sort!) and thus in contrast to the rest of the show, which was live-action (of a sort!)
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Later, whenever things headed really south, Gray would find a private spot and holler "Shazam!," whereupon he'd transform into the super-powered Captain Marvel, who could fly, was super-strong and basically took care of business (like moving vehicles, rocks and other debris or bringing someone down from a terrifying precipice.)
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Marvel, played by Jackson Bostwick (who was blessedly free of any sort of strictly-confining undergarment) would then appear and usually catapult himself into the sky.
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As a kid whose daddy left when he was four (insert violin music here) and had no considerable male role model or even physical example of manhood, shots of Bostwick's jangly bits clanking around in his costume made for provocative viewing! LOL
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It's entirely possible that my lifelong preoccupation with bulges (countless examples of which have been duly documented here for many years) began while watching this show as a 7 to 10 year-old. Where else was I going to learn? Ha ha!
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Such matters weren't confined to Bostwick, though. Take the extra pictured above at left (all in white.) He had on the tightest, briefest pair of shorts I've probably ever seen on a human male.
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I straight-up thought his junk was going to come bouncing out when he ran down the beach in this scene...!
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This was the mid-'70s, when you couldn't go into a store and buy "distressed" jeans. You had to get them that way by whatever means necessary from hard work to over-laundering to scraping at them with a rock!
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As the show was aimed at kids, there was a steady stream of youthful performers dropping in for each episode. Many of them sported the de rigueur trousers of the day, which were clingy, revealing, deliberately roughed-up blue jeans. |
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Shaggy hair was also the order of the day, which I was never a fan of, but the pants I could appreciate.
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Not only is this dude firmly "dressed left" but his fly isn't even closed all the way!
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Most often, however, the on-screen dickory fell to Bostwick in his "Marvel-ous" costume.
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Keen-eyed viewers could ascertain just what was happening under those tights.
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Shazam! loved to impart lessons to its viewing audiences... and I learned a few they weren't intentionally providing! |
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Bostwick had lovely green eyes... IF you could manage to look at them!
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Sunshine was a major friend to oglers of Bostwick. If his back was to the sun, it was harder to see things. If he was standing towards the sun... well, hallelujah!
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As the song goes, "Let... the sun shine...!" |
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If you were able to stay focused, there was a moral at the end of each story.
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In an unhappy turn of events, though, things were about to change. Bostwick, who performed virtually all of his own stunts, was injured during one episode. He was seeking medical treatment for it when he missed a filming day and was promptly fired!
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So, without warning, Bostwick was out and a whole 'nother Captain Marvel was in!
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Now the part was played by John Davey. While bulkier and more lantern-jawed like the original Marvel of the comics, he was quite a change from the friendlier-looking and more accessible Bostwick. Fans still debate to this day over which one was better for the role.
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Just like his predecessor, though, Davey was soon letting it all hang out in his red costume.
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Again... "Let... the sun shine!" Ha ha!
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While Davey was Captain Marvel, the show introduced the splendiferous Joanna Cameron as a pretty archeologist who has her own little secret. With the help of a mystical amulet, she can transform into Isis!
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I dearly loved this character, who then had her own show, Isis. She appeared three times on Shazam! and Captain Marvel appeared three times on Isis.
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It may interest you to know that football player-turned actor Mark Harmon was in the running to portray Captain Marvel and model-turned-actress Veronica Hamel was one of those up for the part of Isis!
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Interesting to imagine...
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In any event, the show could be a fertile training ground for young, new talent. The guy in the middle won a featured role after having played quite a few bit parts beforehand.
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That's young Andrew Stevens, who would proceed on to a considerable TV and, to a lesser extent, career in movies.
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His episode happened to be one that included Isis.
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Okay... why not? "Let... the sun shine!" Ha ha ha!!
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Generally, Davey showed more from the side than Bostwick had.
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But the front wasn't exactly neglected either.
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This was not a mystery show. The plots were very straightforward and fit snugly into a roughly 20-minute time frame. But one mystery was how and why on earth Tremayne wound up with his hair in this complicated confection...! Tremayne had supporting roles in films from the 1950s through the 1960s and many times lent his resonant voice to projects, including narrations and animated movies. He passed away in 2003 of heart failure at age 90.
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Earnest-looking, pouty-lipped Gray had worked as a teen guest star on Room 222, The Flying Nun, The Brian Keith Show and even as one of Marcia's beaux on The Brady Bunch before landing Shazam!
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As the principle star of a popular Saturday morning show, he was thrust into the teen magazine whirlwind, his face dotting the covers of all the popular periodicals of the day such as 16, Tiger Beat, etc...
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Sometimes his body, of the lean, non-threatening type, was also featured. After the series was cancelled, he faded from public view, ultimately operating a flower shop which he ran with his wife and which catered to celebrities. It's hard to believe, but he is now 70! He's occasionally been called upon to reflect upon the show or take part in comic-related events and projects.
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Bostwick might have been unfairly ousted from his role, but he won a case against the production company (Filmation) and was awarded full pay for the second season (in which he barely appeared) and was given residuals, too, which mattered since the show was re-aired for a long while (and later restored beautifully for DVD - at least as beautiful as a 16mm series with a budget per episode of about $12.97 can get!) He continued to work on screen occasionally and also became involved in independent producing (in Alabama and Tennessee.) Bostwick is currently 78.
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Ex-marine and former boxer Davey had played small roles in many TV series and would continue to do so after this through the mid-1980s. He is currently 82.
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Neither Bostwick nor Davey was the first Captain Marvel on screen. Western star (and former champion weight-lifter) Tom Tyler had played the hero in a 12-part 1941 serial called Adventures of Captain Marvel. All that weightlifting seems to have done his glutes a world of good!
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Then for the campy 1979 specials Legends of the Superheroes, bit player Garrett Craig somehow wound up in the tights!
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By the time of 2019's Shazam!, the camp was intentional and the whole thing played, for most purposes, with laughs.
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So that's about it! Signing off till next time.
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:::BONUS PICS:::
After this post went up, an eagle-eyed viewer commented about a brief "slip-up" in one of the episodes. (Or should I say "slip-out??") So in order to satisfy any curiosity about that among my readers, I give you the said moment, followed by the actor's self-correction!
11 comments:
Had forgotten about this one. One of my favotites was Land 9f the Lost. That hairy chested dad. Drooling just thinking of him.
Oh yeah, I forgot about the land of the lost. That daddy was hot haha. Thank you for this post P. Love the click-zooming. It's shows like this that really should be restored onto 4k hd. :)
Thank you for the trip down memory lane! What a pleasant way to spend my friday morning, thinking about all of my childhood crushes from back in the day.
I watched these every week and was more partial to glamorous Isis. Both guys are great but Bostwick more kid friendly I think ( not that way) the other Actor a bit menacing looking. These costumes are a scream, probably a really thin knit like t shirt jersey. I do remember the younger Actor all over tean beat, I paid a lot of attentiont to those magazines. I also remember the tone of the show was very preachy. Lessons learned, men in tights!
DC could (and as far as I know still can) use the name and title “Captain Marvel” and did as recently as 2006 in Justice League Unlimited. The PTB at DC decided on their own to minimize the use of the name because of the potential for confusion with Marvel pushing its CM film at around the same time as Shazam. There are a ton of ancillary characters associated with Shazam that used “Marvel” in their names but I am well out of the comics world so I have no idea how they’re all called these days.
I may have to see about borrowing the DVD set on this one. For the longest time the only DVD release was a single episode included with season 3 of Wonder Woman that featured our hero battling, I kid you not, a vulture.
Around the same time SHAZAM! started running on CBS, I was taking a non-credit university course on comic book history (the university library later wound up with one of the largest archives of comics materials in the country, started by the professor, who was then head of the English Dept.).
The course was an evening course open to the public, and one of the other students was a fairly outrageous older lady who confessed that when she was younger, she had a thing for Captain Marvel, "because he was drawn with a real package in those tights."
And it's true-- both Captain Marvel and Captain Marvel, Jr. were given one-piece tights rather than the "shorts over long-johns" outfits Superman and others of the day wore, and C.C. Beck, Mac Raboy and the other artists tended to do rear views with clearly defined butt cleavage and a "real package" compared to the neutering most superheroes got.
But I'm absolutely stunned you didn't call out Captain Marvel's thrusting bulge on that cover of WHIZ COMICS in your second image.
Not only is his junk well-defined by a cast shadow to the point of being blatant, but-- what the hell is Billy Batson's right elbow resting on?
The way the shadows are established, it looks like there's some space between Billy's forearm and CM's thigh, with contact only between Billy's elbow and what looks like a bulging boner stretching up towards CM's left hip.
SHAZAM!!!!
As always, another great post! Be safe and well, everyone!
Unknown, I covered (somewhat!) "Land of the Lost" in the link at the top of this post. I called it "Saturday Morning Fever" (and there's a part 2 out there in P.U. land, as well.
Shawny, the original film stock was not exactly wonderful. But the series was painstakingly (and I mean painstakingly) restored for DVD by some guys who went through the whole thing frame by frame. I wonder if they took note of the various bumps and bulges that I saw. Ha!
cjdude1962, I'm so glad you liked this! Thanks.
Gingerguy, truth be told, I was also more of an "Isis" kid. But revisiting "Shazam!" opened my eyes, so to speak! Apparently, the epilogs, wherein Capt Marvel (later Billy) would go over the moral of the story in clear terms, were not shown in syndication and have been restored for DVD. So basically not seen for several decades. (But, as you say, even the show itself was preachy. But maybe we could use more of that the way things are going!) Thanks!
F. Nomen, I gave up comic book reading by 1990, so I can't comment on how things stand now. But at the time of the TV show "Shazam!," DC Comics could not have a comic book called "Captain Marvel." That's why they came up with "Shazam!" They could use the character Captain Marvel, but not have that as a title. They tried to use the sub-title "The Original Captain Marvel" and were served with a cease & desist by Marvel Comics after 14 issues. The whole tormented debacle is outlined fairly well here: https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/542404/litigious-history-dc-and-marvel-rival-captain-marvel-characters
hsc, thanks for all the added info on Captain's marvel. LOL Ironically, C C Beck was an opponent to increased realism in comic book art, preferring simpler drawings over the trend towards much more detailed penciling which came about in the late-1960/early-1970s and went on from there.
TDMAN, you have to listen to your elders. LOL
Thanks for the journey down Saturday Morning Lane, dear Poseidon! I gotta say, I was a fan of any show with men in tights or loin cloths - animated or live-action - but Shazam left me cold. To start, it bothered me that this kid was, to my eyes, a runaway living with an old guy in a camper. Ummm…? But I continued to watch, waiting for the hot guy in tights. Although initially titilating, my fascination waned quickly as the poorly designed costume seemed to effectively neuter the poor actor. After the first couple episodes, I switched tp a different show on the dial (yet never missed an episode of Isis). The Valley of the Dinosaurs, Tarzan, and Flash Gordon were my go-to cartoons for handsome heroes in appreciably fine-fitting attire. All that said, I have a new appreciation for the show and the actors how had the tough task of bringing a superhero to life. Glad to hear that Bostwick won his lawsuit. I recall that he remained quite handsome in subsequent years, albeit away from the cameras. As always, grateful for your posts!
Thanks, SonofaBuck! I appreciate it a lot. I'd have rather had Billy and Shazam living the in RV and no Mentor at all. LOL I feel like I demonstrated here, though, that Captain Marvel wasn't always "neutered!" He (both of them) had their junk on display pretty clearly. I liked "The Herculoids." Dad hardly had anything on. And to a lesser extent, "Thundarr, The Barbarian." We all seem to have enjoyed "Isis." I thought she was the living end! LOL
Oddly enough, in the episode "The Brain," at approximately 8:15, one of the volleyball players (blue shorts, blue tank-top) inadvertently has his appendage pop out of the bottom right side of his shorts while running about, realizes it, and tucks it back in. While the offending organ is clearly visible in the DVD release, someone deemed it necessary to take the time, effort and expense to air-brush it out on the more recent blu-ray release.
KarloffFan, that's FAR too captivating a moment to let pass by without further examination...!!! I have added it to the bottom of the post as a bonus. (The youths were playing football, but I can forgive you the confusion over which sort of balls were in play during the episode!) Thanks! P.S. - It is SO fleeting and he corrects it SO swiftly and discreetly that it's incredible, as you say, that anyone would feel the need to expend the time, effort and money to "correct" it. All I can say on that score is that the show underwent a, literally, frame-by-frame restoration for BluRay and it probably was just a matter of obscuring it with a rendition of Photoshop which was being used to get rid of dirt, scratches and other film impurities anyway. Frame by frame, the technician probably caught it rather clearly versus watching it in real time...
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