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The Fugitive and Route 66


I grew up in the 60’s and have a preference for the TV shows of that era. Two of my favorites were Route 66, (1960-64) and The Fugitive (1963-67). The first is the all-time favorite program of one of my best friends and the second is mine. We often discuss them. I’ve gotten DVD boxed sets of the entirety of both series and have started watching both in chronological order. I decided to review each episode as I went along.

Both shows featured wandering heroes, as did several shows of the 60’s, (Run for Your Life, The Invaders, Cornet Blue, The Immortal, etc.) Those shows, in turn were the progeny of the western shows of the 1950’s and 60’s, (Cheyenne, Sugarfoot, The Restless Gun, Bat Masterson, many others) with rootless protagonists. Most shows have the heroes in the same location and the stories come from the people who enter their sphere. Or they are based on their profession and are limited by its boundaries. These “road” shows have the heroes travel and find themselves in the middle of other people’s stories. The fact that they have no permanent professions means that they could be in any type of situation and any type of story could be told. Route 66 was totally open-ended while the Fugitive had the suspenseful “double-chase” scenario where Lt. Gerard is after Richard Kimble and Dr. Kimble is after the one-armed man. Neither show could rely on the routine plots and situations that dominated conventional series.

Both shows had the problem of inserting their heroes into the situation of the plot since their professions did not do it for them, as they would in a cop, lawyer or doctor show. Sometimes the devices used were kind of awkward on Route 66. They seemed much more ingenious on The Fugitive, where the fixes the writers put Kimble in are often amazing and delightful. Route 66 was able to have light-hearted episodes or an element of comedy relief in the serious ones. Richard Kimble’s situations were inevitably rather tense. But they were also incredibly poignant. The Fugitive used a lot of the music from the Twilight Zone and it is essentially a four year journey into Kimball’s own Twilight Zone. The protagonists on that show were both fearful and searching for something that would get them out of their nightmare. That’s exactly where Kimble is. Think of how many shows you’ve seen and what emotions they brought out in you. How many of them produced feelings of poignancy and alienation? Route 66 produces a sense of freedom, with the boys always wanting to see what’s around the next bend before they have to settle down.

David Janssen’s performance as Richard Kimble is the best I’ve ever seen on television. Kimble doesn’t want to be recognized so he keeps his head down and says as little as possible, as quietly as possible. This deprives Janssen of an actor’s basic tools. He has to simply use his face, especially his eyes, to tell us what Kimble is thinking and feeling. And the fact that Kimble is a doctor makes a wonderful “hook”. He’s not the type of doctor who went into the profession to get rich: he cares about people and can’t walk away from their problems just to save his neck. It creates many great dramatic situations.

With all the traveling the heroes do, it’s a pity that the shows weren’t filmed in color, (as the Fugitive finally was in its last season). Actually, The Fugitive with its downbeat theme, is probably more appropriate for black and white. Route 66 which was actually filmed all over the country, (The Fugitive was filmed in California), definitely should be in color, as were contemporary series like Bonanza and I Spy. Musically, The Fugitive had the wonderful theme composed by Pete Rugolo, which could be played allegro for excitement and suspense or lento for drama and poignancy. But Route 66 has my favorite TV theme of all time, by Nelson Riddle who was told to “write something that sounded like a car driving down a road”. He sure did. It’s the greatest traveling music of all time.

Neither show has an origin episode, although The Fugitive did some flashbacks in “The Girl From Little Egypt”. The Route 66 backstory is that Tod’s father was rich, owning a fleet of barges that worked the Hudson River where Tod works for a time and met his Buddy, Buz Murdock, form New York’s Hell’s Kitchen. When Tod’s father died suddenly Tod found that his family wasn’t rich after all- at least not any more. When all the debts were paid, all he had was his corvette. He and his buddy decided to use it to see the world, or at least America. Richard Kimble was a successful doctor whose wife could not have a child and didn’t want to adopt. They argued about it. He left in a huff. When he came back, he nearly ran over a one-armed man, then went into the house to find his wife dead. Lt. Gerard could never find this one armed man and Kimble was convicted. Gerard accepted this verdict and accompanied Kimble on a train ride to the death house. But a derailment freed him, sending Gerard on his obsessive search for Kimble and Kimble on his even more obsessive search for the one-armed man.

Neither showed premiered with an episode depicting these events. Route 66 starts with a sort of “Bad Day at Black Rock” episode that takes place in Mississippi, (but was filmed in Kentucky). There are some brief references to who they are and how they got there. The rest of the backstory above was put together from fragments mentioned in other episodes. The Fugitive has a significant opening segment explaining Kimble’s situation along with a narrator describing it and his feelings at the beginning and end of each episode. But the first episode takes place in Arizona and is about Kimble trying to help a woman and her son get away from a politically powerful and abusive husband/ father. He thinks about going off with them but realizes that’s impossible and is on his way. The fans demanded to see the backstory and the writers gave them a delirious Kimble in, “The Girl From Little Egypt”, producing the flashbacks they wanted. My theory is that the premiere of a show is usually the pilot and the networks wanted the pilot of a show to be a typical episode, not an origin story, which wouldn’t really tell them what a show will be like.

Both shows inaugurated the concept of a finale, an episode that ended the series by terminating its premise. Route 66 made a rather meek gesture toward this with a goofy two-parter called “Where There’s a Will, There’s a Way” that no one seems to like about a family of con men and women, one of whom is Barbara Eden who marries Tod, who also inherits some money and is rich again. Far more satisfactory, to say the least, was “The Judgement”, when Gerard finally catches up to Kimble who finally catches up to the one armed man, which was the highest rated show in the history of American television until the “Who Shot JR” show of “Dallas” 13 years later. It ends with Kimble free and having a pretty new girlfriend, (Diane Baker). I’d rather that Kimble have left the courthouse and found Vera Miles and her son from Fear in a Desert City so they could finally go off together as they almost did in the premiere. Not only will Kimble be free but he’ll have a wife and the child he always wanted. (A comical alternative to this would be to have Kimble exit the courthouse and be faced with a vast throng of all the women who fell in love with him on his travels. He panics and runs, the women chasing him with open arms. William Conrad: ”For Richard Kimble, the running never stops!”)

You would think Tod and Buz might have met up with Richard Kimble at some point in their mutual travels. They sort of did in “One Tiger to a Hll”, the premiere episode of the third season of Route 66, in which David Jansen guest stars as a troubled war veteran named Karno, who has become a near psychopathic bully. That’s not Richard Kimble, but he sure looks like him.







The past is a series of presents. The present is living history we are privileged to witness

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Well written post; Route 66 and the Fugitive are also two of my favorites.
Nicely summarized for new viewers.

Funny idea for the alternate Fugitive epilogue.

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There is no question that QM's The Fugitive had some wonderful Pete music and stock music running over the hours. A lot of the stock music was pinched from Twilight Zone and in season four it pinched music from The Outer Limits as well. But who cares? The show did wonders with the music.

I only started getting into Route 66 in recent years. I thought Nelson Riddle did much better music for Batman (1966) and I was less pleased with his Route 66 music.

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The great thing about both of these shows is all the real exterior shooting. So many great shows from the 60s are diminished for me by their fake looking stage 'exteriors'. (cough, cough...Bonanza...cough, cough.)

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Janssen performed the best dramatic role ever on tv until.... Jon Hamm may have outdone him in Mad Men. I see parallels between the 2 characters , on film, and in real life (sadly, the alcohol consumption being one of them). I always hoped that Don Draper would run into Richard Kimble on the show.... but u r right, Janssen had such a difficult role to play and he mastered it.

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I'm glad I'm not the only one who noticed similarities between the Kimble and Draper characters. Both characters on the run, they are reserved men who say little. Although Draper was a 'famous' adman, his demeanor was reminiscent of many men from the 60s. I often wonder if Jon Hamm used Janssen's 'Fugitive' performance as inspiration.

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It's taken a year but I've now completed my combined Route 66 / The Fugitive project. Some additional observations:

- The best season I've ever seen for a television series is the second season of Route 66, (despite George Maharis having to leave the show, (for the first time) at the end of the season), there is one classic after another in this season: "A Month of Sundays", "Good Night, Sweet Blues", "Birdcage on my Foot", "The Mud Nest", (my all-time favorite episode of any series), "Some of the People, Some of the Time", "The Thin White Line", "And the Cat Jumped Over the Moon", "To Walk With a Serpent", "City of Wheels", "How Much a Pound Is Albatross", "Aren't You Surprised to See Me", "Shoulder the Sky My Lad", "Even Stones Have Eyes"and "There I am There I Always Am" are all very memorable. That's as many good episodes as a good show normally has in it's entire run and Route 66 had those, almost in a row.

- After that the show became much less consistent. In the fourth and final season, they resort to humorous episodes too often and this show didn't do very well with comedy relief. It becomes more silly than funny. The nadir in this regard is in the much maligned finale, where the two heroes pretend to be German tourists in the Florida Everglades and show up wearing liederhosen.

- The Fugitive, on the other hand has a crescendo to a famous finale, "The Judgment", which was the most viewed television show during the first three decades of American television. It's a powerful and cathartic ending, one that no one who has ever seen the entire series can ever forget.

- Perhaps because of the constraints of it's premise, The Fugitive never reaches the heights of the best episodes of Route 66. Route 66 did several episodes you can't picture being done on any other series, largely because other hero's structured lives wouldn't have permitted them to become involved with the situations presented. But the virtue of structure is that it tends to provide a floor as well as a ceiling for the quality of the show and there are many Route 66 episodes that are worse than anything you'll see on The Fugitive.

- Even good shows have bad episodes. The worst Fugitive episode is a deary, uninspired episode from late in the first season called "The Homecoming", a lame combination of Tennessee Williams and Edgar Allen Poe about a mental patient returning to her southern plantation home after having witnessed a traumatic event. The baddies try to drive her insane by giving her flashbacks to the grisly event. Dr. Kimble is basically on the sidelines.

- Route 66's worst episode was so bad, (and ill-timed) that it wasn't even shown, at least not until either after the planned finale or years alter in syndication, depending on which story you prefer. It's a "double trouble" episode where Tod meets a doppelganger who is an assassin, "I'm here to Kill a King". Amazingly, this was scheduled for 11/22/63, (or a week later, again depending on what you are reading), and was considered inappropriate for the moment. Audiences were thus spared, for a time, of viewing a show so bad it was inappropriate for any moment.

- People are wrong about one thing: Glenn Corbett didn't replace George Maharis. Martin Milner did. And Corbett replaced Milner. Tod Stiles became the slightly cynical guy who wanted to hold back from entanglements if he could , (as Buz Murdock had been), and Lincoln Case became the idealistic guy who wanted to solve everyone's problems, as Tod had been.

- My mind is unchanged on the subject of color. Route 66 clearly needed to be filmed in color to capture the beauties of the various spots around America where it was actually filmed. The Fugitive, a darker show filmed entirely in California, is much better in black and white.

- I really, really wish that they had shown the episodes with more geographical continuity. Route 66 actually did film 3-4 episodes in one general area before moving on. It's jarring to see an episode in New England, one in Minnesota, one in Colorado and then we're back in New England again. Intuitively, we know the actions in the New England episodes must have taken place first, then Minnesota, then Colorado. Even though all the Fugitive episodes were filmed in California, they could still have traced Dr. Kimble's peregrinations as he moved back and forth across the country instead of having him pop up in an entirely different place in each episode as if he'd been transported there, Star Trek style.

- Both shows are tributes not only to the people who made them- the producers, the writers, the directors and the stars- but to the wonderful repertory company of TV guest starts that made the world of 60's television so real: Everett Sloane, Whit Bissell, Janice Rule, Thomas Gomez, Betty Field, Henry Hull, Lew Ayres, Frank Overton, Suzanne Pleshette, John Larch, Harry Townes, Warren Stevens, E. G. Marshall, Jay C. Flippen, Arline Sax, Charles McGraw, Bethel leslie, Zora Lampert, Leslie Nielsen, Fay Spain, James Brown, Lee Marvin, Regis Tommey, Ann Francis, Jack Warden, Ford Rainey, Paul Richards, Martha Hyer, Jack Weston, George McCready, Royal Dano, Vaughn Taylor, Denver Pyle, Gene Evans, Harold J. Stone, Robert DuVal, Darren McGavin, Ed Asner, Lois Nettleton, Susan Oliver, Claude Akins, Murray Matheson, Lon Chaney, Nina Foch, James Dunn, Keenan Wynn, Inger Stevens, Pat Hingle, Dan O'Herlihy, Simon Oakland, Albert Salmi, Ben Johnson, John Ericson, DeForest Kelly, marion Ross, Steven Hill, Julie Newmar, David Wayne, Peter Graves, Akim Tamiroff, Arthur Hill, Henry Jones, Joanna Moore, Herschel Bernardi, Arthur O'Connell,Laura Devon, Edgar Buchanan, Luther Adler, Bruce Gordon, Jeremy Slate, Sorrell Brooke, Madlyn Rhue, Jack Kruschen, Joanne Linville, Harry Guardino, Mike Kellin, Theodore Bickel, Vera Miles, Robert Webber, Barry Sullivan, Richard Basehart, James Whitmore, Philip Abbott, Martin Balsam, Steve Cochran, Kathleen Crowley, Ed Begley, Ruth Roman, Robert Emhart, Linda Watkins, Anne Helm, Alan Hale, Diane Baker, E$dward Binns, Michael Tolan, John Litel, Michael Conrad, Chester Morris, Tom Bosley, Clifton James, Beatrice Straight, Patrick O'Neal, Alex Vespi, (Cord), J. Carroll Naish, Lou Antonio, Lee Phillips, Jo Van Fleet, Robert Loggia, Jessica Walter, Larry Blyden, Eugene Roche, James Coburn, Michael Parks, Lee Meriwether, Bert Freed, Dan Duryea, etc. etc. (I got that list just from the Route 66 book).



The past is a series of presents. The present is living history we are privileged to witness

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Good work. A few points:

I Spy was on a few years later than Route 66; it premiered right at the time that the switch to color was taking place. Most of the shows around Route 66's time were still in B&W.

Agreed that Route 66 would have been so much greater in color. It's still great just for innocuous stuff that does not look like the SoCal that we see in every show. Different buildings, trees, whatever.

I Spy was filmed internationally AND in color. There was just something a little off about the look that show had, though. I don't like the film stock or something. Just felt it should look better than it does. I liked the saturated color late 60s early 70s look and maybe I Spy was doing something different.

Route 66 was great in that the episodes could be about anything. As you said though, if the story was weak there wasn't the framing device a normal show had, so it was more noticeable.

Glenn Corbett was hit and miss. Not a big fan of his stiff acting style. Probably the best episode with him was in Minneapolis where he was a beauty contest judge. One case where his persona worked better. That episode also had some sort of callback, where they ran into someone they met in a different city. They did that with Julie Newmar, but this character was not a focal point. Was a nice touch.

There was one unintentionally good thing about Corbett. It makes for a more sensible ending to the series. With Maharis still there, they would have had to go really dramatic or some teary sendoff. With Corbett, it was clear that Tod didn't click with Linc in the same way and the magic was starting to wear off. Kind of like college or some good experience in your life that is great for a while, and then you hit that senioritis point where it's time to move on. Having Corbett there brought out that quality, it made more sense for Tod to want to give up the road.

Actual finale was awful though. That was the worst of the show. When you can't find anything for Roger C. Carmel to do, you have a stinker on your hands!

Fuge finale was great I thought, though a lot of the serious fans like to rip it. The Lloyd Chandler character that JD Cannon played really was needed for plot purposes. Diane Baker's character also served her purpose. She was supposed to be somewhat interesting, but a fellow Stafford expat that Kimble could relate to at that point. She was supposed to be somewhat comforting. Maybe less exciting than some of the others, but it's what he needed at the point. She steps out of the way in the second half to let things wrap up.

The Fugitive could get relentless. Four seasons was certainly enough. Kind of makes the little things stand out though. It always helped when Kimble got a bit of a break, an easier getaway or someone helped him more than usual.

In the fourth season it was more obvious that Janssen was getting burned out and asked for a bit of relief. So there are a few episodes where the subplot is beefed up more, and Kimble doesn't even appear in some of the scenes. Again, a bit of relief for a formula show.

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