- AMG Rating:



- Genre: Comedy
- Movie Type: Animal Picture, Sitcom
- Themes: Talking Animals
- Release Year: 1961
- Country: US
- Run Time: 30 minutes
TV Series:
Mister Ed |



| Who2 Biography: Mister Ed, Fictional Character |
|
The TV comedy Mr. Ed ran on the CBS network from 1961 to 1966. The title star was a cantankerous talking horse who would speak only to his owner, Wilbur Post, and played dumb when anyone else was present. Naturally, this created comical troubles for Wilbur (played by actor Alan Young). Mr. Ed was played by a trained show horse named Bamboo Harvester; his voice was provided by veteran actor Allan "Rocky" Lane.
Ed is sometimes compared to Francis the Talking Mule, the star of a movie series which ran from 1949 to 1956.
| Biology Q&A: Who was Mr. Ed? |
Mr. Ed was the "the talking horse" and a star of a television show
in the 1960s. When he appeared to talk, the horse was actually responding to
cues from his trainer. Movement of a small rope running from his halter through
his mouth and held by the trainer off camera would cause Ed to move his lips as
if he were speaking. In the real world, so far only birds have been able to
mimic human speech.
Previous question:
Can horses really do math?
Next question:
How do you teach a parrot to talk?
| Wikipedia: Mister Ed |
| Mister Ed | |
|---|---|
Mister Ed title, from a colorized print |
|
| Genre | Sitcom |
| Created by | Walter R. Brooks |
| Directed by | Jus Addiss Rodney Amateau Arthur Lubin John Rich Ira Stewart Alan Young |
| Starring | Alan Young Connie Hines |
| Voices of | Allan "Rocky" Lane |
| Theme music composer | Ray Evans Jay Livingston |
| Opening theme | "Mr. Ed" by Jay Livingston |
| Composer(s) | Jack Cookerly Dave Kahn |
| Country of origin | |
| Language(s) | English |
| No. of seasons | 6 |
| No. of episodes | 143 |
| Production | |
| Executive producer(s) | Al Simon |
| Producer(s) | Arthur Lubin |
| Cinematography | Archie R. Dalzell Maury Gertsman |
| Running time | 30 mins. |
| Production company(s) | The Mister Ed Company |
| Distributor | Filmways Television |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | Syndication (1961) CBS (1961-1966) |
| Original run | January 5, 1961 – February 6, 1966 |
| Chronology | |
| Related shows | Mister Ed (2004) |
Mister Ed was an American television situation comedy produced by Filmways[1] that first aired in syndication from January 5 to July 2, 1961 and then on CBS from October 1, 1961 to February 6, 1966. Mister Ed was the first series ever to debut as a midseason replacement.
The stars of the show are Mister Ed, an intelligent palomino American Saddlebred who could talk ("played" by gelding Bamboo Harvester and voiced by Allan Lane), and his owner, an eccentric and enormously klutzy architect named Wilbur Post (portrayed by Alan Young). Much of the program's humor stemmed from the fact Mister Ed would speak only to Wilbur, as well as Ed's notoriety as a troublemaker. According to the show's producer, Arthur Lubin, Young was chosen as the lead character because he "just seemed like the sort of guy a horse would talk to."[2] Lubin, a friend of Mae West, scored a coup by persuading the screen icon to guest star in one episode.
Contents |
The show was derived from short stories by Walter R. Brooks, including Ed Takes the Pledge. Brooks is otherwise known for the Freddy the Pig series of children's novels, which likewise feature talking animals who interact with humans.
The concept of the show was similar to Francis the Talking Mule, with the equine normally talking only to one person (Wilbur), and thus both helping and frustrating its owner.
The horse that played Mister Ed for the pilot episode was a chestnut gelding.
Mister Ed (1949-1970) was voiced by ex-B-movie cowboy star Allan "Rocky" Lane (speaking) and Sheldon Allman (singing, except his line in the theme song, which was sung by its composer, Jay Livingston).
Ed was voice-trained for the show by Les Hilton. Lane remained anonymous as the voice of Mister Ed, and the show's producers referred to him only as "an actor who prefers to remain nameless," though once the show became a hit, Lane campaigned the producers for credit, which he never received. The credits listed Mister Ed as playing "Himself"; however, his family tree name was Bamboo Harvester. Ed's stablemate, a quarter horse named Pumpkin, who was later to appear in the television series Green Acres, was also Ed's stunt double in the show.
There are conflicting stories involving of the death of Mr. Ed.
One version is by 1968 the horse playing Mister Ed was suffering from a variety of health problems. In 1970 he was euthanized with no publicity, and buried at Snodgrass Farm in Oklahoma.[3]
A second story, which also occurs in Oklahoma, is a horse that died in Oklahoma in February 1979 who was widely thought to be Mister Ed, (it was in fact another horse that posed for the still pictures used by the production company for the show's press kits. See Alan Young's comments below). After Bamboo Harvester's death in 1970 this horse was unofficially known as Mister Ed which led to him being reported as such (including sardonic comments on Saturday Night Live's Weekend Update) following his own death.[4]
A third version is quoted by Alan Young in his book "Mr. Ed and Me" (1994,St. Martins Press, New York, ISBN 0-312-11852-X). Young wrote in his book that he'd frequently visit his former "co-star" in retirement. He states that Mr. Ed died from an inadvertent tranquilizer administered while he was "in retirement" in a stable in Burbank, California where he lived with his trainer Lester Hilton. Young says Hilton was out of town visiting relatives and a temporary care giver might have seen Ed rolling on the ground, struggling to get up. Young said Ed was a heavy horse and he wasn't always strong enough for him to get back on his feet without struggling. The theory is the care giver thought the horse was in distress and administered a tranquilizer and for unknown reason, the horse died within hours. The remains were cremated and scattered by Hilton in the Los Angeles area at a spot known only to him.
Young says when the Oklahoma horse death story came out in 1979, he knew it wasn't the real Mr. Ed, but didn't have the heart to "shatter their illusions" that the horse being memorialized wasn't the real Mr. Ed. He believes it was a horse used for early publicity photos. [5]
The fact that the death of this 'Mister Ed' came less than a year after the last Triple Crown winner in 1978 has led some to speculate that this began "The Curse Of Mister Ed", during which no horse (or jockey) has managed to win the Triple Crown.
The other main characters in the show were Wilbur's tolerant young wife, Carol (Connie Hines); and their neighbors the Addisons, Roger (Larry Keating) and Kay (Edna Skinner) until 1963 (upon Larry Keating's death that year) and then the Kirkwoods, Gordon (Leon Ames) and Winnie (Florence MacMichael). In 1963, the child actor Darby Hinton, cast thereafter as Israel Boone on NBC's Daniel Boone, guest starred as Rocky in the episode "Getting Ed's Goat". Jack Albertson appeared occasionally from 1961 to 1963 as Kay Addison's older brother Paul Fenton.
For the final season, the show focused strictly on the home life of the Posts, which was made more interesting when Carol's grumpy and uptight father, Mr. Higgins (Barry Kelly), who appeared occasionally through the entire series, apparently moved in with Wilbur and Carol during the final episodes, and who never stopped loathing Wilbur since Wilbur's quirky eccentricity always clashed with the emotionless and uptight personality of Carol's father who never stopped trying to persuade Carol to leave Wilbur, whom he referred to as a "kook" because of his klutziness.
Although Connie Hines retired from acting a few years after the shows cancellation in 1966, she and Alan Young still make public appearances together.[6]
The theme song was written by the songwriting team of Jay Livingston and Ray Evans and sung, for the show, by Livingston, who was not the first choice. Only the music was used to open the first six episodes, but when a professional singer could not be found, Livingston agreed to sing the lyrics, because the producers were so pleased with his vocals, and he was never replaced. [7]
The series was sponsored from 1961 to 1963 by Studebaker Corporation, a now-defunct American car manufacturer. Studebakers were featured prominently in the show during this period. The Posts are shown owning a 1962 Lark convertible, and the company used publicity shots featuring the Posts and Mister Ed with their product (various cast members also appeared in "integrated commercials" for Lark at the end of the program). The Addisons are shown owning a 1963 Avanti. Ford Motor Company provided the vehicles starting at the beginning of 1965. It is also interesting to note that, in the first episode ever aired, the Posts were driving a 1961 Studebaker Lark.
In 2004, a remake was planned for the Fox network, with Sherman Hemsley as the voice of Mister Ed, David Alan Basche as Wilbur, Sherilyn Fenn as Carol, and Sara Paxton. The pilot was filmed, but was not picked up by Fox. The show's writer and producer, Drake Sather, committed suicide shortly before the pilot's completion.
It is often said the crew was able to get Mister Ed to move his mouth by applying peanut butter to his gums in order for him to try to remove it by moving his lips. However, Alan Young said in 2004 that he had started the story himself.[8]
Young, in an interview 7 April 2007 on radio station 3AW, Melbourne, Australia, claimed that a loose piece of Nylon was inserted under Mr. Ed's lip which the horse attempted to remove on his trainer's cue. Mr. Ed was so well trained, it was said, that the insert would be ignored until the required cue.
Others argued that examination of Mister Ed footage shows Ed's handler pulling strings to make him talk, and that this was method was at work at least some of the time. Young later said during an interview for the Archive of American Television that a nylon string was tied to the bridle and the loose end inserted under his lip to make Ed talk, saying that he had used the peanut butter fable for years in radio interviews instead of telling the truth. THIS TV is broadcasting the show several times a day, and you can sometimes see the loose thread tied to the bridle, it's clearly not taut as it would be if it were being pulled. Young also states in the AAT interview that after the first season, Ed didn't need the nylon - Alan and trainer Les were out riding one day and Les started laughing, telling Alan to look at Ed, who was moving his lips every time they stopped talking, attempting to join in the conversation. You can tell the difference watching first season eps versus later eps, it's clear that early on he's working the irritating string out, sometimes working his tongue in the attempt too, and later on he tends to only move his upper lip, and appears to watch Alan Young closely, waiting for him to finish his lines before twitching his lip. Young added in the Archive interview that Ed saw the trainer as the disciplinarian, or father figure, and when scolded for missing a cue, would go to Alan for comfort, like a mother figure, which Les said was a good thing. You can truly see the bond and affection between the horse & his costar. [1]
Main cast:
Allan Lane (voice only) ... Mister Ed
Alan Young ... Wilbur Post
Connie Hines ... Carol Post
Supporting Cast:
Larry Keating ... Roger Addison (1961-1963); Seasons 1-3
Edna Skinner ... Kay Addison (1961-1963); Seasons 1-4
Leon Ames ... Gordon Kirkwood (1963-1965); Seasons 4-5
Florence MacMichael ... Winnie Kirkwood (1963-1965); Seasons 4-5
Jack Albertson ... Paul Fenton (occasionally 1961-1963); Seasons 2-4
Barry Kelly ... Carol's Father, Mr. Higgins (occasionally 1962-1966)
|
|
This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (September 2007) |
Recent work has been done by a master builder in Oklahoma to create a community built around the supposed final resting place (although that fact is disputable) of Mr. Ed. It is intended to be themed to the style of the show and its period.
MGM Home Entertainment released two Best-of collections of Mister Ed on DVD in Region 1. Volume 1 (released January 13, 2004) contains 21 episodes and Volume 2 (released March 8, 2005) contains 20 episodes. Due to poor sales, further volumes were not released.
MGM also released a single-disc released entitled Mister Ed's Barnyard Favorites on July 26, 2005 which contains the first eight episodes featured on Volume One.
Judging by the pattern of other CBS and Filmways programs of the era, it is possible that some episodes from the early seasons may have had their copyrights lapsed, and thus have fallen in the public domain. The Internet Archive (archive.org) has the episode entitled "Ed the Beneficiary".
On October 6, 2009, Shout! Factory released the complete first season of Mister Ed on DVD in Region 1. [4] An early review by Paul Mavis states that most of the episodes are the full-length versions, while eight of them are the edited versions. [5]
The Complete Second Season has been announced for release on February 2, 2010. [6]
| DVD Name | Ep # | Release Date |
|---|---|---|
| The Complete First Season | 26 | October 6, 2009 |
| The Complete Second Season | 26 | February 2, 2010 |
Other films with talking horses include Hot to Trot (1988) and Ready to Run (2002). The names of the talking horses were Don and Thunder Jam (TJ) respectively.
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| Season 04: Perry Mason (TV Episode) (1960 Mystery TV Episode) | |
| Leo L. Fuchs (Actor, Comedy/Western) | |
| A Flock of Trouble: Maverick (TV Episode) (1960 TV Episode) |
| What breed of horse was the title character on Mister Ed? Read answer... | |
| How many hands tall was Mister Ed? Read answer... | |
| What kind of animal was the talkative Mister Ed? Read answer... |
Copyrights:
![]() | TV Listings. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Mister Ed biography from Who2. Read more | |
![]() | Biology Q&A. The Handy Biology Answer Book. 2004 ©Visible Ink Press. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Mister Ed". Read more |
Mentioned in