I’d known about Space:1999 for months. Paperback novelisations had begun appearing in bookshops well before the series got anywhere near a TV screen. The TV Times had mentioned it a year earlier, publishing a photo of Martin Landau and Barbara Bain and calling the series Space 99 (a better title if you ask me). The BBC’s Horizon had included clips in a film about the special effects industry, How on Earth Did They Do That, broadcast on 23 December 1974. I knew something was on its way from Gerry Anderson, I just didn’t know when to expect it.
Finally, on September 4, 1975, it arrived, promoted as part of ITV’s ‘Big Season’ of autumn programmes. Viewers in the ATV Midlands region, of whom I was one, got to see it first, at 7.00pm that evening, along with the Yorkshire, Grampian, Scottish, Border and Ulster regions. In the London and Anglia areas, it began two days later, on Saturday 6th at 5.50pm – arguably a better slot, but up against Dr. Who on BBC1 – and the Timelord had stolen a march on the Alphans by grabbing viewers a week earlier. This, clearly, didn’t help the Andersons' cause. Neither did the events of the coming months, when many ITV regions relegated the series to different slots. Christmas has a habit of interrupting any scheduled series, and in the LWT area, it provided the perfect excuse to demote Space:1999 to Saturday mornings at 11.50 commencing January 1976. One can only imagine what Gerry Anderson and Lew Grade thought of seeing their £3m investment treated as kids’s stuff.
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'Space 99' gets its first mention in the TV Times, September 1974 |
It was too often the case on British television that science fiction was dismissed as juvenile fodder, the BBC’s Quatermass and Out of the Unknown being notable exceptions to an almost universal rule. Science fiction meant space ships, robots and men in monster suits. It did not equate to serious drama. When the BBC began showing Star Trek in the summer of 1969, it was in the slot normally occupied by Dr. Who. When the show’s appeal to adults was better understood, it got taken more seriously, and was promoted to a 7pm slot on midweek evenings – exactly the same slot that most ITV regions originally chose for Space:1999. Mr. Spock would have approved of their logic...
By the time the series appeared, I'd got ahead of the curve by reading the novelisation of the first episode. Further novels appeared through the autumn, along with a Space:1999 Annual, which a friend of mine got ordered for us through his mum's mail order catalogue. The series was promoted in the comic Look-in, where John Burns provided a rushed strip cartoon version (he reportedly hated drawing comics based on TV series). I'd stopped reading Look-in when it started featuring the likes of David Cassidy, but I made an exception this week. I might have kept on buying it if I'd liked the comic strip, but I wasn't keen on John Burns' artwork. Why couldn't they have got Mike Noble? (Don't tell me, I know...)
Here in the ATV region, Space:1999 stayed put on Thursday evenings for its whole first series run, with only a single episode, The Last Sunset, broadcast in an earlier slot on New Year’s Day 1976. When it returned, in the autumn, for a second season, ATV played the same trick as LWT and Anglia the previous year, putting it up against Dr. Who. I was quite happy to forsake the Doctor (I was never that keen on Tom Baker), and tuned in on Saturday 4 September for the first of the new series. Teatime on Saturday felt like a good time to watch Space:1999, ideally accompanied by a bacon and sausage sandwich – but it wouldn’t last. Only seven episodes were shown in that slot before the series was bumped to 4.45 on Thursday evenings, commencing with the all time dud episode, The Rules of Luton. Had the programme been under-performing against Dr. Who? It seems highly likely. But series two got the scheduling it deserved – under Fred Freiberger’s influence, it had degenerated into a children’s show, on a par with Lost in Space. Aged fifteen, I was keenly aware of this, and although I kept on watching, I knew the series had lost everything that had made it special – the serious, metaphysical air that pervaded year one was replaced with comic gags about Tony Verdeschi’s home-brewed beer, and a parade of increasingly silly monsters. It’s clear from my diary that I wasn’t taking the new series entirely seriously when I wrote about the Alphans blowing up ‘Brian Blessed’s fizzy drinks machine’ in the season opener, The Metamorph. Series two disappeared after Christmas, leaving seven episodes as yet unbroadcast, but by this time, I didn’t really care. The tail end of the series finally made it to the screen in August of 1977, when five episodes were shown, whilst the remaining two (The Immunity Syndrome and The Dorcons) were rolled out on a couple of Bank Holiday Mondays in 1978.
It’s sobering to reflect that half a century has passed since I first saw Breakaway. That broadcast was probably the very last time that a new sci-fi TV series gave me a frisson of anticipation. For the first few weeks it was all new, and strange and amazing, the sets, the hardware, the music – I’d got the same buzz about every Anderson series from Thunderbirds onwards, when I was old enough to enjoy the anticipation of a new and exciting series. I know it’s a feeling I’ll never get again.
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TV Times looks at Space:1999 during its first week on air. |