Whitney Ellsworth Movies
Whitney Ellsworth was a writer/producer who was closely associated with film and television adaptations of comic book characters -- most notably Superman -- for three decades. Born in 1908 in Brooklyn, NY, he had a special appreciation for historical subjects -- especially the Civil War -- and also for painting. He took a mail-order correspondence course in graphic art and did enough with what he learned to eventually become an assistant on the Just Kids comic strip. He was subsequently employed by King Features, where he worked on strips such as Tillie the Toiler and Dumb Dora. In the '30s, he wrote for the pulp magazines as well, and created his own comic strip character, Little Linda, which appeared in New Fun Comics in the middle of the decade.Ellsworth found his permanent home in the editorial department of National Periodicals, at their DC Comics imprint, where he had charge of the writing for Batman, The Spectre, and Dr. Fate, and also created later a new character, Congo Bill. Among his other duties, he also wrote for the Superman daily comic strip. By the early '40s, DC Comics' heroes had begun appearing in incarnations beyond the pages of the comic books, in various manifestations. There were the Superman and Batman comic strips that appeared daily in newspapers; the radio shows (which was where kryptonite, the one element that could harm Superman, first appeared); the Max Fleischer/Paramount-produced animated Superman cartoons; and from 1943 onward, the movies as well. Ellsworth, in addition to his other duties, was put in charge of representing DC's interests in dealing with the movie serial adaptations of Batman, Superman, and his own Congo Bill, all of which were turned into successful serials during the '40s. The two Batman serials done by Columbia were poor in overall quality, although they did make money, but the two Superman serials made by the same studio were beyond reproach technically, and also hugely successful at the box office, despite the declining marketplace for serials.
In May of 1951, Ellsworth was asked to deliver a script for a proposed Superman feature film, part of an effort to move the Man of Steel from the Saturday matinee to the small screen. Living in New York at the time, he drove west with his wife (ex-Paramount contract player Jane Dewey) and their daughter Patricia, intending to devise his script while on the way across country, amid some sight-seeing. According to an essay by Patricia Ellsworth Wilson, it was after taking a side-trip through Dalhart, TX, and its oil fields that her father conceived the idea for what became Superman and the Mole Men, the property that introduced George Reeves in the role of the Man of Steel. Ellsworth and producer Robert Maxwell collaborated on the final script under the joint pseudonym of Richard Fielding. That screenplay told of an oil well drilled so deep that it goes below the outer crust of the Earth and opens a path to another world and another order of human life living far below -- out of the shaft come tiny, mute, fur-covered humanoid creatures who set about exploring, only to set off panic and a cycle of violence and attempted murder that only Superman can quell. The story was superb science fiction with a gritty, topical edge that reflected the uneasiness of the time in which it was written, and in Ellsworth's and Maxwell's hands it gave a flying start to Reeves' portrayal of Superman and to the Superman television series. Filmed that summer and released later in the year, the movie was an instant hit, and the shooting of the series Adventures of Superman, produced by Maxwell, followed immediately. When that first season of shows finally got on the air nationally in syndication in early 1953, it was a huge hit, and a second season was prepared. Many parents, however, as well as the sponsor (Kellogg's cereals) were unhappy with the level of violence in the first season programs. Maxwell, who had previously produced the Superman radio series, had miscalculated somewhat by emulating the radio show and aiming the television series at a general audience, which included adults as well as children, which also meant that a great deal of realistic violence and dark, threatening situations had to be included in the action and shown, sometimes in graphic detail. The decision was made to turn the production over to Ellsworth. He turned out to be the perfect choice -- he had successfully shepherded the Superman comic strip and various comic books through the changes of the war years and the post-war era. Comic books were under steady attack from various quarters during 1953, in print and in legislative hearings, and Ellsworth understood what was necessary to shield Adventures of Superman from those attacks. For the next five years, through 1958, Ellsworth made Adventures of Superman work with a gentler, less threatening, more child-friendly approach to the character of Superman and the property. He was also responsible for engaging some top talent from the movie world on the production end of the series, including Oscar-winning editor Harry Gerstad and production manager Clem Beauchamp, and cinematographers Harold E. Stine and Joseph Biroc. And after the run of Superman ended tragically with the June 1959 suicide of George Reeves, Ellsworth wasn't done with the franchise -- two years later, he was given the task of producing the pilot for the proposed Superboy series in 1961 which, for reasons that aren't exactly clear, did not sell and was never produced beyond the pilot episode (which has circulated underground among collectors for decades).
Three years later, Ellsworth was called on to help devise the Batman series starring Adam West and Burt Ward, which proved far more popular and enduring than those Columbia serials that he'd worked on two decades before (although ironically enough, the Batman television series was so popular, that those two '40s Batman serials were re-released to theaters in the mid-'60s). Ellsworth retired in 1970 with a surprisingly high public profile for a producer of his era -- the Superman series, most of the episodes of which carried his name prominently as producer in their end credits, had been in near-constant reruns for over 15 years at that point, and he was at least as well-known as the two men who had created the character, Jerry Siegel and Joe Schuster. He pursued his interest in painting and on rare occasions was interviewed by those writing about the series. For all of his success in this particular end of the entertainment world, however, Ellsworth never was able to get a series on the air devoted to his greatest personal interest, the history of the Civil War. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
Reporters Clark (George Reeves), Lois (Noel Neill) and Jimmy (Jack Larson) venture onto a Nevada atomic testing site in hopes of interviewing scientist Dr. Latislav (Raskin Ben-Ari), who has exiled himself from the rest of humanity after being exposed to radioactivity. Meanwhile, a pair of enemy spies are planning to kidnap Latislav and liquidate the reporters. Worse still: The Army has scheduled an atomic blast on the very site when Latislav, the spies and our heroes are squirreled away. Can Superman rescue everyone from annihilation before it is--shudder--too late? ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Introduced in the previous episode "Divide and Conquer", Professor LaSerne (Everett Glass) returns in this episode to help Superman (George Reeves) sidestep a legal obstacle. It seems that wanted criminal Paul Barton (Bruce Wendell) has evaded arrest for past crimes by sealing himself in a huge, impenetrable concrete cube until the seven-year statute of limitations has expired. Ordinarily Superman would bust down the cube and nab Barton, but even he is unable to smash down its walls. Fortunately, LaSerne has a solution: Superman can "deconstruct" his molecule structure on the outside of the wall, then reassemble himself inside! There's only one problem: If Superman attempts to go through with his plan, Barton's henchman Jody Malone (Ben Welden) will murder reporters Lois (Noel Neill) and Jimmy (Jack Larson) at the very same moment. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Arriving in a banana republic on a goodwill mission, Perry (John White), Clark (George Reeves) and Lois (Noel Neill) land smack-dab in the middle of an assassination attempt aimed at President Bateo (Donald Lawton). Quickly transforming into Superman, Clark manages to neutralize an exploding bomb, only to be promptly arrested when scheming Vice President Oberon (Robert Tafur) cites an obscure ordinance. To prevent Bateo from losing face in front of his people, Superman agrees to be placed behind bars, even though his absence leaves the President at the mercy of the villains. Enter eccentric Professor La Serne (Everett Glass), who has developed a theory whereby Superman can literally be in two places at once by dividing his molecule structure. Alas, once Superman has split himself in two, he dare not fuse back into a single body, lest "both" of him perish! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Superman (George Reeves) takes to the airwaves--the radio airwaves, that is--to declare war against gangster boss D.W. Griswald (Freeman Lusk). In retaliation, Griwald teams up with sinister scientist Prof. Von Brunner (George Selk), who has developed a process to extract Kryptonite from the earth and convert it into a deadly light beam (If you need reminding, Kryptonite is the only known element that can render Superman helpless). Kidnapping Lois (Noel Neill) and Jimmy (Jack Larson) to lure Superman into a trap, the crooks manage to gain the upper hand--until the Man of Steel decides to resort to a magic trick he'd learned from amateur illusionist (and "Daily Planet" editor) Perry White (John Hamilton). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
This 104th and final episode of The Adventures of Superman not only stars George Reeves as the title character, but was directed by Reeves as well. Eccentric inventor Professor Pepperwinkle (Phillips Tead) has created a machine which he claims can produce gold from ordinary metal. And that's not all: Pepperwinkle has also developed a new strain of positive and negative Kryptonite. Whereas negative Kryptonite has the capacity to sap Superman of his strength, positive Kryptonite restores that strength--and also transforms reporters Lois (Noel Neill) and Jimmy (Jack Larson) into superpowered superheroes themselves! Unfortunately, once the inevitable villains arrive to steal the gold-manufacturing apparatus, "Super Lois" and "Super Jimmy" literally awaken to the discovery that they're still plain, ordinary mortals. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Directed by series star George Reeves, this wild-and-woolly spoof of old time movie serials begins when a mysterious masked man (Michael Fox) shows up at the "Daily Planet" to inform Clark (Reeves), Lois (Noel Neill), Jimmy (Jack Larson) and Perry White (John Hamilton) that their days are numbered. The masked figure turns out to be a criminal who has a vendetta against the "Planet" staff, and who has adopted a disguise to whet their curiosity and lure them into an elaborate trap. As the episode hurtles to its climax, Clark is about to be immersed in a vat of boiling acid, Perry has been strapped to a whirring buzz-saw, Jimmy is locked in a car without brakes that is careening down a treacherous mountain road, and Lois is tied to the railroad tracks as a speeding locomotive bears down upon her! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
This episode was apparently inspired by the vintage Lon Chaney Sr. movie vehicle The Unholy Three. A trio of circus performers--magician Harmon the Great (Sid Tomack), "human fly" Pallini (Rick Vallin) and strong man Atlas (Buddy Baer)--combine their talents in order to commit a string of robberies. The logic behind this scheme is that the crimes will appear to have been impossible to pull off by any single person. . .except Superman (George Reeves). Reluctantly taking the Man of Steel into custody, Inspector Henderson (Robert Shayne) "accidentally" allows him to escape so that he can solve the case and round up the real perpetrators. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Curvaceous cult actress Joi Lansing appears in this episode as policewoman Helen O'Hara, who upon meeting Superman (George Reeves) evidently exudes such an attraction that the Man of Steel instantly proposes marriage! This of course is all part of a scheme to bring elusive criminal mastermind Mr. X (John Eldredge) out in the open to attempt the kidnapping of "Mrs. Superman"--whereupon the police will slap the cuffs on the villain. Unfortunately, Mr. X not only manages to abduct Helen and bind her to a bundle of sputtering explosives, but he also seals Perry (John Hamilton), Lois (Noel Neill) and Jimmy (Jack Larson) in a leaky diving bell some 250 feet beneath the sea--and though he may be able to bend steel in his bare hands and change the course of mighty rivers, no way can Superman be in two places at once! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Still headquartered in the busy ZIV studios, The Adventures of Superman churned out 13 full-color episodes for its sixth and final season on the air. Though George Reeves may have developed a bit of avoirdupois since launching the series back in 1951, he still cut quite an impressive figure as Superman (and, to a lesser extent, as the Man of Steel's alter ego Clark Kent). Also, Noel Neill is still cute as a button as Lois Lane, Jack Larson is as nebbishy as ever as Jimmy Olsen, John Hamilton remains the quintessence of irascibility as Perry White (though a failing memory required him to rely upon "cue cards" in the form of letters on his editor's desk), and Robert Shayne stalwartly stays the course as the sublimely clueless Inspector Henderson. An enormous improvement over the series' lackluster fifth season, Season Six features a number of above-average outings, several of which were directed by star George Reeves. "Superman's Wife" guest-stars voluptuous cult actress Joi Lansing as a policewoman who goes through a sham marriage to Superman in order to flush out a criminal. "The Big Forget" finds the eccentric Professor Pepperwinkle inventing an "anti-memory" gas which comes in handy when, during a moment of crisis, Clark Kent is forced to reveal his true identity as Superman in full view of Lois, Jimmy and Perry White. "The Perils of Superman" is a campy spoof of old-time serials, replete with Lois tied to the railroad tracks, Perry bound to a buzzsaw, Jimmy locked in a runaway car, and Clark suspended over a vat of acid. And in the series' final episode "All That Glitters", a dose of "positive Kryptonite" endows Lois and Jimmy with amazing Superman-like powers, including the ability to fly! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- George Reeves, Noel Neill, (more)
Having filmed its fourth season within the hallowed walls of the old Chaplin Studios, The Adventures of Superman moved into new quarters at the ZIV studios (formerly Eagle-Lion) for its fifth season on the air. Going along for the ride were, of course, the series' popular stars: George Reeves as Clark Kent/Superman, Noel Neill as Lois Lane, Jack Larson as Jimmy Olsen, John Hamilton as Perry White, and Robert Shayne as Inspector Henderson. Perhaps inevitably, a bit of creative ennui was setting in as the series entered its fifth year. Phlegmatic episodes like "Tin Hero", "Close Shave" and "Mister Zero" (derided by many fans as the series' most ridiculous entry) are hardly representative of the best that Superman has to offer. On the plus side, Season Five yields such laudatory efforts as "The Phoney Alibi" and "Whatever Goes Up", both featuring Philips Tead as the eccentric Professor Pepperwinkle; "Peril in Paris", wherein Robert Shayne inexplicably drops his familiar "Inspector Henderson" guise to play a French police captain, replete with a broad Pepe Le Pew accent; and "Disappearing Lois", which if nothing else offers the amazing spectacle of Noel Neill flirting outrageously with ubiquitous Superman bad guy Ben Welden! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- George Reeves, Noel Neill, (more)

- 1955
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Filmed in color, the 13 episodes comprising Season Four of The Adventures of Superman upheld the standard set in Season Five: That is, the show was geared primarily for youngsters, eschewing the fascinating costumed villains and complex plotlines of the comic-book version of Superman in favor of straightforward fantasy and whimsy. Also back from Season Four are the principal actors: George Reeves as Superman and Clark Kent, Noel Neill as Lois Lane, Jack Larson as Jimmy Olsen, John Hamilton as Perry White, and Robert Shayne as Inspector Henderson. The biggest change between Seasons Three and Four is the base of production: the Superman unit had moved out of its familiar California Studios stamping grounds and into the legendary Chaplin Studios on the corner of La Brea Street and Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles. This season's output contains quite a few unexpected delights: Superman's disgruntled reaction when his superpowers are sapped in "The Big Freeze", the cunning (if improbable) camera trickery in "Topsy Turvy", the seriocomic swashbuckling in "The Jolly Roger", and, best of all, the long-awaited marriage of Lois Lane and Superman in "The Wedding of Superman"--which, in the tradition of all those "imaginary stories" in the Superman comic books, turns out to be a dream. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- George Reeves, Noel Neill, (more)
For its third season on the air, the popular action series The Adventures of Superman switched over from black and white to color photography, a move designed to boost the series' profitability once color television became the rule rather than the exception. The switch to color put a strain on the show's already attenuated budget, which is one of the reasons that only 13 episodes were filmed this season, rather than the usual 26. By now, producer Whitney Ellsworth had abandoned all pretense of aiming the series at an adult audience, and was gearing the scripts almost exclusively towards the kiddie trade. To their credit, stars George Reeves (Superman/Clark Kent), Noel Neill (Lois Lane), Jack Larson (Jimmy Olsen), John Hamilton (Perry White) and Robert Shayne (Inspector Henderson) did not "play down" to their audience, though their tongues were firmly in their cheeks when delivering the more puerile dialogue passages (witness Clark Kent's playful interpretation of the phrase "a hot deck" in the episode "Bully of Dry Gulch"). Otherwise, the series' youthful following was acknowledged by an overemphasis on purely comic episodes, the best of which is "Flight to the North", featuring all-purpose Superman supporting player Ben Welden and a young Chuck Connors. There is also a tendency to lay the series' "fantasy" angle on a bit too thick, as in the season opener "Through the Time Barrier", in which a wispy inventor (Sterling Holloway creates a time machine which thrusts the entire cast back to the Stone Age. And on occasion, the writers succumbed to the temptation to be satirically self-referential-- never more so than in "Great Caesar's Ghost", the title of which invokes the oft-shouted catchphrase of the dyspeptic Perry White. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- George Reeves, Noel Neill, (more)
- 1953
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Filmed nearly two years after production shut down on The Adventures of Superman's first season, the series' second season of 26 episodes was completed in mid-1953, and aired in most TV markets in the fall of that year. Because the series' owner, National Periodicals, was not pleased with the high violence quotient in Season One, producer Robert Maxwell was replaced by Whitney Ellsworth, who considerably toned down the mayhem. Also, whereas the villains in the Maxwell-produced episodes ranged from vicious to downright insane, the bad guys in the Ellsworth-produced installments tend to be Runyonesque buffoons--especially those played by the ubiquitious Ben Welden and Herb Vigran. As a result, the series lost a lot of its adult appeal during its second season, though it picked up a much larger audience of children and teenagers. While many Superman fans bemoaned this perceived "dumbing down" of the concept, the fact is that The Adventures of Superman would grow more and more popular the younger its target audience became. Beyond these cosmetic changes, Season Two also marks a significant cast change. While George Reeves was still in harness in the dual role of Superman and Clark Kent, as were John Hamilton as Perry White, Jack Larson as Jimmy Olsen and Robert Shayne as Inspector Henderson, Phyllis Coates had vacated the role of intrepid girl reporter Lois Lane to pursue other film and TV work. Her replacement is Noel Neill, who'd previously played Lois in a brace of 1ate-1940s Superman theatrical serials starring Kirk Alyn in the title. Compared with Coates' brittle, aggressive portrayal of Lois, Neill came off as more fragile and vulnerable. Though there are some who prefer Phyllis Coates' more self-reliant interpretation of Lois, Noel Neill is the actress who first comes to mind when the character's name is mentioned today; she would remain with the series until its final episode in 1957. Moving production from RKO Pathe to an independent rental outfit called California Studios, The Adventures of Superman was obliged to tighten its budget throughout its second season, meaning fewer location shoots and more interior scenes, recycling furniture, sets and props as often as possible. Credit must go to special-effects wizard Thol "Si" Simonson for doing so much with so little, especially in those scenes wherein Superman was obliged to show off his "powers and abilities beyond those of mortal men." Arguably the season's best episode is "The Face and the Voice", in which George Reeves is seen in three separate characterizations: Clark Kent, Superman, and a doltish Superman lookalike named Boulder. Not actually a part of Season Two, though utilizing the same cast and personnel, is Stamp Day for Superman, a 12-minute public service short subject filmed on behalf of the United States Treasury Department. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- George Reeves, Noel Neill, (more)
The sole survivor of the doomed planet Krypton is the baby son of scientist Jor-El (Robert Rockwell) and Lara (Aline Towne), who providently place the child in a rocketship and blast him to earth just before their planet explodes. Rescued by a farm couple named Kent, the infant, renamed Clark, grows up with the knowledge that he is "different" from other children--mainly, he has powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal men, including the power of X-Ray vision and the ability to fly. Making his way to the big city of Metropolis, the adult Clark Kent (George Reeves) applies for a reporter job at the "Daily Planet", but irascible editor Perry White (John Hamilton) wants nothing to do with the bespectacled greenhorn--at least, not until Clark offers to "arrange" the rescue of a man dangling from a dirigible guide wire 1000 feet above ground. Of course, Clark neglects to tell anyone that he is able to pull off the rescue himself--as his alter ego, Superman! This "origin" episode of The Adventures of Superman was the first to be telecast, but was actually the 24th episode to be filmed for the series' inaugural season. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide









