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Gilligan's Island

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American television series (1964–67)
For other uses, seeGilligan's Island (disambiguation).

Gilligan's Island
Created bySherwood Schwartz
Directed byRod Amateau
Jack Arnold
Ida Lupino
Stanley Z. Cherry
Richard Donner
Starring
Theme music composerSherwood Schwartz
George Wyle
Opening theme"The Ballad of Gilligan's Isle"
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes98 plus a 1963 pilot (first broadcast in 1964)(list of episodes)
Production
Executive producerSherwood Schwartz
ProducerSherwood Schwartz
Camera setupFilm;Single-camera
Running time25 minutes
Production companiesGladasya Productions
CBS Productions
United Artists Television
Original release
NetworkCBS
ReleaseSeptember 26, 1964 (1964-09-26) –
April 17, 1967 (1967-04-17)
Related
Bob Denver asGilligan
Alan Hale Jr. asThe Skipper
Russell Johnson asThe Professor
Tina Louise asGinger Grant
Dawn Wells asMary Ann Summers

Gilligan's Island is an Americansitcom created and produced bySherwood Schwartz. The show'sensemble cast featuresBob Denver,Alan Hale Jr.,Jim Backus,Natalie Schafer,Tina Louise,Russell Johnson, andDawn Wells. It aired for three seasons on theCBS network from September 26, 1964, to April 17, 1967.[1] The series follows the comic adventures of seven castaways as they try to survive on an island where they are shipwrecked. Most episodes revolve around the dissimilar castaways' conflicts and their unsuccessful attempts to escape their plight, with the ship's first mate, Gilligan, usually being responsible for the failures.[2]

Gilligan's Island ran for 98 episodes. All 36 episodes of the first season were filmed in black and white and were latercolorized forsyndication. The show's second and third seasons (62 episodes) and the three television film sequels (broadcast between 1978 and 1982) were filmed in color.

Gilligan's Island received solid ratings during its original run and grew in popularity during decades of syndication, especially in the 1970s and '80s, when many markets ran the show in the late afternoon.

Premise

[edit]

The two-person crew of the charter boat SSMinnow and five passengers on a "three-hour tour" fromHonolulu run into a storm and are shipwrecked on an uncharted island somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. The exact location is said to be in conflicting longitudes/latitudes in three episodes.[3] Their efforts to be rescued are typically thwarted by the negligent conduct of the haplessfirst mate, Gilligan. In 1997, show creator Sherwood Schwartz explained that the underlying concept, people with different characters and backgrounds being in a situation where they need to learn how to get along and cooperate to survive, is still "the most important idea in the world today."[4]

Cast and characters

[edit]
Main article:List of Gilligan's Island characters

Episodes

[edit]
Main article:List of Gilligan's Island episodes
SeasonEpisodesOriginally released
First releasedLast releasedNetwork
PilotOctober 16, 1992 (1992-10-16)TBS
136September 26, 1964 (1964-09-26)June 12, 1965 (1965-06-12)CBS
232September 16, 1965 (1965-09-16)April 28, 1966 (1966-04-28)
330September 12, 1966 (1966-09-12)April 17, 1967 (1967-04-17)
Television filmsOctober 14, 1978 (1978-10-14)October 14, 2001 (2001-10-14)NBC/CBS

Pilot episode

[edit]

Thepilot episode, "Marooned," was filmed in November 1963. The pilot featured seven characters (as in the series), but only four of the characters—and their associated actors—were carried forward into the series: Gilligan (Denver), the Skipper (Hale), and the Howells (Backus and Schafer).

Because of the three significant character and casting changes between the pilot episode and the first series episode, the pilot was not shown before the series first aired on September 26, 1964. The original pilot eventually aired over 29 years later onTBS.

The three characters who did not carry forward from the pilot were two secretaries and a high school teacher. In the pilot, the scientifically inclined Professor was instead a high school teacher played byJohn Gabriel. Ginger, the movie star, was still red-haired, but she worked as a secretary and was played by Kit Smythe. She was more sarcastic than the later incarnation. Mary Ann, the Kansas farm girl, was instead Bunny, Ginger's co-worker, played as a cheerful "dumb blonde" byNancy McCarthy.

The pilot's opening and ending songs were two similarcalypso-styled tracks written byJohn Williams and performed by Sherwood Schwartz impersonating singerSir Lancelot. The lyrics of both differ from those of the TV series, and the pilot's opening theme song is longer. The short scenes during this initial music include Gilligan taking the Howells' luggage to the boat before cast-off and Gilligan trying to give a cup of coffee to the Skipper during the storm that would ultimately maroon the vessel.

After the opening theme song and credits end, the pilot proper begins with the seven castaways waking up on the beached SSMinnow. It continues with them performing various tasks, including exploring the island, trying to fix the transmitter, building huts, and finding food. Contrary to some descriptions, the pilot contained no detailed accounts of the characters' backgrounds. It concludes with the ending theme song and credits. The background music and even thelaugh tracks of the pilot appear nearly identical to those used during the series.

First broadcast episode

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The first episode broadcast, "Two on a Raft," is sometimes incorrectly referred to as the series pilot. This episode begins with the theme song performed by the Wellingtons and then the same scene of Gilligan and the Skipper awakening on the boat as in the pilot (though slightly differently cut to eliminate most shots of the departed actors) and continues with the characters sitting on the beach listening to a radio news report about their disappearance. No equivalent scene or background information is in the pilot, except for the description of the passengers in the original theme song. Rather than reshooting the rest of the pilot story for broadcast, the show proceeded. The plot thus skips over the topics of the pilot; the bulk of the episode tells of Gilligan and the Skipper setting off on a raft to try to bring help but unknowingly landing back on the other side of the same island.

The scene with the radio report is one of two scenes that reveal the names of the Skipper (Jonas Grumby) and the Professor (Roy Hinkley); the names are used in a similar radio report early in the series. The name Jonas Grumby appears nowhere else in the series except for an episode in which the Maritime Board of Review blames the Skipper for the loss of theMinnow. The name Roy Hinkley is used one other time when Mr. Howell introduces the Professor as Roy Huntley, and the Professor corrects him, to which Mr. Howell replies, "Brinkley, Brinkley."

The plot for the pilot episode was recycled into that season's Christmas episode, "Birds Gotta Fly, Fish Gotta Talk," in which the story of the pilot episode, concerning the practical problems on landing, is related through a series offlashbacks. Footage featuring characters that had been recast was reshot using the current actors. For scenes including only Denver, Hale, Backus, and Schafer, the original footage was reused.

Last broadcast episode

[edit]

The last episode of the show, "Gilligan the Goddess", aired on April 17, 1967, and ended just like the rest, with the castaways still stranded on the island. It was not known at the time that it would be the series finale, as a fourth season was expected but then canceled.[5]

Typical plots

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The shipwrecked castaways are desperate to leave the island, and various opportunities frequently present themselves but invariably fail, nearly always due to some bumbling error committed by Gilligan. Sometimes, this results in Gilligan saving the others from some unforeseen flaw in their plan.[6] The only episode in which the entire cast leaves the island (albeit temporarily) is "The Friendly Physician" aired in Season 2.

Most episodes ofGilligan's Island use variations of five recurring basic plots:

  • Life on the island. Arunning gag is the castaways' ability to fashion various useful objects frombamboo,coconuts, gourds, vines, and other local materials. Some are everyday items, such as eating and cooking utensils, while others (such as adental drill and a remarkably efficientlie detector apparatus) are stretches of the imagination. Russell Johnson noted in his autobiography that the production crew enjoyed the challenge of building these props. These bamboo items include framed huts with thatched grass sides and roofs, bamboo closets strong enough to withstandhurricane-force winds and rain, a communal dining table and chairs, Gilligan's hot water pipes, a stethoscope, and a pedal-powered car.
  • Visitors to the island. Another challenge to a viewer'ssuspension of disbelief is the remarkable frequency with which an assortment of people visit the remote, uncharted island, all of whom either refuse or fail to help rescue the castaways.
  • Dream sequences in which one of the castaways dreams they are some character related to that week's storyline. All of the castaways appeared as other characters within the dream. In later interviews and memoirs, nearly all the actors stated that the dream episodes were among their favorites.
  • A piece of news concerning one or more of the castaways is heard over the radio and causes distress or discord among them.
  • The appearance or arrival of unusual objects to the island, such as a World War IInaval mine, an old silent motion picture camera and costumes, a crate of radioactive vegetable seeds, plastic explosives, arobot, a live lion, a jet pack, or a wayward "Mars Lander" that the scientists who launched it think is sending them pictures of life on Mars.

Most of the slapstick comedic sequences between Hale and Denver were inspired byLaurel and Hardy, particularly when Hale breaks thefourth wall by looking directly into the camera, expressing his frustration with Denver's clumsiness, as Oliver Hardy often did.[7]

Guest stars

[edit]

Although most episodes do not have guest stars given the characters are on an uncharted, unknown island, a remarkable number of people manage to find their way to the episode - and to leave without helping the castaways also escape. Among the actors who guest starred wereLarry Storch,Kurt Russell,Rory Calhoun,Zsa Zsa Gabor,Hans Conreid,Don Rickles,Strother Martin,John McGiver,Denny Miller,Phil Silvers,Richard Kiel, and pop groupThe Wellingtons (folk group).

Dream sequences

[edit]

One of the trademarks ofGilligan's Island is its frequent use of dream sequences. The showrunners used this device to expand beyond the premise's limited setting, and to showcase the cast's acting talents. Many episodes that feature dream sequences are ranked among the show's most memorable episodes, as most of them parodied or drew inspiration from works of literature, film, and other television shows of the day.

Each dream sequence is triggered by the real-life situation of the episode and usually features symbolism that prompted a change of heart in whichever castaway was dreaming. Of the fourteen dream episodes, eleven feature a Gilligan dream (with one of these episodes including short dreams of each of the male cast members). Mr. Howell, Mrs. Howell, and Mary Ann each have an episode centering on a dream of theirs, making Mr. Howell the only cast member besides Gilligan who has more than one dream sequence. Skipper is presented as a woman in two dreams, although in one this is only a disguise; in Mrs. Howell's dream he is both herwicked stepmother and a different male character, making him the only cast member to have two roles in one dream and also the only one to be the opposite sex in a dream. The Professor appears twice as a fauxCary Grant: in Mary Ann's dream, and his own short dream. Ginger is the only one of the seven castaways who never had a dream sequence.

  • "The Sound of Quacking" (S1E7) — Inspired byGunsmoke. Afraid that the starving castaways will eat his pet duck, Emily, Gilligan dreams that he is U.S. Marshal Gilligan, whose primary task is keeping the rowdy citizens of his town from eating Emily, who he keeps locked in a jail cell. Features the Skipper as the Marshal's limping deputy, Ginger as a sultry saloon girl, Mary Ann as the Marshal's sweetheart, Mrs. Howell as a duck-gravy-making Spanish señora, and Mr. Howell and the Professor as a lynch mob.
  • "St. Gilligan and the Dragon" (S1E20) — All four men react to the girls' recent demand for equal rights by having dreams that reflect what they expect from their women. The Skipper dreams of being asultan with Ginger, Mary Ann, and Mrs. Howell as his dancing girls. Mr. Howell dreams of relaxing in a spa with all three girls catering to his every whim. The Professor dreams that he isCary Grant emerging from his dressing room only to be assaulted by the girls, his crazed fans. Gilligan, always childlike, dreams that he is abullfighter and that the girls each bring him a gift.
  • "My Fair Gilligan" (S1E35) — Gilligan's fears of his new life as the Howells' adopted son manifest when he dreams that he is a spoiled prince who callously orders the beheadings of any supplicant who displeases him. Features Mr. and Mrs. Howell as the pampering King and Queen, Mary Ann as a shepherd girl, the Professor as a wizardly astronomer, Ginger as a simpering court lady, and the Skipper as a naval admiral.
  • "The Little Dictator" (S2E3) — Having just been appointed thepuppet ruler of the island, Gilligan dreams that he is the dictator of a small foreign country on the brink of war, and the other castaways serve as hiscabinet, who desperately try to convince him to look out his window at the chaos outside. Features Mr. Howell as the minister of finance, the Skipper as the secretary of the navy, Ginger as an undercover agent, the other castaways as cabinet members, and guest starNehemiah Persoff as the masterminding dictator. It is notable for being the only dream sequence to feature a guest star as a main character.
  • "The Sweepstakes" (S2E5) — Obsessed with finding Gilligan's lostsweepstake ticket, Mr. Howell dreams that he is a grizzled prospector in theOld West who has just struck millions of dollars worth of gold, but the kingly treatment he receives in town is quickly revoked when he realizes that he doesn't have proof of his claim. Features the Professor as a crooked bank owner, Gilligan as the corrupt U.S. Marshal, Ginger as a smooth-talking saloon owner, Mary Ann as an impoverished country girl, and the Skipper as a cheating gambler. It is notable for being one of the few dream sequences in which one of the castaways does not appear (Mrs. Howell, in this case). Jim Backus reprised his role as the prospector in the three-part Grand Canyon episode in the third season ofThe Brady Bunch.
  • "The Postman Cometh" (S2E18) — Inspired byDr. Kildare andBen Casey. Afraid that she is going to die from eating poisonous mushrooms, Mary Ann falls asleep listening to hermedical soap opera radio show and dreams that she is a patient in a hospital for a fatal disease. Features Mr. Howell as the kooky Dr. Zorbagillespie, Gilligan as Dr.Charles Boyer, the Skipper as Dr.Matt Dillon, the Professor as Dr.Cary Grant, and Mrs. Howell and Ginger as somewhat sympathetic nurses.
  • "V for Vitamins" (S2E30) — Inspired by the "Jack and the Beanstalk". Gilligan falls asleep while guarding the last of the castaways' citrus rations and dreams that he is a farm boy named Jack tasked with retrieving oranges for his starving family. Instead, he buys magic beans, climbs a beanstalk, and enters a giant's castle. Features Mrs. Howell as Jack's mother, Mr. Howell as aW.C. Fields-inspired gangster, Mary Ann as the Giant's helpful maid, the Skipper as theGiant, and Ginger and the Professor as elderly captives in the Giant's dungeon. In the sequence where Jack runs from the Giant, Bob Denver's young son Patrick plays Jack and uses a forced perspective to make Jack look extra small.
  • "Meet the Meteor" (S2E32) — When the Professor's measurements of radiation on a newly crashedmeteor show it to be lethal, Gilligan dreams that the castaways have aged to extreme feebleness in only a few days. The castaways hobble from their huts to the dining table to celebrate one final anniversary on the island before they die of old age or an electrical storm destroys the island.
  • "Up at Bat" (S3E1) — Inspired byDracula andSherlock Holmes. After supposedly being bitten by avampire bat, Gilligan dreams that he is a ghoulishvampire inhabiting a haunted castle and eagerly awaiting the arrival of his guests, who also double as his dinner. It features Ginger as the vampire's ghostly wife, the Professor as Sherlock Holmes, and the Skipper asDr. Watson (renamed "Colonel Watney"), Mr. and Mrs. Howell as unsuspecting guests in the house, and Mary Ann as the hideous housekeeper. Notable for being filmed on the same haunted mansion set from the earlier episode "The Friendly Physician" (S2E29) and for concluding with a brawl featuring superimposedonomatopoeic words in the style of rival seriesBatman.
  • "The Invasion" (S3E11) — Inspired byJames Bond. Gilligan's fears of being hunted down by secret agents show up in his dream, in which he is suave spy Agent 014 fighting against a criminal empire and its formidable group of assassins out to kill him and take away his top-secret briefcase. Features the Professor as the Chief Good Guy, Mr. Howell as Mr. Evil (inspired byErnst Stavro Blofeld), Mrs. Howell as Mr. Evil's moll, Mary Ann as the deadly receptionist, Ginger as Gilligan's treacherous fiancée, and the Skipper as an evil agent disguised as Gilligan's mother.
  • "And Then There Were None" (S3E13) — Inspired byStrange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde. Gilligan believes that he may be a murderous psychopath and dreams that he is on trial as anOscar Wilde-styleDoctor Gilligan, who transforms into a hideous monster at the mention of food. Features Mrs. Howell as his defense attorneyMary Poppins (renamed "Mary Poplin"), Mary Ann as the loyalEliza Doolittle (who has confused Henry Jekyll for Henry Higgins), Ginger as the Lady in Red, Mr. Howell as a biased judge, the Professor as the prosecuting attorney, and the Skipper as the bailiff.
  • "Court-Martial" (S3E17) — Gilligan dreams that he is Lord Admiral Gilligan, the youngest in the British fleet, charged with protecting the three noble ladies onboard when the ship is attacked and captured by uncouth pirates. Features Mr. Howell asCaptain Hook, the Professor asLong John Silver, the Skipper asCaptain Kidd, Mrs. Howell as the queen mother, and Ginger and Mary Ann as her daughters.
  • "Lovey's Secret Admirer" (S3E19) — Inspired by "Cinderella". After a fight with her husband, Mrs. Howell dreams of being Cinderella, oppressed by her wicked stepfamily but determined to attend the royal ball and meet the prince. Features the Skipper as Cinderella's stepmother, Ginger, and Mary Ann as theugly stepsisters, Gilligan as the ineptFairy Godfather, Mr. Howell as the self-absorbed prince, and the Skipper and the Professor as pages.
  • "The Secret of Gilligan's Island" (S3E25) — Gilligan's discovery of an ancient stone tablet on the island leads him to dream that he and the castaways arecave people, each with a goal or fear about leaving their familiar caves in search of a better land. Features Gilligan as an artistic stonecutter, the Skipper as his best friend, Mr. Howell as the dictatorial chief, Mrs. Howell as his jealous wife, Ginger, and Mary Ann as cave girls seeking husbands, and the Professor as an inventor.

Production

[edit]

The show was filmed at theCBSRadford Studios complex inStudio City, Los Angeles.[8] The same stage was later used forThe Mary Tyler Moore Show andRoseanne, the latter of which featured a daydream parodyingGilligan's Island in one episode. The lagoon was drained and used as a parking lot during the show's off-season. It was the last surviving element of the show, which was demolished in 1997 as part of an expansion project.[9]

Four boats were used as the SSMinnow. One was used in the opening credits and rented in Ala Wai Yacht Harbor inHonolulu. Another, theBluejacket, was used in the opening credits shown during the second and third seasons and eventually turned up for sale onVancouver Island in August 2006 after running aground on a reef in theHecate Strait on the way south from Alaska. One boat was used for beach scenes after being towed toKauai in Hawaii. The fourthMinnow was built on the CBS Studios set in the second season.[10] TheMinnow was named in reference toNewton Minow, chairman of the U.S.FCC, in response to Minow's landmark 1961 speech "Television and the Public Interest"; the speech lambasted television producers for producing, among other things, "formula comedies about totally unbelievable" characters and creating a "vast wasteland" of bad television.[11]

The final day of filming the pilot was Friday, November 22, 1963, the day of theassassination of PresidentJohn F. Kennedy.[12] The cast and crew learned of the assassination late that morning, Hawaii time.[12] Between the filming of scenes, they crowded around a radio listening to news bulletins.[12] A reminder of the tragedy appears in the opening sequence of the show's first season when the theme song is played. As theMinnow is leaving the harbor and heading out to sea, anAmerican flag flying athalf staff can be seen in the background.[12][13]

Casting

[edit]

Bob Denver was not the first choice to play Gilligan; actorJerry Van Dyke was offered the role, but he turned it down, believing that the show would never be successful. He chose instead to play the lead inMy Mother the Car, which premiered the following year and is frequently cited as one of the worst television shows of all time; it was canceled after one season.[14] The producers looked to Bob Denver, the actor who had playedMaynard G. Krebs, thebeatnik inThe Many Loves of Dobie Gillis. Schwartz was initially reluctant to cast Denver, as he didn't want Gilligan to be a beatnik type character, but eventually agreed that Denver was a good choice.

Schwartz had an extremely difficult time casting role of the Skipper, as the character had to be gruff, but affable at the same time. ActorCarroll O'Connor was among those who auditioned, but could not bring the right combination into the role. Schwartz almost gave up, before actorAlan Hale Jr. became available, and was cast. According to his wife, "(Hale) was born to play the Skipper".

Schwartz had written the role of Thurston Howell III specifically forJim Backus, with whom he was close friends. However, at the time Backus was not immediately available for the role, holding out for a pilot to become a potential series, and he was too expensive to be hired for a supporting role with the show's limited budget. Eventually, Backus became available, and liked the script enough to join the cast, and CBS approved a budget increase to cast him.

Natalie Schafer had it written into her contract that no close-ups would be made of her, but it was forgotten after a while in the series. Schafer was 63 when the pilot was shot, although, reportedly, no one on the set or in the cast knew her actual age, and she refused to divulge it. Initially, she accepted the role only because the pilot was filmed on location in Hawaii. She looked at the job as nothing more than a free vacation, as she was convinced that a show this silly would "never go."[15]

Tina Louise clashed with producer Sherwood Schwartz because she initially believed she was hired as the central character. The character of Ginger was originally written as a hard-nosed, sharp-tongued temptress, but Louise argued that this portrayal was too harsh and refused to play her as written. A compromise was reached; Louise agreed to play Ginger as aMarilyn Monroe/Jayne Mansfield type. Her temperament reportedly made her difficult to work with, but she was always professional when it came time to shoot. Louise continued to disagree with producers over her role and was the only cast member who refused to appear in any of the three post-series TV movies. After many years of distancing herself from the show, she appeared in a reunion of the cast on two television talk shows in 1982 and 1988 and on an episode ofRoseanne in 1995 when theRoseanne cast re-enactedGilligan's Island. In the pilot episode, the character of Ginger was played by actress Kit Smythe.[16]: 63 

Russell Johnson played the part of the Professor.John Gabriel was initially cast as the academic character, a high school teacher. After testing, the network didn't believe the character scored well with the audience. Auditions were held for the revised role of the Professor, which includedDabney Coleman, but the part was ultimately won byRussell Johnson. Before his acting career, Johnson had served as a bombardier in 44 combat missions over the Pacific during World War II. On March 4, 1945, the B-25 he was flying as the navigator was shot down, killing the copilot and breaking both of Johnson's ankles. At the time of his audition, he worked primarily in movies and was not very interested in a television show unless he would be the leading character. His film career had been going well, tallying several science fiction and Western film credits, including a role oppositeRonald Reagan in the 1953 filmLaw and Order. In addition to movies, Johnson had landed roles in multiple popular television series such asThe Adventures of Superman,The Twilight Zone andThe Outer Limits. With six other leads, his agent had to talk him into going to the audition, but after meetingSherwood Schwartz, he started to warm up to the idea of playing the Professor. In discussing his role, he laughingly said he was unsure what was more difficult, remembering the Professor's technically oriented lines or looking up what they meant.[citation needed][17][18]

Dawn Wells was a formerMiss Nevada when she auditioned for the Mary Ann role. Her competition includedRaquel Welch andPat Priest. The pilot episode featured a different character ("Bunny") played by actressNancy McCarthy. After it was shot, the network decided to recast the roles of the Professor and the two young women. Mary Ann became a simple farm girl fromWinfield, Kansas.[citation needed][19][20]

Theme song

[edit]

The music and lyrics for the theme song, "The Ballad of Gilligan's Isle", were written bySherwood Schwartz andGeorge Wyle. One version was used for the first season and another for the second and third seasons. In the original song, the Professor and Mary Ann, originally considered "second-billed co-stars", were referred to as "the rest". However, with the growing popularity of those characters, their names were inserted into the lyrics in the second season. TheGilligan theme song underwent this one major change because star Bob Denver personally asked studio executives to add Johnson and Wells to the song.[21] When the studio at first refused, saying it would be too expensive to reshoot, Denver insisted, even going so far as to state that if Johnson and Wells were not included, he wanted his name out of the song as well. The studio caved in, and "the Professor and Mary Ann" were added.[22][23][24] The theme song in the original pilot did not even mention the character Ginger, with the last two mentioned by name being "the Millionaire and Mrs. Millionaire" followed by "...and the other tourists".[25]

The first-season version was recorded by the folk groupThe Wellingtons. The second-season version, which incorporated more of asea shanty sound, was uncredited, but according to Russell Johnson in his bookHere on Gilligan's Isle, it was performed by a group called the Eligibles.[26]

The show's original pilot episode featured acalypso theme song by future film composerJohn Williams and different lyrics. The original length of the voyage was "a six-hour ride", not "a three-hour tour".[27] John Williams (or Johnny Williams as he was often listed in the show credits) was the initial composer of the incidental music for the show (from 1964 to 1965), but was replaced byGerald Fried for the remaining seasons (1965–1967).

Later parodies and homages

[edit]

The bandLittle Roger and the Goosebumps recorded "Stairway to Gilligan's Island", a parody ofLed Zeppelin's "Stairway to Heaven", substituting the words to theGilligan's Island theme song.[28] In 1987, The Iceman parodiedMadonna's "La Isla Bonita" as "La Isla Gilligan"."Weird Al" Yankovic recorded a song called "Isle Thing", a parody ofTone Lōc's "Wild Thing", about a rapper whose girlfriend introduces him to the show. Yankovic also mentions the show in his song "Stop Draggin' My Car Around", and he used one verse from the closing theme lyrics in "Amish Paradise" (1996), a parody ofCoolio's "Gangsta's Paradise" (1995). The song has also been covered by many bands, includingBowling for Soup for theTBS showThe Real Gilligan's Island.[29]Israel Kamakawiwoʻole also recorded a comic tribute to the theme song on his album E Ala E. The chorus to rap groupBig Tymers' "Still Fly" is based on the Gilligan's Island theme song.[30]

Cancellation

[edit]

During the 1966–1967 television season,Gilligan's Island aired on Mondays at 7:30 p.m. Eastern time. Although the sitcom's ratings had fallen well out of the top-30 programs, during the last few weeks of its third season, the series was still winning its timeslot against its main competition,The Monkees, which aired at the same time onNBC-TV. Therefore, CBS assured Sherwood Schwartz thatGilligan's Island would be picked up for a fourth year.

CBS, however, had signaled its intention to cancel the long-running Western seriesGunsmoke, which had been airing late on Saturday nights during the 1966–1967 television season. Under pressure from CBS network presidentWilliam S. Paley and his wife Babe, along with many network affiliates and longtime fans ofGunsmoke, CBS rescheduled the Western to an earlier time slot on Mondays at 7:30 p.m. Eastern time. As a result,Gilligan's Island was quietly canceled at practically the last minute while the cast members were all on vacation. Based on Sherwood Schwartz's verbal confirmation that the series would be renewed for a fourth season, some of the cast had bought houses near the set.[31]

Nielsen ratings/television schedule

[edit]
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SeasonEp#Season premiereSeason finaleTime slotRankRatingHouseholds
1 (1964–1965)36September 26, 1964June 12, 1965Saturdays at 8:30 p.m. eastern time#1824.7 (tie)13,227,700
2 (1965–1966)32September 16, 1965April 28, 1966Thursdays at 8:00 p.m. eastern time#2222.111,900,850
3 (1966–1967)30September 12, 1966April 17, 1967Mondays at 7:30 p.m. eastern time#49[32]N/AN/A

Film sequels

[edit]

Three television film sequels were made—the first independently, the other two by MCA/Universal Television.

In the 1978TV film,Rescue from Gilligan's Island, the castaways successfully leave the island but have difficulty reintegrating into society. During a reunion cruise on the first Christmas after their rescue, fate intervenes, and they find themselves wrecked on the same island at the end of the film. It starred the original cast, except for Tina Louise, who refused to participate because of her disputes with the producers and was replaced byJudith Baldwin. The plot involved Soviet agents seeking a memory disc from a spy satellite that landed on the island and facilitated the protagonists' rescue.

In a 1979 sequel,The Castaways on Gilligan's Island, they are rescued once again, and the Howells convert the island into a getaway resort with the other five castaways as "silent partners." Ginger was again played by Judith Baldwin.

In a 1981 sequel,The Harlem Globetrotters on Gilligan's Island, villains played byMartin Landau and then-wifeBarbara Bain try to take over the island to gain access to a vein of "supremium", a valuable but volatilefictional element. This time, Ginger was played byConstance Forslund. They are thwarted by the timely intervention of theHarlem Globetrotters.Jim Backus, who was in poor health then, was written out of the script by saying Thurston Howell III was tending to Howell Industries back on the mainland.David Ruprecht played the role of his son, Thurston Howell IV, who was asked to manage the resort. However, Backus insisted on maintaining continuity and made a cameo appearance at the end of the film.

In September 1992, it was reportedSherwood Schwartz and his sonLloyd J. Schwartz were negotiating a possible feature film adaptation titledGilligan’s Island: The Movie withTed Turner andColumbia Pictures.[33]

In 2008, Sherwood Schwartz stated he would like a modern-day movie adaptation ofGilligan's Island withMichael Cera as Gilligan andBeyonce Knowles as Ginger.[34][35][36]

Spin-offs and timelines

[edit]

The New Adventures of Gilligan is aFilmation-produced animated remake that aired on ABC on Saturday mornings from September 7, 1974, to September 4, 1977, for 24 episodes (16 installments airing in 1974–75 and eight new ones combined with repeats in 1975–76). The voices were provided by the original cast except for Ginger and Mary Ann (both were voiced byJane Webb). Dawn Wells could not participate because she was in a touring production.[37] An additional character was Gilligan's pet, Snubby theMonkey.

Gilligan's Planet is an animated science-fiction version produced by Filmation and starring the voices of theGilligan's Island cast, save for Tina Louise (Dawn Wells voiced both Mary Ann and Ginger). In a follow-up toThe New Adventures of Gilligan, the castaways escape from the island by building aspaceship and get shipwrecked on a distant planet. Only 13 episodes aired on CBS between September 18, 1982, and September 3, 1983. In the episode "Let Sleeping Minnows Lie", they travel to an island and get shipwrecked there, and Gilligan observes, "First we were stranded on an island, then we were stranded on a planet, and now we're stranded on an island on a planet."

Related productions

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  • Gilligan's Island: The Musical was first produced in the early 1990s. Its script was by Lloyd Schwartz, Sherwood Schwartz's son, and its songs were written by Schwartz's daughter and son-in-law, Hope andLaurence Juber.
  • Gilligan's Wake is a 2003 parallel novel loosely based on the 1960s CBS sitcom, from the viewpoints of the seven major characters, written byEsquire film and television critic Tom Carson. The title is derived from the title of the TV show andFinnegans Wake, the seminal work of Irish novelist James Joyce.
  • On November 30, 2004, the TBS network launched a reality series titledThe Real Gilligan's Island, which placed two groups of people on an island, leaving them to fend for themselves in the manner ofSurvivor – the catch being that each islander matched a character type established in the original series (a klutz, a sea captain, a movie star, a millionaire's wife, etc.). While heavilymarketed by TBS, the show turned out to be a flop with a verySurvivor-like feel, but little of its success. A second season began June 8, 2005, with two-hour episodes for four weeks. TBS announced in July 2005 that a third season of the show would not be produced.

Syndication

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Syndication is handled byWarner Bros. Television (underTurner Entertainment Co., which in 1986 acquiredUnited Artists Television's share of the series as part of the classic pre-1986Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer library). It aired onTBS from 1986 to 2003, where it also aired with colorization on season one for a while. TBS airedGilligan's Island weekday mornings at 8:05 a.m. ET throughout the 1990s, often paired withBewitched.TNT aired it at some point in the 1990s and also aired the colorized season one.Nick at Nite later aired the series from 2000 to 2001. It then shifted toTV Land, where it aired from 2001 to 2003 and again from January to June 2014. In 2004, it aired onHallmark Channel.

In 2015, the show started to air nationally onMeTV.[2]

Warner/Turner also handles the two Filmation-produced animated sequel series, while other companies handle the three TV movie sequels.

In the UK,Gilligan's Island had a very brief run onITV in April 1965, but it was dropped after 13 episodes.[38]

It has briefly aired onMBC in the MENA region.

Home media

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Warner Home Video released all three seasons ofGilligan's Island on DVD in Region 1 between 2004 and 2005.The Complete First Season features all 36 episodes unedited with the original theme song in their original black-and-white format. The special features include the rare pilot episode with commentary from creator Sherwood Schwartz and three other featurettes.

The Complete Second Season includes all 32 season-two episodes in color. Bonuses for this set include a season-two introduction with Russell Johnson and Sherwood Schwartz and audio commentary on the season's third episode, "The Little Dictator".

The Complete Third Season includes all 30 season-three episodes. Special features include a season introduction with Russell Johnson and Sherwood Schwartz, commentary on the season's fourth episode, "The Producer," guest-starringPhil Silvers, and a 15-minute documentary titledGilligan's Island: A Pop Culture Phenomenon.

The Complete Series Collection contains all the same bonuses and featurettes for a complete series box set in 2007. In April 2012, the series was reissued in new DVD releases.

The series is also available at theiTunes Store.[39]

DVD nameEp#Release date
The Complete First Season36February 3, 2004
The Complete Second Season32January 11, 2005
The Complete Third Season30July 26, 2005
The Complete Series Collection98November 6, 2007

In August 2006, an executive at Warner Bros. announced plans thatGilligan's Island, in addition to other classic TV series owned by the studio, would be digitally re-mastered in HD.[40] The original TV series was shot on high-resolution film but scaled down for broadcast.

On January 20, 2014,TV Land became the first network to air theatrical-style widescreen HD remastered episodes ofGilligan's Island. This marked the first time fans and the general public saw the WB remastered episodes.[41]

HD remastered episodes have been made available for purchase through streaming media sources.

In other media

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Two board games based on the show, both calledThe Gilligan's Island Game featuring Gilligan, Thurston Howell III, and the Skipper on the box cover, were manufactured by Game Gems and released in 1965.The New Adventures of Gilligan, based on the short-lived cartoon of the same name and featuring all castaways, was manufactured by Milton Bradley and was released in 1974.[citation needed]

A set of trading cards was released byTopps in 1965.[42] Apinball machine, manufactured byBally and based on the show, was released in May 1991.[43] A video game based on the series, calledThe Adventures of Gilligan's Island and manufactured byBandai, was released for theNintendo Entertainment System in July 1990. The game features the likenesses of all the original castaways except for Ginger, who is absent from the game.[44] A video slot machine, manufactured byInternational Game Technology and loosely based on the show, was released in 2004.[45][46]

Ginger or Mary Ann?

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The question of which of these two characters fans of the show prefer has endured long after the end of the series.[47][48] The question has inspired commercials,[49] essays, videos, and a sermon.[50] By most accounts, the wholesome Mary Ann has consistently outpolled the glamorous movie-star Ginger by a sizable margin.[51] Bob Denver admitted he was a Mary Ann fan.[48] According to Denver in a 2001 interview, Wells received 3,000–5,000 fan letters weekly. In contrast, Louise may have had 1,500 or 2,000.[52][53]

See also

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References

[edit]

Notes

  1. ^"BBC - Comedy Guide - Gilligan's Island". January 3, 2005. Archived fromthe original on January 3, 2005.
  2. ^ab"Watch Gilligan's Island on MeTV".Me-TV Network.
  3. ^"22 fascinating facts about 'Gilligan's Island'".Me-TV Network. RetrievedJanuary 30, 2022.
  4. ^"Gilligan's Island" creator Sherwood Schwartz on the show's concept - EMMYTVLEGENDS.ORG, recorded on September 17, 1997, in Beverly Hills, CA with Dan Pasternack (published to YouTube on Nov 4, 2010).
  5. ^Stoddard 1996, pp. 306–7.
  6. ^"Shows | Gilligan's Island".Me-TV Network.
  7. ^"Denver",The New York Times, September 7, 2005.
  8. ^"CBS Studio Center". Seeing-stars.com. RetrievedOctober 17, 2009.
  9. ^Walstad, David (August 7, 1995)."Civilization Takes Over 'Gilligan's' Lagoon : Television: The set of the 1960s sitcom is turned into an employee parking lot as CBS Studio Center adds production facilities".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedFebruary 4, 2017.
  10. ^"Gilligan's Minnow no longer lost".Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. August 28, 2006. RetrievedAugust 28, 2006.
  11. ^"Legal Tales from Gilligan's Island". Santa Clara Law Review & Jamail Center for Legal Research. Archived fromthe original on August 28, 2005.
  12. ^abcdRussell Johnson with Steve Cox,Here on Gilligan's Isle, p. 20 (1993).
  13. ^First season opening sequence of Gilligan's Island FromYouTube. Retrieved on November 6, 2011.
  14. ^Nyren, Erin (January 6, 2018)."Jerry Van Dyke, Emmy-Nominated 'Coach' Actor, Dies at 86".Variety.
  15. ^Stoddard 1996, p. 190.
  16. ^Schwartz, Sherwood (April 15, 1994).Inside Gilligan's Island: A Three-Hour Tour Through The Making Of A Television Classic. Macmillan.ISBN 978-0-312-10482-5.
  17. ^https://metv.com/lists/8-actors-who-were-almost-cast-on-gilligans-island
  18. ^https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/dabney-coleman-dead-9-to-5-mary-hartman-tootsie-1235902521/
  19. ^https://metv.com/lists/8-actors-who-were-almost-cast-on-gilligans-island
  20. ^https://retrocrush.com/archives/165
  21. ^Shales, Tom (February 8, 2004), "Hey, little buddy! 'Gilligan' DVD drifts into port",The Washington Post, p. N1,To his credit, star Bob Denver lobbied Schwartz and others to change the lyrics to the theme song after the second season, so all the characters and not just most of them were listed. Instead of the chorus singing 'the movie star and the rest', they sang 'the movie star, the professor and Mary Ann, here on Gilligan's isle!'
  22. ^Green (1988).Unofficial Gilligan's Island Handbook. Warner Books.ISBN 9780446386685.
  23. ^Lileth."Was the "Gilligan's Island" theme song tampered with?".The Straight Dope. Cecil Adams. RetrievedApril 4, 2006.
  24. ^"Gilligan's Island Tidbits". The Fifties Web. RetrievedApril 4, 2006.
  25. ^"Gilligans Island 1.00". April 27, 1963 – via Internet Archive.
  26. ^"Home Town Success Story".Bay views. Google Blogger. March 24, 2012. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2014.
  27. ^"Gilligan's Island Theme". Gilligan's isle. RetrievedOctober 17, 2009.
  28. ^"Stairway".The Official Gilligan's Island Fan Club. RetrievedMarch 18, 2011.
  29. ^"Bowling For Soup – Gilligan's Island Theme".YouTube. Archived fromthe original on July 26, 2011.
  30. ^Vibe. Time Publishing Ventures, Incorporated. 2003. p. 105. "The producer extraordinaire entered the big time of commercial rap recognition with the Gilligan's Island-based "Still Fly."
  31. ^Stoddard 1996, p. 306.
  32. ^The Worst TV Shows Ever, Those TV Turkeys We Will Never Forget...(No Matter How Hard We Try) by Bart Andrews with Brad Dunning (1980).
  33. ^"Wring out the old: Reel wrap-up of '92, Part II".Variety.Archived from the original on September 6, 2015. RetrievedJanuary 9, 2025.
  34. ^"Gilligan's Island: TV Show Creator wants Michael Cera and Beyonce for New Movie".canceled + renewed TV shows - TV Series Finale. January 2, 2009. RetrievedJanuary 12, 2021.
  35. ^"Gilligan's Island Creator Wants Michael Cera To Play Gilligan in Movie Adaptation"./Film. December 24, 2008. RetrievedJanuary 12, 2021.
  36. ^"Beyoncé to Star in 'Gilligan's Island' Movie?".Rap-Up. RetrievedJanuary 12, 2021.
  37. ^Tate, Marsha Ann; Houser, Earl (January 11, 2022).What America Watched: Television Favorites from the Cornfields to the Cosmos, 1960s-1990s. McFarland. p. 144.ISBN 978-1-4766-4465-3.
  38. ^"BBC - Comedy Guide - Gilligan's Island". January 3, 2005. Archived fromthe original on January 3, 2005. RetrievedFebruary 8, 2025.
  39. ^"Gilligan's Island: The Complete Series".iTunes Store (US). RetrievedMarch 26, 2019.
  40. ^""Gilligan's Island" coming to HD?". August 18, 2006.
  41. ^"'Gilligan's Island' Docks at TV Land For the First Time in 10 Years". January 16, 2014. Archived fromthe original on March 7, 2017.
  42. ^Cracknell, Ryan (October 2, 2012)."1965 Topps Gilligan's Island Trading Cards".The Cardboard Connection.
  43. ^Michael Shalhoub (2005).The Pinball Compendium. Schiffer. p. 138.ISBN 978-0-7643-4107-6.
  44. ^"The Adventures of Gilligan's Island Review for NES: A Three Hour Bore - GameFAQs".gamefaqs.gamespot.com. RetrievedMay 16, 2022.
  45. ^IGT - IGT Signs Deal to MakeGilligan's Island(TM) Slots
  46. ^Gilligan's Island Video Slots by International Game Technologies
  47. ^Gael Fashingbauer Cooper (October 18, 2012)."As Dawn Wells turns 74, the question remains: Ginger or Mary Ann?".Today. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2014.
  48. ^abHiassen, Rob (September 29, 2007)."Author has left Ginger and 'Island' behind".The Baltimore Sun. Archived fromthe original on September 24, 2015.
  49. ^Budweiser Ginger or Mary AnnArchived October 16, 2011, at theWayback Machine Retrieved on September 7, 2011
  50. ^Rev. Jeffrey Symynkywicz (June 5, 2005)."Ginger or Mary Ann?". uustoughtonma.org. Archived fromthe original on December 26, 2007. RetrievedOctober 24, 2007.
  51. ^Slotek, Jim (January 16, 2014)."Russell Johnson on 'Gilligan's Island' in 1993 interview".Toronto Sun. Archived fromthe original on May 2, 2017. RetrievedJanuary 24, 2021.USA Today carried a Ginger vs. Mary Ann fave poll and Dawn Wells' character had 85% of the vote
  52. ^Silver, Marc (September 7, 2005)."So which one did Gilligan like best?". usnews.comU.S. News & World Report. Archived fromthe original on December 26, 2007. RetrievedOctober 24, 2007.
  53. ^"Ginger vs. Maryann". retroCRUSH. Archived fromthe original on September 11, 2019. RetrievedApril 2, 2012.

Bibliography

  • Denver, Bob (November 1993).Gilligan, Maynard & Me. Carol Publishing.ISBN 0-8065-1413-2.
  • Green, Joey (April 1988).Unofficial Gilligan's Island Handbook. Warner Books.ISBN 0-446-38668-5.
  • Johnson, Russell; Cox, Steve (July 1993).Here on Gilligan's Isle (1st ed.). Perennial.ISBN 0-06-096993-8.
  • Schwartz, Sherwood (April 15, 1994).Inside Gilligan's Island: A Three-Hour Tour Through The Making of A Television Classic. St. Martin's Griffin.ISBN 0-312-10482-0.
  • Stoddard, Sylvia (May 1996).TV Treasures – A Companion Guide to Gilligan's Island. New York: St. Martin's Paperbacks.ISBN 0-312-95797-1.
  • Gilligan's Island – The Complete First Season (DVD), 2004, Turner Home Entertainment, UPC 053939673425.
  • Gilligan's Island – The Complete Second Season (DVD), 2005, Turner Home Entertainment, UPC 053939692624.
  • Gilligan's Island – The Complete Third Season (DVD), 2005, Turner Home Entertainment, UPC 053939733129.

External links

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