did their corvette have a auto or mans transmission?
@1mespud12 күн бұрын
Percussionist, PERCY JAMES @ 23:51 was a featured artist for his Latin feel with "Quartette Tre's Bien" and many other Jazz and R&B ensembles back in the day when Gaslight Square and Central West End was in its heyday. But I found it somewhat disturbing that his name is not in the credits. To be given so much screen time without credit? I guess it just slipped the producers' minds. Afterall, even St. Louis' Chase Park Plaza Hotel was credited near the end.
@michellenelms353214 күн бұрын
Martin Milner ???...in my native city, before my time??? I did not know that until today November 19, 2024. WOW! Thank you for this video clip.
@JohnCasciello14 күн бұрын
@Alberto Barros == THANKS as I missed this episode when ORIGINALLY RUN !!!! Guy yelling out window was veteran actor FRANK CAMPANELLA and he is the brother of JOE CAMPANELLA !!!!! NOTE== this ROUTE 66 as well as NAKED CITY tv series showed the HUMAN EMOTIONAL SIDE of our citys And neighborhood citizens ********
@GLK-LondonАй бұрын
Wonderful and a nice contrast from the sometimes gritty magnificent drama in this great series.
@charlesholden9283Ай бұрын
From TC
@lindastretch2522Ай бұрын
my favorite actor rip martin
@hoagland19432 ай бұрын
This episode aired during the Cuban Missile Crises. The next day after this episode aired was considered Black Saturday. We/the USA came so close to a thermal nuclear war. The famous Kennedy vs. Khrushchev eye to eye showdown famously took place. Good thing all sides were smart enough to withdraw. Russia removed missiles from Cuba as we removed missiles from Turkey.
@daviddorward76842 ай бұрын
Great show, great car, good story and great acting!
@citywide443 ай бұрын
I watched the show as a young kid for the Corvette. Now, as an old buzzard, I realize how good the stories are.
@harrietandrade92843 ай бұрын
Thank you, Alberto, for the wonderful Route 66 episodes!
@FJB9653 ай бұрын
That was terrific!
@ADAMSIXTIES3 ай бұрын
Airdate April 13th, 1962 2:01 The cop on the left is actual Dallas officer Bobby Hargis who rode his motorcycle to the left of JFK during the assassination a year later.
@SuperTony19684 ай бұрын
David Janssen was bad ass in this episode far from Richard Kimball & Harry Orwell.
@MrWillHughes4 ай бұрын
So enjoyable!! I first saw this episode and the whole series on Nick At Nite back in the late 80s! Great times and happy to see it again!
@MrWillHughes4 ай бұрын
Sally Gracie playing Beth! She was an excellent actress and was once married to.Rod Steiger.
@jamescalifornia29645 ай бұрын
Marine Land of the Pacific ✨️
@bandini222215 ай бұрын
I never seen such a versatile pair of guys, test piloting speed boats on Lake Havasu one week and managing a big hotel the next. And always dining with the rich and famous, and becoming intimately involved in their lives...before moving on to the next episode. What a life and, in the early 60s, America loved these two!
@knitpurlsquirrelwithgrannydee5 ай бұрын
Young Nielsen was a dish!
@johnd81675 ай бұрын
The opening scene did use West Trunk St. in Crandall. It was a previous routing of US 175 prior to its current alignment.
@ADAMSIXTIES5 ай бұрын
If Madlyn Rhue (Ara) looks familiar she played Marla in the Space Seed (Khan) episode of Star Trek.
@ADAMSIXTIES5 ай бұрын
Alternate universe where everyone talks in articulate poetic philosophical parables.
@robertjacob66746 ай бұрын
Classic era I can't believe the heavy duty rock and roll wasn't on the table yet the stones are a couple years later in 64 of course it was Elvis but then the mighty led Zeppelin was formed
@markpolinsky55606 ай бұрын
Great episode, great acting and thanks for the details on the locations. Former St. Louisan and big Route 66 fan. I was the boys age when I first watched with my older Brother, who bought a Vette because of the show !
@slybear5256 ай бұрын
I wonder if the Hannibal Lecter character in Silence of the Lambs was inspired by the scene of Lezama , handcuffed to a pipe while using his wit to get into Todd's mind.
@rupertlenoir6 ай бұрын
you can catch a glimpse of george maharis without his toupee in the water!!
@stephenclarke22066 ай бұрын
Everyone seemed very understanding at the end given that the Redford character covered up the girl's death for several days
@billmurphy7407 ай бұрын
Buzz was in full method acting mode with a lame script on this ONE.
@douglasthompson94827 ай бұрын
I love Route 66…every episode I dreamed of being travelling throughout America and saving a girl. I had that feeling when I was 5 years old. I still have the feeling today. This show gave me purpose and enlightened me on manhood, the way things used to be. Funny, i still am there…1965.
@Anname88 ай бұрын
I just watched Brookside Park-Part 2 by Billie the Kid Adventures. He relates that a Route 66 scene was shot there. This reminded me that I had been at the location of another scene in Cleveland, Ohio (South Miles Rd. in Warrensville Hts. It was fields back then.). The site of the barn. Looked long and hard to find out what episode it was. This episode aired when I was 13. I don't remember the episodes, how many I watched and hadn't viewed any since then until this one today. But I know that I liked the series and had a crush on Martin Milner. I remember walking next to him at the barn site (there were a lot of teens there). Maybe even got his autograph, long gone now. And then parts of the storyline relates directly to things going on in my life today; I mean this very day! Can't explain more. Weird and/or wonderful!
@DoloresJaffari8 ай бұрын
That is funny the comment from a year ago thanks for the needed laugh
@gino4239 ай бұрын
O boy she's off her rocker
@gino4239 ай бұрын
Martin Milner had a good career
@gino4239 ай бұрын
My favorite show back than....2 guys driving thr country in a Corvette
@Gene-dm6pm9 ай бұрын
This show was years ahead of its time! Excellent writing each week and great performances by the actors who appeared on the episodes. To think these episodes were created each week in different locations all over America. Actually, Route 66 was not even used that much for the roads and highways. But, being on location every week was a great demand for everyone. It goes to show that even back then in my opinion no only this show, but, many were ahead of its time and a great proving ground for artistic freedom and creativity.
@robertmartinez417410 ай бұрын
the soundtrack's for television in those days were sure loud.
@robertmartinez417410 ай бұрын
The Long Beach VA was where my dad passed away in 1995 he was a WWII veteran. RIP Dad.
@davidfessler182610 ай бұрын
It’s research scientists like these that have done their part in helping to create the mainstream blood pressure medications that we now use. I know of one medication that was developed as a result of shark research.
@casamagneticaviva11 ай бұрын
Did Lon really say “he was starting to not believe in me no more” ? Who wrote this?
@77news9711 ай бұрын
The woman who has her cigarette lit by wolfman lived across the street from us, and she would "baby" sit me sometimes. Her daughter was in the group of "our gang" kids in the neighborhood. My mom is also in this episode, sitting with the women in the seminar, and she also faints at one point. I'm about to download this and then edit it to show to my brothers and sister. This was filmed in the Chicago suburbs when I was around 9 or so. I'm 70 now.
@Lindylou194711 ай бұрын
I loved Route 66. I even cut school when they filmed The Thin White Line in Philadelphia. Made my way out to the Marriott on City Line Avenue hoping to see them. Alas, I was disappointed.
@anton199011 ай бұрын
Fun facts for Lon Chaney Jr. fans; * Lon desperately wanted to take on his fathers old role as Quasimodo when RKO remade the Hunchback of Notre Dame in 1939. So it’s nice to see him made up to look close to Chaney Sr.’s Quasimodo at the start of this episode. * On the other hand, Chaney despised playing Kharis, the Mummy, during the 40’s. And yet, here he is, back in the Kharis makeup for one final time. He was such a trooper.
@cm9439 Жыл бұрын
This is a museum piece. I'm so glad that times have changed. It's great to see a classic trio. It's painfully dated.
@NickolasFigler-fi3wj Жыл бұрын
Yup
@charlesrobert6211 Жыл бұрын
I like route 66 except so many of the episodes get too deep into people's emotional problems. It's like they have the only psychiatric office on wheels.
@madbrowniac7871 Жыл бұрын
The Director John Newland was a driving Creative Force behind "The Outer Limits." The Writer Stirling Silliphant provided The Screenplay for a 1967 Sidney Poitier and Rod Steiger Classic known as "In The Heat of The Night."🤔🎤🛸👮♂️👮♀️👨⚖📺🎥B.W.
@steveanacorteswa39799 ай бұрын
Stirling was a great writer, all the best episodes were written by him
@madbrowniac7871 Жыл бұрын
Same Font in The Opening Credits as "Mannix." Both Miss Joanna Moore and George Maharis were talented Vocalists.🤔🎤💃🚘🛣📺B.W.
@anthonyiocca5683 Жыл бұрын
This is more like the twilight zone. Strange storyline, as stories go. The beginning, middle, and ending. This ending seems incomplete…
@custer2449 Жыл бұрын
Steven Hill was such a great actor. I really liked him in Law and Order. And Bethel Leslie, what a dish.