The Man from U.N.C.L.E. is an American television series that was
broadcast on NBC from September 22, 1964, to January 15, 1968. It follows the exploits of two secret agents,
played by Robert Vaughn and David McCallum, who work for a fictitious secret international espionage and
law-enforcement agency called U.N.C.L.E., whose letters stand for the United Network Command for Law and
Enforcement.
105 episodes were produced between 1964 and 1968. The series was
created by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The first season was broadcast in black-and-white.
James Bond creator Ian Fleming contributed to the show's
creation.The book The James Bond Films reveals that Fleming's TV concept had two characters: Napoleon Solo and
April Dancer (The Girl from U.N.C.L.E.). ("Mr. Solo" was originally the name of a crime boss in Fleming's
Goldfinger.) Robert Towne and Harlan Ellison wrote scripts for the series, which was originally to have been
titled Solo. Author Michael Avallone, who wrote the first original novel based upon the series (see below), is
sometimes incorrectly cited as the creator of the series (such as in the January 1967 issue of The Saint
Magazine). At one point, Fleming's name was to have been connected more directly with the series. The cover of
the original prospectus for the series showed the title Ian Fleming's Solo. Solo was originally slated to be the
"solo" star of the series, the only "Man." But a small scene by a Russian agent named Illya Kuryakin caught fire
with the fans, and the two were permanently paired.
The series centered on a two-man troubleshooting team working for
U.N.C.L.E.: American Napoleon Solo (Robert Vaughn), and Russian Illya Kuryakin (David McCallum). Leo G. Carroll
played Alexander Waverly, the British head of the organization (Number One of Section One). Lisa Rogers (Barbara
Moore) joined the cast as a female regular in the fourth season.
The series, though fictional, achieved such notability as to have
artifacts (props, costumes and documents, and a video clip) from the show included in the Ronald Reagan
Presidential Library's exhibit on spies and counterspies. Similar exhibits can be found in the museums of the
Central Intelligence Agency and other agencies and organizations involved with intelligence
gathering.
U.N.C.L.E.'s archenemy was a vast organization known as THRUSH
(originally named WASP in the series pilot movie). The original series never explained what the acronym THRUSH
stood for, but in several of the U.N.C.L.E. novels written by David McDaniel, it was expanded as the
Technological Hierarchy for the Removal of Undesirables and the Subjugation of Humanity, and described by him as
having been founded by Col. Sebastian Moran after the death of Professor Moriarty at the Reichenbach Falls in
the Sherlock Holmes story "The Final Problem." Later, an alternate—and more plausible—explanation was offered,
with THRUSH rising out of the fall of Nazism and founded by high-ranking Nazi officials--including Martin
Bormann--who fled to Argentina when defeat was seen as inevitable, taking with them enormous financial wealth,
including gold and precious works of art.
THRUSH's aim was to conquer the world. Napoleon Solo said, in "The
Green Opal Affair," "THRUSH believes in the two-party system: the masters and the slaves,", adding in another
episode ("The Vulcan Affair") that THRUSH will "kill people the way people kill flies: a careless flick of the
wrist--reflex action." So dangerous was the threat from THRUSH that governments, even those most ideologically
opposed such as the United States and the USSR, cooperated in the formation and operation of U.N.C.L.E.
Similarly, if Solo and Kuryakin held opposing political views, the writers allowed little to show in their
interactions.
Though executive producer Norman Felton and Ian Fleming had
developed the character of Napoleon Solo, it was producer Sam Rolfe who created the organization of U.N.C.L.E.
Unlike the nationalistic organizations of the CIA and James Bond's MI.6, U.N.C.L.E. was a worldwide organization
composed of agents from all corners of the globe. The character of Illya Kuryakin was created by Rolfe as a
Russian U.N.C.L.E. agent.
The creators of the series decided that the involvement of an
innocent character would be part of each episode, giving the audience someone with whom it could identify.
Through all the changes in series in the course of four seasons, this element remained a factor--from a suburban
housewife in the pilot, "The Vulcan Affair" (film version: "To Trap a Spy"), to the various people kidnapped in
the final episode, "The Seven Wonders of the World Affair."
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