Get Smart
Get Smart was an American TV comedy series that ran from 1965 until 1970. It satirized the secret agent genre, which was quite popular in the late 1960s. It ran on the NBC television network from 1965 to 1969 and on CBS from 1969 to 1970.
The series, written and created by Mel Brooks and Buck Henry, won seven Emmy Awards and was nominated for another 14 Emmys and two Golden Globe Awards.
The series starred Don Adams as bumbling secret agent Maxwell Smart, Agent 86. Barbara Feldon's character had no name; even after Smart married her, he (and everyone else) would always address her as "99." Smart and 99 worked for Control, a secret U.S. Government spy agency. The nemesis of Control was KAOS, headed by a mysterious eastern-European spymaster named Sigfried (Bernie Kopell). Other characters included the Chief of Control, whose first name was once revealed as Thaddeus but who was always addressed as Chief (Ed Platt); Agent 44, who was always disguised as a planter, mailbox, or other object; and Agent Larrabee (Robert Karvelas), the Chief's assistant.
Many taglines and schticks have endured:
"Sorry about that, Chief." "Would you believe..." "Missed me by that much." "Don't tell me .... I asked you not to tell me that." "Max!"
Smart would communicate with Control using a dial telephone concealed in his shoe (a "shoe phone").
Smart would always insist on following the rules and, when in the Chief's office, would insist on speaking under the Cone of Silence (two plastic hemispheres which were electrically lowered on top of Smart and the Chief, and which invariably malfunctioned).
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Referenced By
Barbara Feldon | Bond film | Bond movie | Cone of Silence | Covert operative | Don Adams | Eighty-six | Gadget Boy | Gadget and the Gadgetinis | Gordon Jump | Homer's Odyssey | Inspector Gadget | Inspector Gadget's Last Case | Inspector Gadget Saves Christmas | James Bond | List of fictional robots | List of programs broadcast by NBC | List of television programs | Mel Brooks | Ninety-nine | Richard Donner | Robots in fiction | Robots in film | Robots in literature | Robots in television | Secret agent | TV shows | The Man From U.N.C.L.E. | The Man from U.N.C.L.E
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