Maxwell Smart [played by Don Adams]: “You see, the moment I suspected there was something wrong with this old scow, I immediately telephoned headquarters, and I happen to know that at this very minute, seven coastguard cutters are converging on this boat. Wouldya believe it? Seven.”
Mr. Big [played by Michael
Dunn]: “I find that pretty hard to believe.”
Smart [slightly
hesitating]: “Wouldya believe six?”
Mr. Big: “I don't think
so.”
Smart: “How about two
cops in a rowboat?”— Get Smart,
Season 1, Episode 1, “Mr. Big,” original air date Sept. 18, 1965,
teleplay by Mel Brooks and Buck Henry, directed by Howard Morris
For the first time the other night, I watched the
pilot—the only episode shot in black and white—of the classic Sixties comedy, Get
Smart. I was convulsed with laughter from the opening minutes to the last,
but especially by this scene involving the clueless spy who, co-creators Brooks
and Henry said over the years, was a cross between James Bond and Inspector
Clouseau.
The “wouldya believe” line, I learned from the Season
1 DVD of the series, was one that Don Adams came up with. It turned into one of
the great running gags of the show.
In the image accompanying this post, Smart’s
colleague, Agent 99 (played by Barbara Feldon), has taken off her cap and let
her hair down. Her partner is astonished to discover that she’s a woman.
A friend of mine (AND HE KNOWS WHO HE IS!!!),
quite a Feldon fan, would be astonished that Smart is astonished. As a mere
youngster in the 1960s, I am sure he would not mind telling you, even he would
have been able to see that Feldon was a woman from 10 miles away. It was one of the first indications that the spy's surname was ironic.
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