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Lost In Space

Keith1701

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I have been watching Season 2 of Lost in Space on DVD, and I noticed that you never see Professor Robinson and his wife in their living corners----I was thinking why????:lol:
 
I'm also on season two of my Lost in Space DVD's (less than a week to go before I get to season 3). I don't know the answer to your question, but I suspect it has to do with season two being the point where the focus on Will, Dr. Smith and the Robot begins. The other characters become incidental.
 
I'm also on season two of my Lost in Space DVD's (less than a week to go before I get to season 3). I don't know the answer to your question, but I suspect it has to do with season two being the point where the focus on Will, Dr. Smith and the Robot begins. The other characters become incidental.
Yeah, I agree ~~~ Also, I noticed that Guy Williams and the Major really had small roles compared to the other members of the cast.
 
Probably the reason you do not see John and Maureen in the more private areas is the same as the reason why Rob and Laura had separate beds. Censors, and not wanting to even give a whiff of intimacy between them.
 
I remember a interview with June Lockhart where she said that the producer or director told her that she and Guy Williams were not to embrace or kiss on screen, it being a family show. This struck her as odd because her own parents would alway touch and kiss in passing.

Perhaps not showing a bedroom for the married Robinsons was a part of that mentality?

:)
 
:lol:
I remember a interview with June Lockhart where she said that the producer or director told her that she and Guy Williams were not to embrace or kiss on screen, it being a family show. This struck her as odd because her own parents would alway touch and kiss in passing.

Perhaps not showing a bedroom for the married Robinsons was a part of that mentality?

:)

Wow, I didn't know that fact as well. I guess that way it was with 60's television. I do remember Gene Roddenberry had a fight with NBC television over the showing of a belly button too.:lol::guffaw:
 
I remember a interview with June Lockhart where she said that the producer or director told her that she and Guy Williams were not to embrace or kiss on screen, it being a family show. This struck her as odd because her own parents would alway touch and kiss in passing.

Perhaps not showing a bedroom for the married Robinsons was a part of that mentality?

:)
That seems kind of excessive. I understand they were a lot stricter about that kind of stuff on TV back then, but I'm pretty sure I've seen other shows from the same era that showed married couples embracing and kissing.
 
I'm also on season two of my Lost in Space DVD's (less than a week to go before I get to season 3). I don't know the answer to your question, but I suspect it has to do with season two being the point where the focus on Will, Dr. Smith and the Robot begins. The other characters become incidental.
Yeah, I agree ~~~ Also, I noticed that Guy Williams and the Major really had small roles compared to the other members of the cast.

Agree. If the scripts had it, then it would have been seen as in season one.:vulcan:
 
Ah, the silly sixties. When Lucy and Desi had to fight to keep Lucy on their show while she was pregnant because you couldn't show a pregnant woman on TV. (they had to agree not to say "pregnant" but I think Desi said it in Spanish a couple of times, heh heh)
 
I do remember Gene Roddenberry had a fight with NBC television over the showing of a belly button too.:lol::guffaw:

Which is why he put a double-naveled Mariette Hartley in the Genesis II movie. :lol:

gr70s_gen2_3_zpsfhof4nsk.jpg



One of the few shows of that era to have the married couple in one bed was The Addams Family...
 
One of the few shows of that era to have the married couple in one bed was The Addams Family...

The Munsters was another. Since those were fantasy shows, I'm guessing that's why they got away with it.
 
One trick in some shows was to push two twin beds together and cover them with a king or queen size sheet.

Ah, the silly sixties. When Lucy and Desi had to fight to keep Lucy on their show while she was pregnant because you couldn't show a pregnant woman on TV. (they had to agree not to say "pregnant" but I think Desi said it in Spanish a couple of times, heh heh)
I Love Lucy was in the fifties, not the sixties. Lucille and Desi were divorced in 1960. The episode you're referring to was "Lucy Is Enceinte" in 1952. Although the word "pregnant" was discouraged by the advertising sponsor, "expecting" was allowed.
 
I do remember Gene Roddenberry had a fight with NBC television over the showing of a belly button too.:lol::guffaw:

Which is why he put a double-naveled Mariette Hartley in the Genesis II movie. :lol:

gr70s_gen2_3_zpsfhof4nsk.jpg



One of the few shows of that era to have the married couple in one bed was The Addams Family...

I guess that I need to get Genesis II on DVD.:) By the way, I just received my Lost In Space Season Three Volume 1 on DVD today from ebay.:)
 
Gomez and Morticia were the first television couple to show true passion for each other- until then it was just simple hugs and a peck on the cheek.

Lost in Space was initially about a family struggling against odds in an alien environment and trying to get home. The first episodes were exciting but it then became more of a formula of Smith/Will/Robot having adventures and the rest of the family was just there to provide context.

I would have loved to seen more of both the family relationships and the budding romance between Don and Judy...
 
[/QUOTE]
I Love Lucy was in the fifties, not the sixties. Lucille and Desi were divorced in 1960. The episode you're referring to was "Lucy Is Enceinte" in 1952. Although the word "pregnant" was discouraged by the advertising sponsor, "expecting" was allowed.[/QUOTE]

Alas, you are correct. It's tough getting old. Everything before TMP came out kinda jumbles together :lol:
 
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