By the way, I liked Paul Sand as the friendly psychic in
Wonder Woman last night. He was kind of like a more understated Tom Baker.
That other show would be Dozier's The Green Hornet. The model home set was Britt Reid's living room.
I wondered if that might be it, but I haven't seen TGH recently enough to have recognized it. Plus I was, err,
kind of distracted...
Nevermind that producers should have assumed that fans of both series would instantly recognize the Reid living room, or that TGH was still a first run series with three episodes left to air, where the set would be featured prominently.
Well, shows reused familiar sets all the time.
The Man from UNCLE would often reuse the same mansion set as totally different mansions in consecutive episodes.
Mission: Impossible did the same with their standing prison, hospital, apartment, and house sets -- and in one episode, they borrowed the living room set from
The Brady Bunch, while an earlier episode used Stalag 13 from
Hogan's Heroes. It's the same sort of deal with
Columbo using Robby the Robot, or Kirk and Edith Keeler walking past Floyd's Barber Shop in
Star Trek -- they know viewers will probably recognize it, but they still have to stay within budget and reuse what they can.
On that note, if Me-TV is running Batman in broadcast order, the famous Green Hornet crossovers "A Piece of the Action" / "Batman's Satisfaction" (with Roger C. Carmel) will air next weekend.
Indeed they will.
Consider it an unintentional send-off of Wayne's permanently unrequited romantic feelings, as "Batman Displays His Knowledge" was the final appearance of Julie Newmar as The Catwoman--a major loss for the series.
Ohh, I wish I'd realized that. Well, this wasn't one of her best stories, and it did feel like the freshness was gone. I mentioned how self-conscious the Art Linkletter bit was, and Robin's musing about the deathtraps they keep getting into and out of was also a bit self-consciously meta. And it did repeat the "We can kill Robin and be happy together" gag. The show is starting to get tired by this point anyway.
And yeah, I guess this would be the end of the Batman-Catwoman romance. The show might've been progressive enough to cast Eartha Kitt as Catwoman, but not enough to let her have a romance with a white leading man.
Let's see, what's left in the second season? Just five more 2-parters -- Green Hornet/Colonel Gumm, King Tut, Black Widow, Joker, and Mr. Freeze's swan song.