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Space Origins
As the various live
space-adventure TV programs (CAPTAIN VIDEO, SPACE PATROL and
TOM CORBETT, SPACE CADET) got going in the period 1949-50,
those responsible for the visual design and look of the
programs faced a great challenge. One might think that they
would have turned for reference to the ubiquitous pulp
magazines, which had been featuring heavily-illustrated
stories of space adventure since the late 1920s, but
remember that these magazines were treated as disposable.
Back issues could not be found in libraries, or anywhere
else, except in the closets of a few private collectors here
and there.
Therefore, in looking for influences on the designers of these
Golden-Age TV programs, one needs to look no further than roughly
contemporary mass media. Surprisingly enough, I've been able to find
only three major influences in about 40 years of questing around.
These sources were (1) a magazine article, (2) a movie, and (3) a
book. Let's take them in order.
The January 17, 1949, issue of LIFE contains an article (pages 67-73)
titled "Rocket to the Moon." It is illustrated with black-and-white paintings by an artist whose name appears to be Noel Sickles. The
paintings show the takeoff of a multistage rocket that is vaguely
V-2-like except for some boomerang-shaped fins at the top. [The space
ship depicted briefly in ROCKETSHIP X-M (1950) is identical to the
Sickles ship.] On page 71 is a large painting of the control deck of
the space ship. In addition to acceleration couches for the crew, and
circular hatches in ceiling and floor to allow access to other decks,
it has such bizarre (to modern viewers) features as a periscope and an
ordinary-looking office swivel chair at a control panel which has
virtually no controls. [ROCKETSHIP X-M duplicates this set except for
the acceleration couches and periscope.] On page 72 and 73 we see
space-suited explorers on the lunar surface. They wear dark, rubbery
pressure suits with bellows-like arms and legs. Their helmets are
clear plastic bubbles, with built-in binoculars. They wear massive
backpacks consisting of two large oxygen bottles with a knapsack-like
structure in between the bottles. These suits made a big impression
on legendary 1950s comic artist Wally Wood, whose impressive suits
were usually very complex variations of the Sickles suits. The
depiction of the lunar surface in the LIFE paintings closely follows
the famous paintings of Chesley Bonestell that were widely published
in 1947 (see later).
In August, 1950, the first movie to deal realistically with space
flight was released. Produced by George Pal and directed by Irving
Pichel, DESTINATION MOON depicted in 92 full-color minutes the
construction of an atomic-powered single-stage rocket which flies
directly to the moon and returns. Technical advice came from
script-writer Robert A. Heinlein, the famous science fiction novelist
whose background in physics was excellent. The production also made
extensive use of the astronomical art of Chesley Bonestell. The
production design, credited to Ernst Fegte, owes an obvious debt in
spots to the LIFE article, but Fegte's design had a far greater and
more immediate impact, and defined for almost the entire 1950s the
"look" of space explorers. The gigantic space ship is vaguely
V-2-like (an alternate design by Chesley Bonestell was rejected). The
pressure suit for lunar exploration is black and rubbery and is
glimpsed only for a few seconds early in the production, as it is
being demonstrated to some of the film's characters. What is usually
mistaken for a space suit by viewers of the film is in fact a
brightly-covered canvas coverall used to protect the space suit on the
lunar surface. The space helmet is metal, with a circular viewport in
front, vaguely like a diver's helmet. The backpack consists of three
small oxygen cylinders. There's a complex belt-tray arrangement which
has radio controls, tools (including huge crescent wrenches!), a
flashlight and hanks of rope. The coverall has hooplike bands around
knees and elbows (about where the bellows joints were in the Noel
Sickles paintings).
The control deck of the space ship has contoured acceleration couches
with control panels which swing out so that a reclining astronaut can
use them. There are no chairs (useless in weightlessness anyway!)
and a single large circular viewport. Because the control deck is at
the very top of the huge rocket, the astronauts must climb a hundred
feet down a ladder whose rungs are part of and can be extruded from
the hull of the rocket, in order to reach the lunar surface.
The special effects are crude by today's standards but dazzling by the
standards of 1950, and they deserved and won an Academy Award. The
main problem with the effects is the inconsistent scale of the space
ship (it appears to be a totally different size in relation to the
astronauts on earth, versus in flight, versus on the lunar surface).
Also annoying is the star background seen in space. All the stars
have a visible disk (they were automobile headlights!) and a uniform
brightness. The depiction of the lunar surface closely follows
Chesley Bonestell for an excellent reason-- he designed the lunar
sets and painted a number of the panoramas used.
The DESTINATION MOON space ship model cropped up in a number of places
in the space hero TV shows, particularly in SPACE PATROL. The main
influence was on space suits. Mistaking the coverall for the space
suit, the designers for SPACE PATROL, TOM CORBETT and CAPTAIN VIDEO
quickly put together virtually identical-looking coveralls. TOM
CORBETT's suits even retained the bright day-glo colors of the
DESTINATION MOON coveralls. Jan Merlin remembers them to have been
bright pink! Like the DESTINATION MOON suits, they also have a
complex toolbelt, including hanks of rope. The backpack has two small
oxygen bottles. The SPACE PATROL and CAPTAIN VIDEO suits were darker,
but had the ubiquitous sewed-on hoops (lighter in color) at elbows and
knees, although no toolbelts.
SPACE PATROL's Flash-Gordon-like
space ships were arranged
horizontally rather than vertically, and retained the foolish
periscope from the LIFE article. The pilots sat in chairs in an
airplane-like cockpit. There were no accleration couches and any
other crew members had to stand up throughout the space flight,
no matter how long! However, to exit the ship in its horizontal
position the crew had to climb a short ladder inside the ship to
reach a hatch at the very top of the hull. Another ordinary
painter's ladder then appeared mysteriously from somewhere so the
crew could climb from the top of the hull to the surface.
On SPACE CADET the crew entered through a hatch in one of the V2-like
fins of their vertical rocket cruisers, which also had two upper
boomerang-shaped fins like those shown in the LIFE article.
Presumably they then climbed a long ladder inside the ship, past the
reactor and reaction-mass tanks, before getting to the power deck,
then the control deck, and finally the radar deck. The
radar-radio-man crew-member is an obvious nod to DESTINATION MOON,
where the radio man (Dick Wesson) is a comic-relief character to
contrast with the seriousness of the rest of the crew. The circular
hatches in floor and (unseen) ceiling were an important part of the
SPACE CADET control-deck set. A long ladder led to the invisible
upper hatch.
On CAPTAIN VIDEO it was usually unclear how Video and the Ranger got
from the cockpit to the surface, but a time or two they were shown
crawling DESTINATION-MOON-like down a long ladder which led from the
tip to the fins of the huge vertical rocket. More often, they entered
a Space Jeep and shuttled to the surface in style.
On both SPACE CADET and SPACE PATROL the space helmets were largely
clear plastic bubbles, as it was too hard to tell one actor from
another otherwise. The SPACE CADET helmets were held together with
very visible and obvious office binder clips, which sometimes fell off
or popped off in the middle of a scene. (Some early production stills
from both SPACE PATROL and SPACE CADET show DESTINATION-MOON-style
helmets.) Captain Video and the Ranger used a variety of helmets over
the years, but most were rather like a medieval knight's helmet, of
light-colored plastic, with a clear plastic visor hinged at the top.
The final major influence on the look of 1950s space travel was a
book, THE CONQUEST OF SPACE, by Willy Ley and Chesley Bonestell.
Published in 1947 by Viking Press, and lavishly illustrated in color
and black and white with paintings by Bonestell, the book pictures
space-ships like winged V2s exploring the earth's moon and the rest of
the solar system. Bonestell's paintings of the surfaces of our
moon, and the moons of the outer planets, show a distinctively craggy,
sharp-edged landscape that all set designers for the 1950s space
adventure shows followed faithfully. (Bonestell knew all about
thermal and micrometeor erosion, which in our real solar system has
worn almost all relief on the airless surfaces of the moons down to
very gentle slopes. I believe his trademark craggy look is deliberate
artistic license, far more visually interesting than the vaguely
pizza-like surfaces nature has actually provided us.) Bonestell's
winged V2 spaceships are often also seen in 1950s space adventure,
particulary on TOM CORBETT, SPACE CADET and on ROCKY JONES, SPACE
RANGER and ROD BROWN OF THE ROCKET RANGERS.
When Willy Ley was hired, early on, as "science advisor"
for TOM CORBETT, he probably just handed a copy of CONQUEST
OF SPACE to the set and prop designers. And they used it.
Check out Plate IX in the book to see that the V2-like
winged moon rocket has airlock-like hatches in its fins,
just as the Polaris did three years later. Check out Plates
Xa, XIV, XVIIIa, and XXIIb to see in the foreground the very
distinctive viewport of the Polaris; set designers did the
best they could with masonite to duplicate the look of the
metal frame shown in Bonestell's paintings. The "rocket
scout" spaceships on TOM CORBETT are duplicates of
Bonestell's winged moonship, while the "rocket cruiser"
space ships substitute instead the short, tab-like fins seen
in the 1949 LIFE paintings.
[Addendum: Correspondent Gary Harris, an expert on space
suits and their history, reminds us that the rubbery space
suits of the 1947 LIFE paintings were based on photos of
various pressure suits developed during WWII, particularly
the XH-5 built by Colley and Krupp of B. F. Goodrich.
Photos of such suits began to appear in the print media
during 1946 and 1947. One prominent appearance is in the
July 1947 issue of MECHANIX ILLUSTRATED, where it pops up in
the midst of a long article by none other than Willy Ley,
illustrated with full color paintings by none other than
Chesley Bonestell, concerning expeditions to the moon and to
Mars. A photo of the black, rubbery XH-5 suit with
transparent fishbowl helmet appears on p. 107, where it is
referred to merely as a "pilot's stratosphere suit" with
no further details.]
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The nuclear-powered single-stage rocket Luna prepares to blast off for the earth's moon, in DESTINATION MOON (1950).
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The most influential design from DESTINATION MOON was its space suit.
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Space suits as depicted in the 1949 LIFE trip to the Moon. Lunar explorers prepare to leave their landed space ship.
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On the Moon (LIFE, 1949).
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More of LUCA OLEASTRI's fine art can be found here.
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