Summaries

The adventures of two young drifters across America.

Only fiction series written and shot all over North America. Two young adventurers in a Corvette explore early 60's social problems and changing mores, looking for the right place to settle down while seeking themselves. Debuting 3 years after "On the Road" transformed modern literature, while such newly available fast cars dominated the new teenage culture, Tod, an Ivy Leaguer, and Buz, an orphan from Hell's Kitchen, cruise the U.S.A. coping with shifting relationships and lifestyles. The FCC's Newton Minow characterized U.S. TV as a "vast wasteland," in 1961, but "Route 66" found important, compelling stories all over. Stirling Silliphant who won an Oscar for writing "In the Heat of the Night," traveled around the U.S. and Canada scouting locales, while writing ¾ of the very dark, literate show's episodes - a feat only Rod Serling matched with The Twilight Zone. Soon, a crew of 50 arrived at the location. Shows were filmed in 40 States. Tod, from a once-wealthy family, inherited only a Corvette when his father died, so he and Buz (suddenly jobless because he worked for Tod's father's company) strike out across North America, especially along the iconic Route 66 from Chicago to L.A. which the Okies traveled. Tod and Buz take local jobs (such as shrimping, shipbuilding, oil rigging) to support their wanderings. The 2 socially conscious knights of the road, encourage, champion, and learn from oppressed and troubled people they encounter. 1962 guest star Ethel Waters was the first African-American woman nominated for an Emmy Award. The CBS show doubled Corvette sales its first season. Tod and Buz's beige Corvette's 2 seats meant "sans souci" and constant movement, so shows were shot in 6 days, in a new city almost every week. The two drifters reject the post-war American Dream of the suburbs, while exploring a disappearing North America with very diverse local culture, not yet dominated by international franchises and cookie-cutter suburbs. The shows' vibrate with the new dreams for a Great Society and the fears of the Cold War. The volatile Buz Murdock was cast quickly, while Martin Milner beat out Robert Redford for the Tod Stiles role. Due to hepatitis, Maharis did not appear in the series' last 1 ½ seasons. The show grew from a pilot on creator Silliphant and Route 66 producer Herbert B. Leonard's "Naked City," also shot on location. Naked City and Route 66 bridged the widely varied anthologies and live plays of the 1950's Golden Age of Television, to the much cheaper, 1 hour dramatic, set-character based series, which continue to rule prime-time. Nelson Riddle's atmospheric Theme from Route 66, and his episode scores factored heavily in the show's allure. The breezy song Route 66, written by Bobby Troup (of the 1970's TV series "Emergency !"), a 1946 Nat King Cole hit, wasn't used for the series. A sequel to Route 66 appeared in 1993, but lasted only 4 episodes.—David Stevens

Tod Stiles is the blonde, preppie son of a wealthy New York businessman, Tod who attended Yale for a few years and who grew up in privilege. Dark in complexion and temperament, Buz Murdock grew up an orphan, his education largely from the streets of Hells Kitchen and the many fights he got into in its back alleys. They become friends working for Tod's father on the barges in the East River during the summer. After Tod's father passes away, Tod learns that after paying off his father's debts, he is penniless except for a Corvette that his father left to him. Both restless and unsure of their place in the world, Tod and Buz decide to travel throughout the United States together in Tod's Corvette to find a place and vocation to set their roots also together, working odd jobs along the way to find that vocation and meeting a wide array of people who influence their lives and visa versa. After Buz contracts echo-virus and convalesces in a Cleveland hospital, Tod finds a new travel companion in Linc Case, a US Army veteran, who too is looking for his place in the world following his military stint.—Huggo

Details

Keywords
  • road trip
  • arizona
  • superstition mountains arizona
  • route 66
  • superstition mountains
Genres
  • Thriller
  • Adventure
  • Crime
  • Drama
Release date Oct 6, 1960
Motion Picture Rating (MPA) TV-Y7
Countries of origin United States
Language English
Filming locations Sonoran Desert, Arizona, USA
Production companies Screen Gems Television Edling Productions Lancer Productions Limited

Box office

Tech specs

Runtime 1h
Color Black and White
Sound mix Mono
Aspect ratio 4:3

Synopsis

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