Tailspin Tommy (serial)
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Vin Moore
Basil Dickey
Norman S. Hall
Robert Hershon
George H. Plympton
by Hal Forrest
Henry MacRae (associate)
| Tailspin Tommy | |
|---|---|
![]() | |
| Directed by | Lew Landers (as Louis Friedlander) |
| Written by | Ella O'Neill (screenplay) Vin Moore Basil Dickey Norman S. Hall Robert Hershon George H. Plympton |
| Based on | Tailspin Tommy by Hal Forrest |
| Produced by | Milton Gatzert Henry MacRae (associate) |
| Starring | Maurice Murphy Noah Beery, Jr. Patricia Farr Walter Miller Grant Withers |
| Cinematography | Richard Fryer William A. Sickner |
| Edited by | Albert Akst Irving Applebaum Saul A. Goodkind Edward Todd |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 12 chapters (248 minutes) |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Tailspin Tommy is a 12-episode 1934 Universal film serial based on the Tailspin Tommy comic strip by Hal Forrest.[1] Directed by Lew Landers and produced by Milton Gatzert, the serial was the 97th serial of the 137 released by that studio (and the 24th with sound). The plot of Tailspin Tommy concerns a conflict over a government airmail contract.[N 1]
Two cargo airlines clash over a government mail contract. "Tailspin" Tommy (Maurice Murphy), a young mechanic, gets a job with Three Points Airlines, which wins the contract. Their opponents resort to sabotage in order to have the contract for themselves. Wade "Tiger" Taggart (John Davidson) becomes their enemy, a man who will do anything to stop the airline from doing business.
After Tommy becomes a pilot, he prevents a runaway aircraft from crashing into a crowd of children, among other adventures that put him into the public eye. Eventually Taggart and his gang are brought to justice. Tommy goes on to win a movie contract, and win the heart of his sweetheart Betty Lou Barnes (Patricia Farr).
Cast
- Maurice Murphy as "Tailspin" Tommy Tompkins
- Noah Beery, Jr. as Peter "Skeeter" Milligan
- Patricia Farr as Betty Lou Barnes
- Walter Miller as Bruce Hoyt
- Grant Withers as Milt Howe
- Charles A. Browne as Paul Smith
- Bryant Washburn as Mr Grant, director of Midnight Patrol
- Belle Daube as Mrs Martha Tompkins, Tommy's mother
- John Davidson as Wade "Tiger" Taggart
- Harrison Greene as the Air circus announcer
- William Desmond as Sloane, Taggart's office henchman
- Lew Kelly as Victor Martin, Three Point airport dispatcher
- John Ince as Eric Peabody, one of Taggart's henchmen
- Lee Beggs as Deacon Grimes
- Ethan Laidlaw as Bart Dirk, one of Taggart's henchmen
Chapter titles
- Death Flies the Mail
- The Mail Goes Through
- Sky bandits
- The Copper Room
- The Night Flight
- The Baited Trap
- Tommy to the Rescue
- The Thrill of Death
- The Earth God's Roar
- Death at the Controls
- Rushing Waters
- Littleville's Big Day
Source:[3]
Production
Tailspin Tommy was the first serial to be based on a comic strip. From 1936 to 1945, Universal almost made more serial adaptations of comic strips than both of their rivals, Columbia and Republic, combined.[4][5] Jimmy Allen was a rival radio serial character to the Tailspin Tommy newspaper strip. He featured in the film The Sky Parade. Grant Withers played the sidekick in this film as well as both Tailspin Tommy serials.[6]
The aircraft used in Tailspin Tommy included:
- Stearman C2B, c/n n110, NC4099
- Travel Air B 4000, c/n 1337, NC406N and c / n 1323, NC688K
- Great Lakes 2T1 A, c/n 243, NC11326
- Fleet 7
- Douglas M2
- Curtiss Fledgling, c/n 69, N465K
- Waco ATO, c/n A-122, NC925H
- Travel Air R Mystery Plane
- American Eagle A-101
- Alexander Eaglerock A2, c / n 207, NC1412
- Fokker Super Universal
- Boeing P-12 (archive footage) [7]
