Adam Adamant
1968 Annual
Credits:
Price - 10/6d
Pages - 94
Stories and Script: Thomas Woodman
Illustrations: Selby Donnison
Published By:
TV Publications LTD: London
Printed by Purnell & Sons
Txt Stories:
Escape of the Snake
Holiday for Spies
Train to Nowhere
Men from the Sea
Strips:
The Mask of Terror
Caravan of Terror
One of the more bizarre thrillers on British TV, Adam Adamant Lives! was created after Sydney Newman failed to obtain the rights for a series based on the popular detective Sexton Blake.
Adamant was part Blake and part Scarlet Pimpernel. The series was intended to draw humour from contrasting the character's Victorian gentlemanly values with those of swinging sixties London.
The original pilot for the show, now lost, was never broadcast, and the storyline reworked into the (now) opening episode: in 1902, Edwardian adventurer Adam Llewellyn de Vere Adamant, portrayed by RADA-trained Gerald Harper, was tricked by his arch nemesis The Face (in collusion with Adamant's beloved, Louise) and trapped in a state of suspended animation until workmen revive him in 1966 by which time his name has passed into legend.
Escaping from the hospital where he was revived from his icy sleep, he meets Georgina, an ardent fan of Adamant's exploits (he was a friend of her grandfather) but whose liberated sixties self-confidence Adamant finds baffling; her confidence is misplaced as, inevitably, Adamant needs to rescue her every episode and thwart the villains, usually dispatching them with his sword stick.
Escaping from the hospital where he was revived from his icy sleep, he meets Georgina, an ardent fan of Adamant's exploits (he was a friend of her grandfather) but whose liberated sixties self-confidence Adamant finds baffling; her confidence is misplaced as, inevitably, Adamant needs to rescue her every episode and thwart the villains, usually dispatching them with his sword stick.
The second episode added William E. Simms, a former music hall artiste with a proclivity for rhyming couplets who becomes Adamant's valet; originally portrayed by John Dawson, he had to be replaced due to an injury and the role was taken over by Jack May.
Despite tight production schedules and some frankly shaky action, the show proved successful enough to warrant a second season, in which The Face was revived by a now dodderingly ancient Louise and the plots became even more offbeat.
Newman, however, was unhappy with the series - he was not keen on the actors, the production or the quality of scripts - and decided to call it a day on the show after only 29 episodes.
There were originally 29 black and white episodes composing two series, plus one unbroadcast pilot titled Adam Adamant Lives (without exclamation mark). The 1902 sequence is now all that is known to survive of this unseen debut episode of the series, and only exists because it was later reused in "A Vintage Year for Scoundrels".
No script of Adam Adamant Lives is known to exist, and the only documentation that remains is the description given in the Drama Early Warning Synopsis issued on Thursday 10 March 1966; this is included in the booklet Adam Adamant Lives!: Viewing Notes accompanying the DVD boxed set Adam Adamant Lives!: The Complete Collection released by 2entertain Ltd. in July 2006.
The first series, with the exception of "Ticket to Terror", was made as a mixture of 16mm film for the location sequences, and multi-camera in the studio using 625-line electronic cameras. Instead of being edited on video tape, as was the usual BBC procedure, the series was edited entirely on film, with the output of the studio cameras being telerecorded, for ease of editing.
"Ticket to Terror" from the first series, and all of the second series, were made with the usual BBC mix of tape and film, with the second series being edited on 405-line tape.
Wiping by the BBC in the 1970s has resulted in no master videotapes having survived. Film recordings haven't all survived either as, in one case, one episode on 35mm film is known to have been destroyed.
The result of all this is that only 16 episodes remained in the archives when the BBC realised the value of such material, including the first and last episodes in broadcast order. These were mainly in the form of the original broadcast 35mm film recordings, with a handful of episodes as 16mm film recordings or reduction prints. In the case of some episodes the 35mm location footage also exists, and has been used to remaster the surviving episodes.
The last episode of Series One, "D For Destruction", thought to be among those lost forever, was however recovered in 2003 – it was found at the BBC Archives in a mislabelled film can. It has since been screened every year at the Missing Believed Wiped event.
A public appeal campaign, the BBC Archive Treasure Hunt, continues to search for missing episodes.
List of lost episodes
Pilot Adam Adamant Lives - Not broadcast
Ticket To Terror - 29th September 1966
Slight Case of Reincarnation - 31st December 1966
Conspiracy of Death - 14th January 1967
The Basardi Affair - 21st January 1967
The Survivors - 28th January 1967
Face in a Mirror - 4th February 1967
Another Little Drink - 11th February 1967
Death Begins at Seventy - 18th February 1967
Tunnel of Death - 25th February 1967
The Deadly Bullet - 4th March 1967
The Resurrectionists - 11th March 1967
Wish You Were Here - 18th March 1967