View Full Version: PANIC!/NO WARNING! (1957-58)

Mobius > Network and Premium Television > PANIC!/NO WARNING! (1957-58)



Title: PANIC!/NO WARNING! (1957-58)
Description: Anyone here see this forgotten show?


Pete Fitzgerald - March 27, 2008 03:48 AM (GMT)
I was watching THE MIST on DVD the other day, and in the disc's Special Features interview segment with Stephen King and director Frank Darabont, King briefly recalls the half-hour suspense anthology series, PANIC!, with some fondness.

That was enough for me to do a little research. It ran for two seasons, though was renamed NO WARNING! in its truncated second season (or perhaps for later syndication airings), with a combined total of 31 half-hour episodes (18 in Season 1, 13 in Season 2). The series producer, Al Simon, is best known for producing THE BEVERLY HILLBILLIES, GREEN ACRES, PETTICOAT JUNCTION, and MISTER ED. At least a couple of episodes were photographed by film noir ace Harry Wild, though the bulk of the cinematography was apparently by Arch R. Dalzell (who later shot LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS and THE TRIP for Roger Corman). Each episode was narrated by Westbrook Van Voorhis, best known as the voice of the MARCH OF TIME newsreels of the 1930s and 1940s.

According to imdb.com poster "crabturtle", a typical episode would open like this:

“(Van Voorhis) introduced a character and gave a time in minutes and seconds when he (or she) would become involved in a harrowing situation. For example: "This is Mr. Smith. In 2 minutes and 36 seconds, he will be in PANIC"! Then, in that announced time, the character would get into some unforeseen trouble, and would indeed become panicky! The title then came on the screen and shattered into hundreds of pieces. The rest of the show would be how the victims of the situation were saved from their predicament.”

Among those who appeared on PANIC!:

James Mason (with his real-life wife and kids!)
James Whitmore
Robert Vaughn
Barbara Billingsley
Carolyn Jones
Alan Napier
Strother Martin
Mercedes McCambridge
June Havoc
Ann Rutherford
Marsha Hunt
Everett Sloane
Leon Ames
Whitney Blake
Elisha Cook, Jr.
Bruce Bennett
John Anderson
Richard Jaeckel
Keye Luke
Lola Albright
Brian Kelly
Richard Bakalyan
Mark Damon
Steve Brodie
Len Lesser
Robert Fuller
Norman Alden
Virginia Gregg
Kathy Garver
Darryl Hickman
Marshall Thompson
Lawrence Dobkin
Eduardo Ciannelli
Paul Burke
Robert Quarry
Paul Picerni
Irene Hervey
Kent Taylor
Milton Frome
Parley Baer
Jack Lambert
John Doucette
Eduard Franz
Whit Bissell
Ted De Corsia
Stafford Repp
Paul Birch
Kenneth Tobey
Richard Erdman
Ralph Moody

As for the specific episodes’ plots, the recollections of the imdb.com posters, and the listings at imdb and tv.com, are scattershot and vague. However, I managed to find a page that has decent descriptions and actor/character listings for virtually all of the episodes:

Panic! Episode Guide

--that said, here are slightly better descriptions of a few episodes than that page provides:

* “Nightmare” (S1, Episode 7) In New York, a woman dreams that her husband is inexplicably driving a car on a rainy night in California, with a strange woman in the back seat, and will be killed in a crash. She awakens to find circumstances gradually drawing her unconvinced spouse closer and closer to that terrible fate.

* “Reincarnated” (S1, Episode 18) A dancer (June Havoc) is threatened by an insane knife-thrower (Alan Napier), who believes her to be the reincarnation of the wife he killed.

* “Hear No Evil” (S2, Episode 2) A young deaf-mute woman’s doctor solves her hearing problem with a hearing aid. She arrives home to tell her husband and sister the good news, only to overhear them plotting her death.

PANIC! / NO WARNING! Originally aired on NBC, but it is unclear who controls the series now, other than that it was from Al Simon Productions, Inc and McCadden Corp.

Has this fallen into the public domain? Or was it swallowed up by one of the majors (thus subsequently locked away and ignored)? Have any episodes surfaced in a multi-series set from Mill Creek, Alpha, Timeless, et al? Or is it a “lost” show?

I've never seen the show (not even a still from it), but it sounds good. If anyone here has seen it, how does it stack up? Is it a forgotten gem, a humdrum ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS wannabe, or laughable cheese?

Marty McKee - March 27, 2008 03:53 AM (GMT)
According to THE COMPLETE DIRECTORY TO PRIME TIME NETWORK AND CABLE TV SHOWS 1946-PRESENT, PANIC aired from March to September 1957, which sounds like one "season" to me, though that's just picking at nits. There's just one paragraph written, which doesn't say anything more than you did, although there's no mention of the alternate title. Considering how well researched the book is, my guess is NO WARNING is a syndication title.

Outside of reading about it in reference books, I don't know much about PANIC nor have I seen it.




Hosted for free by InvisionFree