Conception and development Space: 1999 was the last in a long line of science-fiction series that
Gerry and
Sylvia Anderson produced as a working partnership, beginning with
Supercar in the early 1960s. In 1972, Sir
Lew Grade, head of
ITC Entertainment, proposed financing a second series of the Century 21 production
UFO to show-runners Gerry and Sylvia Anderson. Grade had one stipulation: the new series would be set primarily on the Moon within the environs of an expanded SHADO Moonbase; the ratings indicated the Moon-centric episodes had proved the most popular with audiences. The Andersons and their team revamped the production, flashing ahead nearly twenty years for
UFO: 1999 with Commander Ed Straker and the forces of SHADO fighting their alien foes from a large new Moonbase facility.
Space: 1999 owes much of its visual design to pre-production work for the never-made second series of
UFO. Toward the end of its run,
UFO experienced a drop in ratings in both the US and the UK; ITC executives in both countries began to question the financial viability of the new series, and support for the project collapsed. In the meantime, production designer
Keith Wilson and the art department had made considerable progress in envisioning the look and design of the new series. Their work was shelved for the foreseeable future. Anderson would not let the project die; he approached Grade's number two in New York,
Abe Mandell, with the proposal for taking the research and development done for
UFO: 1999 and creating a new science fiction series. Mandell was amenable, but stated he did not want a series set featuring people "having tea in the Midlands" and forbade any Earth-bound settings. Anderson responded that in the series opener, he would "blow up the Earth". Mandell countered that this concept might be off-putting to viewers, to which Anderson replied he would "blow up the Moon". The Andersons reworked
UFO: 1999 so that the separation of Moon and Earth is caused by a nuclear accident rather than alien involvement. Group Three Productions, a partnership of the Andersons and production executive Reg Hill, was to produce the series; ITC Entertainment and Italian broadcaster
RAI were to provide the funding. Grade, aiming for a US network sale, insisted the series have American leads and employ American writers and directors.
George Bellak, a well-known American television writer, was brought on staff. As stated by series writers
Christopher Penfold and
Johnny Byrne, it was Bellak who created and polished the series' defining concepts. Bellak wrote a ninety-minute opening episode titled "The Void Ahead", which was a close forerunner of "
Breakaway". Bellak also set up a writers' guide defining the three leads, the facilities of the Moonbase and potential storylines. For the lead characters of John Koenig and Helena Russell, Gerry Anderson approached the husband-and-wife acting team of Martin Landau and Barbara Bain. Landau and Bain were high-profile stars in America after three years in the popular
CBS espionage series
Mission: Impossible. Producer Sylvia Anderson would have preferred British lead actors; since Grade insisted on Americans, she would have chosen
Robert Culp (star of the 1960s espionage series
I Spy) and
Katharine Ross (co-star of 1960s blockbuster movies
The Graduate and
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid). Speaking about the show in 2010, Bain reflected: "We had some very good science fiction people as advisors who knew what they were talking about. For instance, they knew that sound up there wouldn't travel, and it would just be quiet up there. But then we wouldn't have a series, so we couldn't do that. There were various considerations that had to be made, but they were based on what is, or what was, known at the time."
Special effects, design and music The show's vehicles, including the
Eagle space shuttle and the Moon Buggy, were represented with a mixture of full-sized props, photographic blow-ups, and detailed
scale models. Dozens of models for the various alien spaceships and the Mark IX Hawk from the "
War Games" episode were built by model maker
Martin Bower. The programme's special effects director
Brian Johnson had previously worked on both
Thunderbirds (as Brian Johncock) and
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). Rather than relying on the expensive and time-consuming
blue screen process, as for
Star Trek, Johnson's team often employed a technique that went back to the earliest days of visual effects: spacecraft and planets would be filmed against black backgrounds, with the camera being rewound for each successive element. As long as the various elements did not overlap, this produced convincing results. In technical terms, the advantage was that all of the elements were recorded on the original negative, as opposed to blue screen, which would have involved several generations of duplication. Another benefit was that the camera's exposed negative contained completed effects thereby avoiding the costs of the blue screen "optical" technique. The disadvantage was that the number of possible angles was more limited. For instance, a spaceship could be seen approaching a planet from the side, but could not move in front of it without the elements overlapping. The Moonbase interiors were also upgraded for the second year, with the existing stock of wall panels, doors, and computer panels (along with some bits from other Anderson productions) being assembled for the first time—on Stage L—into a standing complex of interconnected sets (the first series' sets had been assembled as needed and the size of the Main Mission/Command Office complex was prohibitive for the construction of a lasting series of rooms). As the November 1973 start date approached, George Bellak fell out with Gerry Anderson over creative issues and left the production. Story consultant
Christopher Penfold acted as head writer, bringing in American writer
Edward di Lorenzo and Irish poet
Johnny Byrne as script editors. Penfold reworked Bellak's opening episode into a one-hour draft first re-titled "Turning Point", then finalised as "Breakaway". Lee Katzin was a perfectionist and demanded take after take of scenes; even coverage of reaction shots of the background extras required running a whole scene from beginning to end. His two-hour director's cut was assembled and sent to ITC New York for a viewing. Abe Mandell was horrified by the finished product. Anderson re-wrote several key scenes and, after three days of re-shoots, re-edited the pilot into a one-hour episode that appeased the fears of ITC. Katzin was not asked back to the programme after the filming of his second episode "
Black Sun", which also ran over schedule. Scheduled for a twelve-month shoot, the twenty-four episodes took fifteen months to complete, with the production experiencing a number of difficulties. Britain's
mandatory three-day work week in the early months of 1974 and the unplugging of the
National Grid during the coal shortages due to industrial unrest of the early 1970s did not delay filming, for Pinewood had its own generators, but it affected film processing because the lab was an off-site contractor. With Bergman gone, the role of the scientist on Alpha was filled by Maya, whose people's science was far in advance of mankind's. Her character was conceived to provide "outside observation of human behaviour" as had been provided by the character of
Mr. Spock on
Star Trek. Maya shared Spock's logical approach to problem-solving and advanced intelligence, but differed in that she was a charming, fully emotional person. Koenig and Russell went from a barely noticeable courtship to a physically passionate, full-fledged romance, in which the devotion ran so deep that they offered to die for each other ("Brian the Brain"). To keep the budget and filming schedule under control, Freiberger opted not to rehire any of the cast apart from Landau, Bain, and Morse, offering the rest appearances on an episode-by-episode basis only, with no series contract. Freiberger emphasised action-adventure in Year Two stories to the exclusion of
metaphysical themes explored in Year One. Of Year One, he commented, "They were doing the show as an English show, where there was no story, with the people standing around and talking. In the first show I did, I stressed action as well as character development, along with strong story content, to prove that
1999 could stand up to the American concept of what an action-adventure show should be." Members of the
Space: 1999 cast were disenchanted with the scripts. Martin Landau said: "They changed it because a bunch of American minds got into the act and they decided to do many things they felt were commercial. Fred Freiberger helped in some respects, but, overall, I don't think he helped the show, I think he brought a much more ordinary, mundane approach to the series." Byrne, who was contracted to write three episodes for series two, said of Freiberger, "I got along very well with him. But it was clear that we were in different universes as far as stories were concerned." An article regarding a third series was printed in the trade papers: "Now entrenched in its successful second season boom, ITC is looking forward to a third season with more fantastic events and additions, although mum's the word at the studio. They will only say that Maya and Miss Schell will be kept in and that the budget may be raised again, but that's all until final preparations and an official announcement are made."
Cancelled series 3 The producers and studio intended to continue the show with a third series. This was to be shorter than the previous two, with 13 episodes, for budget reasons. Maya was considered to be a successful character, and the producers began grooming her for a spinoff show. The "Maya" series was also intended to run for 13 episodes a year. == Broadcast history ==