During the mid-1970s,
Marvel Comics publisher and Spider-Man's co-creator
Stan Lee, sold CBS the rights to produce a prime time live-action Spider-Man series, to be made by producer Daniel R. Goodman. Actor
Nicholas Hammond was cast in the lead role, though all of Spider-Man's stunts were performed by the series's stunt coordinator, Fred Waugh. Despite its storylines being set in
New York City (the character's hometown), the series was mostly filmed in
Los Angeles. The series began as a
backdoor pilot: a 90-minute movie known simply as
Spider-Man which was broadcast on CBS TV network in September 1977, which was theatrically released internationally. In it, Peter Parker (as an intrepid university student) gains super powers after being bitten by a radioactive spider. He uses those powers to get a job at the
Daily Bugle, and to stop a con man who is covertly using mind control for personal gain. The pilot garnered a 17.8 rating with a 30 share - CBS' highest rating for the entire year. However, citing concern over the pilot's relatively weak ratings in the lucrative adult-demographic (ages 18–49), The series ended up being the 19th-highest-rated show of the entire season, but CBS was reluctant to commit to giving the show a regular/fixed time slot for the 1978-79 season, as the series was expensive to produce and continued to underperform with older audiences. The second season that consisted of seven episodes aired infrequently throughout the
1978–79 TV season. The series continued to do well in the ratings during its second season. due to the season two departures from more comic book-like storylines, and the lack of any recognizable "
supervillains" from the Spider-Man comics. The series yielded the first live-action depictions of Peter Parker's "spider-tracer" tracking/homing devices; they are prominently featured in several episodes throughout the series.
Directors • Tom Blank •
Cliff Bole •
Michael Caffey • Dennis Donnelly • Tony Ganz •
Fernando Lamas • Joseph Manduke •
Don McDougall • Ron Satlof • Larry Stewart •
E. W. Swackhamer ==Episodes==