Development The film is based upon
Der Schweizerische Robinson (translated as
The Swiss Family Robinson), a book written by
Johann David Wyss.
RKO Pictures had previously made
an adaptation in 1940, directed by
Edward Ludwig. After watching that movie,
Walt Disney and Bill Anderson decided to produce their own version of the story. Annakin worked on the script with Bill Anderson and
Lowell Hawley. The idea to have the brothers discover a girl dressed as a boy came from
Janet Munro, who had been in
Third Man on the Mountain and was then making ''
Darby O'Gill and the Little People''. She was telling stories about playing a boy when working on stage with her father
Alex Munro and Disney had this incorporated into the film. There were several meetings to decide filming locations. There was talk of making the film in a studio in
Burbank, California or filming on location in a natural environment. Annakin wanted to film in
Ceylon, and the associate producer Basil Keys, in
East Africa. Bill Anderson stressed that they should examine the
Caribbean. They visited
Jamaica and
Trinidad, but it was not what they wanted. Somebody in Trinidad told them of a nearby island,
Tobago. When they saw the island for the first time, they "fell instantly in love",
Filming Richmond Bay was featured prominently as the Robinsons' beach, while Mount Irvine Bay was used for the scene where the boys rescue Bertie (Munro) from the pirates. The vine-swinging/waterfall scenes were filmed at the Craig Hall Waterfall in Moriah. The choppy waters at Quashie (Carapuse) Bay in Belle Garden was used for anchoring the shipwreck against the rocks, giving the illusion that it was out at sea. The cliffs at Bay Hill Rock, situated at the edge of John Dial Beach, Hillsborough Bay, was used for filming the canoe outrigger crashing on the rocks. Here, the boys came ashore to free Roberta. The treehouse was constructed in a 200-foot tall
saman in the Goldsborough Bay area. Referring to the treehouse, Annakin said that "it was really solid—capable of holding twenty crew and cast and constructed in sections so that it could be taken apart and rebuilt on film by the family." The script required animals, which arrived from all around the world. The trainers met with the director every day around 4 PM and went over attitudes or gestures that the animals should play the next day. They spent the night learning them. The animals that were brought included eight dogs, two giant tortoises, forty monkeys, two elephants, six ostriches, four zebras, one hundred flamingos, six hyenas, two anacondas, and a tiger. Annakin wrote "Moochie" Corcoran "was wonderfully coordinated and had hung around so many animal trainers and stuntmen, that he knew exactly what was called for and how much of the action he could handle. I never had to use a double with ‘Moochie'." Soon after filming began in Tobago, the British film crew became unhappy with the wages that they were being paid by Disney. They threatened to abandon filming and return home. Their
National Association of Theatrical and Kine Employees (NATKE) union representative, Cyril (Cid) Thawley, negotiated a new wage agreement which included overtime pay. Cid Thawley, along with some of the Disney crew were accommodated at Dellamira Hotel in
Bacolet. The rest of the crew stayed at Robinson Crusoe Hotel in
Scarborough and Blue Haven Hotel in Bacolet. Most evenings, the prop men relaxed at the Club La Tropical, located next to the Dellamira Hotel. After filming, the local Tobagonians convinced Disney, who had intended to remove all evidence of filmmaking, to let the treehouse remain, sans interior furnishing. In 1960, the treehouse was listed for sale for $9,000, a fraction of its original cost, and later became a popular attraction among locals and tourists, before the structure was finally destroyed by
Hurricane Flora in September 1963. The tree still remains, and is located on the property of Roberts Auto Service and Tyre Shop, at Cow Farm Road, Goldsborough, just off the Windward Road. Tobagonian Lennox Straker says, "The tree has fallen into obscurity; only a few of the older people knew of its significance." Three Tobagonians acted as stand-ins and doubles for the stars -
James MacArthur,
Tommy Kirk, Janet Munro and
Dorothy McGuire. Two of them still reside in Tobago and one lives in the USA. A few locals who were employed by Disney as drivers, hoteliers and office staff still live in Tobago. They are happy to share their memories of working with 'the film company' back in 1959.
Music The film features one original song, "My Heart Was an Island", written by
Terry Gilkyson. Mother Robinson (McGuire) sings the song as she hangs new curtains in the family's treehouse. The song, however, is not heard in its entirety, as it trails off when the scene shifts to Ernst (Kirk) on the ground. ==Reception==