One of the underappreciated talents of the genre, actor / writer / director Robert Culp, passed away.
Best known for his genre work, he made three appearances (more than any other lead actor) on the original Outer Limits
He even played the villain in the 1st season Man From U.N.C.L.E.
His greatest success came on the tv series I Spy
Bill Cosby's Alexander Scott posed as "trainer" to Culp's "pro tennis player" Kelly Robinson, but the pair were equals in every way, including fighting abilities and opportunities for romantic entaglements, though Scott was the better-educated of the two, and Robinson was more experienced at espionage work.
Both Culp and Cosby liked improvising their wise-cracking dialogue, and, after doing a couple of takes as scripted, usually did one or two off the tops of their heads, with the resulting episode being a combination of takes.
Culp and Cosby were both nominated for Emmys as Lead Actor in all three years, with Cosby winning each time.
Culp was also Emmy-nominated for one of the seven episodes he wrote. (Culp insisted on no improv when filming those episodes!)
Like most 60s shows, there was both a reunion tv-movie I Spy Returns
There were eight original novels (no novelizations of episodes like Star Trek
After I Spy, Culp did various tv guest-star roles as well as both starring and supporting roles in feature films, most notably Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice
He was the first choice for Commander John Koenig on Space: 1999
He returned to genre tv in the early 1980s as old-style FBI agent Bill Maxwell in The Greatest American Hero
Robert Martin Culp
August 16, 1930 – March 24, 2010
A special tribute treat: The pop-culture spy blog Mister 8 provides the I Spy comic story "The Missing Man", while the Gold Key Comics blog samples the I Spy comic "A Deadly Friend".
*There were plans by "Demon with a Glass Hand" writer Harlan Ellison to use Trent (again played by Culp) in an episode of Babylon 5
(which Ellison was serving as a creative consultant on), but they never came to fruition.