Get Smart
From the Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia that anyone can change
- This is about the TV show. For the film, see Get Smart (film)
Get Smart | |
---|---|
Format | Sitcom |
Created by | Mel Brooks Buck Henry |
Starring | Don Adams Barbara Feldon Edward Platt |
Country of origin | |
No. of seasons | 5 |
No. of episodes | 138, +7 revival |
Production | |
Running time | ca. 25 minutes |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | NBC (1965-1969) CBS (1969-1970) ABC (1989) FOX (1995) |
Original run | September 18, 1965 – September 11, 1970 (revival January 15, 1995 - February 1995) |
Other websites | |
IMDb profile |
Get Smart was a television show that aired on NBC from September 18, 1965 to April 12, 1969, and on CBS from September 26, 1969, to September 11, 1970. It made fun of the secret agent genre. It starred Don Adams as Maxwell Smart, Barbara Feldon as Agent 99, and Edward Platt as the chief. Max Smart worked for a secret organization called CONTROL. Their enemy was KOAS. In 1980, a movie The Nude Bomb was released in theaters. In 1989, a television movie premiered called, Get Smart, Again!. Because of the good success of the movie, FOX developed a new TV show called Get Smart, which featured Don Adams as Max Smart, now chief of CONTROL. A movie, based on the series will be released on June 20, 2008.
[change] Other websites
|
|
---|---|
Feature films | The Producers (1968) · The Twelve Chairs · Blazing Saddles · Young Frankenstein (1974) · Silent Movie · High Anxiety · History of the World, Part I · Spaceballs · Life Stinks · Robin Hood: Men in Tights · Dracula: Dead and Loving It |
Productions | The Elephant Man · To Be or Not to Be · The Fly · The Producers (2005) |
Television programs | Get Smart · When Things Were Rotten · Spaceballs: The Animated Series |
Broadway productions | Shinbone Alley · All-American · The Producers (2001) · Young Frankenstein (2007) |
Collaborators | Anne Bancroft · Rudy De Luca · Dom DeLuise · Marty Feldman · Madeline Kahn · Harvey Korman · Cloris Leachman · Kenneth Mars · Gene Wilder |