Thunderbirds (Series Two)

The continuing adventures of International Rescue and their London Agent, Lady Penelope Creighton Ward, in the year 2067.

AP Films/ATV/ITC

Produced: 1966

First UK broadcast: Sunday 2nd October 1966 – 5.05pm

Anglia, ATV London, Southern Television, TWW (Television Wales And West) and Tyne Tees

6 episodes x 50 minutes

Executive Producer: Gerry Anderson

Producer: Reg Hill

Associate Producer: John Read

Characters Created by Sylvia Anderson

Lighting Cameraman: Paddy Seale and Julien Lugrin

Supervising Art Director: Bob Bell

Art Director: Grenville Nott

Script Editor: Alan Pattillo

Supervising Special Effects Director: Derek Meddings

Special Effects Directors: Jimmy Elliott and Shaun Whittacker-Cook

Music Composed and Directed by Barry Gray

Episodes List
1 Atlantic Inferno

Jeff reluctantly accepts an invitation to holiday with Lady Penelope at her farm in Bonga Bonga, Australia, leaving Scott in temporary command of International Rescue. Meanwhile, the World Navy is testing gyropedoes in the Atlantic but one of their missiles goes wild, exploding on the sea-bed and igniting a gas field beneath the crust, throwing up a huge column of fire which endangers the crew of the drilling rig Seascape. Scott dispatches Gordon in Thunderbird 4 to cap the escaping gas with a sealing device, putting out the flame, but Jeff is furious as he does not believe that the situation warranted International Rescue’s involvement. However, the gas field remains ignited beneath the sea-bed and another burst fractures one of the rig’s legs. Crewmen Hooper and O’Shea submerge in a diving bell to check the damage, but a third explosion causes the the rig to slip further and the diving bell crashes to the sea-bed trapping Hooper and O’Shea inside!

Written by Alan Fennell

Directed by Desmond Saunders

Edited by Harry MacDonald

First UK Airdates:

  • Sunday 2nd October 1966 – 5.05pm (ATV London, Anglia, Tyne Tees, Southern and T.W.W.)
  • Monday 3rd October 1966 – 5.25pm Part One (ATV Midlands and Westward)
  • Tuesday 4th October 1966 – 5.25pm Part Two (ATV Midlands and Westward)
  • Sunday 9th October 1966 – 4.50pm (Ulster)
  • Friday 25th November 1966 – 5.05pm (Border)
  • Wednesday 8th February 1967 – 5.25pm Part One (Granada)
  • Wednesday 8th February 1967 – 6.05pm Part Two (Granada)
  • Thursday 1st July 1976 – 4.25pm (Yorkshire)

Repeat Broadcasts (ITV):

ATV Midlands / Central

  • Monday 8th May 1967 – 5.25pm Part One
  • Tuesday 9th May 1967 – 5.25pm Part Two
  • Friday 20th June 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 30th January 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 11th September 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 17th February 1973 – 10.40am
  • Sunday 13th June 1982 – 2.00pm

ATV London / London Weekend

  • Sunday 7th May 1967 – 4.15pm
  • Saturday 21st February 1970 – 12.00pm
  • Saturday 14th August 1971 – 11.50am

Granada

  • Monday 18th March 1968 – 4.40pm Part One
  • Tuesday 19th March 1968 – 4.40pm Part Two
  • Wednesday 20th March 1968 – 4.40 Part Three
  • Friday 21st March 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 2nd October 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 17th December 1971 – 4.45pm
  • Monday 9th September 1974 – 11.00am

Southern

  • Friday 11th April 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 20th March 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 19th February 1972 – 11.45am
  • Sunday 2nd September 1973 – 11.00am
  • Sunday 24th March 1974 – 11.05am
  • Saturday 12th December 1981 – 9.30am

Yorkshire

  • Wednesday 6th July 1977 – 11.05am
  • Sunday 30th January 1983 – 1.45pm

First UK Network Broadcast:

  • 17th April 1992 – 6.00pm (BBC2)

Major Equipment: TB1, TB2 (Pod 4), TB4, TB5, FAB 1, Magnetic Grabs, Sealing Device, Seascape, Atom Sub Reaper, Road Construction Vehicle, Desert Jeep, Jeff’s Jet

Additional Voice Cast:

  • Frank Hooper John Tate
  • Dick O’Shea Jeremy Wilkin
  • World Navy Commander Peter Dyneley
  • Atlantic Captain David Graham
  • Sir Harry Ray Barrett
  • Atom Sub Reaper Captain Ray Barrett
  • Atom Sub Reaper Lieutenant Matt Zimmerman
  • Cravitz Jeremy Wilkin
  • TV Reporter Ray Barrett

Notes

This was the first episode of the series’ second production block, originally screened as part of a repeat run of the earlier episodes in 1966 (it was preceded only by Trapped In The Sky). In some areas this and the following five episodes were first broadcast as two-part episodes in 25-minute instalments.

The Road Construction Vehicle seen in the opening sequence previously appeared as the Gray and Houseman Road Construction Vehicle in End Of The Road, although it has been repainted yellow for its appearance here. The World Navy Commander was last seen as the Commander of Matthews Field in The Cham-Cham. This is the only episode in which anyone other than Scott is seen piloting Thunderbird 1, namely Alan.

Atlantic Inferno was adapted for audio on the Century 21 Mini-Album Atlantic Inferno (MA 125 1967) narrated by David Graham as Gordon Tracy. It was adapted for audio again on Penguin Audiobooks’ Thunderbirds – 4 (ISBN 014180338X, 2001) audiocassette collection with additional narration by William Roberts. The episode was also adapted as a comic strip by Alan Fennell and Keith Page in Thunderbirds: The Comic (issues 27-29 1992).

Oops!

Lady Penelope’s sheep-counting meter is useless to her as it only counts to five digits. She needs six digits to count all of her 200,007 sheep.

2 Path Of Destruction

Crablogger One, a huge tree-felling machine, arrives at base camp in South America in preparation for its first mission. The base commander, Jansen, takes the crew for a meal at a local restaurant in nearby San Martino and all but Jansen have the ‘special’. The next morning, when the Crablogger sets off from the camp, both of the two-man crew collapse, victims of food poisoning, and the Crablogger veers off course, heading straight for San Martino. To make matters worse, the vehicle has to be constantly relieved of the supplies of wood pulp that it produces whilst in motion, for if the machinery jams the resulting explosion of the Superon-fuelled atomic reactor would lay waste to everything within a 50-mile radius. The only way to stop the huge machine is to activate the secret reactor shut-down procedure from inside the control cabin, which can only be accessed through the roof of the vehicle. Jansen calls International Rescue…

Written by Donald Robertson

Directed by David Elliott

Edited by Harry MacDonald

First UK Airdates:

  • Sunday 9th October 1966 – 5.05pm (ATV London, Anglia, Tyne Tees, Southern and T.W.W. )
  • Monday 10th October 1966 – 5.25pm Part One (ATV Midlands and Westward)
  • Tuesday 11th October 1966 – 5.25 Part Two (ATV Midlands and Westward)
  • Sunday 16th October 1966 – 4.50pm (Ulster)
  • Friday 9th December 1966 – 5.00pm (Border)
  • Wednesday 4th January 1967 – 5.25pm Part One (Granada)
  • Wednesday 4th January 1967 – 6.05pm Part Two (Granada)
  • Thursday 8th July 1976 – 4.25pm (Yorkshire)

Repeat Broadcasts (ITV):

Anglia

  • Sunday 4th June 1967 – 5.05pm
  • Friday 27th June 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 14th August 1982 – 11.20am

ATV London / London Weekend

  • Sunday 14th May 1967 – 4.15pm
  • Saturday 10th January 1970 – 12.00pm
  • Saturday 3rd April 1971 – 11.05am
  • Sunday 26th November 1972 – 1.00pm

ATV Midlands / Central

  • Monday 15th May 1967 – 5.25pm Part One
  • Tuesday 16th May 1967 – 5.25pm Part Two
  • Friday 27th June 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 6th February 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 12th February 1971 – 4.50pm
  • Saturday 24th February 1973 – 10.40am
  • Monday 23rd April 1984 – 9.55am

Border

  • Monday 29th April 1968 – 5.00pm
  • Friday 9th May 1969 – 4.55pm

Grampian

  • Thursday 12th September 1968 – 6.25pm
  • Friday 27th June 1969 – 4.55pm

Granada

  • Monday 25th March 1968 – 4.40pm Part One
  • Tuesday 26th March 1968 – 4.40pm Part Two
  • Wednesday 27th March 1968 – Part Three
  • Friday 28th March 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 9th October 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Thursday 19th April 1973 – 4.25pm
  • Thursday 10th October 1974 – 9.55am

Southern

  • Friday 27th March 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 11th December 1971 – 11.45am
  • Saturday 5th August 1972 – 11.45am
  • Sunday 25th November 1973 – 1.10pm
  • Saturday 19th December 1981 – 9.30am

Tyne Tees

  • Sunday 2nd July 1967 – 5.05pm
  • Friday 14th February 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 27th November 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 27th February 1982 – 9.40am

T.W.W. / Harlech / HTV

  • Tuesday 14th November 1967 – 5.00pm
  • Saturday 27th March 1982 – 9.40am

Ulster

  • Friday 17th October 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 6th March 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 10th July 1982 – 10.55am

Westward

  • Monday 15th May 1967 – 5.25pm Part One
  • Tuesday 16th May 1967 – 5.25pm Part Two
  • Friday 27th June 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Thursday 7th July 1977 – 4.45pm

Yorkshire

  • Wednesday 10th August 1977 – 11.00am
  • Sunday 16th August 1981 – 1.30pm

First UK Network Broadcast:

  • 24th April 1992 – 6.00pm (BBC2)

Major Equipment: TB1, TB2 (Pod 3), TB5, FAB 1, Crablogger 1, Desert Jeep, Mobile Crane, Hover Packs

Additional Voice Cast:

  • Jansen Ray Barrett
  • Simms David Graham
  • McColl John Tate
  • Jim Lucas David Graham
  • Peterson Jeremy Wilkin
  • Franklin Matt Zimmerman
  • Sanchos David Graham
  • Maria Sylvia Anderson
  • Gutierrez Matt Zimmerman
  • Manuel David Graham
  • Security Guard Ray Barrett
  • Lucas Christine Finn

Notes

Base camp operative Simms previously appeared as Dave Clayton in Day Of Disaster. Dam site manager Manuel was originally seen as General Bron in Edge Of Impact. The incidental theme for the Crablogger was originally composed as the theme for the Sidewinder in Pit Of Peril. A live mouse appears with Maria on the puppet set of the restaurant kitchen.

Director David Elliott decided that he had had enough of working with puppets and left the company after completing this episode, bringing to an end a working relationship with Gerry Anderson that had started in the editing rooms at Pinewood Studios 13 years earlier.

Oops!

Crablogger designer Jim Lucas lives at 75 Sunnigale Road, Eppington Wood East, Somerset according to the card that Penelope finds in the personnel files at Robotics International, but she reads it out to Parker as “20 Hazlemere Gardens, Iresham”.

3 Alias Mr. Hackenbacker

Using the alias Hiram K. Hackenbacker, Brains has designed a revolutionary new airliner for Atlantic Airlines, the Skythrust, which incorporates a top secret design feature to make it the safest craft in the skies. Penelope believes that the vehicle’s maiden flight from Paris to London will be ideal for the unveiling of a new fashion collection designed by her friend Francois Lemaire. Lemaire has developed an incredible new fibre, Penelon, which can fold up so compactly that a complete outfit will fit into a cigarette box without creasing, but the secret formula for Penelon is highly sought-after by his competitors. Skythrust takes off, the fashion show begins and Penelon is a huge success with the invited guests, but Lemaire’ assistant Madeline hi-jacks the plane, giving Captain Ashton instructions to head for the Sahara Desert. Assisted by her co-conspirator Mason, Madeline plans to steal Lemaire’s entire collection!

Written by Alan Pattillo

Directed by Desmond Saunders

Edited by Harry MacDonald

First UK Airdates:

  • Sunday 16th October 1966 – 5.05pm (ATV London, Anglia, Southern, Tyne Tees and T.W.W.)
  • Monday 17th October 1966 – 5.25pm Part One (ATV Midlands and Westward)
  • Tuesday 18th October 1966 5.25pm Part Two (ATV Midlands and Westward)
  • Sunday 30th October 4.50pm (Ulster)
  • Friday 16th December 1966 – 5.00pm (Border)
  • Wednesday 11th January 1967 – 5.25pm Part One (Granada)
  • Wednesday 11th January 1967 – 6.05pm Part Two (Granada)
  • Thursday 15th July 1976 – 4.25pm (Yorkshire)

Repeat Broadcasts (ITV):

Anglia

  • Sunday 11th June 1967 – 5.05pm
  • Friday 4th July 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 17th July 1982 – 11.20am

ATV London / London Weekend

  • Sunday 21st May 1967 – 4.15pm
  • Saturday 17th January 1970 – 12.00pm
  • Saturday 18th September 1971 – 11.45am
  • Sunday 19th November 1972 – 1.00pm

ATV Midlands / Central

  • Monday 22nd May 1967 –   5.25pm Part One
  • Tuesday 23rd May 1967 –  5.25pm Part Two
  • Friday 18th July 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 20th February 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 19th February 1971 – 4.50pm
  • Saturday 24th February 1973 – 10.40am
  • Sunday 5th December 1982 – 2.00pm

Border

  • Monday 6th May 1968 – 5.00pm
  • Friday 16th May 1969 – 4.55pm

Granada

  • Monday 1st April 1968 – 4.40pm Part One
  • Tuesday 2nd April 1968 – 4.40pm Part Two
  • Wednesday 3rd April 1968 – 4.40pm Part Three
  • Friday 4th April 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 21st August 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Thursday 26th April 1973 – 4.20pm

Southern / T.V.S.

  • Wednesday 31st December 1969 – 1.15pm
  • Saturday 1st January 1972 – 11.45am
  • Saturday 29th July 1972 – 12.10pm
  • Sunday 2nd December 1973 – 1.10pm
  • Saturday 9th January 1982 – 9.35am

Tyne Tees

  • Sunday 4th June 1967 – 5.05pm
  • Friday 7th March 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 15th January 1971 – 4.50pm
  • Saturday 13th March 1982 – 9.40am

T.W.W. / Harlech / HTV

  • Tuesday 21st November 1967 – 5.00pm
  • Saturday 3rd April 1982 – 9.40pm

Ulster

  • Friday 24th January 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 13th March 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Monday 31st May 1982 – 12.05pm

Westward

  • Monday 22nd May 1967 – 5.25pm Part One
  • Tuesday 23rd May 1967 – 5.25pm Part Two
  • Friday 18th July 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Thursday 14th July 1977 – 4.45pm

Yorkshire

  • Wednesday 17th August 1977 – 11.05am
  • Wednesday 29th December 1982 – 11.10am

First UK Network Broadcast:

  • 1st May 1992 – 6.00pm (BBC2)

Major Equipment: TB1, TB2 (Pod 3), FAB 1, Skythrust, D103

Additional Voice Cast:

  • Captain Ashton Paul Maxwell
  • Francois Lemaire Ray Barrett
  • Commander Norman Peter Dyneley
  • Madeline Sylvia Anderson
  • Mason Jeremy Wilkin
  • Dierdre Christine Finn
  • Captain Saville Ray Barrett
  • Skythrust Co-Pilot David Graham
  • Control Tower Lieutenant Ray Barrett
  • D103 Pilot Jeremy Wilkin
  • 1st Reporter Jeremy Wilkin
  • 2nd Reporter Paul Maxwell
  • Officer, London Airport David Graham
  • Saville’s Secretary Christine Finn
  • Telephone Operator Sylvia Anderson
  • Waiter David Graham
  • 1st Fashion Buyer David Graham
  • 2nd Fashion Buyer David Graham
  • Ross David Graham
  • Co-Conspirator Ray Barrett

Notes

This episode features the largest cast of characters (in speaking roles) seen in any Thunderbirds episode. Uncredited guest voice artist Paul Maxwell (Captain Ashton) previously voiced Colonel Steve Zodiac in Fireball XL5. He is also heard as Captain Paul Travers in Thunderbirds Are Go (1966) and later voiced Captain Grey in Captain Scarlet And The Mysterons. Hiram Hackenbacker is clearly a pseudonym adopted by Brains and is not his real name.

The 1st Reporter at the press conference is Frank Hooper from Atlantic Inferno. Brains’s London Airport security pass is signed by series props maker Tony Dunsterville. The roof of the airport building also appears as the floor of the meeting room of the Space Exploration Center in Thunderbirds Are Go (1966).

Alias Mr. Hackenbacker was adapted for audio on the Century 21 Mini-Album Brains (MA 123 1967) narrated by David Graham as Brains.

Oops!

At the end of the episode, Penelope says that 1993 is the best year for champagne, but retrospect tells us that 1993 actually wasn’t a particularly good year for champagne at all.

4 Lord Parker's 'Oliday

Professor Lungren has developed a solar generator which will, as its first test, power the sleepy Mediterranean town of Monte Bianco from a vantage point on a mountain overlooking the town. Penelope and Parker are among the invited guests at the hotel to witness this historic event, which all goes according to plan until a violent storm hits the surrounding area. The solar reflector dish is repeatedly struck by lightning and eventually buckles, crashing down the mountainside and lodging half-way with the reflector pointing directly at the village. The village is plunged into darkness as the solar power cuts off but then, as the storm clears, Monte Bianco is bathed in moonlight reflected by the huge dish. Everyone enjoys the spectacle, but Penelope suddenly realises the potential disaster: as the sun rises in the morning, the sunlight will be magnified and reflected on to the town, which will burn under the intense heat!

Written by Tony Barwick

Directed by Brian Burgess

Edited by Harry MacDonald

First UK Airdates:

  • Sunday 23rd October 1966 – 5.05pm (ATV London, Anglia, Southern, Tyne Tees and T.W.W.)
  • Monday 24th October 1966 – 5.25pm Part One (ATV Midlands and Westward)
  • Tuesday 25th October 1966 – 5.25pm Part Two (ATV Midlands and Westward)
  • Sunday 6th November 1966 – 4.50pm (Ulster)
  • Friday 23rd December 1966 – 5.00pm (Border)
  • Wednesday 18th January 1967 – 5.25pm Part One (Granada)
  • Wednesday 18th January 1967 – 6.05pm Part Two (Granada)
  • Thursday 22nd July 1976 – 4.25pm (Yorkshire)

Repeat Broadcasts (ITV):

Anglia

  • Sunday 7th May 1967 – 4.20pm
  • Friday 25th April 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 31st July 1982 – 11.20am

ATV London / London Weekend

  • Sunday 28th May 1967 – 4.15pm
  • Saturday 24th January 1970 – 12.00pm
  • Saturday 24th July 1971 – 12.15pm
  • Sunday 12th November 1972 – 1.00pm
  • Sunday 10th June 1973 – 1.00pm

ATV Midlands / Central

  • Monday 29th May 1967 – 5.20pm Part One
  • Tuesday 30th May 1967 – 5.25pm Part Two
  • Friday 25th July 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 27th February 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 26th February 1971 – 4.50pm
  • Friday 28th March 1975 – 10.30am
  • Sunday 14th November 1982 – 2.30pm

Border

  • Friday 5th April 1968 – 5.00pm

Granada

  • Monday 8th April 1968 – 4.40pm Part One
  • Tuesday 9th April 1968 – 4.40pm Part Two
  • Wednesday 10th April 1968 – Part Three
  • Friday 25th April 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 28th August 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 8th August 1975 – 11.55am

Southern / T.V.S.

  • Friday 9th May 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 13th February 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 26th February 1972 – 11.45am
  • Sunday 12th August 1973 – 11.00am
  • Sunday 31st March 1974 – 11.05am
  • Saturday 16th January 1982 – 9.35am

Tyne Tees

  • Sunday 11th June 1967 – 5.05pm
  • Friday 21st February 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 11th December 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 13th February 1982 – 9.40am

T.W.W. / Harlech / HTV

  • Tuesday 28th November 1967 – 5.00pm
  • Monday 29th March 1982 – 9.40am

Ulster

  • Friday 31st January 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 20th March 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 17th February 1973 – 11.30am
  • Saturday 17th July 1982 – 11.05am

Westward / T.S.W.

  • Monday 29th May 1967 – 5.20pm Part One
  • Tuesday 30th May 1967 – 5.25pm Part Two
  • Friday 25th July 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Thursday 21st July 1977 – 4.45pm
  • Tuesday 5th January 1982 – 10.55am

Yorkshire

  • Wednesday 24th August 1977 – 11.05am
  • Sunday 6th February 1983 – 1.45pm

First UK Network Broadcast:

  • 8th May 1992 – 6.00pm (BBC2)

Major Equipment: TB1, TB2 (Pod 3), FAB 1, Magno-Grip

Additional Voice Cast:

  • Professor Lungren Peter Dyneley
  • Mitchell Charles Tingwell
  • Senor Faccini Jeremy Wilkin
  • Bruno Charles Tingwell
  • Party Goer David Graham

Notes

Uncredited guest voice artist Charles Tingwell (Mitchell and Bruno) also provided the voice of Zero X scientist Dr. Tony Grant in Thunderbirds Are Go (1966) and later voiced Dr. Fawn in Captain Scarlet And The Mysterons. The incidental music that opens this episode is a track entitled ‘Pleasant Theme’, first heard in the Supercar episode Amazonian Adventure. The jazz track ‘Blues Pacifica’, composed for the Stingray episode Tune Of Danger, is heard playing on the radio in FAB 1. FAB 1 is revealed to be equipped with hydrofoils which enable the car to travel on water at high speed.

Professor Lungren’s assistant Mitchell previously appeared as Captain Ashton in Alias Mr. Hackenbacker. It appears that Senor Faccini has hired Cass Carnaby to perform at his hotel on this prestigious occasion, as the pianist from The Cham-Cham is seen in a brief clip from that episode. Other guests at the hotel include Madeline, Mason and Dierdre from Alias Mr. Hackenbacker and a female puppet who later appears as Nurse Nimmo in Give Or Take A Million.

5 Ricochet

Telsat 4 is launched from Sentinel Base, but the second stage fails to separate, even under manual control. International Space Control are contacted to allocate safe co-ordinates for the destruction of the rocket but, unknown to ISC, the co-ordinates they provide are dangerously close to those of unlicensed pirate television satellite KLA with DJ Rick O’Shea and his engineer Loman on board. The explosion of the rocket damages the satellite and Loman realises that they are headed for re-entry. Then he discovers that the breaking parachutes will not operate, so he goes outside to assess the damage but becomes trapped in the airlock when the inner door fails to open on his return. Unfortunately, Thunderbird 5 is non-operational as Gordon and John are fitting a new component, so when O’Shea uses the KLA transmitter to signal for help, his call goes unheard on the International Rescue space station…

Written by Tony Barwick

Directed by Brian Burgess

Edited by Harry Ledger

First UK Airdates:

  • Sunday 6th November 1966 – 5.05pm (ATV London, Anglia, Southern, Tyne Tees and T.W.W.)
  • Monday 7th November 1966 – 5.25pm Part One (ATV Midlands and Westward)
  • Tuesday 8th November 1966 – 5.25pm Part Two (ATV Midlands and Westward)
  • Sunday 20th November 1966 – 4.50pm (Ulster)
  • Friday 2nd December 1966 – 5.00pm (Border)
  • Wednesday 1st February 1967 – 5.25pm Part One (Granada)
  • Wednesday 2nd February 1967 – 6.05pm Part Two (Granada)
  • Sunday 13th February 1983 – 1.45pm (Yorkshire)

Repeat Broadcasts (ITV):

Anglia

  • Sunday 21st May 1967 – 4.20pm
  • Friday 9th May 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 7th August 1982 – 11.20am

ATV London / London Weekend

  • Sunday 4th June 1967 – 4.15pm
  • Saturday 31st January 1970 – 12.00pm
  • Saturday 7th August 1971 – 11.50am
  • Sunday 5th November 1972 – 1.00pm
  • Sunday 3rd June 1973 – 1.00pm

ATV Midlands / Central

  • Monday 5th June 1967 – 5.25pm Part One
  • Tuesday 6th June 1967 – 5.25pm Part Two
  • Friday 8th August 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 20th March 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 12th March 1971 – 4.50pm
  • Tuesday 23rd December 1975 – 11.10am
  • Sunday 21st November 1982 – 2.00pm

Border

  • Monday 20th May 1968 – 5.00pm
  • Friday 30th May 1969 – 4.55pm

Granada

  • Monday 15th April 1968 – 4.45pm Part One
  • Tuesday 16th April 1968 – 4.40pm Part Two
  • Wednesday 17th April 1968 – 4.40pm Part Three
  • Friday 2nd May 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 16th October 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 15th July 1972 – 12.15pm
  • Monday 8th July 1974 – 11.00am

Southern / T.V.S.

  • Friday 16th May 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 26th December 1969 – 5.00pm
  • Tuesday 28th December 1971 – 12.30pm
  • Saturday 12th August 1972 – 11.45am
  • Sunday 30th December 1973 – 1.10pm
  • Saturday 23rd January 1982 – 9.35am

Tyne Tees

  • Sunday 14th May 1967 – 5.05pm
  • Friday 28th February 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 18th December 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 6th March 1982 – 9.40am

Ulster

  • Friday 7th February 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 27th March 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Saturday 24th July 1982 – 11.05am

Westward

  • Monday 5th June 1967 – 5.25pm Part One
  • Tuesday 6th June 1967 – 5.25pm Part Two
  • Friday 8th August 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Thursday 13th August 1981 – 10.10am

First UK Network Broadcast:

  • 15th May 1992 – 6.00pm (BBC2)

Major Equipment: TB2 (Pod 3), TB3, TB5, KLA Satellite, Telsat 4

Additional Voice Cast:

  • Rick O’Shea Ray Barrett
  • Loman David Graham
  • Professor Marshall Sylvia Anderson
  • Power Jeremy Wilkin
  • International Space Control Charles Tingwell
  • DJ Tom Jeremy Wilkin
  • Sentinel Base Computer David Graham

Notes

The Rick O’Shea puppet was created by sculptor Terry Curtis, who loosely based the character’s features on those of actor Sean Connery. Curtis created closer likenesses of Connery’s features for Captain Paul Travers in Thunderbirds Are Go (1966) and Captain Grey in Captain Scarlet And The Mysterons. This is the only second season episode in which Lady Penelope does not appear, and the only episode in the whole series in which we see Virgil piloting Thunderbird 3.

The song ‘Flying High’ that O’Shea plays as a request from Tin-Tin is an unused end titles song recorded for the series, performed by Gary Miller with backing vocals by Fred Datchler, Ken Barrie and Eddie Lester. The main theme from The Man From MI.5 is also heard on Rick’s show and Little Luther’s ‘Shram-Shram’ is an instrumental version of ‘I’ve Got Something To Shout About’ from the Stingray episode Titan Goes Pop. The ISC building previously appeared as the Satellite HQ tracking station seen in The Impostors and Cry Wolf. Professor Marshall is portrayed by Madeline from Alias Mr. Hackenbacker.

Ricochet was adapted for audio on the Century 21 Mini-Album Ricochet (MA 126 1967) narrated by David Graham as Brains. With a new introduction by Gerry Anderson, this audio adaptation was first broadcast on BBC Radio 5 at 8.05pm on December 3rd 1990.

Oops!

As Gordon and John fit the new component on Thunderbird 5, John is seen speaking with Gordon’s voice for the line, “It looks like we’ll be another two hours before we’re back in business. In the meantime, International Rescue is non-operational.”

6 Give Or Take A Million

In conjunction with Harman’s Department Store, the directors of the Coralville Children’s Hospital arrange for a container full of presents to be launched by rocket from the roof of the store and dropped in the hospital grounds on Christmas Day. By arrangement with Jeff, one of the gift boxes will contain an invitation for one of the Coralville children to visit Tracy Island and spend Christmas with International Rescue. As the rocket is being packed with presents on Christmas Eve, two crooks, Scobie and Straker, break into the Second National Bank from the toy department of Harman’s, which is just next door. Using a harness on a pulley to lift him clear of the touch-sensitive vault floor, Scobie steals the gold reserves stacked on the shelves of the vault, but he accidentally dislodges a pencil from a table and it falls on to the floor, setting off the alarm. The two crooks hide in the container of toys, just as it is loaded on to the rocket…

Written by Alan Pattillo

Directed by Desmond Saunders

Edited by Harry MacDonald

First UK Airdates:

  • Sunday 25th December 1966 – 5.05pm (ATV London, Anglia, Tyne Tees and T.W.W.)
  • Monday 26th December 1966 – 5.05pm (Southern)
  • Monday 26th December 1966 – 5.25 Part One (ATV Midlands and Westward)
  • Tuesday 27th December 1966 – 5.25pm Part Two (ATV Midlands and Westward)
  • Friday 30th December 1966 – 5.00pm (Border)
  • Wednesday 25th January 1967 – 5.25pm (Granada) Part One
  • Wednesday 25th January 1967 –  6.05pm (Granada) Part Two
  • Wednesday 22nd December 1982 – 11.10am (Yorkshire)

Repeat Broadcasts (ITV):

Anglia

  • Sunday 14th May 1967 – 4.20pm
  • Friday 11th July 1969 – 4.55pm

ATV London / London Weekend

  • Sunday 11th June 1967 – 4.15pm
  • Saturday 27th December 1969 – 12.05pm
  • Saturday 20th March 1971 – 11.05am

ATV Midlands / Central

  • Monday 12th June 1967 – 5.25pm Part One
  • Tuesday 13th June 1967 – 5.25pm Part Two
  • Friday 1st August 1969 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 13th March 1970 – 4.55pm
  • Friday 5th March 1971 – 4.50pm
  • Saturday 27th January 1973 – 10.40am
  • Sunday 12th December 1982 – 2.00pm

Border

  • Monday 13th May 1968 – 5.00pm

Granada

  • Tuesday 26th December 1967 – 10.10am
  • Friday 11th December 1970 – 4.55pm

Scottish

  • Saturday 1st January 1982 – 9.35am

Southern / T.V.S.

  • Monday 26th December 1967 – 1.00pm
  • Friday 26th June 1970 – 4.35pm
  • Friday 24th December 1971 – 11.15am
  • Sunday 9th December 1973 – 1.10pm
  • Tuesday 24th December 1974 – 10.35am
  • Wednesday 22nd December 1982 – 11.10am

Tyne Tees

  • Sunday 18th June 1967 – 5.05pm
  • Thursday 26th December 1968 – 10.20am
  • Friday 25th December 1970 – 11.30am
  • Saturday 12th December 1981 – 9.40am

T.W.W. / Harlech / HTV

  • Tuesday 12th December 1967 – 5.00pm
  • Monday 9th January 1984 – 10.45am

Westward

  • Monday 12th June 1967 – 5.25pm Part One
  • Tuesday 13th June 1967 – 5.25pm Part Two
  • Thursday 26th December 1968 – 4.40pm

 

First UK Network Broadcast:

  • 20th December 1991 – 6.00pm (BBC2)

Major Equipment: TB2 (Pod 3), TB3, TB5, Container Rocket, Ladybird Jet

Additional Voice Cast:

  • Nicky Sylvia Anderson
  • Scobie Ray Barrett
  • Straker David Graham
  • Pringle Jeremy Wilkin
  • Lang Charles Tingwell
  • Nurse Nimmo Sylvia Anderson
  • Harman Ray Barrett
  • Saunders Jeremy Wilkin
  • TV Reporter Jeremy Wilkin
  • 1st Santa Jeremy Wilkin
  • 2nd Santa (Leo) David Graham
  • Tanner Charles Tingwell
  • Preston Peter Dyneley
  • Security Chief Joe Ray Barrett

Notes

The models of the Thunderbird vehicles seen on the table in front of Jeff and Nicky in the opening scene were commercially available at the time of this episode’s initial broadcast. They are the Thunderbirds model toys produced by J. Rosenthal (Toys) Ltd. Unfortunately, Rosenthal’s Thunderbird 5 didn’t look very much like the genuine article, so it does not appear in this scene. The Thunderbird 3 launch footage seen in this episode is lifted from Thunderbirds Are Go (1966). Jeff tells Nicky that Thunderbird 3 is 287 feet high. During the Tracys’ Christmas preparations, various calendars are seen which indicate that Christmas Day is a Sunday, which it actually will be in 2067, the year that the producers intended this episode to be set in.

Dr. Pringle previously appeared as the Commander of Matthews Field in The Cham-Cham, Dr. Lang is portrayed by Francois Lemaire from Alias Mr. Hackenbacker and toy packer Tanner was seen as Frank Hooper in Atlantic Inferno.

Oops!

Tin-Tin tears a page off a calendar which shows the date as 2026, but other calendars indicate that Christmas Day falls on a Sunday this year and December 25th 2026 will be a Friday. It is supposed to be the middle of the night when Virgil sets off in Thunderbird 2 for Coralville Hospital, but the Thunderbird 2 launch takes place in full daylight.

Cast List
Jeff Tracy Peter Dyneley
Scott Tracy Shane Rimmer
Lady Penelope Creighton-Ward Sylvia Anderson
Virgil Tracy Jeremy Wilkin
Alan Tracy Matt Zimmerman
Brains David Graham
Aloysius 'Nosey' Parker David Graham
Tin-Tin Kyrano Christine Finn
Gordon Tracy David Graham
John Tracy Ray Barrett
Kyrano David Graham
Grandma Tracy Christine Finn