Thursday, December 18, 2025

Color me bad: The Get Smart coloring books

The four Get Smart coloring books from 1965 and 1966.


Editors note: This is another "from the archives" entry and was originally posted on Aug. 25, 2016.

Coloring is all the rage at the moment – adult coloring that is. In that vein, and since I’m a bit swamped with all kinds of work and chores, the time is due for an entry on the Get Smart coloring books.

Now referring to these collectibles in the plural, while technically accurate, isn’t exactly correct. Produced by Saalfield Artcraft, there were four Get Smart coloring books with publishing dates of 1965 and 1966. They each had different covers, but the guts on the inside were the same.

There was the yellow one — and the red one that looked like the yellow one except it was die cut along the top corner. There was also the blue one that didn’t look like either of the first two, but there was another red one that looked like the blue one.

Are you confused? Good. The first yellow/red cover design is Max and Fang with the dog’s leash wrapped around him. The second blue/red cover design is a photo of Max and Fang tied to chairs.

Through some resourceful ebaying, I finally managed to score all four of them. All have been colored in and that is typical when finding one of these.

The art was drawn by comic book artist Sam Burlockoff. Born in 1924, his comic book work spanned the 1940s into the 1950s, primarily as an inker. In addition to illustrating other Saalfield coloring books, he also did illustration work for encyclopedias. Among the syndicated comics he worked on in the 1960s were Flash Gordon and The Saint. Burlockoff passed away in 2007.

A peekaboo into the coloring books. We've got 99 doing a new hair color, a sweet fluorescent hot air balloon and Max and 99 chasing after some sort of flying saucer.

In terms of continuity, Max is drawn to look like Don Adams – a few of the pages are take-offs on Get Smart publicity photos. Agent 99 looks cute, yet she does not quite look like Barbara Feldon. The Chief is given a full head of hair and a mustache. He looks more like Chief Quimby from Inspector Gadget rather than Ed Platt.

As for Saalfield Artcraft, its parent, the Akron, Ohio-based Saalfield Publishing Company, was once one of the largest publishers children’s materials in the world. It began publishing children’s books in 1899. Under Saalfield Artcraft, it produced the likes of coloring books, paper dolls and puzzles. The company went defunct in 1976, however, Kent State purchased the company’s library and archives in 1977.

As I mentioned before, if you get your hands on one of these – or any vintage coloring book for that matter – don’t expect them to be mint. I’m a bit of a research nerd, so I actually find that aspect interesting. The colored pages are a like a time capsule of a kid’s day back in the 60s. Which pages did they color? What colors did they pick? Did they stay in the lines?

I noticed some patterns. The first couple pages were usually always colored – then the coloring would peter off with the exception of a few random pages in the middle and at the end. Not that I can blame those choices – the best illustrations, in my opinion, were on the first couple pages. In two of the coloring books I found that the previous owners had colored in the pages displaying the “Captured Kaos Weapons.” Hmmm….

Two different approaches to the Kaos weapons

The coloring habit has recently proved to not just be a past time for little ones. If you walk into a store — and, at this point, one of any kind — you will likely find a shelf of adult coloring books. Inside will be pages of intricate patterns and repetitive detail ranging from paisleys and flowers to mandalas and animals. 

I own several and they are a fun and relaxing way to spend time. I also have a bit of a compulsive art habit and spend all kinds of spare time drawing my own illustrations. Periodically I post my art on Instagram – feel free to take peeky-boo there (@ahaverstick86). For fun, I did my own take on a couple of the Get Smart coloring pages by adding some… enhancements.

And nearly a decade after I first posted this blog, adult coloring is still a thing. Though, of late me posting my art on Instagram is not as much a thing – but feel free to stop by there. Maybe it will become a thing again.

Would you believe I did my own work on these coloring pages?



Wednesday, September 17, 2025

From page to screen: Get Smart marks 60 years

Maxwell Smart answers his shoephone during Get Smart's debut on Sept. 18, 1965.

(Editor's note: This is another post “from the archives” with some adjustments. I've been absent due to life, universe and everything, but Get Smart's 60th anniversary merits recognition.) 

Sixty years ago this week a few of spyfi's noted 60s TV shows were birthed – I Spy, The Wild Wild West and Get Smart.
 
It was on Sept. 18, 1965 that viewers may have tuned into NBC and found themselves watching the beginning of a black and white show, which starts off with a tuxedoed man sitting at concert next to his elegantly dressed and perfectly coiffed date. Then a phone rings. People stare. He excuses himself and takes the call in the nearest closet, where it's revealed that the ringing is coming from a phone in, of all places, his shoe. 

We learn from that one-sided conversation this character is a spy. We're clued in early on that he's an awkward person, since he can't help but get stuck in the closet before driving off to his assignment. What we don't learn is what happened to that woman he left back in the concert hall, but that's just how Get Smart rolls. 

The seeds to Smart were planted by Dan Melnick, a partner in the New York-based production firm of Talent Associates. The other partner in Talent Associates was David Susskind. 

With spies galore on screen, Melnick felt the world was ready for James Bond and the like to be parodied. 

Max and 99 sort out how to thwart Kaos.
Melnick initially approached Mike Nichols to work on the project, but the logistics didn't work out. He then contacted his pal Mel Brooks and, following that, brought Buck Henry into the fold. He pitched the idea to ABC, which gave Talent Associates the funds for a screenplay. 

“We wrote this take off on spy stories. We figured the people running our country were completely inept and we'd show the world,” Brooks noted in an audio commentary of the pilot. 

The group worked out the nuts and bolts of the show, namely that their version of James Bond should be named Maxwell Smart – because he wasn't smart. 

“We...gave him, as his most sterling quality, a remarkable lack of insight,” said Henry, as stated in The Life and Times of Maxwell Smart. 

Since secret agents of the day were all about code numbers, they gave Smart the number 86 – the signal bartenders use to cut off service to drunks. 

It took Brooks and Henry three and a half months to write the script – a processes mostly worked out over Henry's pool table. 

“We could have done it in a week, but we loved playing pool,” said Brooks. 

Getting Smart from page to screen was a bit of a process, part of which was meeting the desires of the network. At some point in that process ABC suggested adding a dog to the cast – and a mother. 

Brooks' opposition to Max having a mother, in most writings about Get Smart's back story, has been well stated. He and Henry did relent on the matter of a dog – only they made sure this dog would be the antitheses of Lassie. 

ABC's head of programming, Edgar Scherick, didn't find the script funny. Some reports have quoted him as calling the script “un-American,” however, he denied that statement. Still, ABC gave Smart a no-go. 

“ABC commissioned this pilot. Somebody looked at it and said, no, it's creepy. It's not funny. It's basically un-American,” Henry noted in an audio commentary of the pilot. 

Some may respond to that with a well earned, “Seriously?” However, when I first wrote this blog 10 years ago I stated that I didn't think today's social conscious was so different. Presently, I think the idea of a spy satire would have been spiked entirely. 

The script revolved around a terrorist plot to blow up the Statue of Liberty. In our post- 9-11 world of terrorism and shootings, Americans may have a hard time immediately grasping that concept as funny. ABC's reaction no longer feels far-fetched 

ABC's opinion really didn't matter. Talent Associates, which had brought in Leonard Stern to head its west cost operation, moved on – specifically to NBC. 

There were some minor tweaks NBC wanted – and one rather significant change. Earlier in the process,
Don Adams and the cast of The Bill Dana Show.

when the team presented the show to ABC, Tom Poston was named to play the lead. NBC, however, had an actor they wanted to play Smart: Don Adams.

Adams was under contract with NBC after the sitcom he had co-starred in, The Bill Dana Show, was canceled. As the story goes, Adams had a year to pick and choose a pilot – and was waiting for a possible Sheldon Leonard produced project. Instead he was asked if he'd consider a script about a bumbling James Bond. He was initially hesitant. When he found out Brooks and Henry were the writers, he agreed to do it without even reading the script.

Adams brought elements from his stand-up routine to the mix, specifically his exaggerated impression of actor William Powell and the “Would you believe” gag, which had been created by writer Bill Dana.

"Smart is a very dedicated spy but totally inept," Adams told United Press International in 1965. "I think if Smart is warm and sincere he will appeal to viewers . . . He's never mean or nasty, so viewers can identify with him."

While the part wasn't originally intended for Adams, Henry has described the casting as serendipitous and Brooks called it a wonderful marriage. 

“I think the energy behind it all . . . the jet engine . . . was Don Adams, who really believed in what he was doing,” said Brooks. “He could work from morning to night and never quit.” 

The part of Smart's femme fatale, the never-named Agent 99, was written with actress Barbara Feldon in mind. Prior to spots on such shows as The Man From Uncle, Mr. Broadway and the Talent Associates produced series East Side/West Side, Feldon garnered fame for crawling on a tiger skin rug to pitch Top Brass hair cream. 

Barbara Feldon growling for Top Brass hair cream.
Chosen to play 86 and 99's boss, The Chief, was character actor and opera singer Ed Platt. One of his most memorable pre-Get Smart roles was as James Dean's juvenile officer in Rebel Without A Cause. He also had roles in Written on the Wind and Hitchcock's North by Northwest. 

The pilot was not created with a logo or opening. Leonard Stern later added the noted opening and closing sequence with the multiple doors Max walked through. That scene itself has been parodied a number of times and is as iconic as the shoephone. 

As for that shoephone, Brooks noted in DVD commentary that he thought a bizarre place for anyone to have a secret telephone was in the heel of a shoe. 

“That was the first time a phone went off in an audience,” said Brooks, in reference to the pilot's opening scene. 

Henry said, as stated in DVD commentary, it was ironic that the show started with a phone ringing in an audience. 

“Now of course there's nothing unusual about this,” said Henry. “Then, this was a remarkable instance of strangeness.” 

This was actually a simplified glimpse of what went into the premiere of Get Smart. There's a lot more to digest on the matter and more insights can be found in my reference guide. Also, the DVD box set features two rounds of wonderful audio commentary on the pilot from Mel Brooks and Buck Henry. 

Also premiering on NBC the night of Sept. 18 was another iconic 60s sitcom, I Dream of Jeannie. That show, along with the other shows in NBC's fall lineup were featured in a TV special, A Secret Agent's Dilemma, or A Clear Case of Mind Over Mata Hari. Airing Sept. 6, 1965, this was the first appearance of Maxwell Smart on TV. 

Maxwell Smart appears in color prior to Get Smart in A Clear Case of Mind Over Mata Hari.

So what was the world like when Get Smart aired? Perhaps it was as confusing and turbulent as it is today. The country was both in the midst of changing social norms and engaged in a war. 

In a nutshell, here's what kept people glued to the news in the month prior to Get Smart's premiere: 
  • The war in Vietnam had escalated and the American ground war was underway. On Sept. 11, 1965, the 1st Cavalry Division of the United States Army arrived in Vietnam. During this period President Lyndon Johnson, signed a law penalizing the burning of draft cards with up to five years in prison and a $1,000 fine. 
  • The Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 was ongoing. The day of Get Smart's airing, Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin invited the leaders of India and Pakistan to meet in the Soviet Union to negotiate. 
  • In Iraq, Prime Minister Arif Abd ar-Razzaq's attempted coup fails. 
  • Hurricane Betsy hit the New Orleans area with winds reaching 145 mph. There were 76 deaths and $1.42 billion in damage.
In non-scary news:
  • Bob Dylan released Highway 61 Revisited, featuring "Like a Rolling Stone." 
  • The fourth and final period of the Second Vatican Council opened. 
  • Gemini 5, with a crew of Gordon Cooper and Pete Conrad, was launched. 
September inches us closer to the World Series. Here's what was going on in sports around this time:
  • Sandy Koufax of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitched a perfect game against the Chicago Cubs. 
  • On the night Get Smart aired, Mickey Mantle played his 2,000th game at Yankee stadium.
Born in September of 1965 were: President of Syria Bashar al-Assad, boxer Lennox Lewis, actress Marlee Matlin, musician Moby and actor Charlie Sheen.



Color me bad: The Get Smart coloring books

The four Get Smart coloring books from 1965 and 1966. Editors note: This is another "from the archives" entry and was originally p...