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F TROOP PHOTO GALLERY #07 |
Updated: June 30, 2024
In "The Singing Mountie," Larry Storch appears as Corporal Agarn and his cousin, a French fur trapper. In "Did Your Father Come
from Ireland?" Forrest Tucker brogues it up as Sgt. O'Rourke's visiting Irish father. In "Wilton the Kid," Ken Berry gets into
the act portraying klutzy, clueless Capt. Parmenter and his look-alike, a vicious bank robber. And in "One Russian Is Coming!
Only One Russian Is Coming!" Storch again doubles up as Agarn's Cossack cousin. It's a sure indication that F Troop had indeed
jumped the stagecoach ( particularly the 1967 episode "That's Show Biz," featuring a frontier rock group, the Bedbugs, and a
rendition of Bob Dylan's "Tambourine Man" that makes William Shatner's sound like the Byrds ), but the show is so unabashedly
old-school funny, and its ensemble of crack character actors so likeable, that one willingly takes the leap. During its brief
run, F Troop spawned its share of catch-phrases ( Agarn's "Who says I'm dumb" and "I'm warning you, Dobbs" ), but this season's
"Bye Bye Balloon" contains perhaps the series' most classic quotable, as the Hekawis' Chief Wild Eagle ( Frank DeKova ) gazes
upon the mysterious flying object in the sky and proclaims, "It is balloon" ( it plays better than it reads ).
For a frontier outpost, Fort Courage sure saw its share of visiting show-business luminaries, including Paul Lynde as "The Singing Mountie," Harvey Korman as a Prussian balloonist in "Bye Bye Balloon," Milton Berle as sham medicine man Wise Owl in "The Great
Troop Robbery," Sterling "Winnie the Pooh" Holloway as a bespectacled sheriff in "Wilton the Kid," and Vincent Price as a
suspicious Count in "V Is for Vampire." One regrets the show's switch from black and white to color and the replacement of F
Troop's original rousing theme song with an instrumental rendition ( the original, with vocals, obligingly plays over each disc's menus ), but the commercial-break freeze frames are fun. Tucker, as the entrepreneurial O'Rourke, and Storch, as his wildly
emotional sidekick, are one of TV's great comedy teams, and Berry displays Astaire-like grace performing the bulk of the physical comedy. Those who dismiss F Troop as a mindlessly silly sitcom are directed to the near-half-hour series retrospective, in which military personnel salute this series' spoofing of military protocol and life as a morale builder during the Vietnam War. Donald Liebenson
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