Ivanhoe (1958 TV series)


Ivanhoe is a British television adventure series first shown on ITV in 1958-59. The show stars Roger Moore in his first starring role, as Sir Wilfred of Ivanhoe, in a series of adventures aimed at a children's audience. The characters were drawn loosely from Sir Walter Scott's 1819 novel Ivanhoe.

Plot

The series is set in England during the 12th century reign of King Richard the Lionheart, who had gone to fight in the Crusades and failed to return. In his absence, power had been taken by his younger brother, the ambitious and wicked Prince John, who sought to strip the people of their rights and land. The dashing and heroic knight Ivanhoe, with his father-and-son companions Gurth and Bart whom he had freed from servitude, attempted to right wrongs, secure justice, help those in need, and thwart John and his allies.

Making of the series

Swashbuckling adventures for a younger audience, such as The Adventures of the Scarlet Pimpernel, The Adventures of Robin Hood and The Adventures of Sir Lancelot, were a mainstay of ITV's programming in Britain in the mid-1950s. In December 1956, Columbia Pictures signed up Roger Moore, then working with limited success in Hollywood, to play the title role in an intended series for transmission in both America and the UK. The series was a co-production between the Columbia subsidiary Screen Gems and the British producer Sydney Box.
The budget was far more lavish than that of the Robin Hood series running at the time and filming started in early 1957, mostly at the Associated British Picture Corporation studios at Elstree and on location around Buckinghamshire in England, but with some shooting also taking place in California. The series was premiered on ITV in January 1958, while filming continued to complete all 39 episodes through to June 1958. Although a pilot episode was filmed in colour, the series was shot in black and white. The executive producer was Peter Rogers, who shortly afterwards began producing the Carry On films. Guest stars in the series included Christopher Lee and John Schlesinger. Other supporting actors included Jon Pertwee, Paul Eddington, Leonard Sachs, Kenneth Cope, John Warner and Adrienne Corri.
Moore insisted on undertaking much of the stunt work himself, resulting in several injuries including three cracked ribs from a fight scene and being knocked unconscious when a battleaxe hit his helmeted skull. Moore later commented, "I felt a complete Charlie riding around in all that armour and damned stupid plumed helmet. I felt like a medieval fireman."
The series finished when Moore returned to Hollywood after Warner Brothers offered him a movie role in The Miracle.

Cast

Broadcasting

The 39 episodes of the series were originally broadcast from 5 January 1958 to 4 January 1959 and were repeated several times. The original broadcast dates are in parentheses.
  1. "Freeing the Serfs"
  2. "Slave Traders"
  3. "Wedding Cake"
  4. "Black Boar"
  5. "Whipping Boy"
  6. "The Witness"
  7. "German Knight"
  8. "Face to Face"
  9. "Rinaldo"
  10. "Lyman the Pieman"
  11. "The Escape"
  12. "Ragan's Forge"
  13. "The Ransom"
  14. "The Prisoner in the Tower"
  15. "Murder at the Inn"
  16. "Brothers in Arms"
  17. "The Weavers"
  18. "Counterfeit"
  19. "The Widow of Woodcote"
  20. "The Kidnapping"
  21. "Treasures from Cathay"
  22. "By Hook or By Crook"
  23. "The Double-Edged Sword"
  24. "Search For Gold"
  25. "The Masked Bandits"
  26. "Freelance"
  27. "The Masons"
  28. "Arms and the Woman"
  29. "The Cattle Killers"
  30. "The Gentle Jester"
  31. "3 Days to Worcester"
  32. "The Night Raiders"
  33. "The Raven"
  34. "The Monk"
  35. "The Swindler"
  36. "The Princess"
  37. "The Fledgling"
  38. "The Circus"
  39. "The Devil's Dungeon"

    Availability

The series has not been released on DVD.

Title song

Each episode starts with the title song:
Each episode ends with the following song: