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In secret service of fun

Robert Conrad recalls his 'Wild Wild West' pal, and his favorite villains, as the series becomes a DVD set.

November 04, 2008|Susan King, Susan King is a Times staff writer.

In the mid-1960s, there seemed to be plenty of guys named James running around blowing things up, foiling dastardly plans and making the planet -- and galaxy -- a safer place for Western-style democracies. And they all achieved this with a distinctive style.

British secret agent James Bond did it shaken, not stirred. Starship Capt. James T. Kirk did it with his middle initial. And U.S. Secret Service agent James West did it in very, very tight pants.


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Fans of "The Wild Wild West," which originally aired on CBS from 1965-69, can revisit the fashion and the adventures of West with today's release of a 27-disc set that includes the entire series plus two made-for-television movies.

For Robert Conrad, who famously played West, the rugged federal agent charged with guarding President Ulysses S. Grant, it's a case of better late than never. Even though single-season sets are already out on DVD, the 73-year-old Thousand Oaks resident has seen only a handful. He said he was so busy shooting his series that he never had a chance to watch.

"I never really remembered them," said Conrad. "It's campy. It's fun."

Along with "The Man From U.N.C.L.E.," and "Get Smart," "The Wild West West" capitalized on the James Bond craze of the 1960s. In fact, when the show was originally pitched to the networks, it was described as "James Bond on horseback."

Like Bond, West -- and his adversaries -- had a cache of secret gadgets that audiences loved. There were guns concealed in his shoes and sleeves, exploding billiard tables, not to mention sci-fi torpedoes disguised as dragons with radio homing devices. And like Bond, West was a bachelor who rarely seemed far from a beautiful woman. Unlike Bond, West enjoyed male companionship as well with his sidekick Artemus Gordon (Ross Martin), a master of technology and disguises.

Just as Robert Vaughn and David McCallum had perfect chemistry on "U.N.C.L.E.," so did Conrad and Martin. The two had never met before the show.

"I knew he was quadruple bilingual and had a law degree," said Conrad. "I got to know him on the show. We had fun."

The series was hurt toward the last season when Martin suffered a heart attack and had to take a sabbatical. Several were brought in to be West's foil, but the chemistry "wasn't the same," said Conrad.

Another hallmark of the show was its villains, none more infamous than the brilliant, demonic Miguelito Loveless -- played by Michael Dunn, who was less than 4 feet tall.

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