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Welcome to the web home of THE EAGLE SOCIETY.

THE EAGLE SOCIETY is dedicated to the memory of EAGLE - Britain's National Picture Strip Weekly - the leading Boy's magazine of the 1950s and 1960s. We publish an A4, quarterly journal - the Eagle Times.

This weblog has been created to provide an additional, more immediate, forum for news and commentary about the society and EAGLE-related issues. Want to know more? See First Post and Eagle - How it began.

Saturday 13 January 2024

IN AND OUT OF THE EAGLE 47

 

The image alongside of a never published Eagle was the mysterious issue that appeared at the end of an episode of Midsomer Murders called 'Electric Vendetta', which begs the question “Why didn’t they use a real Eagle?” I believe the answer lies in the picture of a ‘flying saucer’ from the same ‘issue’. The saucer closely resembles one featured in the episode, (shown below), so the page was specially drawn to link with the story. I don’t think the artwork would pass muster in the real Eagle, although to be fair, the pictures were photographed from a television screen. In the programme, several real back pages of Eagle are shown and these feature The Travels of Marco Polo, drawn by Peter Jackson. In this episode, Inspector Tom Barnaby reveals that he was a keen EAGLE reader as a boy and he still has his collection, so it is no wonder he is such a good detective.  

EAGLE has been mentioned and sometimes featured in several films and television programmes over the years. In the 1958 film Violent Playground which stars Stanley Baker and David Mc Callum, a young boy is shown buying a copy of EAGLE in a newsagent's and in the 1965 film Doctor Who and the Daleks, Peter Cushing as the Doctor is shown reading a copy. Not to be outdone, the Doctor Who TV series also features a character reading EAGLE in the 1987 adventure 'Delta and the Bannermen', which is set in a 1950s Holiday Camp in south Wales. (See the picture below). In the BBCs 1987 version of Agatha Christie's Miss Marple story, '4.50 From Paddington', copies of EAGLE are prominently displayed on the newsagent's stand on Paddington Station at the start of the film and later in the story, two boys are shown reading EAGLE. The most recent mentions of EAGLE on TV were in two episodes of the 2024 series of Grantchester, which is also set in the 1950s. In the first episode, the Rev. Will Davenport, played by Tom Brittney, punishes his stepson for a minor misdemeanour by banning him from reading EAGLE for a month, which seems a gross overreaction to me! Later in the episode, the boy's mother mentions Dan Dare and Digby. In the final episode of this series, the young boy is shown reading EAGLE dated 23rd July 1960. 


In Michael Palin's 1989 travel series, Around the  World in Eighty Days, Michael is shown wearing a 'Dan Dare' tee shirt and Nicholas Lyndhurst, playing Rodney Trotter, wears a similar shirt in an episode of the comedy series Only Fools and Horses in 1981. The 1980s EAGLE appears in a 1983 episode of Coronation Street, being read by Eddie Yeats, played by Geoffrey Hughes. Geoffrey was a keen 'Dan Dare' fan and he played Digby in a short pilot film made in the hope of being commissioned for a TV series in 1994. EAGLE and Dan Dare are often featured on Quiz shows, but if you know of any other mentions of EAGLE and EAGLE characters in drama or comedy productions, then please let us know.  

  

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