The Girl from U.N.C.L.E. (TV Series 1966–1967) Poster

(1966–1967)

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7/10
Enchanting April
ShadeGrenade26 May 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Such was the popularity of 'The Man From U.N.C.L.E.' in 1965 that a spin-off was planned. An episode of the second series - 'The Moonglow Affair' - saw Solo and Kuryakin temporarily written out, and their places taken by agents 'April Dancer' and 'Mark Slate', played by Mary Ann Mobley and Norman Fell respectfully. It did well, and a series was commissioned - but with two important changes. The lead roles were recast; in came a young Stefanie Powers as 'Dancer' and British actor Noel Harrison ( son of Rex ) as 'Slate'. Leo G.Carroll, of course, played 'Mr.Waverly'.

I did not see this when it first went out, but viewed it recently. It is enjoyably daft hokum, with plots involving such unlikely ideas as a dog's fleas used to carry a microdot, a Kali statue coming to life and throwing daggers, the entrance to the lost city of Atlantis turning out to be in some caves in the Caribbean, an island colony of shipwrecked survivors, a health spa that makes its customers youthful, and Boris Karloff ( in drag ) as the head of a gang of killers who wear flat caps and speak bad Cockney. This hailed from the same era as 'The Monkees' and 'Batman', and it shows.

Powers is beautiful and glamorous, though it is a pity that 'April' was not given more to do in the action department. In the last episode I saw ( 'The U.N.C.L.E. Samurai Affair' ), she was attacked by a frogman, and after putting up token resistance, went to hide while Slate dealt with him. She should have chucked him over her shoulder the way Mrs.Peel did in 'The Avengers'. It does seem bizarre to call a show 'The Girl From U.N.C.L.E.' and then depict its main character as a helpless bimbo heavily reliant on a male sidekick. Another mistake was the reuse of Jerry Goldsmith's 'Man From U.N.C.L.E.' theme, here given a trendy new arrangement.

I warmed more to Harrison's 'Slate'. Obviously intended to be the show's answer to David McCallum, he is rather good as a foppish hero in the 'Jason King' mold. But whose idea was it to cast a teenage boy ( 'Randy Kirby' ) as an U.N.C.L.E. agent? Robert Vaughn played 'Solo' in 'The Mother Muffin Affair', at exactly the same time Harrison was guesting on the parent show.

In the U.K., 'Girl' was shown in rotation with 'Man', but in the U.S.A., they were screened more or less together. Viewers found two 'U.N.C.L.E.' shows a week a bit much to take, and 'Girl' was dropped after a single season.

Less comedy and more action ( for April ) would have been beneficial for the show. Sam Rolfe's superb first season of 'Man' should have been the blueprint for 'Girl'.

Best episode - 'The Atlantis Affair' ( written by 'I am Legend' author Richard Matheson ) Worst episode - 'The Paradise Lost Affair'.
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7/10
Good fun and worth a second season
ashmored14 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
The Girl from U.N.C.L.E is not the strongest spin-off ever and it suffers from some poor writing choices. For one, rather than make April Dancer competent and deadly as she should be, being UNCLE's first female enforcement agent, they made her mainly a damsel in distress with extra spy gadgets. April's partner Mark Slate spends more time rescuing her than being her than anything else. She does occasionally knocks a villain out using one of her gadgets but April Dancer gets knocked unconscious by T.H.R.U.S.H agents on a regular basis or kidnapped and left in some perilous position, such as hanging over a pool of piranhas in the Dog gone affair. Stefanie Powers dancing skills are put to good effect in The Mata Hari Affair and The Drublegratz Affair, the latter of which April is undercover as a go-go dancer and gets to wear a mini-skirt. There were some interesting guest stars too, including Boris Karloff in drag in the Mother Muffin affair. Overall, I think The Girl from Uncle is fun if you don't take it too seriously and I think it would have been worthy of a second season, with April being given more of a fighting role rather than leave it to the man. Whatever else, April Dancer made an enchanting secret agent.
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7/10
Entertains despite a handful of bad scripts/Why it was only one season
astravision13 April 2018
Outstanding music, charming young leads, game guest stars, exciting stunt work, colorful fashions and sets (mostly)triumph over some scripts that weren't ready for filming(Did THE Richard Matheson really hack out the Atlantis Affair(partly redeemed by April besting the villain in a sword fight in Act 4)?). Maybe somebody else rewrote his script. Airing a spinoff of a NON Top Ten show(Season 2 Man from Uncle barely edged Girl's ratings nemesis Daktari) against 2 established shows, Daktari and Combat, might have been too high a hurdle even with consistent scripting. Plus the outre fashions and sets that look so good now on DVD would have been lost on the tiny analog black and white sets many/most had in 1966/7 whereas Daktari and Combat seem more amenable to B&W. Plus was America ready for the first(?) female-American-starring one hour action adventure series? Audiences chose Gomer Pyle over the prior year's very entertaining half hour Honey West. Also it took SEVERAL seasons for Avengers(which this series is unfairly comparted to) show's scripts to become more consistently entertaining and even a couple of the Ms. Peel series were clunkers-and they only filmed 14 eps a season. "Moulin Ruse Affair" a favorite-fun to watch ancient Burt Mustin DEMOLISH Uncle HQ(great stunt work)! Dave Grusin's "Muffin" soundtrack is sublime and is best heard uninterrupted on the probably out of print Volume 3 CD of Uncle soundtracks-the Girl from Uncle album has a less robust orchestration(but a lovely Girl from Uncle theme not heard in any episode). RIP April and Mark
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Its fun! (give it a chance)
tristanmorell23 March 2006
I must say that I have Just watched "The girl from uncle" for the first time and i don't agree with all the bad reviews it gets at all. OK April Dancer (stefanie powers) the leading character could be tougher especially considering her TV rivals at the time like the marvellous Emma peel from "the Avengers" but there's barely an episode I've watched where she doesn't knock an assailant out or high volt a fence or blow something up with a hidden uncle gadget.OK she often uses a gas spray rather than karate but she does use that too. the stories are daft as anything but executed with tongue in cheek and for fun and no dafter than "The avengers" stories or "the champions" but thats half the point! they're fun!. Its not meant to be serious!. Her English partner Mark Slate (who must be the first gay agent ever i think on TV! joke) makes the whole thing camp as Christmas and the villains are straight from pantomime. It might just be me, but some of the dialogue is funny too...and paul o'grady (lilly savage) is a fan too!. what more can I say, besides which Yvonne de Carlo (Lilly munster)is a villain in one episode and who can resist anything where Boris Karloff appears in drag (!) as "mother muffin"...irresistible madness.(but it is a bit sexist at times..hey ho cant win "em all)
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6/10
Silly
aramis-112-80488023 November 2022
April Dancer (originally, in The Man From UNCLE episode setting this series up, Mary Ann Mobley, superior in every way; but Stephanie Powers in the series) is an UNCLE agent. Her partner, Mark Slate, is played by Noel Harrison, son of Rex and best known for singing the theme song of "The Thomas Crown Affair."

Some idiot reviewers here are like Inquisitors seeing Heresy wherever the look for it. They say the show is sexist. If all you can do is call names, you don't belong as a reviewer. You're too stupid. The show isn't sexist. Don't fall for their hate, folks with open minds.

In fact, Powers is a gifted UNCLE agent while her partner Slate, while not actually bumbling, is often in trouble and needs her to rescue him, a nice inversion of the cliche. Following that pattern more seriously, this series might have been a classic, universally beloved (Partners in TV shows developed in America are rarely fully equal, as in the British "Avengers"; when they made the movie in America about "The Avengers" they got the dynamics so incredibly wrong-headed: what's wrong with the tiny minds of American movie and TV makers, anyway? Why can't they conceive of equal partnerships?)

The show isn't sexist but it is INCREDIBLY silly. Possibly inspired by "Batman." The lure of Batman at the time is dangerous to underestimate.

It isn't helped by Powers, carrying on in a silly accent when her natural voice would have been much better. And Noel Harrison, while not altogether without talent, is a poor choice for a regular. Unlike the case with some of the great teams like Solo and Kuryakin, Jim and Artie, Steed and Mrs. Peel, Harrison can't compete, acting-wise, with Powers, even considering her misguided accent.

The best thing about this series is its variety of guest stars. For instance, one episode has a very funny part for comedian and voice artist Stan Freberg, who was shamefully underutilized during this time. It's for guest artists like Freberg that I give the series so many stars.

This is a show to miss, but not for the pilfering reasons given by Inquisitor-like reviewers. To be honest (and I always try to be) "The Man From UNCLE," never too serious, was going through its own silly season at the same time. Looking back, the whole Carnaby Street 1960s is kind of silly and the people then were bewilderingly self-important. So it's wrong to single this show out.
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5/10
A rather disappointing series
gridoon20243 July 2014
Warning: Spoilers
A lot of people seem to pan this TV series for being too campy; I don't have as much of a problem with that as with the fact that it's not as much fun as it could have been. The two leads, Stefanie Powers and Noel Harrison, are likable enough, Leo G. Carroll provides dependably gruff support, there are lots of famous guest stars, and the production is colorful. However, the direction is usually pedestrian, the pacing sluggish, the scripts talky, the globe-trotting unconvincing, and the title misleading, since about 95% of the action is handled by Mark Slate and not by April Dancer; on the rare occasion she has a fight, she almost always loses. It's not a terrible show, it has some 1960s nostalgia value, but it is rather disappointing. ** out of 4 for the series as a whole, a couple of episodes might get an extra half-star.
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What a shame! Script, script, script!!!
gdk5136 March 2005
A completely missed opportunity! It had promise, it great pedigree and decent acting talent. What we ended up with, was a parody on the original series, but without the wit necessary to pull it off. Completely wasted are Stephaie Powers (aka April Dancer) and Noel Harrison (aka Mark Slade). While the music for the series (by Dave Grusin and Richard Shores) was excellent, the scripts were embarrassingly BAD. Even help from Robert Vaughn and Boris Karloff ("The Mother Muffin Affair") weren't enough to stop this ultimate train wreck of a series spin off. So bad was the odor from this show, I believe it also helped in the early demise of the Man From UNCLE (of course, in it's 3rd season, that show had it's own writing problems). Still, if your looking for light fluff, and enjoy "bad" TV shows, you could do worse. I recommend getting the Man From UNCLE Vol. 3 soundtrack (from Film Score Monthly) and enjoy the music from this show. If this show is ever released on DVD, I recommend a couple glasses of wine to ease the pain.
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Sexist and stupid
nimbleweevil7 July 2004
Even by the standards of the 1960s, "The Girl from U.N.C.L.E" is synonymous to me with "bad spin off." "The Man from U.N.C.L.E", a fun and intelligent '60s spy show, did not deserve this kind of treatment. Is it any wonder, after viewing it, that the famous female spy of this decade was Emma Peel from The Avengers and not April Dancer?

The lead character, played reasonably well by Stephanie Powers, is April, the first female spy from agency U.N.C.L.E. This sounds typical and fun, if a bit cheesy, but the problem is that April is the Nancy Drew of television characters. Almost every episode ends with April being rescued from evil people by her male partner, Mark Slate. This not only begins to get boring after a while, but it makes April an unsympathetic ditz. Even worse, the plot line of quite a few episodes revolves around April ALMOST GETTING MARRIED to a BAD GUY!!! Of course, the heroic, manly Mark Slate will come by to rescue her at the last minute from this TERRIBLE FATE!!!!

Sure, there is such a thing as a good spin off. This isn't it. Leave this one to collect dust in the corner, and watch the original series.
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Iffy--Is it merely bad or just troubled?
Nick Zbu26 October 2000
This show was born from the potential from it's parent show, The Man From UNCLE, in a fantastic episode called "The Moonglow Affair." However, due to some mysterious fluke the producers changed the actors in the lead. This was a fatal flaw: not due to the actors, but their chemistry was very far off.

The plots of "Girl" were troubled and not very interesting. Even the supposed 'best' episode, "The Mother Muffin Affair," (starring Boris Karloff in drag), is at best a meddling excuse for a show. Such a disappointment.

If "Girl" can prove anything, it's that sometimes even the best of intentions can bear no fruit. A real shame, too.
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No wonder it lasted one season....it was pathetic.
raysond9 December 2004
The format episode for this spin off was from an earlier 1966 episode of its parent show,The Man From U.N.C.L.E which was an fantastic episode called,"The Moonglow Affair",which starred Mary Ann Mobley and Norman Fell in the roles of April Dancer and Mark Slate. But here what gets me with this show,which is very synonymous with one of the bad spin-off to one of the most successful espionage shows of all time. By the way,The Man From U.N.C.L.E. was an intelligent and brilliant and very innovative 1960's spy show,but when its spin-off,The Girl From U.N.C.L.E. premiered on NBC-TV in September of 1966,the show from which it came from,did not deserve this kind of treatment nor the physical abuse of its original format. It there was any wonder why some of the episodes were so blant,sexist,and incredibly stupid within the silly plots and goofy dialogue within the characters,it was no wonder that this show lasted only one season,it was just that pathetic. The episodes themselves,were typical fun,but were corny as the popcorn left over for a movie,and as cheesy and most of all,totally stupid. Only 29 episodes were produced of this series,which was under its executive producers David Victor and Douglas Benton,and Norman Felton and based on the characters created by Sam Rolfe(the original architect for U.N.C.L.E). The series ended its run in 1967.

But here was gets me,how did April Dancer went from being an assistant secretary of the head chief of the organization to becoming one of the first female secret agents for U.N.C.L.E.? That is anybody guess of how she did this,but in all aspects,it was any wonder that this girl would be one,as I put it,a cross between Nancy Drew and Penelope Pitstop. U.N.C.L.E agent April Dancer(played by Stephanie Powers)wasn't the best of the female secret agents either. She was a total accident prone girl who was in some ways an sympathetic ditz who always manages to get herself in some tight situation,only to get herself deeper and deeper into serious complications with diabolical villains or even worse ending up with some mad scientist's deadly schemes only to be rescued by her male partner,U.N.C.L.E. agent Mark Slate(played by Noel Harrison),but only to come to her aid at the last minute to save her from a terrible and sinister fate. However,this does get boring very quickly,and it shows in some of the episodes. Out of all of the episodes,there was only one that was very good and the rest were just either plain silly or repulsive.

If this show proved anything is that some of the best intentions from their offspring can bear the the fruits of the original,and that's a crying shame to see a grand show like the Man From U.N.C.L.E. didn't deserved this kind of treatment,especially from its loyalists of fans.
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