I Dream of Jeannie
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| I Dream of Jeannie | |
|---|---|
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Title Screen. |
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| Format | Sitcom |
| Created by | Sidney Sheldon |
| Starring | Barbara Eden Larry Hagman Bill Daily Hayden Rorke |
| Country of origin | |
| Language(s) | English |
| No. of seasons | 5 |
| No. of episodes | 139 (List of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Executive producer(s) |
Sidney Sheldon |
| Producer(s) | Screen Gems Columbia Pictures Television Sony Pictures Television |
| Location(s) | Sunset Gower Studios Warner Bros. Ranch |
| Running time | 24 minutes per episode |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | NBC |
| Picture format | 35mm film B&W (Season 1) Color (Seasons 2 - 5) |
| Audio format | Monaural |
| Original run | September 18, 1965 – May 26, 1970 |
| External links | |
| IMDb profile | |
| TV.com summary | |
I Dream of Jeannie is an American sitcom with a fantasy premise. Produced by Screen Gems, it originally aired from September 1965 to May 1970 with new episodes, and September 1970 with season repeats, on NBC. The show ran for five seasons and produced 139 episodes. The first season consisted of 30 episodes filmed in black and white and recently colorized for some broadcasts and a DVD edition. The other 109 episodes were filmed in color. The show has continued to air in reruns ever since. The show starred Barbara Eden as a female genie, and Larry Hagman as an astronaut who becomes her master, with whom she falls in love and eventually marries.
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[edit] Show history
[edit] Original run
The series was created by Sidney Sheldon in response to the great success of rival network ABC's Bewitched series, which had debuted in 1964 as the second most watched program in the United States. Sheldon, inspired by the movie The Brass Bottle, starring Tony Randall, Barbara Eden, and Burl Ives as the genie Fakrash, came up with the idea for a beautiful female genie who wanted to grant her master's wishes, a stark contrast to the social ideas of what a genie was and what a genie looked like. Many Bewitched fans continue to propagate the rumor that producer William Asher was called upon unofficially to comment on the final script for the pilot episode of Jeannie. NBC was hoping Jeannie would recreate the successful ratings Bewitched was pulling at that time. Coincidentally, both shows were produced by Screen Gems Television.
Interestingly, when casting was opened for the role of Jeannie, Sidney Sheldon could not find an actress who could play the role the way he wrote it. He did have one specific rule: Sheldon said that he did not want a blond genie because there would be too much similarity with the blond witch on Bewitched. However, after many unsuccessful auditions he called the agent for Barbara Eden who had costarred in The Brass Bottle and then had tea with her at the Beverly Hills Hotel.
In most episodes, Barbara Eden wears little more than her revealing "Jeannie" costume. Strangely, the censors allowed her to be depicted living in a house with an unmarried man, but would not permit Eden's navel to be seen. The makers of the series were also presented with the situation of filming around Eden's real-life pregnancy during the pilot season, without writing it into the storyline. Instead she wore many veils to hide her stomach and as her pregnancy progressed they began to use body doubles and film Eden only above the waist though her belly is visible in some profile shots.
[edit] After the original run
I Dream of Jeannie was a moderate success on NBC, but the show's popularity exploded when the series began playing in syndication. The reruns became one of the highest rated series during the 1970s. For example, when the reruns debuted on New York's WPIX, Jeannie won its time period with a 13 rating and a 23 share of the audience (Variety, October 6, 1971). The series average a 14 share and 32 share of the audience when WTTG in Washington, D.C. began airing the series (Variety, September 22, 1971). Across the board, the series was reaching a bigger audience in syndication than on NBC. According to the October 6, 1971 edition of Variety, it was the first off-network series to best network competition in the ratings, "The big switch no doubt representing the first time in rating history that indies (local stations) have knocked over the network stations in a primetime slot was promoted by WPIX's premiere of the off-web Jeannie reruns back to back from 7 to 8 p.m." The show continues to have a cult following today. Hanna-Barbera Productions produced an animated series Jeannie in September 1973, which featured Jeannie (voiced by Julie McWhirter) and genie-in-training Babu (voiced by former Three Stooges star Joe Besser) as the servants of Corry Anders, a high-school student (voiced by Mark Hamill).
There were two I Dream of Jeannie NBC-TV reunion movies: I Dream of Jeannie: 15 Years Later (1985) and I Still Dream of Jeannie (1991). In the first reunion movie Wayne Rogers replaced Larry Hagman in the role of Tony Nelson. In the second reunion movie, the character of Tony Nelson was written out of the movie with his character being away on an extended mission, therefore officially unable to act as "Master" (which was most of the movie's premise). Hagman refused to appear in the first reunion movie, reportedly because of a payment dispute. When it came time to film the second reunion, Barbara Eden asked Hagman to join her. However, as she told Geraldo Rivera in a 1991 interview, Hagman was just coming off a 13-year run on Dallas and was taking a vacation. Eden expressed her disappointment, as a year earlier, she had obliged Hagman by appearing on a few episodes of Dallas, playing a former lover out for revenge.
However, in November 1999 brought together for the very first time the official I Dream Of Jeannie Reunion on the Donny & Marie daytime talk show. For the first time in 29 years, Barbara Eden, Larry Hagman, Bill Daily and even the creator and producer Sidney Sheldon reunited on this 1-hour show that was filled with loving memories and clips from I Dream Of Jeannie.
In 2002 when I Dream Of Jeannie was set to join the cable channel TV Land, once again there was an I Dream Of Jeannie Reunion, this time on the Larry King Live show for CNN. For the first time ever fans of I Dream Of Jeannie were able to call in and talk to the cast.
On the TV Land Awards in March 2004, Barbara Eden and Larry Hagman were the first presenters to reunite on stage to give out the first award to the best TV twin. The award went to Patty Duke for The Patty Duke Show.
In October 2004 Larry Hagman and Bill Daily appeared at The Ray Courts Hollywood Autograph Show.
In October 2005 the cast reunited again at the Chiller Expo Show in New Jersey to meet fans and sign autographs. This would mark the first and only time that all three stars were together at an autograph show.
In February 2006 Barbara Eden and Larry Hagman reunited on stage in Florida for the play Love Letters. This would be their first acting gig since acting together on a few episodes of Dallas in 1990.
In March 2006, Barbara Eden once again reunited with Larry Hagman and went on a publicity tour in New York to promote the First Season DVD of I Dream Of Jeannie appearing together on such shows as Good Morning America, The View, Martha Stewart, Entertainment Tonight, Access Hollywood and CNN Showbiz Tonight. Later that week they both appeared at an autograph signing for the DVD at Barnes & Nobles in downtown Manhattan in Chelsea New York. That same month, both reunited on stage again for the play Love Letters at the College Of Staten Island in New York and Upstate New York.
Rumors of a big screen treatment of I Dream of Jeannie have flown around Hollywood for years. Jessica Alba, Halle Berry, Amanda Bynes, Jessica Simpson, Mandy Moore, Paris Hilton, Keira Knightley, Valeria Mazza, Parminder Nagra, Reese Witherspoon, Jenna Elfman, Lindsay Lohan and Lisa Kudrow have been considered for the part of Jeannie. Jimmy Fallon, Will Ferrell, Steve Carell, Will Smith, and James Marsden have all been considered for the role of Major Nelson. The latest news is that Columbia Pictures is in pre-production for a feature film version of I Dream of Jeannie, the date of release now pushed back to 2010 with no defined script, cast or director. According to some sources, writer/director Gurinder Chadha, who had been set to direct the remake, lost the job because of her lack of knowledge of the show and its initial success. Chadha suggested a possible storyline which would be somewhat darker than the original series, with Jeannie as a headstrong girl who is punished for becoming a soldier by being imprisoned in a bottle as a genie. As Columbia Pictures began to see the direction Chadha was going it is rumored they cancelled that idea and told her to create a storyline more closely relating to the original show. Upon her inability to do so Columbia released Chadha from her contract on I Dream of Jeannie.
Over the past ten years, merchandise based on the series has been produced including numerous dolls, ceramic pieces, lunchboxes, a board game and a series of Instant Scratchit cards. There is even an officially licensed slot machine with Jeannie sound effects, new animations and voice samples recorded specifically for the machine by Eden herself.
Recently, Cocoa Beach, Florida, has been embracing the fame it garnered from Jeannie. A street near the Lori Wilson Park in Cocoa Beach is named "I Dream of Jeannie Lane." On September 15, 2005, they held the We Dream Of Jeannie Festival, during which were memories of the show and a Jeannie lookalike contest. There were plans for one in 2004, but it was interrupted by Hurricane Frances and Hurricane Jeanne. They did, however, hold the Jeannie lookalike contest in 2004, with Bill Daily attending. None of the cast members went to the 2005 festival.
[edit] Main cast
- Jeannie — Barbara Eden
- Captain/Major Tony Nelson — Larry Hagman, who occasionally directed
- Captain/Major Roger Healey — Bill Daily, who occasionally wrote
- Dr. Alfred Bellows — Hayden Rorke
- Amanda Bellows (Dr. Bellows' wife) (1966-1970) — Emmaline Henry
- Gen. Wingard Stone (1965) - Philip Ober
- Melissa Stone (Nelson's fiancée) (1965) - Karen Sharpe
- Gen. Martin Peterson (1965–1969) — Barton MacLane
- Gen. Winfield Schaeffer (1969–1970) — Vinton Hayworth
- Jeannie's Sister (also named Jeannie and officially known to NBC as "Jeannie II"; in recent closed-captioning her name is spelled "Jeaney" to make it distinct) (1967-1969) — Barbara Eden
- Jeannie's Mother — Barbara Eden (Fourth season) (In the first season Jeannie's Mother was also played by Florence Sundstrom and Lurene Tuttle)
- Haji (the "chief of all the genies") (1966, mention, to 1967) - Abraham Sofaer
[edit] Additional appearances
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[edit] Plot outline
[edit] Season Outlines
When NBC began telecasting most of its prime time television programs in color in the fall of 1965, Jeannie was the one regular program that remained in black and white because of the special photographic effects employed to achieve Jeannie's magic. By the second season, however, further work had been done on techniques to create the visual effects in color, necessary because by 1966 all U.S. prime time series were being made in color.
According to the book Dreaming of Jeannie by Stephen Cox and Howard Frank, series producers originally wanted to film season one in color but NBC did not want to pay for the extra expense because they believed the series would not make it to a second season.
The first season was also characterized by the more romantic and relaxed nature of the pilot season, as compared to the faster-paced later seasons. Also, the jazzy title music of Season 1 is different from the perkier Emmy-Award winning introductory theme of later episodes.
Sidney Sheldon and the cast fought against the planned fifth season wedding, feeling it would ruin the sexual tension between the two. Despite the series finishing its fourth season in 26th place, NBC was going to cancel the program if Jeannie and Tony did not wed. For the series' fifth season (1969–70), NBC moved the series to a weak time slot (Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. [Eastern/Pacific Time]) where it had done mediocre ratings during its third season (1967–68). Jeannie and Tony wed, NBC got lots of press and then canceled the series.
[edit] Main story
Astronaut Captain Tony Nelson is on a space flight when his one-man capsule comes down far from the planned recovery area, near a deserted island. Tony notices a strange bottle that rolls by itself, and when he rubs it after removing the cork, smoke starts shooting out and Jeannie materializes and kisses Tony on the lips with passion, shocking Tony. (In the second season's animated opening, it's a kiss on the cheek and Tony is happy to receive it). Eventually, Jeannie (a homophone of genie) "blinks" a recovery helicopter into the area to rescue Tony, who is so grateful for her help that he tells her she's free. But Jeannie, who falls in love with Tony at first sight, reenters her bottle and moves it into Tony's duffel bag so she can accompany him back home.
Tony at first keeps Jeannie in her bottle most of the time, but finally relents and allows her to develop a life of her own. The first thing Jeannie does is break up Tony's engagement to the general's daughter.
Tony's efforts to cover up Jeannie's antics brings him to the attention of NASA's resident psychiatrist Dr. Alfred Bellows. In a running gag, Dr. Bellows tries over and over to prove to his superiors that Tony's either crazy or hiding something, but he's always foiled and Tony's job remains secure. The closest Dr. Bellows ever comes to finding out the truth happens twice in the series:
- In an episode in which Jeannie sees the future (if she marries Major Nelson), Dr. Bellows and his wife stop by the Nelson house and see Jeannie and Major Nelson's son "flying".
- In one of the final episodes when he discovers, through a magical movie projector, that Jeannie is a genie; her bottle is broken; and Major Nelson resigns from the Air Force. However, this is a dream sequence.
Tony's best friend and fellow astronaut Capt. Roger Healey doesn't know about Jeannie for several episodes – when he finds out, he steals her so he can become rich and live in luxury. It's not long though before Tony reclaims his status as Jeannie's master. Roger continues to demonstrate his desire to use Jeannie's powers for his own benefit, but for the most part he respects Tony's status as Jeannie's master. Both Tony and Roger are promoted to the rank of Major early in the series.
Jeannie's sister, mentioned in a second season episode (and also named Jeannie), proves to have a mean streak starting in the third season, repeatedly trying to steal Tony for herself, with her as the master. One of her final efforts comes right after Tony and Jeannie get married.
Early in the fifth season, Jeannie is called upon by her Uncle Sully to become queen of Basenji, and she decides, for his birthday gift, to give Tony the country of Basenji and make him its king. However, NASA has assigned Tony to deal with the ambassador from Kajsa, Basenji's neighbor and enemy, to secure finkilium, a mineral needed for the space program. Sully causes Tony to unwittingly and repeatedly threaten Kajsa's ambassador, harming America's friendship with Kajsa. When Roger warns Tony about Sully, Tony tries to trap Sully and tells him he won't marry Jeannie. Jeannie had gotten Sully to leave and she was waiting to talk to Tony, so he alienated her. She leaves to become queen, while Tony and Roger are exiled to a remote post in Alaska. NASA finds another source of finkilium, and sends a dispatch that recalls Tony and Roger to Cocoa Beach. However, the newspaper came with the message, mentioning the new queen of Basenji. The boys fly to Basenji (somewhere near Russia) where Tony reconciles with Jeannie. They arrive back at NASA and Tony introduces Jeannie as his fiancée. The two were wed before the end of the season.
[edit] Multi-part story arcs
In a four-part episode, it is established that Jeannie did not know her birthday, and her family members could not agree when it was either (2,000 years being a long time to remember such a thing). Tony and Roger use NASA's powerful new computer, and horoscopic guidance based on Jeannie's traits, to calculate it, but Roger wants to make a game out of revealing it. Jeannie finally forces it out of him in the fourth episode: April 1, 64 B.C.
In another four-part episode (entitled "Genie, Genie, Who's Got the Genie?"), Jeannie is locked in a safe bound for the moon, and any attempt to force the safe or use the wrong combination will destroy the safe with an explosive. Jeannie is in there so long (four weeks) that whoever opens the safe will become her master. The episodes spread out over a month, during which a national contest was held to guess the safe's combination. This explains why Larry Hagman is never seen actually saying the combination out loud... his mouth is hidden behind the safe, or the shot is on Jeannie when he says it. The actual combination was not decided until right before airing, and Hagman's voice was dubbed in. Over the closing credits, Barbara Eden announced and congratulated the contest winner. The combination: 4-9-7. [1]
[edit] The Jeannie theme
The first season Jeannie theme was an instrumental jazz/waltz written by Richard Wess. From the second season on, however, a new theme, titled Jeannie, was written by Hugo Montenegro, with lyrics by Buddy Kaye. The lyrics were never used in the show, but read as follows:
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- Jeannie, fresh as a daisy
- Just love how she obeys me
- Does things that just amaze me so
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- She smiles, presto, the rain goes
- She blinks, out pops a rainbow
- Cars stop, even the train goes slow
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- When she goes by
- She paints sunshine on every rafter
- Sprinkles the air with laughter
- We're close as a quarter after three
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- There's no one like Jeannie
- I'd introduce her to you
- But it's no use, sir
- Cause my Jeannie's in love with me
- She's in love with me!
Songwriters Gerry Goffin and Carole King wrote a spec theme, called Jeannie, for Sidney Sheldon before the series started, but it was rejected.
- The animated opening was done by world famous animator Friz Freleng.
- DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince sampled the theme song for their 1986 debut single Girls Ain't Nothing But Trouble.
- Ice Cream T sampled the theme song for her 1988 single Guys Ain't Nothing But Trouble, a parody of DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince's earlier single.
- Dimples D sampled the theme song for her single "Sucker DJs" in 1990.
- Mark Davis & Marilyn E Whitelaw sampled the theme song in their single "Jeannie's Diner" in 1991.
[edit] The bottle
- Jeannie's famous bottle was not created for the show. It was actually a special Christmas 1964 Jim Beam liquor decanter containing 'Beam's Choice' bourbon whiskey.
- The studio prop department painted the bottle to look like an antique. For years it was said that Sidney Sheldon received one as a gift and thought it would be a perfect design for the series. Several people in the Screen Gems art department also take credit for finding the bottle. There is strong evidence, however, that it was first season director, Gene Nelson who saw one in a liquor store and bought it, bringing it to Sidney Sheldon.
- The first season bottle had a clear glass stopper that Tony took from a 1956 Old Grand Dad Bourbon bottle in his home, as the original stopper was left behind on the beach where Tony found Jeannie. The color seasons (and the movies) used the original bottle stopper, painted to match the bottle. (During some close-ups, you can still see the plastic rings that hold the cork part of the stopper in place!) Jeannie's bottle was painted mainly in pinks and purples, while the bottle for the Blue Djinn was a first season design with a heavy green wash and Jeannie's sister's bottle was simply a plain, unpainted Jim Beam bottle. The movies again used Jim Beam bottles, but with a new, more dramatic paint job. The TV movie "I Still Dream of Jeannie" showed for the first time and for less than a minute what has come to be known as the sister's bottle in a two tone black and green bottle with gold and pink accents.
- Jeannie's bottle was left its original dark, smoke-green color with a gold leaf pattern during the first season. The plot description of the pilot episode in TV Guide in September 1965 referred to it as a "green bottle". In that first episode, it also looked quite rough and weathered. Since the show was originally filmed in black and white, a lot of colors and patterns were not necessary. When the show switched to color, the prop people came up with a brightly colored bottle to replace the original. On the last day of filming the final episode of the television series Barbara Eden got to keep the color 'stunt' bottle. Several of each season bottles were made, as they did occasionally get broken during production. In the DVD release of the first season, during the first episode commentary, Bill Daily also claims to own an original bottle.
- The bottle itself was designed in 1964 by Roy Kramer for the Wheaton Bottle Company.
- No one knows exactly how many bottles were used during the show, but members of the production have estimated that from six to eight bottles were painted and used during the run of the series. The stunt bottle used mostly for the smoke effect was broken frequently by the heat and chemicals used to produce Jeannie's smoke. In the pilot episode several bottles were used for the opening scene on the beach, one was drilled through the bottom for smoke and another was used to "walk" across the sand and slip into Tony's pack. Two bottles were used from promotional tours to kick off the first season and one bottle was used for the first season production.
[edit] Jeannie's origin
Throughout the first season, it is made clear that Jeannie was originally a human who was turned into a genie by (as later revealed) the Blue Djinn, when she refused to marry him. We meet several members of her family, including her parents, and while some are rather eccentric, none are genies. Her mother describes the family as "just peasants from the old country". The topic of Jeannie originally being human is restated in season two during the episode "How to be a Genie in 10 Easy Lessons." Jeannie does mention that she has a sister who is a genie, but the phrasing - "she was a genie when I left Baghdad" - does bring up the question of whether or not she too was born a genie.
In the third season, this back story was omitted and it is assumed that Jeannie has always been a genie. All her relatives are now genies, including, by the fourth season, her mother (now also played by Barbara Eden). This may have been done to increase the similarity with Bewitched, or simply to increase the number of possible plotlines. Whatever the reason, this new concept was retained for the rest of the series.
In the 1985 movie I Dream of Jeannie: 15 Years Later, Jeannie reverts to her first-season origin when she tells her son, Tony Jr., that she was turned into a genie "when she was a girl."
[edit] Other inconsistencies
- Early on, Jeannie's budding movie career ended when she discovered that genies cannot be photographed, but twice in the middle of the series run, Jeannie was successfully photographed. The original premise is reasserted for the actual wedding episode, in which the fact that people would be trying to take pictures of her was part of the storyline.
- In a four-part episode, it was determined that Jeannie's birthday was April 1, 64 BC (which was a Thursday, according to the proleptic Gregorian calendar). However, in the fifth episode of the first season, "G.I. Jeannie", she stated that her birthday was July 1, 21 BC (a Tuesday). This is somewhat resolved by the understanding that she did not know her birthday until it was calculated in that later episode (Many people who do not know their birthdays choose one for ceremonial or social purposes, which Jeannie could have done in choosing, or assuming, that date). In the same episode, she gives her place of birth as Pompeii. In the end, 64 B.C. is a more plausible year assuming she had been imprisoned in her bottle a full 2,000 years.
- The end credits of the pilot episode list Larry Hagman as Capt. Anthony Wilson. (This error was corrected on the DVD release.) In fact, in the entire pilot episode there is no specific mention of Anthony's last name except when seen in a newspaper headline that reads "Nelson safe!"
- In the pilot, when rescued Jeannie speaks Persian (not Arabic as is often stated), and can only speak English after Tony wishes her to. (And even then, she inexplicably speaks archaic English until she learns the modern form.) Yet, whenever anyone from Jeannie's family show up, or she visits them, etc., they speak perfect contemporary English.
- Jeannie claims to come from Baghdad, and to be around 2000 years old. Yet Baghdad was not founded until AD 762. In an earlier episode she claimed to be from Babylon.
- In one early episode, before Roger knew about Jeannie, he was simply made to forget something "impossible" that he'd seen. In a different episode, after Roger has gotten himself into serious trouble while having control of Jeannie, she eventually resolves it by just rewinding time. Yet in later episodes, both of these "easy escapes" seem to be beyond her capabilities.
- In one episode, Jeannie replicates a Rembrandt painting from the Louvre, so that the replicant also appears to be 300 years old. In another episode she takes back her 2000 year old Bukistan slippers from an international exhibition causing a diplomatic emergency. However no one suggests she replicates the slippers.
- Jeannie was supposedly held captive in her bottle for two thousand years, yet has had relationships with famous people throughout the ages.
- One episode asserts that genies are forbidden to marry mortals, while another claims that genies who marry mortals will lose their powers. However, when Tony and Jeannie's marriage actually takes place there are no objections amongst her kind nor any loss of her powers afterwards.
- In early episodes the street address of Anthony Nelson's house was given as 1137 Oak Grove, but in the fourth season the address of the same house was stated as 1020 Palm Drive.
- A crystal ball also shows a possible future: of the two children they have, the boy is mortal but the girl is a genie. In the movie made in 1985, they have one child, Tony Jr., who turns out to be a djinn. However, in the 1991 movie, Tony Jr.'s powers are inexplicably absent.
- The bottle's interior design changed from the first season's Old World look of hanging lanterns and drapery to the color episode's pillow-strewn pink decor.
[edit] Miscellaneous
- Actor Larry Hagman was notoriously difficult to work with, to the point where the producers seriously considered getting rid of him and replacing him with another actor. Darren McGavin was at the top of the list for Hagman's replacement. They even worked out a story where Tony lost Jeannie and McGavin found her, but the studio execs loved Hagman and wouldn't consider a change.
- Gene Nelson, the first director for I Dream of Jeannie, was originally an actor, singer and dancer. He appeared as Will in the motion picture version of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical Oklahoma!.
- The idea that a genie is female and Djinn is male is mistaken. In Arabic, Djinn (or jinn جن) is the collective name for the whole group, Djinni (or jinnī جنی) is singular and masculine. A female genie is called a jinnīyah (جنیه). The word "genie" is just an alteration of the Arabic word jinnī that was adopted into English, as a result of a mistaken association with the Roman mythological genii.
- According to the show, genies have both red and green blood corpuscles.
- While not apparent in the first season (because of the black and white film), Tony Nelson was a Captain in the Air Force, while Roger Healey was a Captain in the Army. This is clearly shown when, in color, Nelson wears the blue uniform and Healey wears the green. These ranks, while in two different branches of the military, are equal in seniority. Healey is in the Army Corps of Engineers, according to his lapel insignia, and wears Army pilot wings which are distinct from Nelson's Air Force pilot wings. There were no real Army astronauts until the Space Shuttle program.[1] Both Healey and Nelson were promoted to the grade of Major in the latter episodes of the first season.
- Owing to network censorship Barbara Eden was forbidden to bare her navel for the entire series run, although it does slip out in several instances in the series. It would not be established that Jeannie actually had a navel until Eden wore a redesigned costume in the movies.
[edit] Comparison to actual NASA astronauts
I Dream of Jeannie's NASA differs from the real NASA in a number of ways:
- The NASA shown in the series appears to be launching a few more flights than real-life NASA, since Tony makes it into space at least three times during the series. But several real astronauts did make second and third flights.
- The first season pilot uses footage from an actual launch of a Project Gemini spacecraft (identifiable by its LGM-25 Titan II booster with twin rocket engines), and this footage also appears in the opening title sequence for some early first season episodes. However, the pilot storyline has Tony as the only crewmember of the craft, which would imply it must have been a Project Mercury mission, since all crewed Gemini spacecraft were flown with two crew members. The cartoon spacecraft shown in the opening titles of later seasons appears to be a one-man spacecraft bearing some resemblance to Project Mercury (flown 1961–May 1963), but during the series' run, the two-man Project Gemini (March 1965–November 1966) and three-man Project Apollo (February 1967–July 1975) craft were flying, aside from the hiatus between Gemini 12 and Apollo 7. In fact, Tony was shown on the series to fly all three of these craft, as well as the Space Shuttle (if you count the TV movies).
- NASA has always hired more astronauts than it has seats on flights, and there was an emphasis on rotation, so that other astronauts would get equal opportunity in space. (This is especially true of John Glenn, who was "grounded" after his Mercury flight Friendship 7 in 1962, for fear of anything risky happening to such a celebrity. He finally flew again in Shuttle Discovery flight STS-95 in 1998.)
- The only real astronaut in history to fly one of each of the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo spacecraft was astronaut Wally Schirra. (Mercury Sigma 7 flight, Gemini 6, and Apollo 7 flights.) Charles Conrad, James Lovell, Thomas Stafford and John Young were the only astronauts to fly two Gemini missions; 15 astronauts made both Gemini and Apollo flights during the series five-year run.
- Since Tony seems to be comparable to James Lovell and Wally Schirra, he was probably, fictionally, one of NASA's earliest-chosen astronauts. That is, healthy and skilled enough to be valuable for several flights.
- I Dream of Jeannie's NASA also was far more militaristic than the real NASA. Major Nelson and Major Healey wore their uniforms at all times. Virtually all the NASA characters such as astronauts (Nelson and Healey), mission controllers (Doctor Bellows), and support personnel were portrayed as active Duty military personnel and commanders. Jeannie's NASA was governed along a strict military hierarchy. In real life, NASA did not operate as such.
[edit] References in popular culture
- In an episode of Perfect Strangers (TV series), Balki becomes addicted to cable television. Harriette clues his cousin Larry in to this addiction by pointing out that Balki has started singing the I Dream Of Jeannie theme. Right on cue, Balki descends the Chicago Chronicle stairs singing and dancing the theme.
- In the Nickelodeon cartoon series Jimmy Neutron, there is an episode called "I Dream of Jimmy", where Jimmy enters Carl's dreams.
- Barbara Eden appears as Jeannie at the end of A Very Brady Sequel, saying she is Mike Brady's wife.
- On an episode of American Dreams, taking place in the spring of 1966, Meg and Roxanne go to Los Angeles, and visit the set of I Dream Of Jeannie. They see the large version of Jeannie's bottle, and meet Barbara Eden, played by Paris Hilton, in her Jeannie outfit.
- The soap opera As the World Turns did a mini-spoof of I Dream of Jeannie called "I Dream of Carly" as a part of their 50th Anniversary celebration on March 30, 2006. Character Jack Snyder played Tony and Carly Snyder played Jeannie.
- On the Adult Swim animated series Robot Chicken, I Dream of Jeannie was spoofed in a short segment of the episode Celebrity Rocket. In the segment, Jeannie is shown apologizing to an irritated-looking Major Nelson for causing problems in his life again, then disappearing into her bottle. In retaliation for what she did to him, Major Nelson shook her bottle vigorously while she was still inside it.
- The 'genie-in-a-bottle' premise was parodied in the Charmed episode I Dream of Phoebe, where the original genie was imprisoned in the bottle by a sorcerer in retaliation for not returning his feelings. Anyone who wished the previous genie free had to take its place. In the same episode, Paige Matthews makes a joke about Major Nelson.
- Half Baked features a music video by "Sir Smoke-A-Lot" (Dave Chappelle) where he demands weed from a genie in a bottle. (The genie was a cameo by the director of Half Baked, Tamra Davis.)
- Philadelphia punk rock band Dead Milkmen have a song called "I Dream of Jesus", in which the singer's mother finds Jesus who is trapped inside a bottle. The song appears on the 1993 album Not Richard, but Dick.
- "I Dream of Jenna" (starring porn-queen Jenna Jameson) is the title of a pornographic film based on a lurid premise of the series.
- There is also another pornographic film parody called "I Dream of Farrah" starring porn star Farrah.
- Family Guy episode "The Griffin Family History": In the Big Bang Theory scene, Peter Griffin is "obligated by the state of Kansas to present the Church's alternative to the theory of Evolution." The screen scrolls left and shows Jeannie walking out of the water and creating things (animals, humans, etc.) Afterwards, the animals, humans, and Jeannie finish the scene by doing a short dance.
- In a Roseanne episode, there is a short spoof on I Dream of Jeannie, which Roseanne as Jeannie and Dan as Major Nelson.
- The song Girls Ain't Nothing but Trouble by Fresh Prince and DJ Jazzy Jeff released in 1986 samples the I Dream of Jeannie theme song.
- The song Jeannie's Diner By Mark Davis and Marilyn E Whitelaw released in 1991 recounts the tale of Barbara Eden's Jeannie.
- In an episode of "That 70s show" the cast argues in the basement over who's powers are better: Jeannie, or Samantha from Bewitched.
- In an episode of the Simpsons, Homer tries to overcome his attraction to new coworker Mindy Simmons by imagining Barney dancing in a bikini while vocalizing the I Dream of Jeannie theme.
- In Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Ferris dances to the theme song of I Dream Of Jeannie imitating the opening credits.
- On the 3rd episode of Season 9 of Good Eats, titled "Urban Preservation II: The Jerky", the character of "W" played the part of Jeannie --complete with Jeannie costume-- as she explained about dehydration and dehydrators.
- An episode of Beavis and Butt-head entitled "I Dream of Beavis" shows them with a dead mouse in a bottle, with them believing that there is a genie inside. They have also sung the theme music during one video review.
[edit] Episode list and video releases
[edit] See also
- I Dream of Jeannie: 15 Years Later (1985)
- I Still Dream of Jeannie (1991)
- List of television series that include time travel
- I Dream of Genie (The Twilight Zone)
[edit] Notes
- ^ NASA Astronaut Fact Book, January, 2005.
[edit] References
Cox, Stephen; Howard Frank (2000-03-18). Dreaming of Jeannie: TV's Prime Time in a Bottle. St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 0312204175.
[edit] External links
- Barbara Eden Online - Barbara Eden Online
- Anthony (Tony) Nelson, ficticious astronaut - Encyclopedia Astronautica

