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Green Lady
All the girls at school (me included) were in love with Illya. ...
I was 9 to 13 when it aired, and I know this was a massive factor in the huge popularity the show achieved. Lots of girls in my classes those four years, I was keenly aware, watched the action/ adventure show...
for Illya. And it was that very large additional female viewership that I'm sure was what put it way over the top, from being merely a popular show, into becoming a cultural phenomenon.
While Robert Vaughn's Napoleon Solo surely was no chopped liver to the ladies, make no mistake, the younger females, at least, were tuning in for David McCallum. He became equivalent to a rock star. Teen mags ran full page ads for big wall posters of him, in his black secret agent turtleneck, arms crossed, gaze calm and unassuming from under the mop of blonde hair,
Here's the difference... and tv and music have figured it out well since then. Robert Vaughn's Solo projected an always-on, up front, sly and sometimes even smirky sexual assertiveness towards female characters, and through them vicariously to female viewers. The appeal of David McCallum's Kuryakin was the opposite. He wasn't a shark, a predator; instead he was the good-looking but nice, unaggressive, thoughtful and considerate male who didn't assume all females should want him. Which made school-age girls gravitate to Illya, the safe, sexually unthreatening heartthrob, over the always-on-the-make, presumptuous and vain one.
I have to think MGM initially didn't realize what they had in David McCallum's Illya when creating the show, didn't foresee that he would become the bigger sex symbol and bigger draw for female viewers than its more James Bond-based, presumptive show lead. If they had, surely they would have titled it what it de facto turned out to be:
The Men From U.N.C.L.E.If there were "life size" Robert Vaughn wall posters, too, I don't recall them. I do know the poster they sold a lot of for bedroom walls was the David McCallum "Illya" one. (Also I seriously doubt there's ever been a Ducky Mallard one.)
The show was very good, for the era, and would have been a hit even had someone else played Illya Kuryakin. It was David McCallum in the role, however, where MGM unexpectedly struck gold, and it was his appeal to viewers that boosted it to that rare cultural phenomenon level of success.
RIP David "Illya Kuryakin" McCallum.
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Rockman