15 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :- Sex appeal sells. End of story. But..., 31 January 2002
Author:
joseph t from ohio, usa
I mean that in a complimentary manner. Before there was Pamela, or
Farrah,
or Sigourney, there was...Anne Francis as Honey West. The producers of
"Honey" knew exactly what their strong hand was in this series, and that
is
the sex appeal of Anne Francis as the smart, resourceful, but above all
else, sexy Honey West. But, while she could play the soft and feminine
sex
object in one scene, in the next Honey could show she was no cupcake when
it
came to battling it out with the baddies on the street.
For those of us who remember the sexually liberated sixties, Honey West
was
the epitome of raw sexuality dressed up in evening clothes. Yet, at the
same time, she had the same quality of femininity when wearing a skin
tight
jumpsuit ala Emma Peel of The Avengers. Anne Francis is one of those rare
females who looks as if she could glide off the runway of a fashion show
and
slip into the working garb of a private investigator without a hair out of
place or smudge of makeup.
The storylines of this series were by no means bad. They featured the
usual
blend of mystery and intrigue, spiced with some (for the time)
techno-gadgetry (courtesy of Honey's partner, Sam, who spent many hours in
his "Bolt's TV Repair" panel truck eavesdropping on the bad guys, and
would
pop out in the nick of time to assist or occasionally save Honey from
peril), and a good amount of action. Honey could hold her own against the
bad guys when it came to kickboxing or gun battles, and always did so with
style and flair and her usual touch of femininity. But, make no mistake,
the storylines are merely vehicles for the display, to the pleasure of
male
viewers, of the sex appeal of Miss Anne Francis.
While Miss Francis is the show's feature player, a nod goes to John
Ericson
as Honey's able assistant, Sam Bolt. Fans will recognize the ruggedly
handsome character actor from his lead role in the 1960 movie Pretty Boy
Floyd. Here, he goes over to the right side of the law, and provides the
rough-edged male counterpart to Honey's cool and soft femininity. While
there was sexual tension between Sam and Honey, I always thought that Sam
also felt a protectiveness towards Honey since he was her father's partner
in the business and retained that loyalty. Still, the episodes never
showed
Sam putting any serious (in today's context) moves on Honey, something
that
intrigued and puzzled by fevered adolescent brain to no
end.
All in all, Honey West was a fun hour of escapism and distraction, and
will
be fondly remembered, thanks to the smoldering sexuality of Miss Francis,
by
legions of men like myself who came of age in the midst of the sexually
liberated sixties.
14 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :- A stronger connection that you might think, 31 May 2004
Author:
schappe1 from N Syracuse NY
People see something of The Avengers in this series and the connection is
stronger than some may realize. As I've read it, Aaron Spelling had been to
England and saw The Avengers with Patrick MacNee and Honor Blackman. I even
think I know the episode he saw: Both the 1962 Avengers episode `Death of a
Great Dane' and the 1964 Burke's Law episode `Who Killed the Richest Man in
the World?' are about a reclusive billionaire who is actually dead but his
staff is pretending he's alive to split up the profits from his empire. He
was so impressed with Blackman that he offered her a job as the star of a
private eye series he would create called `Honey West'. But she opted to do
`Goldfinger' instead. Spelling wasn't willing to give up on the idea and
searched for the actress who most reminded him of Blackman and decided it
was Anne Francis. Honey West was then introduced on the Burke's Law episode
`Who Killed the Jackpot?' in 1965. The series began the following fall but
lasted only one year as it was on opposite the huge hit Gomer Pyle.
I don't think I ever watched a single episode of Gomer Pyle. I fell hard for
Anne Francis, who I think was much better than the rather dower Blackman in
The Avengers, (which I didn't see until A & E showed the earlier version of
the series in 1990). If you rate Francis with the `Avenger Girls', the only
one who really ranks with her is Diana Rigg, although I liked Linda Thorson
as well. I think Francis and Rigg were easily the best actresses in those
parts and brought both a dramatic weight and light comic touch to the
characters and the show.
Looking at Honey West now, it doesn't seem like much of a show other than
what Francis brings to it. John Ericson is a `he-man' who's only job is to
argue with Honey whenever she tries to do anything dangerous. Quite a
difference from Steed's genuine respect for the capabilities of Cathy Gale
and Emma Peel. Irene Hervey as `Aunt Meg' adds nothing whatsoever to the
show. The pet ocelot was more interesting. The fact that the show was only a
half hour show also hurt: it came off as a cartoon rather than a dramatic
adventure.
But a half hour with Anne Francis makes it worth it.
12 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- Still Holds Up for Me!, 1 February 2005
Author:
moonchildiva from Motown
I recently got my hands on a few episodes of this show and I still
don't understand why it only lasted one season, just as I wondered in
1965...! Not only good looking people, but interesting story lines,
good guest stars, great clothes & cars, hip apartments, delicious
banter and a very unique camera/editing style! Who's cuter than Anne
Francis?? and wow, John Ericson is gorgeous! I also enjoy the comic
relief of Jack Jones' mother, Irene Hervey as Aunt Meg. I plan to find
more episodes of this show, maybe ALL of them! I recommend this show to
anyone who enjoys private eye fare, good looking blonds, 60s hunks and
good 60s TV!
16 out of 22 people found the following comment useful :- Honey West Special Effects Man, 17 October 2005
Author:
bobbywo from United States
Is anyone aware that the man who worked on Special Effects for Honey
West is the same man who did the Special Effects for the Star Trek
series just a year later? The man's name was Jim Rugg. He was my Pops.
He also worked on such shows as The Rifleman, Burkes Law, Broken Arrow,
Mission Impossible, Cannon, Barnaby Jones and Hawaii Five-O. He worked
on such movies as The Wizard of Oz, River of No Return, Bus Stop, The
Day the Earth Stood Still, On the Riviera and Silent Running. Pops had
a pyrotechnic license and he made a living blowing everything up from
cars to boats to airplanes... you name it. He was most proud of the
fact that in no show that he was in charge of did anyone ever get hurt.
My Dad is gone now but he was the best in the business... just ask
anyone who ever worked with him.
5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- It's Time for the Entire First Season on DVD!, 4 March 2005
Author:
randwolfray from Fort Scott, Kansas
Why not? Everybody else is doing it. I was 8 years old when this show
aired, and all I remember is seeing the honeycomb cells with Honey
West's face during the title sequence. Then it was off to another
channel to watch good old Gomer Pyle. And therein lies the secret to
the mystery of why Honey West disappeared into the mists.
Most people don't know that the enormously popular Make Room For
Daddy/Danny Thomas Show spun off the enormously popular Andy Griffith
Show, which in turn spun off the enormously popular Gomer Pyle Show.
With Honey West in the same time slot as Gomer Pyle, how could she buck
a tradition like that?
I sure wish she could have, because when one of the nostalgia networks
aired Honey West during the late 1990's, a friend of mine taped several
of the episodes for me. Yowsa! Honey West knew the secret of being a
great entertainer, because she left me wanting more! And not just
because of her sex appeal; she was strong, she was smart, and the
stories brought back that wonderful world of thirty-minute dramas and
mysteries which we just don't see anymore. With a little bit of
suspension of disbelief, Honey West is quite credible, as far as I am
concerned. So let's get those DVD's on the market now!
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Women's lib detective before there was liberation, 4 November 2000
Author:
bj_lucky
Honey West was cool, liberated, and above all, sexy. My first love on TV.
She went off the tube almost as soon as I'd found her, and I had to
subsist
on a diet of Donna Reed, Doris Day, and other actresses that didn't have
the
same erotic spark.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Anne Francis -- the sexiest woman ever born, 5 December 2007
Author:
Mark Sevier (the_sandman@msn.com) from Honey Island, Texas
The good die young, the loveliest things are the most ephemeral, and
the best TV shows are killed after a short run: Star Trek, Due South,
The Powers that Be, and Honey West -- the briefest of the lot. I had
already fallen for Anne Francis, from Forbidden Planet and The Satan
Bug. But Honey West topped them and any other offering on TV or in
movies. Honey was ultimately cool, ultimately hot, self-assured,
poised, capable; she was superlative. But above all, she was
smolderingly sexy. She made me think of a steel spring encased in
ice-blue velvet. I think the ocelot only accentuated the sexual appeal
of the woman, which needed no accentuation. She was the ultimate, and
pheromones fairly poured out through the screen. Whether as Honey West
or any other of her characters, Anne Francis was the sexiest woman who
ever lived on this planet.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Cool school crime show, 11 March 2005
Author:
mike robson from cramlington u.k.
The sort of show that epitomised mid 60's Hollywood hip-great clothes
and cars,fab music,graced with the presence of slim beautiful Anne
Francis as the foxy sleuth.Okay the plots are elementary at best,and
can veer towards silliness("Little green Robin Hood" anyone?),and the
show is too darn short at half an hour to do real justice to
itself.Also it's in black and white-but who cares-just watch Francis
and John Ericson in action.Like the "Burke's Law" series-where Honey
West first appeared on screen-there's quite a lot of wit in the
writing(this show,like "Burke's Law",is from "4 star" television
productions).And there's Bruce,Honey's amusingly roguish ocelot.Some
interesting guest stars include Everett Sloane(in one of his final
appearances),Edd Byrnes,Alan Reed(Fred Flinstone!)and Dick
Clark!Special mention should be made of the brilliant montage of
pictures accompanying the jazzy opening credits.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- Something for 'everyone' not just guys., 25 December 2005
Author:
svgarvin7 from United States
Honey West's sex appeal did indeed sell the show for guys as well as my
Dad, however, I remember thinking, here's the first strong and sexy
female character who can kick butt too--cool. Makes a woman proud, even
though I was 9 yrs old, the impression stuck. I never was attracted to
Sam Bolt and his brotherly attentions to Honey was also confusing. I
could tell he was attracted to her but their relationship always left
me cold. Of course, Honey didn't make any real attempts either. There
was no sexual tension. If a 9 yr old can notice that, something's
wrong. Nevertheless, I enjoyed the show anyway and I thought the ocelot
was cool as well.
good memories of a so-so show, 2 October 2008
Author:
Miles-10 from United States
This show gets points from me for nostalgia. Objectively speaking,
however, some episodes are dreadful, especially any involving guys in
gorilla or bear suits (Sam himself dons such a suit in one episode) or
phony gypsies--although in the episode "Slay Gypsy Slay" Sam does a
revelatory turn disguised as an old prospector; you suddenly realize
that the actor who played Sam could act like more than one type of
person. Aside from that, that episode is awful and its not the only one
that is. Still, other episodes are OK or at least have more than one
redeeming moment.
One thing that becomes clear, when you study the credits of each
episode, is that the best ones were written by William Link and Richard
Levinson, the writing team that later created the "Columbo" TV series.
Every time you see their names on the screen, you know you are about to
see a "Honey West" episode that will be a cut above the rest.
All that said, I am glad I bought the DVD. There are about 30 episodes
in the season. Nowadays you are lucky to get 22. The old commercials
included on the DVD are nostalgic as well, and sometimes hilarious.
Watching the show again makes me realize I have acquired some taste
since then, and it is a little disappointing to realize how flawed the
show was. (It was an Aaron Spelling show, not to speak ill of the
dead.) He had seen "The Avengers" before the rest of America had, he
tried to come up with his own imitation of it, and he missed the mark a
bit.
One thing he got right however, was choosing Anne Francis to do the
honors. She is terrific as Honey West.
Own the rights?
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15 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :-
Sex appeal sells. End of story. But..., 31 January 2002
Author: joseph t from ohio, usa
I mean that in a complimentary manner. Before there was Pamela, or Farrah, or Sigourney, there was...Anne Francis as Honey West. The producers of "Honey" knew exactly what their strong hand was in this series, and that is the sex appeal of Anne Francis as the smart, resourceful, but above all else, sexy Honey West. But, while she could play the soft and feminine sex object in one scene, in the next Honey could show she was no cupcake when it came to battling it out with the baddies on the street.
For those of us who remember the sexually liberated sixties, Honey West was the epitome of raw sexuality dressed up in evening clothes. Yet, at the same time, she had the same quality of femininity when wearing a skin tight jumpsuit ala Emma Peel of The Avengers. Anne Francis is one of those rare females who looks as if she could glide off the runway of a fashion show and slip into the working garb of a private investigator without a hair out of place or smudge of makeup.
The storylines of this series were by no means bad. They featured the usual blend of mystery and intrigue, spiced with some (for the time) techno-gadgetry (courtesy of Honey's partner, Sam, who spent many hours in his "Bolt's TV Repair" panel truck eavesdropping on the bad guys, and would pop out in the nick of time to assist or occasionally save Honey from peril), and a good amount of action. Honey could hold her own against the bad guys when it came to kickboxing or gun battles, and always did so with style and flair and her usual touch of femininity. But, make no mistake, the storylines are merely vehicles for the display, to the pleasure of male viewers, of the sex appeal of Miss Anne Francis.
While Miss Francis is the show's feature player, a nod goes to John Ericson as Honey's able assistant, Sam Bolt. Fans will recognize the ruggedly handsome character actor from his lead role in the 1960 movie Pretty Boy Floyd. Here, he goes over to the right side of the law, and provides the rough-edged male counterpart to Honey's cool and soft femininity. While there was sexual tension between Sam and Honey, I always thought that Sam also felt a protectiveness towards Honey since he was her father's partner in the business and retained that loyalty. Still, the episodes never showed Sam putting any serious (in today's context) moves on Honey, something that intrigued and puzzled by fevered adolescent brain to no end.
All in all, Honey West was a fun hour of escapism and distraction, and will be fondly remembered, thanks to the smoldering sexuality of Miss Francis, by legions of men like myself who came of age in the midst of the sexually liberated sixties.
14 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :-
A stronger connection that you might think, 31 May 2004
Author: schappe1 from N Syracuse NY
People see something of The Avengers in this series and the connection is stronger than some may realize. As I've read it, Aaron Spelling had been to England and saw The Avengers with Patrick MacNee and Honor Blackman. I even think I know the episode he saw: Both the 1962 Avengers episode `Death of a Great Dane' and the 1964 Burke's Law episode `Who Killed the Richest Man in the World?' are about a reclusive billionaire who is actually dead but his staff is pretending he's alive to split up the profits from his empire. He was so impressed with Blackman that he offered her a job as the star of a private eye series he would create called `Honey West'. But she opted to do `Goldfinger' instead. Spelling wasn't willing to give up on the idea and searched for the actress who most reminded him of Blackman and decided it was Anne Francis. Honey West was then introduced on the Burke's Law episode `Who Killed the Jackpot?' in 1965. The series began the following fall but lasted only one year as it was on opposite the huge hit Gomer Pyle.
I don't think I ever watched a single episode of Gomer Pyle. I fell hard for Anne Francis, who I think was much better than the rather dower Blackman in The Avengers, (which I didn't see until A & E showed the earlier version of the series in 1990). If you rate Francis with the `Avenger Girls', the only one who really ranks with her is Diana Rigg, although I liked Linda Thorson as well. I think Francis and Rigg were easily the best actresses in those parts and brought both a dramatic weight and light comic touch to the characters and the show.
Looking at Honey West now, it doesn't seem like much of a show other than what Francis brings to it. John Ericson is a `he-man' who's only job is to argue with Honey whenever she tries to do anything dangerous. Quite a difference from Steed's genuine respect for the capabilities of Cathy Gale and Emma Peel. Irene Hervey as `Aunt Meg' adds nothing whatsoever to the show. The pet ocelot was more interesting. The fact that the show was only a half hour show also hurt: it came off as a cartoon rather than a dramatic adventure.
But a half hour with Anne Francis makes it worth it.
12 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-
Still Holds Up for Me!, 1 February 2005
Author: moonchildiva from Motown
I recently got my hands on a few episodes of this show and I still don't understand why it only lasted one season, just as I wondered in 1965...! Not only good looking people, but interesting story lines, good guest stars, great clothes & cars, hip apartments, delicious banter and a very unique camera/editing style! Who's cuter than Anne Francis?? and wow, John Ericson is gorgeous! I also enjoy the comic relief of Jack Jones' mother, Irene Hervey as Aunt Meg. I plan to find more episodes of this show, maybe ALL of them! I recommend this show to anyone who enjoys private eye fare, good looking blonds, 60s hunks and good 60s TV!
16 out of 22 people found the following comment useful :-
Honey West Special Effects Man, 17 October 2005
Author: bobbywo from United States
Is anyone aware that the man who worked on Special Effects for Honey West is the same man who did the Special Effects for the Star Trek series just a year later? The man's name was Jim Rugg. He was my Pops. He also worked on such shows as The Rifleman, Burkes Law, Broken Arrow, Mission Impossible, Cannon, Barnaby Jones and Hawaii Five-O. He worked on such movies as The Wizard of Oz, River of No Return, Bus Stop, The Day the Earth Stood Still, On the Riviera and Silent Running. Pops had a pyrotechnic license and he made a living blowing everything up from cars to boats to airplanes... you name it. He was most proud of the fact that in no show that he was in charge of did anyone ever get hurt. My Dad is gone now but he was the best in the business... just ask anyone who ever worked with him.
5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-
It's Time for the Entire First Season on DVD!, 4 March 2005
Author: randwolfray from Fort Scott, Kansas
Why not? Everybody else is doing it. I was 8 years old when this show aired, and all I remember is seeing the honeycomb cells with Honey West's face during the title sequence. Then it was off to another channel to watch good old Gomer Pyle. And therein lies the secret to the mystery of why Honey West disappeared into the mists.
Most people don't know that the enormously popular Make Room For Daddy/Danny Thomas Show spun off the enormously popular Andy Griffith Show, which in turn spun off the enormously popular Gomer Pyle Show. With Honey West in the same time slot as Gomer Pyle, how could she buck a tradition like that?
I sure wish she could have, because when one of the nostalgia networks aired Honey West during the late 1990's, a friend of mine taped several of the episodes for me. Yowsa! Honey West knew the secret of being a great entertainer, because she left me wanting more! And not just because of her sex appeal; she was strong, she was smart, and the stories brought back that wonderful world of thirty-minute dramas and mysteries which we just don't see anymore. With a little bit of suspension of disbelief, Honey West is quite credible, as far as I am concerned. So let's get those DVD's on the market now!
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-
Women's lib detective before there was liberation, 4 November 2000
Author: bj_lucky
Honey West was cool, liberated, and above all, sexy. My first love on TV. She went off the tube almost as soon as I'd found her, and I had to subsist on a diet of Donna Reed, Doris Day, and other actresses that didn't have the same erotic spark.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

Anne Francis -- the sexiest woman ever born, 5 December 2007
Author: Mark Sevier (the_sandman@msn.com) from Honey Island, Texas
The good die young, the loveliest things are the most ephemeral, and the best TV shows are killed after a short run: Star Trek, Due South, The Powers that Be, and Honey West -- the briefest of the lot. I had already fallen for Anne Francis, from Forbidden Planet and The Satan Bug. But Honey West topped them and any other offering on TV or in movies. Honey was ultimately cool, ultimately hot, self-assured, poised, capable; she was superlative. But above all, she was smolderingly sexy. She made me think of a steel spring encased in ice-blue velvet. I think the ocelot only accentuated the sexual appeal of the woman, which needed no accentuation. She was the ultimate, and pheromones fairly poured out through the screen. Whether as Honey West or any other of her characters, Anne Francis was the sexiest woman who ever lived on this planet.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-
Cool school crime show, 11 March 2005
Author: mike robson from cramlington u.k.
The sort of show that epitomised mid 60's Hollywood hip-great clothes and cars,fab music,graced with the presence of slim beautiful Anne Francis as the foxy sleuth.Okay the plots are elementary at best,and can veer towards silliness("Little green Robin Hood" anyone?),and the show is too darn short at half an hour to do real justice to itself.Also it's in black and white-but who cares-just watch Francis and John Ericson in action.Like the "Burke's Law" series-where Honey West first appeared on screen-there's quite a lot of wit in the writing(this show,like "Burke's Law",is from "4 star" television productions).And there's Bruce,Honey's amusingly roguish ocelot.Some interesting guest stars include Everett Sloane(in one of his final appearances),Edd Byrnes,Alan Reed(Fred Flinstone!)and Dick Clark!Special mention should be made of the brilliant montage of pictures accompanying the jazzy opening credits.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-
Something for 'everyone' not just guys., 25 December 2005
Author: svgarvin7 from United States
Honey West's sex appeal did indeed sell the show for guys as well as my Dad, however, I remember thinking, here's the first strong and sexy female character who can kick butt too--cool. Makes a woman proud, even though I was 9 yrs old, the impression stuck. I never was attracted to Sam Bolt and his brotherly attentions to Honey was also confusing. I could tell he was attracted to her but their relationship always left me cold. Of course, Honey didn't make any real attempts either. There was no sexual tension. If a 9 yr old can notice that, something's wrong. Nevertheless, I enjoyed the show anyway and I thought the ocelot was cool as well.
good memories of a so-so show, 2 October 2008

Author: Miles-10 from United States
This show gets points from me for nostalgia. Objectively speaking, however, some episodes are dreadful, especially any involving guys in gorilla or bear suits (Sam himself dons such a suit in one episode) or phony gypsies--although in the episode "Slay Gypsy Slay" Sam does a revelatory turn disguised as an old prospector; you suddenly realize that the actor who played Sam could act like more than one type of person. Aside from that, that episode is awful and its not the only one that is. Still, other episodes are OK or at least have more than one redeeming moment.
One thing that becomes clear, when you study the credits of each episode, is that the best ones were written by William Link and Richard Levinson, the writing team that later created the "Columbo" TV series. Every time you see their names on the screen, you know you are about to see a "Honey West" episode that will be a cut above the rest.
All that said, I am glad I bought the DVD. There are about 30 episodes in the season. Nowadays you are lucky to get 22. The old commercials included on the DVD are nostalgic as well, and sometimes hilarious. Watching the show again makes me realize I have acquired some taste since then, and it is a little disappointing to realize how flawed the show was. (It was an Aaron Spelling show, not to speak ill of the dead.) He had seen "The Avengers" before the rest of America had, he tried to come up with his own imitation of it, and he missed the mark a bit.
One thing he got right however, was choosing Anne Francis to do the honors. She is terrific as Honey West.
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