11 Facts About the 1960s Mission: Impossible TV Series
Your mission, should you choose to accept it: Read these facts.
Published 5 months ago in Wow
With a new entry into Tom Cruise’s wildly successful Mission: Impossible movie series hitting theaters this past weekend, there’s no better time to take a look at the TV series that started it all.
Mission: Impossible was a spy show from 1966 that attracted a wide range of guest stars and series regulars. Operatives from the IMF would be sent on dangerous missions by a self-destructing reel-to-reel tape that would have them quelling geopolitical conflicts, dealing with crime lords, and all other types of sensitive espionage.
It spawned a revival series in 1988 and of course a series of movies that are nowadays probably the most recognized bearer of the name Mission: Impossible. But it didn’t start with Tom Cruise. Take a look at these fun facts about the realMission: Impossible.
2
Steven Hill played Dan Briggs, the leader of the IMF, in Mission: Impossible’s first season. As an Orthodox Jew, he had to be home by sundown every Friday and wasn’t available until Saturday night after that. This was built into his contract, but caused conflict with filming schedules, and Hill ended up being replaced by Peter Graves’ character Jim Phelps in Season 2.
3
Lalo Schifrin, the composer of the iconic theme song, claimed it took literal minutes to write it. In 2016 he said “I sat at my desk and wrote that theme in exactly one-and-a-half minutes. It was not inspiration; it was a need to do it. It was a little mission — impossible! The whole thing — including the chorus, the bongos, everything you hear — took me maybe three minutes.”
7
Peter Graves was unhappy about the treatment of his character in the 1996 Mission: Impossible movie. Jon Voight played a character that also went by the name of Jim Phelps and, spoiler alert, was less than a nice guy. Graves expressed his disappointment that his classic character was disrespected in this way.