List of ''Batman'' (TV series) episodes
The following is an episode list for the 1960s Batman television series. It also provides the main cast members, production notes and a list of notable guest stars.
Series overview
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | ||||
1 | 34 | January 12, 1966 | May 5, 1966 | ||
2 | 60 | September 7, 1966 | March 30, 1967 | ||
3 | 26 | September 14, 1967 | March 14, 1968 |
Episodes
Season 1 (1966)
Season 1 aired two episodes per week, on Wednesdays and Thursdays, and followed a single storyline per week.
No. in series | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Special Guest Villain(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 2 | 1 2 | "Hi Diddle Riddle Smack in the Middle" | Robert Butler | Lorenzo Semple Jr. | January 12, 1966 January 13, 1966 | The Riddler (Frank Gorshin) |
While the Riddler maneuvers Batman into being sued, the Dynamic Duo investigate the supervillain's concurrent scheme. | ||||||
3 4 | 3 4 | "Fine Feathered Finks The Penguin's a Jinx" | Robert Butler | Lorenzo Semple Jr. | January 19, 1966 January 20, 1966 | The Penguin (Burgess Meredith) |
The Penguin plots to manipulate Batman into inadvertently devising capers for him. | ||||||
5 6 | 5 6 | "The Joker Is Wild Batman Is Riled" | Don Weis | Robert Dozier | January 26, 1966 January 27, 1966 | The Joker (Cesar Romero) |
The Joker decides to fight fire with fire against Batman with a utility belt of his own. | ||||||
7 8 | 7 8 | "Instant Freeze Rats Like Cheese" | Robert Butler | Max Hodge | February 2, 1966 February 3, 1966 | Mr. Freeze (George Sanders) |
Dr. Shivel aka Mr. Freeze has returned and is seeking revenge on Batman, who accidentally spilled a freeze solution on him, being forced to live in a -50 climate. He is committing crimes involving diamonds, or "ice," in different forms. | ||||||
9 10 | 9 10 | "Zelda the Great A Death Worse Than Fate" | Norman Foster | Lorenzo Semple Jr. | February 9, 1966 February 10, 1966 | Zelda The Great (Anne Baxter) |
The Dynamic Duo arranges a trap for an elusive annual bank robber, but the female magician they are hunting is on to them with a new scheme of her own. | ||||||
11 12 | 11 12 | "A Riddle a Day Keeps the Riddler Away When the Rat's Away, the Mice Will Play" | Tom Gries | Fred De Gorter | February 16, 1966 February 17, 1966 | The Riddler (Frank Gorshin) |
When a visiting King is accosted by the Riddler, the Dynamic Duo pursues his subsequent complex trail of riddles to try to stop him. | ||||||
13 14 | 13 14 | "The Thirteenth Hat Batman Stands Pat" | Norman Foster | Charles Hoffman | February 23, 1966 February 24, 1966 | The Mad Hatter (David Wayne) |
Jervis Tetsch, aka the Mad Hatter, is abducting all the jurors who convicted him of a previous crime wave. He is also taking their hats. His final target is none other than Batman, who provided the key testimony in the Mad Hatter's trial | ||||||
15 16 | 15 16 | "The Joker Goes to School He Meets His Match, the Grisly Ghoul" | Murray Golden | Lorenzo Semple Jr. | March 2, 1966 March 3, 1966 | The Joker (Cesar Romero) |
The Joker strikes at the high school level when his rigged vending machines gives out stocks, bonds, and silver dollars. It's all part of his sinister scheme to blackmail the school basketball team. | ||||||
17 18 | 17 18 | "True or False-Face Holy Rat Race" | William A. Graham | Stephen Kandel | March 9, 1966 March 10, 1966 | False Face (Malachi Throne, billed only as "?" until the end of part 2) |
False Face is on the loose in Gotham City and launches a barrage of tricky true-or-false crimes including replacing a bank's real money with counterfeits. | ||||||
19 20 | 19 20 | "The Purr-fect Crime Better Luck Next Time" | James Sheldon | Stanley Ralph Ross & Lee Orgel | March 16, 1966 March 17, 1966 | Catwoman (Julie Newmar) |
Catwoman steals some priceless art but the importance of the crimes go beyond the taking of the objects involved. | ||||||
21 22 | 21 22 | "The Penguin Goes Straight Not Yet, He Ain't" | Leslie H. Martinson | Lorenzo Semple Jr. & John Cardwell | March 23, 1966 March 24, 1966 | The Penguin (Burgess Meredith) |
The Penguin goes straight, thwarting crimes across Gotham City and offering his services as a security expert. Batman doesn't believe it and sets out to prove the Penguin guilty of a crime, but The Dynamic Duo ended up framed for jewel theft. | ||||||
23 24 | 23 24 | "The Ring of Wax Give 'Em the Axe" | James B. Clark | Jack Paritz & Bob Rodgers | March 30, 1966 March 31, 1966 | The Riddler (Frank Gorshin) |
The Riddler's latest scheme involves stealing a wax figure to melt down for its wax that is powerfully corrosive when exposed to direct flame. He wants to open a vault of rare books to find the key to an ancient treasure. | ||||||
25 26 | 25 26 | "The Joker Trumps an Ace Batman Sets the Pace" | Richard C. Sarafian | Francis M. Cockrell & Marian B. Cockrell | April 6, 1966 April 7, 1966 | The Joker (Cesar Romero) |
A wave of senseless robberies by the Joker prove to be part of a plot against a visiting maharajah. | ||||||
27 28 | 27 28 | "The Curse of Tut The Pharaoh's in a Rut" | Charles R. Rondeau | Robert C. Dennis & Earl Barret | April 13, 1966 April 14, 1966 | King Tut (Victor Buono) |
A new villain called King Tut, a former academic who thinks he is really King Tut, prepares to claim Gotham City as his new Thebes. | ||||||
29 30 | 29 30 | "The Bookworm Turns While Gotham City Burns" | Larry Peerce | Hendrik Vollaerts | April 20, 1966 April 21, 1966 | The Bookworm (Roddy McDowall) |
When Commission Gordon's death is faked by the Bookworm, the Dynamic Duo must track down the literate criminal to find out what he is up to. | ||||||
31 32 | 31 32 | "Death in Slow Motion The Riddler's False Notion" | Charles R. Rondeau | Richard Carr | April 27, 1966 April 28, 1966 | The Riddler (Frank Gorshin) |
The Riddler is back, and is pursuing a silent movie theme with his latest scheme. As the Dynamic Duo pursue the Riddler, they discover the true purpose behind his cinematic theme and his ultimate target. | ||||||
33 34 | 33 34 | "Fine Finny Fiends Batman Makes the Scenes" | Tom Gries | Sheldon Stark | May 4, 1966 May 5, 1966 | The Penguin (Burgess Meredith) |
The Penguin has returned and has a dastardly plan involving Alfred, whom the Penguin captures and brainwashes to be his unwitting pawn for his plan against a wealthy social event. |
The Movie (1966)
A couple of months after Season 1 finished airing, a cinematic feature film of Batman premiered in the cinemas on Saturday July 30, 1966, featuring four of the most prominent villains, and new Bat Gadgets that were enabled by the bigger budget of the film. Julie Newmar, who had played The Catwoman in Season 1, was unavailable to act in the film due to a back injury, and was replaced in the role of the Catwoman by Lee Meriwether.
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Villains |
---|---|---|---|---|
Batman: The Movie | Leslie H. Martinson | Lorenzo Semple Jr. | July 30, 1966 | The Joker (Cesar Romero) The Penguin (Burgess Meredith) The Riddler (Frank Gorshin) Catwoman (Lee Meriwether) |
Season 2 (1966–67)
Season 2 aired two episodes per week, on Wednesdays and Thursdays. The two episodes in a given week were a single storyline in 26 of the 30 weeks that made up Season 2. The four weeks that were the exception to this were during weeks 19-22 of the season, with three storylines that each crossed over into the following week; a three-parter, followed by a two-parter, followed by another three-parter.
Despite being the most prominent villain during Season 1, Frank Gorshin was completely absent as The Riddler during Season 2, as Gorshin was holding out for a salary increase for continuing on in the role, which the studio refused to comply with. As a result, a storyline in Season 2 that was originally intended for the Riddler was instead given to a character called The Puzzler, while another storyline later on in Season 2 saw John Astin replace Gorshin in the role of the Riddler.
After her absence in the 1966 film, Julie Newmar returned to the role of The Catwoman in Season 2, becoming the most prominent villain during the season. And although Barbara Gordon / Batgirl would not be depicted until Season 3, Barbara is discussed in the late Season 2 episodes "Batman's Waterloo" and "The Duo Defy", foreshadowing her debut months later.
Mr. Freeze was portrayed by George Sanders in Season 1, but Sanders was unavailable to reprise the role. As a result, Otto Preminger was cast to portray Mr. Freeze in Season 2, where Mr. Freeze was going to appear in 4 episodes. Due to tensions and difficulties on set in Preminger's two-part storyline, Eli Wallach replaced Preminger in the role of Mr. Freeze for the final two-part storyline of Season 2.
No. in series | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Special Guest Villain(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
35 36 | 1 2 | "Shoot a Crooked Arrow Walk the Straight and Narrow" | Sherman Marks | Stanley Ralph Ross | September 7, 1966 September 8, 1966 | The Archer (Art Carney) |
37 38 | 3 4 | "Hot Off the Griddle The Cat and the Fiddle" | Don Weis | Stanley Ralph Ross | September 15, 1966 September 16, 1966 | Catwoman (Julie Newmar) |
39 40 | 5 6 | "The Minstrel's Shakedown Barbecued Batman?" | Murray Golden | Francis M. Cockrell & Marian B. Cockrell | September 21, 1966 September 22, 1966 | The Minstrel (Van Johnson) |
41 42 | 7 8 | "The Spell of Tut Tut's Case is Shut" | Larry Peerce | Robert C. Dennis & Earl Barret | September 28, 1966 September 29, 1966 | King Tut (Victor Buono) |
43 44 | 9 10 | "The Greatest Mother of Them All Ma Parker" | Oscar Rudolph | Henry Slesar | October 5, 1966 October 6, 1966 | Ma Parker (Shelley Winters) Catwoman (Julie Newmar) (cameo in part 2) |
45 46 | 11 12 | "The Clock King's Crazy Crimes The Clock King Gets Crowned" | James Neilson | Bill Finger & Charles Sinclair | October 12, 1966 October 13, 1966 | The Clock King (Walter Slezak) |
47 48 | 13 14 | "An Egg Grows in Gotham The Yegg Foes in Gotham" | George Waggner | Story by : Edwin Self Teleplay by : Stanley Ralph Ross | October 19, 1966 October 20, 1966 | Egghead (Vincent Price) |
49 50 | 15 16 | "The Devil's Fingers The Dead Ringers" | Larry Peerce | Lorenzo Semple Jr. | October 26, 1966 October 27, 1966 | Chandell/Harry (Liberace) |
51 52 | 17 18 | "Hizzonner the Penguin Dizzoner the Penguin" | Oscar Rudolph | Stanford Sherman | November 2, 1966 November 3, 1966 | The Penguin (Burgess Meredith) |
53 54 | 19 20 | "Green Ice Deep Freeze" | George Waggner | Max Hodge | November 9, 1966 November 10, 1966 | Mr. Freeze (Otto Preminger) |
55 56 | 21 22 | "The Impractical Joker The Joker's Provokers" | James B. Clark | Jay Thompson & Charles Hoffman | November 16, 1966 November 17, 1966 | The Joker (Cesar Romero) |
57 58 | 23 24 | "Marsha, Queen of Diamonds Marsha's Scheme of Diamonds" | James B. Clark | Stanford Sherman | November 23, 1966 November 24, 1966 | Marsha, Queen of Diamonds (Carolyn Jones) |
59 60 | 25 26 | "Come Back, Shame It's How You Play the Game" | Oscar Rudolph | Stanley Ralph Ross | November 30, 1966 December 1, 1966 | Shame (Cliff Robertson) |
61 62 | 27 28 | "The Penguin's Nest The Bird's Last Jest" | Murray Golden | Lorenzo Semple Jr. | December 7, 1966 December 8, 1966 | The Penguin (Burgess Meredith) |
63 64 | 29 30 | "The Cat's Meow The Bat's Kow Tow" | James B. Clark | Stanley Ralph Ross | December 14, 1966 December 15, 1966 | Catwoman (Julie Newmar) |
65 66 | 31 32 | "The Puzzles Are Coming The Duo is Slumming" | Jeffrey Hayden | Fred De Gorter | December 21, 1966 December 22, 1966 | The Puzzler (Maurice Evans) |
67 68 | 33 34 | "The Sandman Cometh The Catwoman Goeth" | George Waggner | Story by : Ellis St. Joseph Teleplay by : Ellis St. Joseph & Charles Hoffman | December 28, 1966 December 29, 1966 | The Sandman (Michael Rennie) & Catwoman (Julie Newmar) |
69 70 | 35 36 | "The Contaminated Cowl The Mad Hatter Runs Afoul" | Oscar Rudolph | Charles Hoffman | January 4, 1967 January 5, 1967 | The Mad Hatter (David Wayne) |
71 72 73 | 37 38 39 | "The Zodiac Crimes The Joker's Hard Times The Penguin Declines" | Oscar Rudolph | Story by : Stephen Kandel Teleplay by : Stephen Kandel & Stanford Sherman | January 11, 1967 January 12, 1967 January 18, 1967 | The Joker (Cesar Romero) & The Penguin (Burgess Meredith) (parts 1 and 3 only) |
74 75 | 40 41 | "That Darn Catwoman Scat! Darn Catwoman" | Oscar Rudolph | Stanley Ralph Ross | January 19, 1967 January 25, 1967 | Catwoman (Julie Newmar) |
76 77 78 | 42 43 44 | "Penguin Is a Girl's Best Friend Penguin Sets a Trend Penguin's Disastrous End" | James B. Clark | Stanford Sherman | January 26, 1967 February 1, 1967 February 2, 1967 | The Penguin (Burgess Meredith) & Marsha, Queen of Diamonds (Carolyn Jones) |
79 80 | 45 46 | "Batman's Anniversary A Riddling Controversy" | James B. Clark | William P. D'Angelo | February 8, 1967 February 9, 1967 | The Riddler (John Astin) |
81 82 | 47 48 | "The Joker's Last Laugh The Joker's Epitaph" | Oscar Rudolph | Lorenzo Semple Jr. | February 15, 1967 February 16, 1967 | The Joker (Cesar Romero) |
83 84 | 49 50 | "Catwoman Goes to College Batman Displays His Knowledge" | Oscar Rudolph | Story by : Peter Rabe Teleplay by : Lorenzo Semple Jr. | February 22, 1967 February 23, 1967 | Catwoman (Julie Newmar) |
85 86 | 51 52 | "A Piece of the Action Batman's Satisfaction[nb 1]" | Oscar Rudolph | Charles Hoffman | March 1, 1967 March 2, 1967 | Colonel Gumm (Roger C. Carmel) |
87 88 | 53 54 | "King Tut's Coup Batman's Waterloo" | James B. Clark | Story by : Leo Townsend & Pauline Townsend Teleplay by : Stanley Ralph Ross | March 8, 1967 March 9, 1967 | King Tut (Victor Buono) |
89 90 | 55 56 | "Black Widow Strikes Again Caught in the Spider's Den" | Oscar Rudolph | Robert Mintz | March 15, 1967 March 16, 1967 | The Black Widow (Tallulah Bankhead) |
91 92 | 57 58 | "Pop Goes the Joker Flop Goes the Joker" | George Waggner | Stanford Sherman | March 22, 1967 March 23, 1967 | The Joker (Cesar Romero) |
93 94 | 59 60 | "Ice Spy The Duo Defy" | Oscar Rudolph | Charles Hoffman | March 29, 1967 March 30, 1967 | Mr. Freeze (Eli Wallach) |
Season 3 (1967–68)
In Season 3, the format of the storylines were somewhat at variance with previous seasons. Season 3 aired just one episode per week, on Thursdays, and true multi-part stories were the exception rather than the norm. At the conclusion of each story, the guest villains of the next story would usually make an uncredited appearance in the final scene. For example, Egghead is seen riding into town, literally, at the end of "Louie the Lilac". A notable "spin" on this idea were the "linked" episodes "Ring Around the Riddler" and "The Wail of the Siren". In "Ring Around the Riddler", the Siren has an "introductory" scene assisting the Riddler in his criminal caper and briefly mentioning having her own plans for Commissioner Gordon. Batman subsequently defeats the Riddler, and the Siren returns in the tag to start her own caper, which is the basis of "The Wail of the Siren", really a separate story altogether.
Major cast changes during Season 3 included Yvonne Craig joining as Batgirl, Frank Gorshin returning as The Riddler as a one-episode storyline meant that Gorshin's salary demands could now be met, and Eartha Kitt replacing Julie Newmar as The Catwoman, as Newmar was working on the film Mackenna's Gold. Curiously, an unidentified body double in the penultimate episode "The Entrancing Dr. Cassandra" returned the Catwoman to being Caucasian. Meanwhile, ill-health reduced Madge Blake's role as Aunt Harriet Cooper to just a couple of cameo appearances during Season 3.
Episode | Title | Airdate | Villain(s) | Actor(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
95 | Enter Batgirl, Exit Penguin | September 14, 1967 | The Penguin | Burgess Meredith |
96 | Ring Around the Riddler | September 21, 1967 | The Riddler The Siren |
Frank Gorshin Joan Collins (not billed as Special Guest Villainess) |
97 | The Wail of the Siren | September 28, 1967 | The Siren | Joan Collins |
98 99 |
The Sport of Penguins A Horse of Another Color |
October 5, 1967 October 12, 1967 |
The Penguin Lola Lasagne |
Burgess Meredith Ethel Merman |
100 | The Unkindest Tut of All | October 19, 1967 | King Tut | Victor Buono |
101 | Louie the Lilac | October 26, 1967 | Louie the Lilac | Milton Berle |
102 103 |
The Ogg and I How to Hatch a Dinosaur |
November 2, 1967 November 9, 1967 |
Egghead Olga, Queen of the Cossacks |
Vincent Price Anne Baxter |
104 | Surf's Up! Joker's Under! | November 16, 1967 | The Joker | Cesar Romero |
105 106 107 |
The Londinium Larcenies The Foggiest Notion The Bloody Tower |
November 23, 1967 November 30, 1967 December 7, 1967 |
Lord Marmaduke Ffogg Lady Penelope Peasoup |
Rudy Vallée Glynis Johns |
108 | Catwoman's Dressed to Kill | December 14, 1967 | The Catwoman | Eartha Kitt |
109 | The Ogg Couple | December 21, 1967 | Egghead Olga, Queen of the Cossacks |
Vincent Price Anne Baxter |
110 111 |
The Funny Feline Felonies The Joke's on Catwoman |
December 28, 1967 January 4, 1968 |
The Joker The Catwoman |
Cesar Romero Eartha Kitt |
112 | Louie's Lethal Lilac Time | January 11, 1968 | Louie the Lilac | Milton Berle |
113 | Nora Clavicle and the Ladies' Crime Club | January 18, 1968 | Nora Clavicle | Barbara Rush |
114 | Penguin's Clean Sweep | January 25, 1968 | The Penguin | Burgess Meredith |
115 116 |
The Great Escape The Great Train Robbery |
February 1, 1968 February 8, 1968 |
Shame Calamity Jan |
Cliff Robertson Dina Merrill |
117 | I'll Be a Mummy's Uncle | February 22, 1968 | King Tut | Victor Buono |
118 | The Joker's Flying Saucer | February 29, 1968 | The Joker | Cesar Romero |
119 | The Entrancing Dr. Cassandra | March 7, 1968 | Dr. Cassandra Spellcraft Cabala (cameos by Catwoman, Egghead, King Tut, Joker, Penguin and Riddler) |
Ida Lupino Howard Duff (all cameos played by stand-ins) |
120 | Minerva, Mayhem and Millionaires | March 14, 1968 | Minerva | Zsa Zsa Gabor |
Main Cast
- Adam West as Batman / Bruce Wayne
- Burt Ward as Robin / Dick Grayson
- Yvonne Craig as Batgirl / Barbara Gordon (Season 3 only)
- Alan Napier as Alfred Pennyworth
- Neil Hamilton as Commissioner James Gordon
- Stafford Repp as Chief Miles O'Hara
- Madge Blake as Aunt Harriet Cooper (Regular in Seasons 1–2, cameo appearances in Season 3, episodes "Ring Around The Riddler" and "The Bloody Tower")
Production credits
Season 1
- Executive Producer/Narrator: William Dozier
- A Greenway Production in association with Twentieth Century-Fox Television
- Produced by Howie Horwitz
- Executive Script Consultant: Lorenzo Semple, Jr.
- Assistant to the Producer (episode 1 only): Charles B. Fitzsimons
- Associate Producer: Wm. P. D'Angelo
- Music: Nelson Riddle
- Music Supervision: Lionel Newman
- Batman Theme: Neal Hefti
- Directors of Photography: Ralph Woolsey (ASC), Jack Marta, Howard Schwartz (ASC), Sam Levitt (ASC)
- Art Directors: Jack Martin Smith, Ed Graves, Franz Bachelin, Serge Krizman, Jack Collis
- Production Supervisor: Jack Sonntag
- Unit Production Manager: Sam Strangis
- Post-Production Manager: James Blakely (ACE)
- Film Editors: Homer Powell, Leon Selditz, Hugh Chaloupka (ACE), Byron Chudnow (ACE), J. Frank O' Neill (ACE), Ronald Fagan
- Assistant Directors: Jack Barry, Bill Derwin, Mark Sandrich, Norman August
- Post-Production Coordinator: Robert Mintz
- Set Decorators: Walter M. Scott, Chester Bayhi, Warren Welch
- Supervising Music Editor: Leonard A. Engel
- Music Editor: Sam Horta
- Supervising Sound Effects Editor: Ralph B. Hickey
- Sound Effects Editor: Harold Wooley
- Make-up Supervision: Ben Nye
- Hair Styling Supervision: Margaret Donovan
- Based Upon the Characters Created by Bob Kane Appearing in Batman and Detective Comics Magazines Published by National Periodical Publications, Inc.
- Color by DeLuxe
- William Self In Charge of Production for Twentieth Century-Fox Television, Inc.
Season 2
- Executive Producer/Narrator: William Dozier
- A Greenway Production in association with Twentieth Century-Fox Television
- Associate Producer: Devon Allen
- Assistant to the Executive Producers: Charles B. Fitzsimons
- Script Consultant: Lorenzo Semple Jr.
- Music: Nelson Riddle, Warren Barker
- Music Supervision: Lionel Newman
- Batman Theme: Neal Hefti
- Production Supervisor: Jack Sonntag
- Unit Production Manager: Sam Strangis
- Assistant Directors: David Whorf, Bill Derwin, Robert G. Stone
- Directors of Photography: Meredith M. Nicholson (ASC), Howard Schwartz (ASC)
- Art Directors: Jack Martin Smith, Serge Krizman, Russell Menzer
- Film Editors: Bill Murphy, Frank O' Neill (ACE), Ron Fagan, Hugh Chaloupka (ACE), Homer Powell, Newell Kimlin (ACE)
- Post-Production Supervisor: James Blakely (ACE)
- Post-Production Coordinator: Robert Mintz
- Set Decorators: Walter M. Scott, Chester Bayhi, Joseph Reith, Bert F. Allen
- Supervising Music Editor: Leonard A. Engel
- Music Editor: Sam Horta
- Supervising Sound Effects Editor: Ralph B. Hickey
- Sound Effects Editor: Harold Wooley
- Men's Wardrobe Furnished by Andrew Pallack
- Make-up Supervision: Ben Nye
- Hair Styling Supervision: Margaret Donovan
- Based Upon the Characters Created by Bob Kane Appearing in Batman and Detective Comics Magazines Published by National Periodical Publications, Inc.
- Color by DeLuxe
- William Self In Charge of Production for Twentieth Century-Fox Television, Inc.
Season 3
- Executive Producer/Narrator: William Dozier
- A Greenway Production in association with Twentieth Century-Fox Television
- Associate Producer: William P. D'Angelo
- Script Consultant: Lorenzo Semple Jr.
- Script Editor: Charles Hoffman
- Assistant to the Executive Producers: Charles B. Fitzsimons
- Music: Billy May
- Music Supervision: Lionel Newman
- Batman Theme: Neal Hefti
- Batgirl Theme: Music by Billy May, Lyrics by Willy Mack
- Production Supervisor: Jack Sonntag
- Unit Production Manager: Sam Strangis
- Assistant Directors: Maxwell O. Henry, Steven Bernhardt, Mark Sandrich, David Whorf
- Directors of Photography: Howard Schwartz (ASC), Charles Straumer (ASC)
- Art Directors: Jack Martin Smith, Serge Krizman, Frank T. Smith
- Film Editors: James Blakely (ACE), Robert Phillips, Homer Powell, Hugh Chaloupka (ACE)
- Post-Production Coordinator: Robert Mintz
- Supervising Music Editor: Leonard A. Engel
- Music Editor: Sam Horta
- Sound Effects Editor: Richard LeGrand, Dan Finnerty
- Men's Wardrobe Furnished by Andrew Pallack
- Set Decorators: Walter M. Scott, Chester Bayhi, Robert deVestel
- Special Photographic Effects by L. B. Abbott (ASC)
- Based Upon the Characters Created by Bob Kane Appearing in Batman and Detective Comics Magazines Published by National Periodical Publications, Inc.
- Color by DeLuxe
- William Self In Charge of Production for Twentieth Century-Fox Television, Inc.
See also
Notes
- ↑ The billed special guest star of this story is not Roger C. Carmel (Colonel Gumm) as "Special Guest Villain", but rather Van Williams (The Green Hornet) as "Visiting Hero" and Bruce Lee (Kato) as "Assistant Visiting Hero", in a crossover from their own series. The Green Hornet and Kato are suspected by the Dynamic Duo and Gotham police as being criminals, rather than crime fighters.
External links
- List of Batman episodes on IMDb