One in a series about unsung figures of television.
Writer-producer Allan Balter (1925-1981) died before his time because his physical heart wasn’t up to the task of powering his talent.
Balter co-wrote (with Robert Mintz) one of the most memorable episodes of the original Outer Limits series, The Hundred Days of the Dragon. An Asian nation hostile to the United States assassinates a candidate for president and substitutes its own double. The story mixed science fiction with espionage.
He also co-wrote (with William Read Woodfield) some of the best episodes of Mission: Impossible. That partnership would last for years, beginning during the first season of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (where Balter was associate producer) and extending to the early 1970s with the television version of Shaft.
The Woodfield-Balter duo made an impact early in the first season of M:I and were brought on full-time with the title of script consultants. That continued into the show’s second season. When Barbara Bain won her second Emmy for playing M:I’s Cinnamon Carter, she mentioned the scribes in her acceptance speech.
Woodfield and Balter were elevated to producers with the show’s third season after Joseph Gantman departed the series.
It would not be a happy time. The new producers clashed with Bruce Geller, M:I’s creator and executive producer.
Woodfield told Patrick White, author of The Complete Mission: Impossible Dossier that Geller went after Balter hard.
“He’d know which acts were Balter’s because they’d come in on different paper from different typewriters,” Woodfield told White.
“He’d go to Balter and say, ‘What are these words? I don’t understand these words.’ Balter would say, ‘Well, I understand them, Bruce.’ Balter was a nebbisher guy with a very weak heart which ultimately killed him.”
After Balter’s partnership with Woodfield ended, he worked as a producer at Universal’s television operation, including serving as executive producer of some episodes of The Six Million Dollar Man and a pair Captain America TV movies.
In 1978, he married Lana Wood, who played Plenty O’Toole in Diamonds Are Forever. Balter died in September 1981 at the age of 56.
Filed under: James Bond Films, The Other Spies | Tagged: Allan Balter, Bruce Geller, Lana Wood, Mission: Impossible, Shaft, The Six Million Dollar Man, unsung figures of television, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, William Read Woodfield |
Maybe Plenty O’Toole was actually too much woman for Allan!
[…] Mintz was a writing partner of Allan Balter. The duo wrote an episode of The Outler Limits titled The Hundred Days of the Dragon, which mixed […]
[…] was very good at writing his screenplays, partnership on Mission Impossible made a massive impact and made […]