
Robert Vaughn, right, with Richardo Montalban in the first-season Man From U.N.C.L.E. episode, The Dove Affair
July 8 is the 50th anniversary of when Robert Vaughn, the star of The Man From U.N.C.L.E., debated William F. Buckley Jr. about the Vietnam war on the program Firing Line.
Buckley, the founder and publisher of National Review, took on debate partners over more than 30 years on Firing Line.
Firing Line’s format was polite but intense. In 1967, the Vietnam War was raging and it was an intense time.
Vaughn was one of the most prominent actors who opposed the war.
Vaughn, decades later, in an interview for the Archive of American Television, described his preparation for the debate.
The actor said he “spent a month in a monastery reading everything Buckley had ever written in his life, including term papers at Yale. So I walked in as the young challenger against the old champ.”
The Firing Line taping occurred during a day off during filming of the fourth-season U.N.C.L.E. episode The Thrush Roulette Affair (July 5-7 and 10-12, according to Jon Heitland’s The Man From U.N.C.L.E. book).
The Hoover Institution, a conservative think thank has posted the Buckley Vaughn encounter. It lasts more than 48 minutes. It’s considerably more polite than a debate, a year later, between Buckley and author Gore Vidal on ABC.
You can view the Buckley-Vaughn video below. There’s a judge, C. Dickerman Williams.
At the end, Williams says, “We’ve had a conflict between a hawk and a dove…Whose feathers were the more ruffled? The hawk’s or the dove’s? I must leave that to you to decide, As chairman, I can’t make a decision myself, I regret to say.”
(Corrected to remove reference to PBS. Firing Line wasn’t shown on PBS until the early 1970s.)
Filed under: The Other Spies | Tagged: Firing LIne, Robert Vaughn, The Man From U.N.C.L.E, Vietnam War, William F. Buckley Jr. | 8 Comments »