Everything about Al Hodge totally explained
For "Big" Al Hodge, the Cornish rock musician, see Al Hodge (rock musician).
Albert Hodge (
April 18,
1912 -
March 19,
1979) was an
American actor best known for playing the
DuMont Television Network's famous space adventurer
Captain Video from
December 15,
1950 to
April 1,
1955. He also portrayed the
Green Hornet on radio from that series' beginnings in January
1936 until January
1943.
Hodge grew up at 326 N. Freedom Street in
Ravenna, Ohio; his parents A. E. and Jessie Hodge operated a tailoring and dry-cleaning business upstairs at 210 W. Main Street.
Al made a name for himself in both athletics and acting at Ravenna High School; nicknamed "Abie", he was a track star, drum major and manager of the band, a bass in the boys glee club and even a cheerleader. He graduated from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio in
1934, having focused mainly on drama. After touring with the Casford Players, a troupe of actors, he accepted a job at
WXYZ in Detroit, in 1935. In addition to playing
Britt Reid, the Green Hornet, he also wrote and delivered daily editorials, narrated football games, wrote ad copy, worked as an early disc jockey, and produced radio dramas and documentaries including
The Lone Ranger and
Challenge of the Yukon. During the last days of World War II he served in the Navy, winding up bedridden for a year with
pleurisy.
In the late 1940s he found work in New York City in a variety of radio and early TV roles, before taking the role of
Captain Video from
Richard Coogan who wanted to leave the series in order to concentrate on his
Broadway career. After the collapse of the
DuMont Network in the spring of 1955, Hodge continued in the role of Captain Video on the children's show "Wonderama" and as the host of "Captain Video's Cartoons" from 1955 to 1959, but those series were seen only in the New York City area. His last such appearance was as himself in a short-lived 1961 local series,
Al Hodge's Space Explorers.
Hodge moved to California where he guest-starred on
Alfred Hitchcock Presents,
Mannix,
M Squad,
Tightrope,
Hawaiian Eye,
Coronado 9 and other similar drama/detective series, but he was soon back in New York City, working during the late 1960s and early 1970s at increasingly low-paying jobs, eventually as a security guard. In his later years, Hodge lived for a short while in the home of famous radio producer William Spear who produced many popular shows of the 40s, 50s and 60s, including the Green Hornet.
He largely dropped from sight after
1975. For the next four years he lived in a small room in a cheap hotel, a room crammed with collectible items from his career as
Captain Video. He died there, alone, in
1979. As late as
1978, Hodge told reporters that he was almost always recognized on the street, and greeted by name, as "Captain Video."
Very little is known of Hodge's private life. He was married three times, and it's sometimes erroneously stated that he produced three children--- two from his first marriage, and one from his second. In fact, he fathered only one (female) child during his first marriage, and the two children (boy and girl) he was frequently photographed with in the early 1950s were offspring of a previous marriage of his second wife. He and his third wife, Virginia, a former showgirl, are buried side-by-side at
Kensico Cemetery in
Westchester County,
New York.
Trivia
- The first filmed episode of The Honeymooners ("TV or Not TV?", April 1, 1955) has Ed Norton and Ralph Kramden watching a fictionalized "Captain Video" episode on their new mutually-owned television set (which is turned away from the "Honeymooners" audience; only the rear of the set is seen, with the voice of George Petrie heard as Captain Video and Frank Marth as the "Captain Video" announcer).
Footnotes
External links and references:
The Green Hornet
Roaring Rockets- Al Hodge before and after Captain Video
Space Hero Files: Captain Video
David Weinstein. The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television. Temple University Press, 2004
Glut, Don and Jim Harmon. The Great Television Heroes. New York: Doubleday, 1975. ISBN 0-385-05167-0. Chapters 1 and 5.
Roaring Rockets: Captain Video
ATOMX13 Captain Video Pages
Captain Video Fans
Who Killed Captain Video? How the FCC strangled a TV pioneer.
Glenn Garvin, Reason, March 2005.
imdb Entry on Captain Video
"Captain Video, Television's First Fantastic Voyage," by David Weinstein, Journal of Popular Film and Television, Fall 2002
Captain Video Memories!
A 1958 Time magazine article on Al Hodge's problems in finding new acting roles
Further Information
Get more info on 'Al Hodge'.
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