
The cast, from the VCR release.
They’re Still My Favorite Martians: The Cleo Caper
Reviewed and analyzed by Jeff Baker
Back in the glorious heyday of Saturday Morning cartoons and shows for kids, there was a spate of cartoons based on live-action prime-time TV shows. “The Brady Bunch,” “Lassie,” “Star Trek” (a classic!) and “I Dream of Jeannie” (as “Jeannie,” with Mark Hamill!) were among the series that got the animation treatment, complete with laugh tracks for the comedies.
Forgotten in the mix was production company Filmation’s adaption of “My Favorite Martian.” The original had run for three seasons starting in 1963. The animated version; “My Favorite Martians,” ran for a single season on CBS in 1973-’74 and was haphazardly on the schedule during 1974-’75. Well-written and funny it was surprisingly not a hit, maybe do to competition on the other networks. In it’s original timeslot it proceeded the animated “Jeannie,” which was the top-rated daytime show on the network that season!
“My Favorite Martians” may have been re-run on some cable stations (there are plenty of You Tube videos of the show taken off what look like broadcasts more recent than 1973) and there were two VHS tape releases of two episodes each, but no DVD releases yet of its 16 episodes.
In those days 16 episodes was the norm for a Saturday Morning kid’s show. The episodes would be re-run for the rest of the season and more than likely over the next season.
But “My Favorite Martians” is worth a re-examination at least.
The set-up is simple and is recapped in the opening theme song; Uncle Martin and his teen-age nephew Andy (“Two friendly Martians,” with “special powers”) and their Martian dog Oakie-Doakie (Kids show, remember?) get stuck on Earth when their spaceship makes a crash landing. The only witnesses, reporter Tim O’Hara and his teen-age niece Katy O’Hara take them in, pass them off as family and are the only ones in on the Martian’s true identity while Martin tries to repair the spaceship and Andy enrolls in Katy’s High School.
And whatever possibly sad events caused Tim to be raising his niece are never touched upon.
The voice cast is just four actors: Jonathan Harris (as Martin), Lane Scheimer (as Andy), Jane Webb (as Katy) and Howard Morris (as Tim.) Morris and Webb also do the rest of the voices on the show. (Webb, by the way, was the first actress to play Sabrina the Teen-Age Witch voicing her and Aunt Hilda and Aunt Zelda in the original cartoon.)
And there’s a little of the feel of the earlier Sabrina/Archie cartoons (also Filmation productions) in “Martians,” except with sci-fi gimmicks and powers instead of magic, as well as many of the same sound effects.
In “The Cleo Caper,” Uncle Martin has built a time machine. Andy decides to use it to send Katy back in time to meet Cleopatra who they are studying in History class. Uncle Martin claims to have known her on one of his previous visits to Earth (“She was in love with me you know. Wanted me to rule Egypt with her.”)
Naturally, when the time machine brings Katy back it accidentally brings Cleopatra back with her.
Andy and Katy are enjoying Uncle Martin’s embarrassment about Cleo (she calls him “Snookums!”) so Andy zaps the time machine so it sends everybody to the garage. (Also where the space ship is usually hidden, by the way.)
This brings us to the episode’s big plot hole, assuming Martin doesn’t regognize Cleo in modern clothes and glasses, his mind-reading powers should blow the gaffe. Presumably his “strict code of Martian ethics,” which are referenced in several other episodes, prevents him from reading Cleo, Andy or Katy’s minds. (Presumably after this episode, he learns better!)
There are some funny sequences at a dance as well as Cleo catching the eye of snoopy Detective Brennan and Martin begins to feel that Cleopatra has a connection to all this. He uses the time machine to send himself back to Ancient Egypt, and of course he doesn’t get there. This leads to one of the funniest lines in the series: “My Martian powers of deduction tell me that I must be in Ancient Egypt. But my Martian eyes tell me that I’m in the garage.” Delivered perfectly by Jonathan Harris.
This leads to a trip to the Museum to show Cleo what she, and maybe history, are missing. A clever bit of business very much in character for Uncle Martin and both the original and animated series.
Reportedly several storylines or scripts for this series were taken from ideas (or scripts) for the unproduced fourth season of the original series. And a couple of stories from the series were re-done for “My Favorite Martians.” “The Cleo Caper” was credited to writer Ben Starr, in the episode credits. The animated series actually improves on the original which had been tampered with by the network and had fallen into the cycle of “Martian thingie happens and Tim and Martin have a time limit to undo it or people will find out Martin’s a Martian.” This was very rarely used in “My Favorite Martians,” to the betterment of the show.
Also, in the original series pilot, landlady Mrs. Brown has two adolescent daughters who vanish from the show after a few episodes. The idea was for them to be regulars and watching the animated series gives us a feel of how “a bunch of teenage Earthlings” as TV Guide’s 1973 Fall Preview issue put it, would have worked on the show. In this animated series the kids are put to the best use, giving it the feel of the Sabrina/Archie cartoons with a sci-fi twist. (More on this in a future installment.)
The comedy (despite the annoying laugh track) plays pretty well with some jokes given a sophisticated twist that belies that this was essentially a kid’s show. And the Martian gimmicks are not over-used (and we do see the famous raising antenna!)
All-in-all, a charming half-hour which holds up well some 53 years later.
Now if only that magical civilization on Mars was real.
We could sure use some help now.
—end—
Author’s note: While it lasts, here’s a link to the You Tube posting of the episode. Enjoy! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9inCaS2QODA&t=1069s







