When Airlines Were On Top of the World
Published by Julia Volkovah under airlines, aviation history on 8:00 PMSony Pictures Television / Patrick Harbron |
Still, if handsome Capt. Dean Lowrey looks too young to be in command of a plane full of 1960s-era travelers, think again. Think in fact, of Capt. Robert Evans.
Pan Am Capt. Robert Evans (L) and actor Mike Vogel who plays Capt. Dean Lowrey |
Capt. Evans flew a S-42 like this one when he joined Pan Am |
Photo courtesy Pan Am Historical Association |
It's no wonder Evans took time from traveling the world to jot down his stories. In a chapter of his book called Unusual Earthly Sights, he describes the sun rising in the west over Scandinavia, a view of Victoria Falls while diverting to avoid weather, experiencing the Aurora Borealis north of Labrador and encountering static electricity known as St. Elmo's fire, that made his airplane glow.
"The bright fiery glow enveloped props, wings and fuselage. A blue ball of static developed in the cabin - rolling down the aisle - and discharging off the tail. Flight service reported a lot of wide-eyed passengers." I'll bet!
So today, as I sat at the Brooklyn film studio where episodes of Pan Am are being shot, talking to the actor Mike Vogel who plays the Pan Am Sky God Dean Lowrey on the weekly program, I reminded myself that Capt. Evans probably looked a lot like him.
Vogel described a childhood growing up by Pennsylvania's Willow Grove Naval Air Station, spending so much time watching the airplanes take off and land that he learned to distinguish a P-3 from an A-4 by the sound of their engines. Aviation was a first love that never died, he told me, which explains why Vogel flies a 707 on TV while working on his PPL in real life.
Photo courtesy Pan Am Historical Association |
In the sixties, heck, through the eighties, stewardesses on Pan Am didn't just serve pretty food, they cooked it too. Sherry says her years at the airline were the best time of her life.
Najeeb Halaby pins wings on Candice Adams Kimmel |
With two months experience she was flying to Rome, hanging out with other stewardesses who were "doing everything but saying 'sombody pinch me'" she recalled when I spoke with her earlier this month. They all thought they were dreaming. It just didn't get any better than this.
But it wasn't all carefree excitement for Candice. In 1971 she was on a flight that was hijacked to Cuba. That's her with co-workers talking about the four-day event on CBS News.
Scary? I think so. Especially in the post September 11th world. But consider this, between 1968 and 1972 there were more than seventy - that's 70 - airplane hijackings. So if there's an episode of Pam Am the TV show which includes that in the plot, don't be surprised, that's all I'm sayin'.
Sony Pictures Television / Patrick Harbron |
So don't quibble about the small stuff. We've got an opportunity to take a trip to a time when aviation was big. Very big - and on top of the world.
Photos courtesy Pan Am Historical Association See my other post on this subject at GO HOW KNOW HOW |