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He is an unsung hero from The Original Series. Associate producer Bob Justman was a key figure in keeping the production side of Star Trek functioning on time ...and on budget.

He came to Star Trek in 1965 and started at the beginning, working on the first pilot, The Cage. Justman stayed until 1968, working on 14 of the 24 shows in the third season.

Like Gene Coon, Bob Justman had a real impact on the show while he was there. He was a major player in getting Star Trek off the ground and functioning as a production.

On this episode of 70s Trek, co-hosts Bob Turner and Kelly Casto tell you about Associate Producer Bob Justman.

Show Notes

         Robert "Bob" Harris Justman was born July 13, 1926 in Brooklyn

         ⁃        As a boy he really liked Science Fiction

         ⁃        His father Joseph Justman was in the produce business. He and his partners did very well.

         ⁃        In 1944, Bob signed up for the draft. He didn’t get drafted so he went to the draft board and asked why he wasn’t drafted. They said he wasn’t needed. He told them he wanted to go so they sent him the PE building in LA for a physical. He failed due to his eye sight. He protested so they sent him to Ft MacArthur to get a real physical and made it.

         ⁃        While Bob was in the Navy during WW II his father, Joseph, founded the Motion Picture Center studio

         ⁃        He rented it to Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz and in 1950 they bought. The studio became part of Desilu Studios.

         ⁃        When Bob returned from the navy he worked at the produce firm. He didn’t get paid very well so when his dad asked him to come to LA to work in the motion picture business he decided to leave the produce firm and go to LA.

         ⁃        He hung around the studio for a time until his money ran out. He then went to one of the producers and asked for a job. This landed him his first job working on the film “Three Husbands” as a production assistant

Justman had quite a career in film and TV as a Production Assistant and Assistant director prior to TOS

         ⁃        Production assistant on such films as

         ⁃        1951's

         ⁃        The Scarf (featuring Celia Lovsky),

         ⁃        New Mexico (featuring Jeff Corey and John Hoyt)

         ⁃        M (featuring Norman Lloyd and William Schallert)

         ⁃        He Ran All the Way (also with Norman Lloyd),

         ⁃        1952's

         ⁃        Japanese War Bride (with George D. Wallace),

         ⁃        Red Planet Mars

         ⁃        Abbott and Costello Meet Captain Kidd (with Leonard Mudie)

         ⁃        1953's

         ⁃        The Moon Is Blue - made in 2 version an english version and a german version

         ⁃        The Moonlighter.

         ⁃        Assistant Director and producer

         ⁃        To be an assistant director you had to be in the Director’s Guild. At the time, to get in the Guild you had to be either the son of a member or be nominated by a studio which was only allowed one nomination a year. He didn’t have either but he requested to be accepted anyway. After waiting an agonizing 30 minutes for an answer the president of the Assistant Directors Counsel, Bob Aldrich, went to him, shook his hand and said, “Welcome brother”

         ⁃        everyone starts as a 2nd assistant director. It only took Justman about a year to become 1st assistant director which was unheard of

         ⁃        After Superman Justman was approached to be 1st assistant director on a series of 3 films called “The Americans” which never saw the light of day

         ⁃        As an assistant director, Justman worked with director Bob Aldrich on several projects.

         ⁃        They first worked together on the 1952-53 NBC series The Doctor, - This was his first AD job

         ⁃        after which they collaborated on such films as Kiss Me Deadly (1955) and

         ⁃        Attack (1956, featuring William Smithers).

         ⁃        Justman's other films where he was assistant director included;

         ⁃        The Big Combo (1955, featuring John Hoyt and Whit Bissell),

         ⁃        Blood Alley (1955, starring Paul Fix),

         ⁃        While the City Sleeps (1956, with Celia Lovsky)

         ⁃        Director - Fritz Lang

         ⁃        Noticed Justman looking at his set plans and Lang spent time to explain the plans to him even though Justman was the 2nd AD

         ⁃        This was technics that Justman used in the future

         ⁃        Lang had issues with John Drew Barrymore

         ⁃        Barrymore looked to his wife for direction instead of Lang which did not make him very happy

         ⁃        Green Mansions (1959, starring Nehemiah Persoff), and

         ⁃        1962's Mutiny on the Bounty (featuring Antoinette Bower, Torin Thatcher and stunts by Paul Baxley).

         ⁃        Justman was also an assistant director on television shows such as

         ⁃        The Adventures of Superman (1953-58, 78 ep)

         ⁃        associate producer for all 78 episodes and

         ⁃        assistant director on the classic series during its 1954-55 season.

         ⁃        Justman says that George Reeves was a trooper given what he was put thru

         ⁃        One time the wire broke and he dropped down to the cement

         ⁃        Justman learned early to schedule certain shots very carefully. As an example he tells a story about how Reeves would drink his lunch so when he would do the spring-board jump out the window he sort of missed and hit his knees on the window sill

         ⁃        The Thin Man (1958-59, 31 ep)

         ⁃        Northwest Passage (1958-59, 13 ep)

         ⁃        Philip Marlowe (1959-60, 26 ep)

         ⁃        Alcoa Presents One Step Beyond (1959-1961)

         ⁃        Produced at the same time as the more well-known The Twilight Zone (1959)

         ⁃        Some stars included Cloris Leachman, Warren Beatty, Jack Lord, Christopher Lee, Elizabeth Montgomery, Donald Pleasence, and William Shatner,

         ⁃        Dr. Kildare (1961-66, 6 ep)

         ⁃        Was asked by the President of MGM TV if Justman new any composers. Justman had heard some of Jerry Goldsmith’s scores and recommended him. As we talked about in Episode XXX This was one of Goldsmith’s breakout opportunities.

         ⁃        Justman and Goldsmith have never met

         ⁃        The Outer Limits (1963-65, 20 ep)

         ⁃        He served as the assistant director for all 20 episodes and a Production Manager in 1964

         ⁃        Appeared in the 1964 episode "A Feasibility Study" (directed by Byron Haskin, written by Joseph Stefano, and starring David Opatoshu)

         ⁃        Worked with Shatner on “Cold Hands, Warm Heart” (1964)

         ⁃        Sally Kellerman, James Dohan

         ⁃        Lassie (1965-66, 4 ep)

         ⁃        My Friend Flicka (1956-57)

         ⁃        While the City SleepsFritz Lang

         ⁃        In Oct 1964 Justman met GR at Desilu to talk to him about Associate Producer role for the first TOS pilot “The Cage”. Justman recommended Byron Haskin saying that he (Justman) did not have enough post production experience

         ⁃        first to call Gene Roddenberry "The Great Bird of the Galaxy," drawn from a throwaway line from the original series episode "The Man Trap"