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NBC Publicity Photo — "Emil and the Detectives" (1966), Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color, Featuring Roger Mobley

Original 1966 NBC publicity photograph of Roger Mobley as Gustav in Emil and the Detectives, with NBC Color Television peacock logo, 8.5 by 11 inches

A Relic from the Golden Age of Disney Television

Long before streaming queues and on-demand libraries, Sunday evenings belonged to a single appointment: Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color. From 1961 onward, NBC broadcast the anthology series in living color — a selling point so novel that the peacock logo felt genuinely magical to families who had just upgraded their sets. This original 8.5 x 11-inch press photograph and caption sheet is a survivor from that world. Dated August 19, 1966, it was issued by NBC to television editors across the country to announce the upcoming premiere of the sixth season, anchored by a two-part broadcast of Emil and the Detectives.

Printed on the glossy stock that was standard for network publicity departments of the era, the still features young actor Roger Mobley in character as Gustav — the scrappy, resourceful boy at the center of the story. The NBC Color Television peacock logo appears on the sheet, a mark that today reads as an instant time-stamp: this is the real thing, produced at the height of the broadcast television golden age, before fax machines replaced photo mailers and digital press kits made physical stills obsolete.

Emil, Gustav, and a Story That Crossed Continents

Emil and the Detectives has deep roots. It began as a beloved 1929 German novel by Erich Kästner, a story about a boy whose stolen money sets off a chain of street-level detective work among the children of Berlin. The tale was adapted for film multiple times in Europe before Walt Disney Productions brought it to the screen in 1964 as a live-action theatrical feature, filmed on location in West Berlin. The film starred Bryan Russell as Emil and Walter Slezak as the menacing Grundeis, with a supporting cast that leaned into the postwar energy of a city still finding its footing.

For the 1966 NBC broadcast — the version documented by this press photo — Disney repackaged and presented the story for the television audience, splitting the film across two episodes to open the new season with something that felt both cinematic and event-worthy. Roger Mobley, who played Gustav, was a familiar face in Disney live-action productions of the 1960s; he appeared in several of the studio's family adventure films and TV episodes during this period, part of the reliable stable of young performers Disney cultivated for its wholesome, adventure-driven output. His likable, energetic screen presence made him a natural fit for the resourceful Gustav, Emil's quick-thinking ally.

Why Press Photos Matter to Collectors

Original network publicity stills occupy a fascinating niche in Disney memorabilia collecting. They were never sold to the public. They were produced in limited runs and mailed to newspaper TV editors, magazine columnists, and program guides — the gatekeepers of audience attention in the pre-internet era. Most were discarded after the broadcast date passed. The ones that survived did so because a film critic filed them in a folder, a TV editor tucked them into a drawer, or an archivist somewhere recognized their documentary value.

What you hold with a piece like this is primary source material — a direct artifact of how Disney and NBC built excitement around their programming. The typed caption on the reverse is particularly valuable: it is the original network voice, describing the broadcast in present tense, written as if the premiere is still weeks away. That frozen-in-time quality is something no reproduction can replicate.

For collectors focused on Disney's live-action era, the 1960s represent a period of remarkable creative range. While the animated classics dominate popular imagination, the studio's live-action slate — European adventures, frontier tales, animal pictures — built an audience of their own and left behind a comparatively thin paper trail. Press materials from these productions are scarcer than those for animated features, which received far more marketing support over the decades.

Condition and Estate Provenance

This photograph presents well for its age. The image is clean and sharp, retaining the contrast and detail that made it useful as a reproduction-ready press still in 1966. There are slight creases along the top edge, consistent with having been clipped or filed at some point in its life — honest wear that speaks to the photo's working history rather than detracting from its appeal. These minor surface imperfections are typical of press materials that spent decades in files rather than frames, and experienced collectors generally accept them as part of the authentic character of original press archive pieces.

This item comes to us as part of a larger Disney estate collection — an assembled body of material gathered over many years by a devoted enthusiast. Estate collections like this one surface rarely, and when they do, they offer the chance to acquire pieces that simply do not appear on the open market with any regularity. A 1966 NBC publicity still for a Disney live-action television event is not the kind of thing that turns up at a flea market. It is the kind of thing a serious collector recognizes immediately for what it is: a window into the week Disney opened its sixth season on NBC, as seen through the eyes of the network's own publicity department.

For the Disney television historian, the live-action completist, or the collector drawn to the paper ephemera of mid-century broadcasting, this is a quietly exceptional piece.

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