Wednesday, December 07, 2011

NBC’s “Mystery Movie” Turns 40: “Banacek”

(The fourth entry in a months-long succession of posts highlighting shows featured in the 1971-1977 NBC Mystery Movie “wheel series.”)

Title: Banacek

Starring: George Peppard

Original Run: 1972-1974 (16 episodes, plus pilot), NBC-TV

Premise: Thomas Banacek (pronounced BAN-uh-check), a stylish, smooth-talking, but tough Polish-American freelance insurance investigator, based in Boston, Massachusetts, solves seemingly impossible, big-valued heists--much to the relief of insurance company executives but the teeth-grinding vexation of their on-staff property-recovery agents. For his trouble, he’s paid 10 percent of the insured worth of the reclaimed goods, which helps support his lavish lifestyle. “While not classic television,” Frank DeCaro wrote in The New York Times when the first season of this series was released on DVD in 2007, “Banacek is modish fun that holds up 35 years later.”

Background: As the Museum of Broadcast Communications Web site notes, the original NBC Mystery Movie rotation--which debuted in September 1971 and comprised Columbo, McCloud, and McMillan & Wife--“was an immediate success” for the network, “finishing at Number 14 in the Nielsen ratings for the 1971-72 season.” Emboldened by that triumph, NBC decided to double down on its “wheel” concept. In September 1972, it relocated the established trio of Mystery Movie segments from Wednesday evenings (8:30-10 p.m. ET/PT) to Sundays at the same hour, added a fourth component (Hec Ramsey), and rechristened the package The NBC Sunday Mystery Movie. Meanwhile, three new character-driven crime dramas were installed in the previous 90-minute timeslot under the umbrella title The NBC Wednesday Mystery Movie: Banacek, starring George Peppard; Cool Million, with James Farentino; and the Richard Widmark-headlined Madigan.

The first of those newbies to air was Banacek, created by Anthony Wilson. The son of a prominent MGM producer-screenwriter, Wilson had put together scripts for The Fugitive and Land of the Giants, served as the story editor of Lost in Space, and would one day help bring Planet of the Apes to television.

Banacek’s two-hour pilot film (usually seen nowadays as “Detour to Nowhere”) had been broadcast on March 20, 1972, but the premiere episode of its regular run--“Let’s Hear It for a Living Legend”--wasn’t shown until September 13 of that same year. Both demonstrated this series’ intent, as well as some of its faults.

“Detour” found Thomas Banacek (Peppard) being hired to track down an armored car, carrying $1,600,000 of gold bullion, that apparently disappeared while under police escort on an all-but-deserted Texas highway. The clues were sparse--a barricade of barrels in the road, tire tracks terminating at a cliff side--and the trail pretty darn cold after investigators with National Meridian Insurance Company failed to turn up so much as a single errant ingot. Yet Banacek sussed out not only who engineered that crime, but the clever means by which it was accomplished. “If Columbo, the template for all the 90-minute Universal detective series, was a howdunit that revealed the identity of the bad guy from the start,” remarks Stephen Bowie in The Classic TV History Blog, “then Banacek tried to top it by being both a how- and a whodunit. Each episode depicts a daring theft before the opening titles, without showing the culprit, and leaves Banacek to ferret out the crook and piece together the details of his or her tricky scheme (usually in an extended reconstruction sequence in the last act).” As one commentator put it, “Banacek was like Mission: Impossible inside out--the unraveling of how an impossible-seeming heist was pulled off.”

In “Living Legend,” a football halfback was tackled during a game, in front of a stadium full of spectators and “millions of television viewers.” Yet when the players on top climbed off, all that remained of the halfback was his empty red helmet. That plot--which Deane Romano later turned into a novel--drew criticism from more than a few small-screen critics, among them The New York Times’ John J. O’Connor, who said it “progressed from the incredible to the ridiculous.” In his September 20, 1972, column, O’Connor added:
Using TV tapes of the game, which along with sports announcer Curt Gowdy and crew are provided by NBC studios, he laboriously tracks down the obvious clues. It turns out that, at a crucial moment, one of the football-player conspirators on the field began to limp noticeably to distract the TV cameras. One carefully unstressed premise, however, is that each of the thousands of spectators in the stadium was also similarly distracted by the limp. Banacek has a severe credibility problem that deserves investigation.
Other Banacek plots were no less determined to push the bounds of plausibility. In “Project Phoenix,” a multimillion-dollar automobile prototype disappeared--together with its flat car--from a moving train, while in “Fly Me--If You Can Find Me,” a charter jet went missing after making an emergency landing on a back-country airstrip. And in one of my favorite episodes, “No Sign of the Cross” (which guest-starred former film heavy Broderick Crawford), a valuable religious artifact vanished during a supposedly secure transfer across the U.S.-Mexico border. Not all of the stories were equally ingenious, despite the supervision of executive producer George Eckstein and scripts by such talents as Del Reisman, Theodore J. Flicker, and novelist Howard Browne.* But then, as Bowie notes, “it’s a daunting task to come up with eight perfect heists a year. If you could, you wouldn’t be a TV producer, you’d be, well, a master criminal.”

Of course, viewers didn’t tune in to Banacek solely for its plot lines. The show also boasted an appealing star in George Peppard.

The son of a building contractor and an opera singer, Peppard was born in Detroit, Michigan, on October 1, 1928. He served as a corporal in the U.S. Marine Corps before making his stage debut in 1949. While completing a bachelor’s degree program at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania’s Carnegie Institute of Technology (now Carnegie Mellon University), Peppard took turns before the footlights of Broadway, and appeared for the first time on television in 1955. Six years later, he was cast opposite Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany’s, a film based on Truman Capote’s 1958 novella of the same name. The actor went on to roles in How the West Was Won (1962), The Carpetbaggers (1964) and The Blue Max (1966), and in 1968 he starred in P.J., a vastly under-appreciated film in which he portrayed a bottom-feeding gumshoe hired to protect the mistress of an eccentric millionaire. (Gayle Hunnicutt played the paramour, while former Perry Mason star Raymond Burr filled the mogul’s shoes. Also in the cast, though with a small, sexy part, was another person who would later figure large in the NBC Mystery Movie universe: Susan Saint James.)

But as Tim Rose observes in Friday @ 8/7 Central, Peppard “had a bit of a bad-boy reputation in the business, despite his impeccable looks and outward presentation. Just like Banacek, Peppard liked some of the finer things in life (such as women and drink), suffered no fools, and was never afraid to tell you whether he thought you were fine or foolish. And that included other actors, directors, producers, and network executives, all of which had run-ins with the man at one time or another along the way. But he did care about the work, and sometimes, that was all he cared about, feelings be damned.”

Because he was thought of as being difficult to work with, and of having an excessive appetite for alcohol (which he didn’t give up until the late 1970s), Peppard’s career had trouble reaching the heights many critics expected it would. Signing on as the star of Banacek--his first TV series--brought him the sort of recognition he’d long been lacking.

(Left) Murray Matheson, George Peppard, and Ralph Manza of Banacek

“Smug” is frequently the adjective associated with Thomas Banacek. Yet “smart” would fit just as aptly. Although, in the series pilot, it was acknowledged that his success rate in recovering stolen property was 66 percent, that was apparently much above the performance of other insurance investigators--a fact he subtly, and sometimes not so subtly, rubbed in the faces of his less-perspicacious competition. “Face it,” a National Meridian exec said grudgingly, “he’s good.” And he had to be, because he needed the money. Banacek lived in an antiques-filled residence in Boston’s historic and high-end Beacon Hill neighborhood (“T. Banacek--Restorations,” read a plaque on the door), drove an elegant, black 1942 Packard Darrin 180 Victoria convertible, played squash at an up-market social and athletic club, imbibed good Scotch, and smoked top-quality panatella cigars (the stubs of which he saved, because “they’re expensive”). He also owned a 1973 Cadillac Fleetwood limousine, behind the wheel of which he installed chauffeur Jay Drury (played by Ralph Manza), a 50-something former Chicago cab driver of Sicilian descent, who had abandoned the Windy City because of stomach ulcers, changed his name (the original family moniker was Ducinello), moved to Dallas, and gone into the limo-driving business. Banacek met him in the pilot film and brought him to Beantown.

Banacek, we learned, had come a long way since his boyhood. He grew up in downtown Boston’s seedy Scollay Square, which was wiped off the map by urban renewal in the 1960s to make room for today’s Government Center. (“It took me two years to lose the accent,” he related in the pilot--longer to remake himself as a suave millionaire.) His father had been a research scientist in Warsaw, Poland, before immigrating to the United States and finding employment as a mathematician at--of all places--National Meridian Insurance. He “work[ed] for the same company for 20 years,” Banacek lamented to Jay early on, only to be “replaced by a computer.” No wonder our hero delighted so in embarrassing insurers!

Stephen Bowie traces Banacek’s bloodline back to Amos Burke, “the preposterous millionaire homicide lieutenant [played by Gene Barry] who solved murders from the backseat of his Rolls in Aaron Spelling’s trash classic Burke’s Law.” A French Web site, Le Magazine de Séries, casts the protagonist instead as an amalgamation of millionaire-thief Thomas Crown (Steve McQueen) and insurance investigator Vicki Anderson (Faye Dunaway), both from the 1968 film The Thomas Crown Affair. O’Connor defined him simply as a cool blend of James Bond and Sam Spade.

(Right) Banacek’s 1942 Packard convertible

However, Banacek wasn’t cool, smug, or intuitive enough to think he could solve major crimes without at least a modicum of help. While Jay Drury could be depended on for ever-more-outrageous theories of how the assorted purloinings took place, Banacek turned to his sexagenarian friend, Felix Mulholland (Murray Matheson)--the owner of a rare-books store on Boston Common, who fancied himself “the fount of all wisdom, a walking compendium of man’s collective intelligence,” yet “infectiously humble”--for aid in researching the history of valuable objects or the people involved in their pilfering. And in this show’s second season, actress Christine Belford--who had worked with George Peppard on the 1972 film The Groundstar Conspiracy--turned a role she’d played in “Detour to Nowhere” into a regular part, appearing as Caroline “Carlie” Kirkland, an occasionally ditzy, 20-something property-recovery agent (originally with National Meridian Insurance but later employed by Boston Insurance Company) whose professional rivalry with Banacek often threw off romantic sparks and helped to propel his investigations down unexpected avenues.

Much was made in this show of Banacek’s combed-forward, salt-and-pepper hairstyle (“the best haircut of any TV sleuth ever,” pronounced critic DeCaro), his fondness for turtlenecks, and his Polish heritage. The 1970s was an era when small-screen detectives--and there were plenty of them--were distinguished in part by their idiosyncrasies. So Frank Cannon was obese, Theo Kojak was bald and addicted to lollipops, Robert T. Ironside was wheelchair-bound, Mike Longstreet was blind, Columbo had his rumpled raincoat and deteriorating Peugeot ... and Banacek boasted a mouthful of cryptic “old Polish proverbs”--all of them dreamed up by the show’s writers--that he’d spout to amuse himself or suggest his superiority over others. “A truly wise man never plays leapfrog with a unicorn,” the detective recited in one episode. “Twelve good horses and candlesticks won’t stop the snow in Bialystok,” he said another time. A humorous collection of those spurious maxims can be found on YouTube:

video

Another thing about Banacek: although he could be chauvinistic, this lifelong bachelor also proved devastating to women. As TV Guide reviewer Cleveland Amory wrote in December 1972:
[T]he writers’ idea of making him different seems to be confined to having every girl fall in love with him on first sight. One girl even fell in love on first hear. She was wearing dark glasses and--like most of the girls in this show--very little else, when he approached her at a swimming pool. “Do you mind,” she asked, “if I don’t open my eyes? Your voice is so sexy, I’d hate to wake up and find you were a skinny little gnome.” The only thing left is for a girl to fall in love with him from around the corner, for his footsteps.
This insurance investigator’s prowess with the female set was cause for great envy among adolescent boys (like me) in the ’70s. However, as Kevin Burton Smith comments on The Thrilling Detective Web Site, “the nudge-nudge wink-wink dialogue between Banacek and the numerous gorgeous, often scantily clad women he’s constantly fending off [now] seems quite dated.”

Additional Notes: Despite the barbs Banacek received from some critics, NBC expressed enthusiasm for the future of that new show and its wheel compatriots. (In fact, the network seemed quite high on Wednesday series rotations, in general. Not only did it schedule Banacek & Co. at 8:30, but it followed them up at 10 p.m. with Search, a short-lived adventure program built around an alternating trio of high-tech security specialists.)

(Left) 1974 newspaper ad for Banacek, after the Wednesday “wheel” moved to Tuesday nights

NBC had good reason for confidence in this series, based not only on the track record of the Mystery Movie concept and Peppard’s ability to draw an audience, but also the distinctiveness of Thomas Banacek’s hometown. When the stories didn’t take our suave hero off to Las Vegas or Southern California, they were set in Boston, a metropolis that hadn’t been used much up to then as a backdrop for TV shows. (James at 15, Cheers, Spenser: For Hire, and other Beantown-rooted programs wouldn’t debut until years later.) Even detective literature had largely avoided the Massachusetts capital. Robert B. Parker’s first Boston-based private-eye novel, The Godwulf Manuscript, wouldn’t be published until 1973, and other tales taking place in the same historic city were a long ways off.

One other unusual and--for many TV viewers--pleasing aspect of Banacek was that the show didn’t leave a lot of corpses in its wake. The protagonist might engage in the occasion fight, but his probes into larceny didn’t leave him stepping over bludgeoned or bleeding bodies at every turn. Bowie explains that
(except in the pilot TV movie that launched the series) nobody dies. Banacek is a “freelance insurance investigator” who solves big-ticket robberies and gleefully pockets a big fee from the insurance execs. That meant the show could strike a breezy tone--sending Banacek to bed, for instance, with each week’s female guest star--without having to find some way to desensitize us against a rising body count. Giving Banacek corporate underwriters to work for also spared us the scene of the private eye agreeing to help some impoverished sad sack solve his grandma’s or old army buddy’s or pet schnauzer’s murder out of the goodness of his heart. That’s a cliché I’m really getting tired of as I see it used over and over again, even in dark-hearted shows that should know better, like Harry O.
Unfortunately, while Banacek thrived, its two original wheel series partners did not. Eight episodes of Peppard’s show were broadcast during the 1972-73 season, but Madigan was cancelled after six installments, and Cool Million disappeared after only four. When The NBC Wednesday Mystery Movie returned in the fall of 1973, Banacek was still in the mix, but now paired with three new crime dramas: Tenafly, starring James MacEachin; The Snoop Sisters, featuring Helen Hayes and Mildred Natwick; and Faraday & Company, with Dan Dailey and James Naughton. Those newcomers proved no more resilient than their predecessors; all received the ax after just four episodes.

The network reportedly wanted to renew Banacek for a third year, but perhaps roll it over into the rotation of its Sunday Mystery Movie (which was losing Hec Ramsey due to a contract dispute with its star, Richard Boone). However, “Peppard decided to quit the show,” according to the Web site TV Shows on DVD. “That may seem strange, but Peppard was divorcing Elizabeth Ashley [his actress wife of six years], and didn’t want her to receive more money as a settlement. Sounds like a nasty divorce!” It certainly does, and it was too bad, because Banacek had more good years--and many entertaining mystery plots--left in it.

In 1975, Peppard starred as Sam Sheppard, an Ohio physician convicted of killing his pregnant wife, in the excellent teleflick Guilty or Innocent: The Sam Sheppard Murder Case. That same year, he played a daring chief of neurosurgery in Doctors’ Hospital, an NBC drama that endured less than a season before Peppard quit. Six years later, he was cast as Blake Carrington, the patriarch of an oil-rich Colorado clan in the TV series Dynasty, but backed out of the show during the filming of its pilot, reportedly because he thought his part was too similar to that of J.R. Ewing in Dallas; John Forsythe was hired to replace him in the role. Not until he signed on to play Colonel John “Hannibal” Smith in The A-Team (1983-1987), a rather silly but nonetheless popular TV program created by Stephen J. Cannell and Frank Lupo, did Peppard find a show he seemed willing to stick with for the long-term. The A-Team, though, was cancelled after five seasons, due to declining ratings.

Peppard was given his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (on the north side of the 6600 block of Hollywood Boulevard) in 1985. He later did a couple of TV movies--Man Against the Mob (1988) and Man Against the Mob: The Chinatown Murders (1989)--in which he starred as the head of an elite Los Angeles Police squad that confronted gangsters during the 1940s. He made his last appearance in “The P.I.,” a March 1994 episode of Matlock, portraying a private dick named Max Morgan, who teamed up with his resourceful daughter, Jessie (Tracy Nelson), to solve crimes; as a poster on YouTube points out, that episode was a “back-door pilot” for a prospective series. Sadly, the series was never to be. Peppard, a heavy smoker during most of his life, who had been diagnosed with lung cancer in 1992, died of pneumonia on May 8, 1994. He was only 65 years old.

Next up: Madigan.

The video embedded below is the second-season opening from Banacek, with theme music by Billy Goldenberg, an American composer who also created the themes for shows such as Alias Smith and Jones, Harry O, Delvecchio, Longstreet, and Kojak. You’ll find the original version of Banacek’s main title sequence here.



* I’ve also spotted references online to Columbo creators William Link and Richard Levinson contributing to Banacek, but Link says that’s incorrect.

† At a time when Poles were often derided as intellectually inferior, Banacek seemed determined to prove he was no Polish joke. The series’ efforts to portray Poles in a positive light won it an award from the Polish-American Congress.


READ MORE:DVD Review: Banacek: The Complete Series,”
by Mike Young (Cinegeek).

NBC’s “Mystery Movie” Turns 40:
Midweek Murders, Misdeeds, and Malfeasance

When The NBC Wednesday Mystery Movie debuted in September 1972, the U.S. television schedule was a great deal different--and certainly less expansive--than what we’ve come to expect in the cable-dominated 21st century. The three original Mystery Movie segments--Columbo, McCloud, and McMillan & Wife--were relocated to Sunday nights, 8:30-10 p.m. ET/PT (following The Wonderful World of Disney), and joined there in rotation by Hec Ramsey. On Wednesdays, the new, second 90-minute Mystery Movie “wheel”--comprising Banacek, Madigan, and Cool Million--began at 8:30 p.m. as well, following the police drama Adam-12. The prime-time grid below comes from the September 9, 1972, Fall Preview edition of TV Guide.

NBC’s “Mystery Movie” Turns 40:
Variations on a Theme

Today, we are in the mood to celebrate George Peppard’s Banacek, as The Rap Sheet’s 40th-anniversary tribute to The NBC Mystery Movie continues. But first, a word or two about TV openings.

Composer Henry Mancini’s signature theme for The NBC Mystery Movie is a classic of the genre, well supported by Wayne Fitzgerald’s flashlight-prominent opening title design. It debuted with the Mystery Moviewheel series” in 1971, and was carried over as the network moved its first trio of Mystery Movie dramas to Sunday nights.

However, when NBC launched a clone of that series, titled The NBC Wednesday Mystery Movie, in September 1972, it featured an entirely different title presentation and distinctive introductory music. I don’t possess a strong memory of the animated visuals that showed the lineup for that second wheel, and I have not yet been able to locate an example of them anywhere on the Web. But I do recall the initial Wednesday Mystery Movie theme--a bolder, brassier tune than its Sunday cousin, concocted by Quincy Jones. You can listen to that theme here. (At the front of the clip, there’s a teaser for Cool Million, one of the midweek series; the music doesn’t start until the 0:30 mark.)

Jones’ Big Band-style jazz tune met with criticism from many Mystery Movie fans. (Even Jones didn’t seem overly enchanted with it; he recalls that it was just “part of [my] evolution as a composer in TV and movies”). And when the Wednesday wheel was retooled and re-launched in the fall of 1973, it’s opening title sequence was redesigned in imitation of the original Mystery Movie introduction, with Mancini’s music again part of the package. (The Snoop Sisters part of that intro can be seen here.)

Regrettably, neither opening for the midweek wheel was sufficient to make it a success. After being relocated to Tuesday nights in January 1974 (and being rechristened, not surprisingly, The NBC Tuesday Mystery Movie), that crime-drama rotation petered over several more episodes of Banacek and The Snoop Sisters.

One of the Busiest Actors on TV

I hate to start out with bad news in the morning, but it can’t be helped today. As The New York Times reports, “Harry Morgan, the prolific character actor best known for playing the acerbic but kindly Colonel Potter in the long-running television series M*A*S*H, died Wednesday morning at his home in Los Angeles. He was 96. His son Charles confirmed his death, saying Mr. Morgan had been treated for pneumonia recently.”

Back in 2007, on the occasion of his 92nd birthday, I composed a longish post about Morgan for The Rap Sheet, and I don’t want to reiterate all of that. But I do wish to honor Morgan for his contributions to some of the crime dramas I remember best from my youth: Dragnet, Hec Ramsey, and Blacke’s Magic. He also appeared with Robert Conrad in The D.A. and co-starred with Peter Lawford in the unsold 1971 TV pilot film, Ellery Queen: Don’t Look Behind You. (A short clip from that film can be viewed here.)

Morgan seemed never to give less than a solid performance.

By the way, the Times’ obituary includes an observation that, in our present era of redundant and tedious self-promotion, strikes me as quite wonderful and consistent with this actor having been brought up in an earlier age of the entertainment industry: “Harry Morgan never sat as a guest on a talk show, Charles Morgan said ; it did not seem appropriate or necessary. ‘Appearing on a talk show to focus on himself because he was Harry Morgan,’ he said, ‘was not nearly as natural as appearing in a role as Pete Porter or Bill Gannon or Colonel Potter, or as the cowboy drifter who wandered into town with Henry Fonda and got wrapped up in a vigilante brigade in Ox-Bow Incident.”

(Hat tip to The Education of a Pulp Writer.)

READ MORE:Harry Morgan, 1915-2011: An appreciation,” by Robert Lloyd (Los Angeles Times); “The Late, Great Harry Morgan,” by Mercurie (A Shroud of Thoughts).

Monday, December 05, 2011

Happy Birthday, James Lee Burke!

The author of the Dave Robicheaux series turns 75 years old today.

Sunday, December 04, 2011

Opening Encounters

Since, in a post earlier today, I mentioned the two adaptations of Rex Stout’s Nero Wolfe stories that made it onto American television, I thought it would be enjoyable to revisit those shows through their main title sequences. So I am embedding below: (1) one of the openings (every episode changed the title design somewhat) from A&E’s A Nero Wolfe Mystery, which starred Maury Chaykin and Timothy Hutton, as well as the wonderful Bill Smitrovich and--in most installments--Kari Matchett; and (2) the introduction to 1981’s Nero Wolfe, an NBC series that starred William Conrad (late of Cannon) and Lee Horsley (before he made a name for himself in Matt Houston).

video

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Filmed but Forgotten

As regular readers of The Rap Sheet know, I am in the midst of writing about all 14 television series once shown as part of The NBC Mystery Movie (Sunday and Wednesday editions). This project is certainly enjoyable, though it’s taking me more time than I had anticipated. But the real problem is, I still have not been able to track down video segments from three of those shows: Madigan, starring Richard Widmark; Faraday & Company, starring Dan Dailey and James Naughton; and Lanigan’s Rabbi, with Art Carney and Bruce Solomon.

If anybody out there has those series on video and would like to share them, or knows where I might acquire clips, please drop me an e-mail note here. Your help would be much appreciated.

Of Penny, Shatner, and Mr. Wolfe

Canadian author Louise Penny has won the 2011 Nero Award for her sixth Chief Inspector Armand Gamache novel, Bury Your Dead (Minotaur). This announcement was made last evening during the Black Orchid Banquet, in New York City. The Nero Award is presented annually by the New York-based Nero Wolfe fan organization, The Wolfe Pack.

The other nominees for this prize were Ice Cold, by Tess Gerritsen (Ballantine); The Book of Spies, by Gayle Lynds (St. Martin’s Press); The Midnight Show Murders, by Al Roker and Dick Lochte (Delacorte); and Think of a Number, by John Verdon (Crown).

Last night’s banquet also brought news about the winner of this year’s Black Orchid Novella Award (BONA), “presented jointly by The Wolfe Pack and Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine to celebrate the novella format popularized by [Nero Wolfe creator] Rex Stout.” The 2011 BONA has gone to James Lincoln Warren for “Inner Fire.” He’ll receive $1,000 and his tale will be published in AHMM this coming spring.

* * *

Speaking of Wolfe, Mystery*File today reminds us of an apparently aborted plan to bring Nero and his legman, Archie Goodwin, to television--way back in 1959. That proposed CBS show was to have starred William Shatner as the energetic Archie (seven years before he debuted on Star Trek) and Kurt Kasznar as the house-bound Wolfe. According to Wikipedia,
Nero Wolfe was co-produced by Gordon Duff and Otis Guernsey, with Edwin Fadiman as executive producer. Written by Sidney Carroll and directed by Tom Donovan, the pilot was filmed in Manhattan in March 1959. Three or four episodes of the half-hour series were filmed, with a jazz score composed by Alex North.

Nero Wolfe was to air Mondays at 10 p.m. ET beginning in September 1959. But in April, CBS announced that the new comedy series Hennesey would occupy the time slot.

In June 1959,
Baltimore Sun critic Donald Kirkley reported that the Nero Wolfe pilot had been, “in a way, too successful”:
Everything seemed to point to a sale of the series. A facsimile of the brownstone house in which Wolfe lives in the novels ... was found in Grammercy Square. But when the film was made and shown around, it was considered too good to be confined to half an hour. There was a new shuffle and deal, and in consequence, an hour-long, new pilot is now being photographed in Hollywood.
In October 1960, William Shatner was reportedly still working to sell the first television adaptation of Nero Wolfe to the networks.
Wolfe and Goodwin later featured in two small-screen series, one starring William Conrad and Lee Horsley in 1981, the other with Maury Chaykin and Timothy Hutton (2000-2002).

READ MORE:‘Two Stage Actors Signed by C.B.S.-TV,’ March 14, 1959,” by Tony Renner (Pfui).

Saturday, December 03, 2011

Taking His Best Shots

UK critic and bon vivant Mike Ripley’s last “Getting Away with Murder” column of 2011 covers everything from Ross Macdonald’s literary endurance and The Daily Telegraph’s “Best Thrillers of 2011” list to a virtual tour of the Parish Church of Fenchurch St. Paul (featured in Dorothy L. Sayers’ Nine Tailors, the Q.R. Markham plagiarism scandal, and forthcoming fiction from John Harvey, Jim Kelly, and Sam Eastland.

However, this Shots contributor saves the best for last: the presentation of his Shots of the Year awards, which includes a thumbs-up to Martin Cruz Smith’s Three Stations as the “best crime novel” of 2011 (though it actually appeared in the States last year).

You can read all of Ripley’s December column here.

There in Spirit Only

Mrs. Columbo and Charlie Townsend are both included in The Huffington Post’s collection of “15 Great Unseen TV Characters.” It’s only too bad that wealthy novelist Robin Masters, voiced by Orson Welles in Magnum, P.I., didn’t make the cut as well.

Thursday, December 01, 2011

“I Struggled with Plagiarism in the Same Way Others Struggle with Smoking, Sex Addiction, Food Addiction, and Gambling”

Quentin Rowan, whose briefly acclaimed first spy thriller, Assassin of Secrets--published under the pseudonym Q.R. Markham--was ingloriously yanked from store shelves amid allegations that he had plagiarized parts of it from more famous works of fiction, continues to find excuses for his behavior. As Salon reports today,
In a new piece (ostensibly by Rowan himself) on the sobriety-centric site The Fix, Rowan blames it all on a manifestation of “addiction.” After admitting the high cost of his transgressions--“I lost my job in the Brooklyn bookstore where I was a part-owner, my beautiful girlfriend left me (and the apartment we were going to share), and my future in the only field I know anything about, books, came to ignominious end”--Rowan traces the roots of his behavior back to the 1990s, when, he says, he was newly sober and “came upon a paragraph I liked from a short story by B.S. Johnson.” Before he fully realized the implications of his actions, he’d “transferred my obsession from drinking and drugs to plagiarism.”
Click here to read Rowan/Markham’s full mea culpa in The Fix.

Burton Gone, but His Work Lives On

Word comes via writer Patti Abbott that East Texas mystery-fictionist Milton T. Burton, author of Nights of the Red Moon (2010) and the forthcoming The Devil’s Odds, has passed away. According to the Down & Out Books Web site, Burton “was born in 1947 in East Texas and raised locally. He has been employed as a college teacher, cattleman, and political consultant. He has four grown children as well as four grandchildren. He is very much a partisan of the South.”

In addition to his four crime novels, Burton penned short stories, at least two of which are available online: “The Apprentice” and “Grassy Knoll.” Kevin R. Tipple critiqued his short-fiction collection, Texas Noir just a few months back. And a year ago, Burton composed a “How I Came to Write This Book” essay about Nights of the Red Moon for Abbott’s blog. Fellow Texas wordsmith Bill Crider once remarked that “Milton Burton writes about East Texas with wit, spice, and insight.”

After Burton’s debut novel, The Rogues’ Game, was published in 2005, Jerome Weeks of The Dallas Morning News wrote a profile of the author in which he related this delightful anecdote:
At 25, Mr. Burton already knew he wanted to write a novel someday--but didn’t start writing until he was given an old Packard Bell computer in 1996.

“I’m a poor typist,” he explains. “My writing career had to wait for the coming of word processing.”
Well, the author tried after that to make the most of the career he had always wanted. In addition to The Devil’s Odds, due out from Minotaur Books in February 2012, Burton also reportedly has another book, These Mortal Remains, coming in early 2013.

READ MORE:East Texas Author Milton Travis Burton Dies at Age 64,” by Tim Monzingo (TylerPaper.com).

Nero and Archie Send Their Regards

I’m not the first (see here and here) to note that today would have been the 125th birthday of mystery author Rex Stout (1886-1975). Nor, I suspect, will I be the last.