Ellery Queen (TV series)
Ellery Queen is an American TV drama series, developed by Richard Levinson and William Link, who based it on the fictional character of the same name. The series ran for a single season on NBC from September 11, 1975, to April 4, 1976. Jim Hutton stars as the eponymous sleuth, along with David Wayne as his father, Inspector Richard Queen.
Ellery Queen | |
---|---|
Main title design: Jack Cole & N. Lee Lacy | |
Genre | Mystery Drama |
Based on | Ellery Queen novels by Ellery Queen |
Developed by | Richard Levinson William Link |
Starring |
|
Theme music composer | Elmer Bernstein |
Composers | Elmer Bernstein Dana Kaproff |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 22 + pilot (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers | Richard Levinson William Link |
Producers | Peter S. Fischer Michael Rhodes |
Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 44-48 minutes |
Production companies | Fairmount/Foxcroft Productions Tom Ward Enterprises Universal Television |
Distributor | NBCUniversal Television Distribution |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Original release | September 11, 1975 – April 4, 1976 |
Each episode revolves around author Queen investigating a murder, usually with the assistance of his father. The series uses some of the same dramatic devices found in the early Queen novels and radio shows. This includes Hutton breaking the fourth wall, to challenge the viewer to solve the mystery.
Plot
Set in post-World War II New York City – more specifically, the first episode is set on New Year's Eve of 1946 – the show revolved around author and amateur detective Ellery Queen (Jim Hutton), a bachelor who lives with his widowed father, Inspector Richard Queen (David Wayne). Ellery solves various cases while writing his latest book, usually with assistance from his father, and Inspector Queen's right-hand-man, Sergeant Velie (Tom Reese).
Similar to the early Queen books and radio episodes, the audience is challenged to solve the mystery. For the television series, this led to Hutton breaking the fourth wall before the confrontation scene. This gave the viewers a short exposition about the case, and leaving the viewer to put together the clues.
The final act always used the detective cliché of calling together all the suspects, with Ellery Queen presenting the solution (except in one episode when the elder Queen took over). The great detective's detailed exposition allowed audience members to assess how they had guessed right and wrong. In some episodes, Queen's explanation disproved the theory of a rival sleuth.[1]
The series departed from the original stories in two respects. An element of mild humour was added by making the Ellery Queen character slightly physically clumsy, and the character of rival radio detective Simon Brimmer (John Hillerman) was created for the series.[2]
Cast
- Jim Hutton as Ellery Queen
- David Wayne as Inspector Richard Queen
- Tom Reese as Sgt. Thomas Velie
Recurring
- John Hillerman as Simon Brimmer, a radio host and Queen's frenemy. He frequently competes with Ellery, and jumps to conclusions about the murderer based on one piece of minor evidence.
- Ken Swofford as Frank Flannigan, a reporter who competes with Queen on several cases.
- Nina Roman as Grace, Inspector Queen's secretary.
- Arch Johnson as Deputy Commissioner Hayes, Inspector Queen's boss.
- Maggie Nelson as Vera, Frank Flannigan's secretary.
Production
Richard Levinson and William Link had previously written a pilot based on the Ellery Queen character, Ellery Queen: Don't Look Behind You, also produced by Universal. The pilot, directed by Barry Shear, aired as a television movie on NBC on November 19, 1971. Peter Lawford and Harry Morgan had portrayed Ellery and Inspector McQueen, respectively, with E. G. Marshall and Stefanie Powers in co-starring roles, and Bill Zuckert as Sgt. Velie. However, Levinson and Link did not like the changes to the script made by producer Leonard Ackerman, and used the pseudonym “Ted Leighton” as the credited writer. NBC did not order a series from the pilot.
In 1974, Levinson and Link retooled their idea into a new pilot, this time with Jim Hutton and David Wayne as Ellery and Inspector Queen. A television pilot premiered on March 23, 1975, with the made-for-TV movie Ellery Queen: Too Many Suspects.[3] Levinson and Link adapted the script from the 1965 Ellery Queen novel The Fourth Side of the Triangle. NBC ordered a series based on the pilot in May 1975.
A total of 22 episodes followed in the show's single season. The theme music was by Elmer Bernstein. The last episode aired on April 4, 1976, after which NBC cancelled the series. The series ranked 68 out of 97 shows that season. Levinson and Link later retooled the idea of an author and amateur sleuth who solves murders, with a list of notable and up-and-coming guest stars, into the CBS series, Murder, She Wrote.
Reception
Richard Schickel, reviewing the series at its premiere in September 1975, called it "a garage-sale period piece"; he said "the presence of Guy Lombardo, some ancient autos and the oldest of detective story conventions (all suspects are assembled in one room to await the results of the detective's ratiocinations) are supposed to evoke nostalgia. They do not—and the format's stasis is numbing."[4]
In 1979, Levinson and Link won a Special Edgar Award for creating the Columbo and Ellery Queen TV series. Thirty-five years later, David Wiegand, reviewing the series when it was released on DVD, called the show's formula a "completely satisfying guilty pleasure" and asserted that the "appeal of the series is that the clues are actually there in the development of each show, and just before the denouement, Ellery breaks the 'fourth wall' and asks if you've figured it out."[5]
Episodes
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
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0 | Ellery Queen: Too Many Suspects | David Greene | Richard Levinson & William Link | March 23, 1975 | |
78-minute[3] pilot: When a famous fashion designer is found murdered, Inspector Richard Queen of the NYPD is baffled by her dying clue (she pulled the plugs for her clock and TV set out of the wall at exactly 10:25 PM), prompting him to bring in his son, mystery writer Ellery Queen, to help in the investigation. | |||||
1 | "The Adventure of Auld Lang Syne" | David Greene | S : Richard Levinson & William Link; S/T : Peter S. Fischer | September 11, 1975 | |
Soon after a wealthy industrialist threatens to disinherit family and staff at a 1947 New Year's Eve party, he is found murdered in a nearby phone booth by fellow guest Inspector Queen, who calls on son Ellery to help unmask the killer. | |||||
2 | "The Adventure of the Lover's Leap" | Charles S. Dubin | Robert Pirosh | September 18, 1975 | |
When an heiress is found dead from an apparent suicide, Ellery Queen suspects she was murdered, but the investigation is hindered by interference from radio detective Simon Brimmer. | |||||
3 | "The Adventure of the Chinese Dog" | Ernest Pintoff | S : Gene Thompson; T : Robert van Scoyk | September 25, 1975 | |
A fishing trip for Richard and Ellery Queen soon becomes a working vacation when they are asked to help investigate the murder of a small-town magnate who was whacked over the head with an ornamental dog figurine. | |||||
4 | "The Adventure of the Comic Book Crusader" | Peter H. Hunt | Robert van Scoyk | October 2, 1975 | |
A tyrannical comic book creator is shot to death in his office, and Ellery Queen becomes the prime suspect because of arguments over how he was portrayed in the victim's comics. | |||||
5 | "The Adventure of the 12th Floor Express" | Jack Arnold | David H. Balkan & Alan Folsom | October 9, 1975 | |
Inspector Queen calls in his son Ellery to help investigate the murder of a newspaper publisher, who first disappears from his private express elevator and then is later found there dead by gunshot. | |||||
6 | "The Adventure of Miss Aggie's Farewell Performance" | James Sheldon | S : Richard Levinson & William Link; S/T : Peter S. Fischer | October 16, 1975 | |
Beloved Vera Bethune stars as Miss Aggie in a radio soap opera, but is about to be written out. One day she drinks water from a jug and is poisoned in a murder attempt. She is taken to the hospital and survives, but the killer returns. | |||||
7 | "The Adventure of Colonel Nivin's Memoirs" | Seymour Robbie | Robert E. Swanson | October 23, 1975 | |
Ellery's publicist becomes embroiled in a murder investigation when she finds the body of one of her clients, a World War II spy who recently wrote a tell-all memoir. | |||||
8 | "The Adventure of the Mad Tea Party" | James Sheldon | S : Ellery Queen; T : Peter S. Fischer | October 30, 1975 | |
Fun-loving theatrical producer Spencer Lockridge invites Ellery to his mansion for a weekend of working out how to adapt one of Ellery's works for the stage. But the producer disappears shortly thereafter, and presumed murdered. A series of clues are delivered by pranksters' means. The idea is to try to get the killer to implicate himself or herself. | |||||
9 | "The Adventure of Veronica's Veils" | Seymour Robbie | Robert Pirosh | November 13, 1975 | |
Burlesque producer Sam Packer is found dead of an apparent heart attack but he leaves behind a video to be shown at his funeral in which he states that, no matter what it looks like, he will have been murdered. | |||||
10 | "The Adventure of the Pharaoh's Curse" | Seymour Robbie | S : Rudolph Borchert; T : Peter S. Fischer | December 11, 1975 | |
Much-hated museum benefactor Norris Wentworth is found dead in the museum. The autopsy indicates he died of a heart attack, but did he have help in dying? He was let into the museum by somebody and couldn't reach his nitroglycerin medicine, indicating that whoever let him in also intimidated him. An Egyptologist shows up and claims that the piece, a pharaoh's tomb, was stolen from Egypt and vows that a curse has been laid upon the tomb to haunt anyone who robs it. | |||||
11 | "The Adventure of the Blunt Instrument" | Ernest Pintoff | T : Robert van Scoyk; S/T : Michael Robert David | December 18, 1975 | |
Edgar Manning, a mystery writer, wins the annual Blunt Instrument Award for his year's work and goes to pick it up at a party. Ellery, who was Edgar's rival for the award, is sidelined because of a nasty cold. So Edgar gleefully phones Ellery and gives a blow-by-blow description of the award ceremony (including describing the trophy) as he leans back in his easy chair. But the phone call is interrupted by a sickening thud. Ellery calls out to Edgar but gets no response. Cut back to Edgar, who's now face down on his desk. His skull was shattered by... The Blunt Instrument, the trophy itself. | |||||
12 | "The Adventure of the Black Falcon" | Walter Doniger | Marc B. Ray | January 4, 1976 | |
Letting a fine wine "breathe" proves deadly for the wine's owner Nick Kingston, who leaves it unattended for a killer to poison it. The vintner, who's hosting a party upstairs, comes back only to collapse. He tries to implicate the killer but breaks the wine cellar's only pencil, so he crawls to a wine rack and grabs a bottle, smashing it on the floor. The shattered bottle bears the label Black Falcon, indicating it was tied to World War One. But how? | |||||
13 | "The Adventure of the Sunday Punch" | Seymour Robbie | Larry Alexander | January 11, 1976 | |
During a practice bout, a lucky shot knocks champion boxer Kid Hogan unconscious. He revives enough to sip some water from his manager's "swill bottle," then falls comatose and is soon pronounced dead. An autopsy reveals he was poisoned, and the "swill bottle" was loaded with poison. The manager is strongly implicated, but so is the opponent Joe Simpson. | |||||
14 | "The Adventure of the Eccentric Engineer" | Peter H. Hunt | David P. Lewis & Booker Bradshaw | January 18, 1976 | |
Lamont Franklin, a once brilliant but now seemingly senile inventor, is murdered in his electric train workshop. It appears as though no one could have entered or left the workshop during the time in which the murder must have taken place. | |||||
15 | "The Adventure of the Wary Witness" | Walter Doniger | Peter S. Fischer | January 25, 1976 | |
Linville Hagen, on trial for murder, claims that the victim Nick Danello was shot through a window from a fire escape, and that Hagen fired at the killer. The defendant's lawyer Leo Campbell claims that he can bring in a witness, a woman who was beaten up by the victim. But the woman can't be found. When she's finally tracked down, Inspector Queen, Ellery and Frank Flannigan hear a gunshot from outside her window, break down the door and find the woman lying unconscious — shot from the fire escape. | |||||
16 | "The Adventure of the Judas Tree" | Walter Doniger | Martin Roth | February 1, 1976 | |
Someone makes the murder of wealthy George Sherman look like a ritualistic killing, hanging his corpse from a Cercis tree (aka a Judas tree) and adorning it with branches. When George is found to be far less wealthy than thought (he had given everything away except a huge life insurance policy), suspicion turns to his wife Paulette, who already has a boyfriend on the side. | |||||
17 | "The Adventure of the Sinister Scenario" | Peter H. Hunt | Robert Pirosh | February 8, 1976 | |
Gil Mallory, an actor playing Ellery Queen in a motion picture, is supposed to be shot on camera, then jump up and nab the woman who shot him, exclaiming "Bulletproof vest!" The rehearsal with blanks goes fine. But the ensuing take with the same gun finds it loaded with real bullets, and Mallory drops dead. The film crew tries to carry on, and soon stunt man Mike Hewitt is killed when the car he was driving is rigged to wipe out before he was ready. Are the two murders linked — and how? | |||||
18 | "The Adventure of the Two-Faced Woman" | Jack Arnold | Robert E. Swanson | February 29, 1976 | |
Simon Brimmer once again fingers the wrong culprit in this tale about the murder of a socialite who was apparently leading a double life. The case has its underpinnings in events that happened in 1922 France. | |||||
19 | "The Adventure of the Tyrant of Tin Pan Alley" | Seymour Robbie | Robert van Scoyk | March 7, 1976 | |
The radio payola scandals of the 1940s and '50s are recalled when popular songwriter Alvin Winer is murdered during the musical interlude on a radio show when he goes to the station's record library to find a record. Ellery must clear a friend who had just accused Winer of stealing his song. | |||||
20 | "The Adventure of Caesar's Last Sleep" | Richard Michaels | S : Michael Rhodes; T : Rudolph Borchert | March 14, 1976 | |
Inspector Queen is in charge of protecting mob witness Ralph Caesar, but the witness is murdered before he can testify. The evidence points to none other than Sgt. Velie. The Inspector must also deal with rivals in the department who feel he's gotten long in the tooth and relies too much on Ellery. | |||||
21 | "The Adventure of the Hardhearted Huckster" | Edward M. Abroms | S : Lewis Davidson; S/T : Robert E. Swanson | March 21, 1976 | |
Madison Avenue advertising executive James Bevin Long wants to make newspaper columnist Frank Flanagan a TV star by setting him up with a variety show. But then Long is murdered in his private bathroom, stabbed in the back. The killer had to be someone who knew Long's meticulous habits. The plans for the TV show go forward and Ellery takes an inside look at the advertising industry to determine how the killer could have slipped in and out undetected. | |||||
22 | "The Adventure of the Disappearing Dagger" | Jack Arnold | T : Robert van Scoyk; S/T : Stephen Lord | April 4, 1976 | |
An elderly amateur criminologist finally figures out how a five-year-old "locked-room" murder was committed, and is murdered by the killer before he can alert Inspector Queen. Ellery takes up the challenge himself. The criminologist had first implicated an airline pilot, because he was flying the plane where the murder was committed and had the opportunity to toss the murder weapon out the window. Nobody else seems to have been able to get rid of the weapon, but Ellery finds that the murder victim had stolen someone else's invention, and that the murderer may have invented the weapon as well. |
Home media
The series, including the pilot, was released on DVD - in Australia (region 4, PAL) on 15 September 2010 and in the US by Entertainment One (region 1, NTSC) on September 28, 2010. The Australian release also includes Ellery Queen: Don't Look Behind You.[2] In 2016, the complete series of Ellery Queen was released on DVD in the UK. This release also includes Ellery Queen: Don't Look Behind You.
See also
- The Adventures of Ellery Queen (radio and TV series)
- The Adventures of Ellery Queen (radio program)
- Murder, She Wrote, a similar, more successful series also by Levinson and Link
References
- Andrews, Dale; Sercu, Kurt (July 14, 2009). "When Ellery Queen met NBC". Criminal Brief. Retrieved 2009-07-14.
- "Interview with screen writer William Link” from disk 6, Ellery Queen Mysteries, DVD release September 2010.
- Erickson, Hal. "Ellery Queen (1975)". Rovi Corporation. The New York Times. Archived from the original on November 4, 2012.
- Schickel, Richard (September 15, 1975). "Television: Viewpoints: The New Season, Part I". Time. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
- Wiegand, David (November 14, 2010). "DVD review: Ellery Queen: The complete Series". sfgate.com. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
External links
- Ellery Queen at IMDb
- Ellery Queen at TV.com
- William Link from the Museum of Broadcast Communications