In the annals of obscure early 60s crime dramas, Coronado 9 is certainly not the least
known (anyone remember The Case of the
Dangerous Robin or This Man Dawson?),
thanks to its star Rod Cameron, who had previously starred in the 1950s series City Detective and State Trooper. But Coronado 9,
a syndicated series produced by Revue Studios that ran for a single season of
39 episodes in 1960-61, has a number of unexplained oddities that over 50 years
later make the show itself almost as much a mystery as the cases Cameron's
character Dan Adams is required to solve.
First, there's the show's title. As the brief Wikipedia article on the show relates,
the opening sequence for the show has the camera zero in on the number 9
emblazoned on a rock outside Adams' front door, suggesting that the show's
title is his house address. And while this may be the case, this fact is never
mentioned in any of the first 17 episodes of the show that aired in 1960.
Furthermore, if this were his address, one would expect there to be a street
designator, such as Drive or Avenue, in the title, and street addresses
typically begin with the number followed by the street name and designator, whereas
the show's title has the number at the end, making it sound more like the type
of telephone number prefix used at the time. However, all of this is mere
speculation, as there is no mention of or reference to the meaning of the
show's title in the first half of the season.
Second is the connection of the show to the city of
Coronado, the wealthy island suburb of San Diego. Though there are a few
references to the city and some location shots at landmarks like the Hotel Del
Coronado (featured prominently in Billy Wilder's Some Like It Hot) in the episodes "The Day Chivalry Died"
(October 11, 1960) and "I Want to Be Hated" (October 25, 1960), many
other episodes take place outside Coronado. "The Spinster of Nob
Hill" (September 27, 1960), takes place in San Francisco, as its title
implies, and "I Came for the Funeral" (October 18, 1960) is set in
San Juan, Mexico. The show's pilot, "The Widow of Kill Cove"
(September 6, 1960) also winds up in Mexico after a boat ride down the
California coast that could have begun anywhere, since the city of origin,
Coronado or elsewhere, is never mentioned. So while Coronado may be Adams' home
base of operations, there is little in the individual episodes that tie him
specifically to this city.
And speaking of the pilot episode, which bears a copyright
date of 1959, Adams' character is largely a mystery as well. Though we later
learn, in "The Day Chivalry Died," that his past experience included
a stint as an intelligence officer in the Navy during World War II, hence his
suitability for civilian work as an investigator, even this rather important
fact is never mentioned in the pilot, in which he is simply a guy with a boat
whose young friend persuades him to take a trip down the coast to Mexico with a
woman who claims her husband was supposedly killed in a plane accident years
ago but whom she suspects of still being alive. Adams is not hired as an
investigator in this case; he's simply a man with a means of transportation and
nothing better to do with his time. And unlike most other crime dramas, even
the syndicated ones, Adams has no supporting cast and no friendly police
lieutenant to help him (as in Lock Up).
It's just one man against a series of criminals.
As a syndicated show, Coronado
9 didn't enjoy the built-in promotion afforded most network-backed series.
And though occasionally syndicated series, like Lloyd Bridges' Sea Hunt, enjoyed popular success, many
more were used as filler by local channels seeking to flesh out holes in their
lineup. Coronado 9 didn't even rank
high enough to be mentioned in TV Guide's
September 24 Fall Preview issue, though other syndicated shows like Sea Hunt, The Case of the Dangerous Robin, and The Brothers Brannagan are covered.
But despite this collective lack of support and perhaps even
clear definition by those producing the show, Coronado 9 makes for a fairly entertaining period crime drama,
largely due to Cameron's rugged but even-handed personality. The producers and
writers seem to have recognized the hint of implausability in some of the plots
because Adams frequently tells those who wish to hire him that they would be
better off taking their case to the police, rather than a private investigator.
But his clients always come up with an excuse for why they don't want to
involve the cops, often in the interest of avoiding publicity, as in
"Stroll in the Park" (September 13, 1960) in which married Seattle
businessman Joseph Brand is bushwhacked in the park kissing a pretty young
actress and has his briefcase containing company secrets stolen. In the world
of Coronado 9 any such incident is
sure to wind up in the newspapers, causing problems for Brand in both his
marriage and his job. Likewise in "I Want to Be Hated," young Nancy
Mosler, who Adams first meets on the ferry from the mainland to Coronado
island, shows up at his beachfront back door claiming to have been attacked but
not wanting to go to the police for fear of losing her job when the alleged
attacker contradicts her story. And again in "Four and Twenty
Buddhas" (November 1, 1960), produce seller W.G. Wong calls Adams when her
niece goes missing after bringing rare Chinese art objects into the country in
the hopes of selling them to rescue her father from financial ruin. Wong resists
Adams' suggestion to take the case to the police because the family wants to
avoid publicity.
Also hard to believe is the frequent beatings the towering,
intimidating Cameron takes from much smaller criminal pugilists in each episode's
obligatory fistfight. But being the hero, Cameron's Adams always prevails, even
sending one assailant to his death in the bear pit of the San Diego Zoo
("Obituary of a Small Ape," December 27, 1960). It's obvious the
producers and writers have Adams get the worst of it early on to heighten
dramatic tension, but it does strain the show's believability at times. On the
other side of the ledger, there are a few instances where the plot takes an
unexpected twist--in "The Widow of Kill Cove" and in "Loser's
Circle" (December 20, 1960)--that raise Coronado 9 above the average, formula-driven crime drama of the
era. Overall, the series delivers satisfying entertainment more often than not.
The show's grand but derivative opening theme and individual
episode scores were the work of Harold V. Johnson, who had previously worked on
four episodes of Cameron's State Trooper series
and had served as music supervisor on 14 episodes of the Mickey Spillane-based
late 50s crime drama Mike Hammer.
Johnson studied music at UCLA and was later an educator himself. He died
October 21, 1995 at the age of 77.
The complete first and only season has been released on DVD
by Timeless Media Group.
The Actors
Rod Cameron
Born Nathan Roderick Cox in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, the
6'4" Cameron originally aspired to be a Canadian Mountie, but when that
career path did not work out, he moved to New York to take up acting and work
in construction on the Holland Tunnel, then relocated to California, where he
found work in bit parts, as a stand in for stars like Fred MacMurray, as a
stunt double for cowboy stars such as Buck Jones, and as the leading man in
screen tests for prospective starlets. He finally found success playing
tough-nosed hero Rex Bennett in the war-time serial shorts G-Men vs. the Black Dragon and Secret
Service in Darkest Africa. This serial success led to a contract with
Universal, though most of his roles were in B-grade westerns. However, he did
get to play opposite fellow Canadian and future Munster Yvonne DeCarlo in Salome, Where She Danced, Frontier Gal, and River Lady. In the 1950s he continued appearing in second-tier
westerns like Dakota Lil, Wagons West, and San Antone but also made the move to television, first playing
Police Detective Lieutenant Bart Grant on City
Detective from 1953-55. Then he played Lt. Rod Blake for three seasons on
the Highway Patrol knockoff State
Trooper, which aired from 1956-59. Cameron also continued the B-movie lead
roles in such thrillers as Passport to
Treason and The Electronic Monster.
After Coronado 9,
Cameron had a spattering of TV guest appearances, including 6 stints on Laramie, 3 turns on Adam-12, and a pair of roles on Alias
Smith and Jones. His last TV guest roles were on The Rockford Files in 1976 and on Project U.F.O. in 1978. More titillating than the sensational
movies he appeared in was this tidbit from his personal life: after being
married for 10 years to Angela Alves-Lico, he divorced her and married her
mother Dorothy. Cameron died from cancer in Gainesville, Georgia on December
21, 1983 at the age of 72.
Notable Guest Stars
Season 1, Episode 1, "The Widow of Kill Cove": Beverly
Garland (shown on the left, played Casey Jones on Decoy, Ellis
Collins on The Bing Crosby Show,
Barbara Harper Douglas on My Three Sons,
Dorothy "Dotty" West on Scarecrow
and Mrs. King, Ellen Lane on Lois
& Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, and Ginger on 7th Heaven) plays presumed widow Doris
Denny. Doug McClure (Frank Flippen on Overland
Trail, Jed Sills on Checkmate,
Trampas on The Virginian, C.R. Grover
on Search, Cash Conover on Barbary Coast, and Kyle X. Applegate on Out of This World) plays Adams' young
friend Jimmy Hoke.
Season 1, Episode 2, "Stroll in the Park": Connie
Hines (Carol Post on Mister Ed) plays
aspiring actress Lorna Preston. Betty Lou Gerson (voice of Cruella de Vil in 101 Dalmations) plays her sister Carole.
Robert Cornthwaite (Professor Windish on Get
Smart) plays Seattle businessman Joseph Brand.
Season 1, Episode 3, "Doomtown": Richard Arlen (starred
in The Virginian, Dangerous Paradise, Gun Smoke, Island of Lost Souls,
and Alice in Wonderland) plays small
town business leader Blair Harper. Frank Ferguson (Gus Broeberg on My Friend Flicka, Eli Carson on Peyton Place, and Dr. Barton Stuart on Petticoat Junction) plays local
constable Jim Usher. Kay Kuter (Newt Kiley on Petticoat Junction and Green
Acres) plays cripple Ben Turner. Hal Needham (Hollywood's highest-paid
stuntman who invented numerous stunt devices, was a double for Richard Boone
and Burt Reynolds, and directed Smokey
and the Bandit, Hooper, and Cannonball Run) plays local hood Joe.
Season 1, Episode 4, "The Spinster of Nob Hill": Jocelyn
Brando (Marlon Brando's older sister) plays wealthy heiress Amy Loomis. Ed
Nelson (Michael Rossi on Peyton Place
and Ward Fuller on The Silent Force)
plays her brother-in-law Doug. Lynette Bernay (the costumer on Miami Vice, Undeclared, and Burn Notice)
plays Doug's girl-friend Madge Wyman. Robert Stevenson (bartender Big Ed on Richard Drum and Marshal Hugh Strickland
on Stagecoach West) plays Police Lt.
Kirk.
Season 1, Episode 5, "The
Groom Came D.O.A.": Connie Hines (shown on the right, see "Stroll in the Park" above)
plays newlywed Penny. Sid Raymond (voice of Baby Huey in numerous cartoon
shorts and on The Baby Huey Show)
plays old fisherman Fishy Smith.
Season 1, Episode 6, "The Day Chivalry Died": Patricia
Medina (Margarita Cortazar on Zorro)
plays Adams' friend's wife Helen Cardoza. Robert Lowery (starred in Criminal Investigator, Revenge of the Zombies, The Navy Way, The Mummy's Ghost, and They
Made Me a Killer and played Big Tim Champion on Circus Boy and Buss Courtney on Pistols
'n' Petticoats) plays Helen's former lover Carson Miller.
Season 1, Episode 7, "I Came for the Funeral": Jan
Arvan (Nacho Torres on Zorro and Paw
Kadiddlehopper on The Red Skelton Hour)
plays Mexican police assistant Carlos. John Dennis (Dutch Schultz on The Lawless Years) plays thug Jack Goff.
Ronnie Rondell, Jr. (stunt coordinator on Mod
Squad, Charlie's Angels, Dynasty, and Hart to Hart) plays thug Juan Velez.
Season 1, Episode 8, "I Want to Be Hated": Doris
Lloyd (starred in Waterloo Bridge, Tarzan the Ape Man, Oliver Twist, and The Time
Machine) plays the grandmother of a young woman Adams is trying to save. Robert
P. Lieb (Harry Thompson on Hazel)
plays Police Capt. Bruce Allen. Bill Erwin (Joe Walters on My Three Sons and Glenn Diamond on Struck by Lightning) plays carjack victim Joe.
Season 1, Episode 9, "Four and Twenty Buddhas": Lisa
Lu (Miss Mandarin on Yancy Derringer
and Hey Girl on Have Gun Will Travel)
plays beauty contestant Mei Ling. Raymond Bailey (shown on the left, played Milburn Drysdale on The Beverly Hillbillies, Dean Magruder
on The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis,
D.A. John Carvell on The Untouchables,
and Mr. Beaumont on My Sister Eileen)
plays art dealer Mr. Crater. Noel Toy (legendary Chinese-American exotic
dancer, played Mama San on M*A*S*H)
plays produce dealer W.G. Wong. Mark Allen (Matt Kissel on The Travels of Jamie McPheeters and Sam Evans on Dark Shadows) plays customs agent imposter
Mark. Bernard Fein (Pvt Gomez on The Phil
Silvers Show) plays nightclub manager Mason. King Calder (Lt. Gray on Martin Kane) plays the head of the
customs agency.
Season 1, Episode 10, "Run Scared": Larry J. Blake
(the unnamed jailer on Yancy Derringer
and Tom Parnell on Saints and Sinners)
plays ex-con Harry Matthews. Phil Tully (Charlie the bartender on The Deputy) plays Police Sgt. O'Donnell.
Nora Marlowe (Martha Commager on Law of
the Plainsman, Sara Andrews on The
Governor and J.J., and Mrs. Flossie Brimmer on The Waltons) plays Matthews' aunt Nora Morgan. James Beck (Sgt.
Highton on Hondo) plays fitness
center employee Jim. John Harmon (Eddie Halstead on The Rifleman) plays tattoo artist Doc Little.
Season 1, Episode 11, "Alibi Bye": Clark Howat (Dr.
John Petrie on The Adventures of Dr. Fu
Manchu) plays Police Sgt. Warren. Katherine Warren (starred in The Lady Pays Off, The Glenn Miller Story, and The
Caine Mutiny) plays wealthy widow Clara Tyson. Roy Engel (Doc Martin on Bonanza, the police chief on My Favorite Martian, and President
Ulysses S. Grant on The Wild, Wild West)
plays narcotics dealer Dave Squires. James Lanphier (starred in Flight of the Lost Balloon and The Pink Panther and played Leslie on Peter Gunn) plays his partner Topeka.
Season 1, Episode 12, "A Bookie Is Not a Bibliophile":
John Bryant (Dr. Carl Spaulding on The
Virginian) plays bookshop manager Frank Banner. Alfred Shelly (Carney on The D.A.'s Man) plays casino operator
Johnny Broaca.
Season 1, Episode 13, "Careless Joe": Sue Ane
Langdon (shown on the right, played Kitty Marsh on Bachelor Father,
Lillian Nuvo on Arnie, Rosie on Grandpa Goes to Washington, and Darlene
on When the Whistle Blows) plays cigarette
girl Connie. Bernard Fein (see "Four and Twenty Buddhas" above) plays
bookie Frank Fishman. Kathie Browne (Angie Dow on Hondo) plays potential heiress Dinah.
Season 1, Episode 14, "Remember the Alamo": David
White (shown on the left, played Larry Tate on Bewitched) plays
Adams' old Navy friend Jeff Hollister. Beverly Garland (see "The Widow of
Kill Cove" above) plays Hollister's secretary Ann Chapman. Hugh Lawrence (Lt.
Mike O'Malley on Miami Undercover)
plays FBI agent Sprague.
Season 1, Episode 15, "Blow, Gabriella": Ray
Stricklyn (Dr. James Parris on The Colbys
and Senator Pickering on Wiseguy) plays
young aspiring scientist Benton Partley. Ed Kemmer (Commander Buzz Corry on Space Patrol, Paul Britton on The Secret Storm, and Dick Martin on As the World Turns) plays his brother
Bradley. William Forrest (Major Swanson on The
Adventures of Rin Tin Tin) plays their father Air Force Cmdr. Partley. Edna
Holland (appeared in Criss Cross, Roar of the Crowd, and Inside Daisy Clover) plays their
housekeeper Miss Elizabeth.
Season 1, Episode 16, "Loser's Circle": Hardie
Albright (starred in The Song of Songs,
The Scarlet Letter, and Angel on My Shoulder) plays acquitted
murder suspect Charlie McGill. DeForest Kelly (shown on the right, played Dr. McCoy on Star Trek) plays McGill's former
neighbor Frank Briggs.
Season 1, Episode 17, "Obituary of a Small Ape": J.
Pat O'Malley (Judge Caleb Marsh on Black
Saddle, Duffy on Frontier Circus,
Harry Burns on My Favorite Martian,
Mr. Bundy on Wendy and Me, Herbert Morrison
on A Touch of Grace, and Bert Beasley
on Maude) plays veterinarian Dr. S.J.
Tracy. Marc Cavell (Gray Hawk on Pistols
'n' Petticoats) plays young animal lover Cleto Dominguez. Ronnie Rondell,
Jr. (see "I Came for the Funeral" above) plays his father Joe.
Virginia Christine (the Folgers Coffee woman in commercials, starred in The Mummy's Curse, The Killers, and Night Wind
and played Ovie Swenson on Tales of Wells
Fargo) plays his Aunt Sarita. Robert Bice (Police Capt. Jim Johnson on The Untouchables) plays an unnamed
police lieutenant.