After the surprise success of Blake Edwards' Peter Gunn in the 1958-59 television
season, CBS called on the then 37-year-old producer for another hit when it
decided to replace the Edward Binns crime drama Brenner barely into the 1959 fall season. And Edwards delivered
with Mr. Lucky, which finished the
season tied for #21 in the ratings, higher than Gunn. But the series had the bad fortune of running afoul of Bible
belt distaste for contemporary depictions of gambling and never recovered. The series'
only resemblance to the 1943 feature-length film of the same name was the suave
demeanor of the title character, played by Cary Grant in the film and John
Vivyan in the TV series, and his penchant for gambling. Both were also ostensibly
based on the short story "Bundles for Freedom" by Milton Holmes. But
whereas Grant's Lucky is a gambler and draft dodger until he reforms and joins
the military, Vivyan's Lucky runs a South American casino with his sidekick
Andamo, then escapes a revolution and relocates in the States to set up a
gambling establishment aboard his boat, the Fortuna II, situated 3 miles off
land in international waters to avoid U.S. restrictions and taxes. While
outside the reach of government officials, Lucky was not beyond the disapproval
of American television viewers, particularly in the South, who began
complaining to CBS, as reported in the January 23, 1960 edition of TV Guide. By the February 13 edition, TV Guide was reporting that sponsor
Lever Brothers had demanded that the show be made more respectable, but by then
the show had already made the transition, with Lucky hinting to Andamo at the
end of "The Sour Milk Fund" (January 30, 1960) that the Fortuna II would
no longer be used for gambling. In the next episode, "The Brain
Picker" (February 6, 1960), Lucky reveals that the boat will become an
exclusive dinner club. TV Guide,
playing on the fact that Lever was mostly known for its soap, opined, "By
taking the bite out of the character, it [Lever] was running a real risk of
transforming one of the season's big hits into a big flop..." Yet, as
mentioned above, the show finished just out of the top 20 in the ratings for
the year. However, Lever decided not to renew its sponsorship, and the network
was unable to find a replacement. Vivyan, who had turned down a role in an
Ingrid Bergman film in anticipation of a second season of Mr. Lucky, had a lackluster career thereafter.
Despite its abandonment by its sponsors, the series proved
popular not only with viewers but also with the editors at TV Guide, as it co-starred in a February 13 cover story with Peter Gunn and producer Edwards, scored
profiles of co-stars Pippa Scott in the April 2 issue and Ross Martin in the
May 21 issue, and was the subject of the magazine's weekly review in the March
12 issue. In that review, Frank DeBlois admires the show's character
development, witty dialogue, and visual aesthetics, but admits that the plots
are frequently shopworn. And he has a point: most episodes revolve around someone
seeking assistance from Lucky or trying to manipulate him for their purposes,
and most climax with a fist-fight that Lucky and Andamo always win, which would
be a tad more credible if Lucky's back-story included a boxing career like
Charles Bronson's Mike Kovacs in Man With
a Camera. Amongst those seeking Lucky's assistance are stand-up comedian
Jerry Musco, trying to escape from his mobster former employer in "The
Last Laugh" (February 13, 1960), exploited ex-con Karl Lieder in "The
Parolee" (Febraury 20, 1960), country club manager Joe Branco, trying to
snuff out a dangerous card cheat in "Cold Deck" (March 19, 1960), and
young, blonde, rich socialite Margot who is being pursued by a beatnik serial
killer in "Stacked Deck" (May 28, 1960). Among those trying to
manipulate him are bad painter and art thief Andre Damon in "Aces Back to
Back" (January 2, 1960), old friend and heist co-conspirator Pop Markel in
"Big Squeeze" (March 12, 1960), divorced mob attorney Vincent, trying
to force his ex-wife into joint custody by using the Fortuna II to kidnap his
own daughter in "His Maiden Voyage" (March 26, 1960), and Nazi
mouthpiece Frederick St. John, who uses the Fortuna II as a way to sneak back
into the States in "Odyssey of Hate" (June 4, 1960). In many of these
white-knuckle escapades, Lucky and Andamo are bailed out in the nick of time by
police Lt. Rovacs, who maintains a love-hate relationship with the
boys--simmering because they are outside his jurisdiction and sometimes have
interests at odds with his, but also somewhat thankful for the number of cases
they help him solve. Sometimes the rescues are a bit implausible, as in
"Stacked Deck" where Lucky tries to signal Rovacs on shore by
flicking his boat's illuminated sign off and on, only to learn from the killer
that because the sign is neon, the flickering would probably appear normal
rather than a sign of distress. Still, Rovacs shows up just as the killer is
about to shoot Lucky, proving that his nickname is not without merit.
Regarding the character development that DeBlois lauded in
his TV Guide review, Lucky is a more
complex individual than the standard male lead. Though he can check off tall,
dark, and handsome on his resumé, his occupation as a professional gambler
during the first half of the series causes him to occasionally rub elbows with
unsavory characters. He maintains a high standard of ethics, refusing, as
mentioned above, to allow his boat to be used as a getaway vehicle for a heist
in "Big Squeeze," even though one of the perpetrators is an old
friend. But he also doesn't run to the police and rat out that old friend, even
when the friend's accomplices first frame him for the robbery and then take
Andamo as a hostage. Rovacs is only able to rush in at the last minute by
tailing Lucky after he is framed as he traces the crime back to its source.
Also somewhat ambivalent is Lucky's relationship status: his regular girlfriend
Margaret "Maggie" Shank-Rutherford appears in only 8 of the 34
episodes, and in those episodes he is devoted only to her. But in other
episodes he occasionally becomes very friendly with a number of other lovely
ladies, some of them quite dangerous, as with the assassin Miss Grey, hired to
rub him out in "I Bet Your Life" (April 2, 1960), or gambler moll
Evelyn, who lures him into a trap in "Election Bet" (June 18, 1960).
The other characters are simpler by comparison. Andamo is a
trusty and always loyal sidekick with plenty of wit but also a weakness for
feminine charms that sometimes gets him into trouble , too, such as when he
falls for do-gooder socialite Victoria Pennington, whose charity is run by a
crook in "The Sour Milk Fund" (January 30, 1960). Rovacs is a
consistently dyspeptic and sarcastic cop, while Maggie is a somewhat ditzy
girlfriend who disobeys instructions and nearly gets herself killed in
"Maggie the Witness" (January 9, 1960).
The boat used as the Fortuna II was actually named The Alamo
and was built in 1932 for William F. Ladd of New York. After changing ownership
several times, it was acquired by the U.S. Navy in 1942 and was decommissioned
at the end of World War II in December 1945. It was sold to retired Col. C.S.
Smith in 1947, and it was during his ownership that it was used for Mr. Lucky. In 1960 it was sold to
Enrique Braun, who moved it to Acapulco. In 1982 it was to be converted to a
floating restaurant (just like in the TV series) when it caught fire and sunk.
It is now considered a popular scuba diving venue. The entire history, with
additional photos and documents, can he found here.
As with Peter Gunn,
the music for the series was provided by frequent Blake Edwards collaborator
and soundtrack superstar Henry Mancini, who would later provide scores for
Edwards' signature Pink Panther film franchise. The theme song for Mr. Lucky was released as a single and
reached #21 on the pop charts after debuting at #95 the week of April 10, 1960.
Also like Peter Gunn, Mancini
produced two albums with music taken from the series, the eponymous Mr. Lucky and Mr. Lucky Goes Latin. The theme song is what the house band aboard
the Fortuna II usually plays, and Lucky has a pocket watch that plays the first
five notes of the theme when opened.
Though the series had not been released to DVD at the time this post was originally written (all 34
episodes were then currently available on youtube.com with visual quality varies from
quite good to merely acceptable), the complete series is now available from Timeless Media Group.
The Actors
John Vivyan
Born Jan Vukoyan to Croatian parents in Pittsburgh, Vivyan
grew up in Chicago and was a ballroom dancer until a World War II injury at
Guadalcanal forced a career change. After the war, he graduated from the
American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York in 1946 and made his first TV
appearance on an episode of the drama anthology series Studio One in Hollywood three years later. More regular TV work did
not come until 1957, when he appeared on shows such as State Trooper, Highway Patrol,
and The Millionaire. More steady work
in crime dramas and westerns, including four appearances in Maverick, followed over the next two
years until he was cast as the lead for Mr.
Lucky. He also appeared in 9 episodes of The Lawless Years before and after Lucky in 1959 and 1961, playing the character Lepke Buchalter in 7
of those appearances.
But, as mentioned above, the cancelation of Lucky took him by surprise and appears
to have hit him hard. Interviews at the time said that he was shocked by the
decision, and he appeared in only one feature-length film, 1962's Rider on a Dead Horse, and a string of
TV guest appearances on a mere 15 shows over the next 23 years, the last being
an episode of Simon & Simon in
1983. He died that year at the age of 68 on December 20. He also owned a
message center in Hollywood on Wilshire Blvd in the 1970s and made commercials
for Coffeemate in the 1980s.
Ross Martin
Much happier than Vivyan's story is that of the actor who
played his sidekick Andamo. Martin was born as Martin Rosenblatt in Grodek,
Poland in 1920 but grew up in New York's Lower East Side. He explained in his
May 21 TV Guide feature story that
his parents and grandparents suffered many pogroms in Poland and that he grew
up with a sense of insecurity that drove him to study law, business, and
accounting as fallbacks, even though his desire was to be an actor. A
multilingual background (he spoke Yiddish, Polish, and Russian growing up) made
him adept at picking up additional languages and accents, making him a perfect
fit for the role of Andamo, who is Latin but of undisclosed origin. His
linguistic dexterity also allowed him to play a variety of characters when he
broke into radio, at one time having roles on 8 different shows simultaneously
before eventually landing his own show. But before that he had a vaudeville
comedy act with Bernie West and was an accomplished violinist by the age of 8.
He broke into TV in 1949 and had steady work throughout the 50s, including 4
appearances on Lights Out, 7 on Treasury Men in Action, and 6 more on Modern Romances. After catching Blake
Edwards' eye when appearing in an episode of Peter Gunn in January 1959, he landed the role of Andamo on Mr. Lucky, his first regular role, and continued his association with Edwards
in the feature films Experiment in Terror
in 1962 and The Great Race in 1965,
which led to a Golden Globe nomination.
After a few more guest appearances on various TV shows as
well as occasional movie work, he landed the role of a lifetime as secret
agent, technical wizard, and master of disguise Artemus Gordon opposite Robert
Conrad on The Wild Wild West, which
ran four seasons from 1965-69 and earned Martin an Emmy nomination in its last
season. However, in the last year of the series, Martin suffered a heart attack
that temporarily kept him from working. It has been suggested that Martin's
heart condition may have scared the networks away from giving him a lead role
thereafter, but he found steady work making appearances on many TV shows and in
TV movies throughout the 70s, including 5 appearances as Tony Alika on Hawaii Five-O. But his heart condition
eventually killed him when he collapsed while playing tennis and died at the
age of 61 on July 3, 1981.
Pippa Scott
Daughter of screenwriter Alan Scott (Top Hat, Swing Time, Follow the Fleet) and Broadway actress
Laura Straub, Scott got the acting bug early and studied at the Royal Academy
of Dramatic Arts in London. When she returned to the States, she won a Theatre
World Award for her performance in Child
of Fortune. Her first TV appearance came at the age of 20 and her film
debut followed the next year in the classic John Ford western The Searchers, though, as she noted in
one interview, her character was killed off very early in the film. In 1958 she
had a leading role as a high school teacher who has a relationship with a
student in As Young As We Are and had
a minor role that same year in the Rosalind Russell vehicle Auntie Mame before landing her first regular
TV role the following year with Mr. Lucky.
After Lucky's
cancelation, she was cast as Molly Wood on the first season of The Virginian but left after that
initial season and did not find another regular role until playing opposite
Jack Warden in the short-lived series Jigsaw
John in 1976. After a 1984 appearance on Remington Steele, Scott had a 25-year gap in acting appearances
until resurfacing in the film Footprints
in 2009. For nearly 20 years she was married to Lee Rich, who co-founded
Lorimar Productions, the production company for The Waltons, Dallas, Falcon Crest, and Knots Landing.
Tom Brown
Thomas Brown was born in New York City in 1913 and first
appeared on stage in his mother's arms at the ripe old age of 6 months. From
the age of 2 he was a child model in ads for Buster Brown Shoes, Arrow Collars,
and Buick Automobiles. His film career commenced at age 11 in 1924, and in the
1930s he had leading roles in Ann of
Green Gables, Bachelor of Arts,
and Gentle Julia. He appeared in over
60 films before moving into TV roles in the mid-50s, but his role as Lt. Rovacs
on Mr. Lucky was his first regular
television role. After Lucky's demise,
his most steady work was as the second incarnation of Al Weeks on General Hospital from 1963-65 and again
from 1970-74. He also worked in single showings on The Untouchables, Peter Gunn,
The Rifleman, and McHale's Navy, to name a few. From
1968-74 he had a recurring role as rancher Ed O'Connor in 13 episodes of Gunsmoke, and his last appearance was as
an emcee on a 1979 episode of The
Jeffersons. He died of cancer on June 3, 1990 at the age of 77.
Joe Scott
Though he appeared in more episodes than Pippa Scott (no
relation), Joe Scott's role as Joe the croupier and then maitre' d was
extremely low-profile, more like a piece of furniture than an actual character.
He occasionally had a line or two of dialogue, such as telling Lucky that
Rovacs was upstairs waiting to see him. His other TV roles, all but one during
the 1960s, were similar: a croupier on The Twilight Zone and The Dick Powell
Theatre, an unnamed jockey on National
Velvet, an attendant and a gunman in two episodes of Peter Gunn, and a bartender and a drive-in attendant on two
episodes of Burke's Law. He actually
got to play named characters in single episodes of The Untouchables and Checkmate
and ended his career as a bartender on The
Mary Tyler Moore Show in 1975. It is not known whether he is still living.
Notable Guest Stars
Season 1, Episode 11, "Aces
Back to Back": Peter Whitney (shown on the left, played Sergeant Buck Sinclair on The Rough Riders and Lafe Crick on The Beverly Hillbillies) plays horrible
painter Andre Damon. Bernard Fein (Pvt. Gomez on The Phil Silvers Show) plays robber Spanish Charley. Robert Warwick
(starred in Alias Jimmy Valentine, The Supreme Sacrifice, The Heart of a Hero, and Against All Flags) plays art appraiser
Charles Colter.
Season 1, Episode 12, "Maggie the Witness": Robert
Carricart (Pepe Cordoza on T.H.E. Cat)
plays hitman Willie. Arthur Batanides (Sgt. Sam Olivera on Johnny Midnight) plays hitman Bruce. Milton Frome (starred in Pardners, The Delicate Delinquent, and The
Swinger and played Lawrence Chapman on The
Beverly Hillbillies) plays attorney Pennypacker. Richard Devon (Jody Barker
on Yancy Derringer) plays imposter
attorney Billy.
Season 1, Episode 13, "The Two Million Dollar Window":
Wesley Lau (shown on the right, played Lt. Andy Anderson on PerryMason and Master Sgt. Jiggs on The
Time Tunnel) plays heist ringleader Slate. William Fawcett (Clayton on Duffy's Tavern, Marshal George Higgins
on The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin, and
Pete Wilkey on Fury) plays an unnamed
fisherman. William Boyett (Sgt. Ken Williams on Highway Patrol and Sgt. MacDonald on Adam-12) plays an unnamed health officer. Cyril Delvanti (Lucious
Coin on Jefferson Drum) plays convict
Gardenia O'Toole.
Season 1, Episode 14, " The Leadville Gang": Will
Wright (shown on the far left, played Mr. Merrivale on Dennis the Menace
and Ben Weaver on The Andy Griffith Show) plays former train robber the Leadville Kid. Burt Mustin (shown on the left, played Foley on The Great Gildersleeve, Mr. Finley on Date With the Angels, Gus the fireman on
Leave It to Beaver, Jud Fletcher on The Andy Griffith Show, and Justin
Quigley on All in the Family) plays accomplice
Billy Gregg. Raymond Hatton (starred in Oliver
Twist (1916), The Hunchback of Notre Dame,
and Lord Jim, played Marshal Sandy
Hopkins in 28 westerns and Rusty Joslin in 7 other westerns, and played The
Mole on Dick Tracy) plays accomplice
Joe Horn. Frank Ferguson (Gus Broeberg on My
Friend Flicka, Eli Carson on Peyton
Place, and Dr. Barton Stuart on Petticoat
Junction) plays retired marshal Hyatt Krausmayer. Harlan Warde (John
Hamilton on The Rifleman and Sheriff
John Brannan on The Virginian) plays retirement
home Dr. Adams.
Season 1, Episode 15, "The Sour Milk Fund": Warren
Stevens (starred in The Frogmen, The Barefoot Contessa, Deadline U.S.A., and Forbidden Planet, played Lt. William
Storm on Tales of the 77th Bengal Lancers,
and was the voice of John Bracken on Bracken's
World) plays orchid-growing charity head Charles Van Clede.
Season 1, Episode 16, " The Brain Picker": Lisa
Gaye (shown on the right, played Gwen Kirby on How to Marry a
Millionaire) plays blackmail victim Sherry Beaumont. Herbert Rudley (Sam
Brennan on The Californians, Lt. Will
Gentry on Michael Shayne, General
Crone on Mona McCluskey, and Herb
Hubbard on The Mothers-in-Law) plays her
counselor Arthur Burnett. Charles Wagenheim (Halligan on Gunsmoke) plays go-between Charles Van Halsington III.
Season 1, Episode 17, " The Last Laugh": Frank Gorshin
(shown on the left, starred in Hot Rod Girl, Invasion of the Saucer Men, Where the Boys Are, and That Darn Cat and played the Riddler on Batman) plays stand-up comic Jerry Musco.
Brad Dexter (starred in Macao, Between Heaven and Hell, and Run Silent, Run Deep) plays his former
boss Fred Scorby. Harvey Parry (Harrigan on Baretta)
plays Scorby thug Dane.
Season 1, Episode 18, " The Parolee": Jeremy Slate
(starred in The Sons of Katie Elder, The Devil's Brigade, and True Grit and played Larry Lahr on The Aquanauts) plays exploited parolee
Karl Lieder. Linda Lawson (shown on the right, jazz singer who played Renee on Adventures in Paradise, Pat Perry on Don't Call Me Charlie, and Laura Fremont on Ben Casey) plays his girlfriend Angie. Bartlett Robinson (Frank
Caldwell on Mona McCluskey) plays
liquor board head Joe Hardiman. Ric Roman (Capt. Briones on Zorro) plays thug Fenneman.
Season 1, Episode 19, "The Tax Man": Simon Scott (John
Riggs on Markham, Gen. Bronson on McHale's Navy, Chief Barney Metcalf on Mod Squad, and Arnold Slocum on Trapper John, M.D.) plays crooked
swimsuit maker George Darwin. Walter Burke (starred in All the King's Men, Jack the
Giant Killer, and Support Your Local
Sheriff! and played Tim Potter on Black
Saddle) plays his accountant Tobias Foss. Robert H. Harris (Jake Goldberg
on Molly and Raymond Schindler on The Court of Last Resort) plays IRS
investigator Fenton Lorimer. Bill Baldwin (narrator on Harbor Command and Bat Masterson and played various announcers on The Bob Cummings Show, The Untouchables, The Addams Family,
and The Beverly Hillbillies) plays second
IRS agent Orval Whitley.
Season 1, Episode 20, " The
Gladiators": William Smith (Sgt. Danny Keller on The Asphalt Jungle, Jimmy Delaney on Zero One, Joe Riley on Laredo,
Falconetti on Rich Man,- Poor Man - Book
II, Det. James "Kimo" Carew on Hawaii Five-O, Col Willie Shell on Emerald Point N.A.S., and Brodie Hollister on Wildside) plays Harvard graduate and boxer Leland Lamont. Kent
Taylor (Carlos Murietta on Zorro and
Capt. Jim Flagg on The Rough Riders)
plays mobster Frankie Bragan. John Dennis (Dutch Schultz on The Lawless Years) plays thug Flipper. Nita
Talbot (Marya on Hogan's Heroes, Judy
Evans on Here We Go Again, Delfina on
General Hospital, and Rose on Starting From Scratch) plays Bragan's
girlfriend Kitten Conner. Jimmy Lennon, Sr. (legendary fight announcer who
appeared in Alias the Champ, Racket Girls, Kid Galahad, and Rocky III
and on The Monkees, Mission: Impossible, and Mod Squad) plays the fight announcer.
Mushy Callahan (real-life boxing referee inducted into the World Boxing Hall of
Fame in 1989) plays himself.
Season 1, Episode 21, " Big Squeeze": Kevin Hagen
(shown on the left, played John Colton on Yancy Derringer,
Inspector Dobbs Kobick on Land of the
Giants, and Dr. Hiram Baker on Little
House on the Prairie) plays explosives expert Jojo Morgan. Percy Helton (Homer
Cratchit on The Beverly Hillbillies) plays
heist conspirator Pop Markel. Jack Elam (Deputy J.D. Smith on The Dakotas and George Taggart on Temple Houston) plays heist conspirator
Phil Bricker. Irene Tedrow (Mrs. Elkins on Dennis
the Menace) plays palm-reader Madame Maria.
Season 1, Episode 22, " Cold Deck": Joe Maross (shown on the right, played Fred
Russell on Peyton Place, Capt. Mike
Benton on Code Red, and Dr. Blakely
on Dallas) plays country club manager
Jim Branco. Larry J. Blake (the unnamed jailer on Yancy Derringer and Tom Parnell on Saints and Sinners) plays bartender Dave Gray. Peter Leeds (Tenner
Smith on Trackdown) plays crooked
card player Len Porter. Howard Petrie (Hugh Blaine on Bat Masterson) plays card player John Dort. Paul Maxey (Matt
Brockway on Lassie and Mayor John
Peoples on The People's Choice) plays
Lucky's patron Reynolds.
Season 1, Episode 23, " His Maiden Voyage": Tammy
Marihugh (Tammy Johnson on The Bob
Cummings Show) plays kidnapped
daughter Penny. Norman Alden (Johnny Ringo on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, Captain Horton on Rango, Tom Williams on My Three Sons, and Coach Leroy Fedders
on Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman) plays
thug Mitch. Henry Beckman (Commander Paul Richards on Flash Gordon, Mulligan on I'm
Dickens, He's Fenster, George Anderson on Peyton Place, Colonel Harrigan on McHale's Navy, Capt. Roland Frances Clancey on Here Come the Brides, Pat Harwell on Funny Face, Harry Mark on Bronk,
and Alf Scully on Check It Out) plays
thug Huey.
Season 1, Episode 24, " I Bet Your Life": Mari
Blanchard (shown on the left, starred in Abbott and Costello
Go to Mars, Destry, Son of Sinbad, and She Devil and played Kathy O'Hara on Klondike) plays hit-woman Miss Grey. R.G. Armstrong (Police Capt.
McAllister on T.H.E. Cat and Lewis
Vendredi on Friday the 13th) plays compulsive
gambler Mike Haley. Ross Elliott (Freddie the director on The Jack Benny Show and Sheriff Abbott on The Virginian) plays stockbroker Harold Young. James Maloney (Jim
on 21 Beacon Street) plays building
supervisor Mr. Hotchkiss.
Season 1, Episode 25, " Hair of the Dog": Peter
Whitney (see "Aces Back to Back" above) plays mobster Rosey
Rosenthal. Gavin MacLeod (shown on the right, starred in Operation
Petticoat, The Sand Pebbles, and Kelly's Heroes and played Joseph Haines
on McHale's Navy, Murray Slaughter on
The Mary Tyler Moore Show and Rhoda, and Capt. Merrill Stubing on The Love Boat) plays an unnamed clothing
store salesman.
Season 1, Episode 26, " Vote the Bullet": Dehl
Berti (Vittorio on Buck James and
John Taylor on Guns of Paradise)
plays council candidate Anthony Vasconi. Stafford Repp (shown on the left, played Chief O'Hara on Batman) plays labor leader Big John Root.
Charles Aidman (narrator on the 1985-87 version of The Twilight Zone) plays former candidate Art Cable.
Season 1, Episode 27, " Hit and Run": Alan Hewitt
(starred in That Touch of Mink, Days of Wine and Roses, The Misadventures of Merlin Jones, and The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes and played
Det. Bill Brennan on My Favorite Martian)
plays swindler Harvey Boone. Doris Singleton (Caroline Appleby on I Love Lucy, Susie on Angel, and Margaret Williams on My Three Sons) plays his wife Iris. Tom
McKee (Comrade Brisson Laylock on I Led 3
Lives, Capt. Davis on The Adventures
of Rin Tin Tin, and Fire Chief Tucker on Rescue 8) plays assistant D.A. Allen Christian. Sarah Selby (Miss
Thomas on Father Knows Best and Ma
Smalley on Gunsmoke) plays socialite
Mrs. Bullitt.
Season 1, Episode 28, " Taking a Chance": Joanna
Barnes (Lola on 21 Beacon Street and
Katie O'Brien on The Trials of O'Brien)
plays movie star Laura Lawrence. Stanley Adams (Lt. Morse on Not for Hire) plays her press agent
Danny Devlin. Billy Barty (Babby on Peter
Gunn, Sparky the Firefly on The
Bugaloos, Sigmund Ooze on Sigmund and
the Sea Monsters, Inch on Ace
Crawford, Private Eye, and the voice of Dweedle on Wildfire) plays an unnamed carnival little person.
Season 1, Episode 29, "Last Journey": Eugene
Mazzola (Joey Drum on Jefferson Drum)
plays father-seeking boy David Parker. Olan Soule (Aristotle "Tut"
Jones on Captain Midnight, Ray Pinker
on Dragnet (1952-59), and Fred
Springer on Arnie) plays his uncle
Mr. Burton. John Marley (starred in Cat
Ballou, Love Story, and The Godfather) plays mobster Glenn
Markson. Clegg Hoyt (Mac on Dr. Kildare)
plays launch pilot Pudge.
Season 1, Episode 30, "Operation Fortuna": Jack
Nicholson (shown on the right, starred in Five Easy Pieces,
Easy Rider, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, and Chinatown and played Jaime Angel on Dr. Kildare) plays clumsy waiter Martin. Richard Chamberlain (starred
in Joy in the Morning, Julius Caesar, The Three Musketeers, and The
Swarm and played Dr. James Kildare on Dr.
Kildare and Dr. Daniel Kulani on Island
Son) plays gang ring-leader Alec. Anne Helm (Molly Pierce on Run for Your Life) plays gang member
Edie. Jolene Brand (Anna Maria Verdugo on Zorro)
plays Andamo's childhood friend Clara Iglesias. Della Sharman (Nurse Betty
Johnson on Dr. Kildare) plays Lucky's
cashier Doris. Helen Kleeb (Mrs. Holland on Dennis
the Menace and Mamie Baldwin on The
Waltons) plays Martin's family maid.
Season 1, Episode 31, "Stacked Deck": Yvette
Mimeaux (shown on the left, starred in The Time Machine,
Where the Boys Are, and Toys in the Attic and played Vanessa
Smith on The Most Deadly Game and
Shane Bradley on Berrenger's) plays runaway
young socialite Margot. Grant Williams (Greg MacKenzie on Hawaiian Eye) plays beatnik serial killer Conrad.
Season 1, Episode 32, " Odyssey of Hate": Karl
Swenson (Lars Hanson on Little House on
the Prairie) plays Nazi promoter Frederick St. John. Patricia Donohue (Hazel
on The Thin Man and Lucy Hamilton on Michael Shayne) plays his companion
Ursula Heft. Ted Knight (shown on the right, played Ted Baxter on The
Mary Tyler Moore Show, Roger Dennis on The
Ted Knight Show, and Henry Rush on Too
Close for Comfort) plays his body double Dr. Benjamin Furst. Eleanor Audley
(Mother Eunice Douglas on Green Acres and
Mrs. Vincent on My Three Sons) plays wealthy
socialite Mrs. Dubois. Carol Bryan (Kitty Mathews on Oh, Those Bells) plays her niece Patricia. Robert Brubaker (Deputy
Ed Blake on U.S. Marshal and Floyd on
Gunsmoke) plays federal agent Barber.
Warner Jones (Capt. Wilbur Scott on The Blue Angels) plays his assistant Paul.
Season 1, Episode 33, "Dangerous Lady": Virginia
Vincent (Betty on The Joey Bishop Show,
Dottie Clark on The Super, and Daisy
Maxwell on Eight Is Enough) plays convict
moll Honeybird. Lee Van Cleef (starred in For
a Few Dollars More and The Good, The
Bad and the Ugly) plays her husband Kruger. Jackie Coogan (starred in The Kid, Oliver Twist, A Boy of
Flanders, Tom Sawyer, and Huckleberry Finn and played Stoney
Crockett on Cowboy G-Men, Sgt. Barnes
on McKeever & the Colonel, and
Uncle Fester Frump on The Addams Family)
plays mobster Joe Azevedo.
Season 1, Episode 34, " Election Bet": King Calder
(Lt. Gray on Martin Kane) plays gambler
Mr. Toby. Joi Lansing (shown on the left, played Shirley Swanson on The
Bob Cummings Show, Goldie on Klondike,
and Gladys Flatt on The Beverly
Hillbillies) plays his girlfriend Evelyn. Leo Gordon (Big Mike McComb on Maverick) plays an unnamed hit-man. Stan Jones (voicework on Challenge of the Superfriends, The Incredible Hulk, The Dukes, The Chipmunks, and The
Transformers) plays Andamo's friend Ed. Vito Scotti (Jose on The Deputy, Capt. Gaspar Fomento on The Flying Nun, Gino on To Rome With Love, and Mr. Velasquez on Barefoot in the Park) plays sculptor
Jake.
No comments:
Post a Comment