Not me. I think of her as…
(Spoilered as possibly NSFW)
Oh, my Lord, she’s nekkid!
I just watched this episode again. A few things I noticed:
It was directed by Nicholas Colasanto, aka “Coach” on Cheers!
I thought the white-haired cop Columbo was talking to at the scene of the crime looked familiar. He was Henry Beckman, aka “Col. Harrigan” in the final season of McHale’s Navy.
James Olson (“Paul”) looked familiar too. He was “Gen. Kirby,” Arhnold’s former CO in Commando.
Dawn Frame (“Audrey”) is now a tropical botanist in French Guiana.
Olson I knew from The Andromeda Strain.
I’m curious what people think of the two Columbo episodes based on Ed McBain books.
So Long As You Both Shall Live - they are trying to find a new bride wo is missing.
Undercover - finding pieces of a jigsaw type puzzle,
These are not typical Columbo episodes. I have read many Ed McBain books, but I skip over these two episodes. To me, it’s not Columbo.
I agree. I didn’t care for them either.
I did like that the bride worked towards freeing herself instead of waiting to be rescued, but it wasn’t Columbo
Stupid rose petals.
Just finished the “Columbo goes to London” episode.
I know Richard Basehart’s name {Gypsy on MST3K loves him!}…but not at all familiar with his work. So i didn’t know he wasn’t English. He seems to do a passable job. But it is the 70’s and he’s playing a way over the top actor. So imperfections are probably hidden by the flourishes.
Columbo just comes off as too silly for my tastes. Since a great deal of the ep is him looking around and communicating with peers and such…this is apparently the ‘real’ Columbo. Not an act he puts on for murderers. The real Columbo is quite silly.
I love that Columbo ‘framed’ the murderers. By placing fake evidence and hoping they would confess
That episode marks the first time I saw a California vanity license plate that contained SEVEN characters (CARSINI). This was weird because the episode aired in 1973, seven years before California started permitting license plates to have seven characters.
The technology of the day was a programmable record player (which I hadn’t heard about in real life). Apparently you can program the spot on the record where the song starts and can easily listen to the second and fifth track. (I’m still not clear on how that works).
I actually used to have one like that. My supposition at the time was that it used an optical scanning device to seek the “spaces” between the tracks. It also scanned the entire LP for those “spaces” even before it would accept the user’s pressing “Play.” Rather than a tone arm, this player had a linear drive mechanism mounted in the lid that would set the stylus down where directed.
I just got in the London episode…Columbo plants the evidence, a pearl, by tossing it into a closed umbrella from about 8 feet. Wow.
Just caught one with Martin Landau as identical twins, with Julie Newmar doing aerobic exercises. Great cast. Great to see Dabney Coleman too, as a fellow homicide detective almost a peer to Columbo which he never seems to have.
Also saw James McCeachern in another one. Question: Was there ever a villain of color or any minority in an episode?
For those of you who are Myrna Loy fans, did you know there was a statue of her in front of Venice (CA) High School?
This is the original:
It eventually crumbled and had to be removed. The replaced it with a new statue, but I don’t think it had the same grace as this one.
Wow!
Was there ever a villain of color or any minority in an episode?
Not that I recall. Almost all of the villains seemed to be rich or otherwise powerful white dudes we loved seeing cut down to size.
Also saw James McCeachern in another one. Question: Was there ever a villain of color or any minority in an episode?
Would you count Ricardo Montalbán?
Would you count Ricardo Montalbán?
Possibly, but that episode was set in Mexico. He wouldn’t be in the minority there.
Sal Mineo and Hector Elizondo played Middle Easterners in “A Case of Immunity,” but they were foreign diplomats.
That episode marks the first time I saw a California vanity license plate that contained SEVEN characters (CARSINI). This was weird because the episode aired in 1973, seven years before California started permitting license plates to have seven characters.
Interesting! I never knew that. (I guess SOME state must have had seven-character vanity plates back in 1973; how else would the writers have come up with the idea?)
Watched “The Greenhouse Jungle” with Ray Milland, Bradford Dillman, and Sandra Smith tonight.
My question is the same one I asked about Lee Grant: What the hell is Ray gonna do with all that hot ransom money? Sell it to a fence for a few pennies on the dollar?