The Old "Perry Mason" TV Show

quote:

Originally posted by zen101
And anyone ever notice that Paul Drake had a phone in his convertible? I kid you not, he had some kind of cell phone/radio deal he could call Perry with.

                                                                                                    In the old Superman TV series Perry White had one.

I believe Gardner himself was at least an attorney if not a district attorney or public defender. He was a pretty deft hand at crafting decent plots with unexpected twists. Johnny Angel, makes an excellent point about Mason’s containment of the truth and how it differs in the television series. Probably one of the most misleading things about the show were the constant courtroom confessions as the real culprit broke down on the stand. In reality, this happens with about the frequency of Helen Hayes thrashing Mike Tyson.

What Gardner did have was a good estimate of human nature and the ability to portray the nuances of law and evidence rather well. A famous quote by Mason is that; “Every man has a closed chapter in his life.” I think that Burr did a fabulous job of animating Gardner’s charter. The entire cast managed to capture the essence of 1950s Los Angeles quite nicely. I would compare the television show’s casting accuracy with “The Maltese Falcon” for having just the right actors on board to recreate the books’ plot line.

Incidentally, (IIRC) at one point, there was a national call-in for a famous two part episode where the public got to decide if Mason won or lost the case. Burr was finally allowed to briefly grasp the laurels for one episode. There were also a very few episodes filmed in color. Bette Davis took the helm as a cantankerous woman attorney in one of them. It’s really rather shocking to watch the show in color. It almost “loses” something in making the chromatic transition.

Gardner was a real attorney who worked on several high-profile criminal cases. He was part of the legal team that defended Dr. Sam Sheppard (that was the case that inspired “The Fugitive”), for instance.

One of his co-counsels on the Sheppard case was F. Lee Bailey. Years ago, I read a magazine piece in which Bailey evaluated the “realism” of various legal-themed shows, and he mentioned that he’d once asked Gardner, “Have you ever REALLY witnessed a court case in which a witness broke down on the stand and confessed?”

Gardner supposedly laughed, and said “Of course not.”

An interesting bit of trivia from the IMDB