Columbo (season 3)
Columbo (season 3) | |
---|---|
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 8 |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Original release | September 23, 1973 – May 5, 1974 |
This is a list of episodes from the third season of Columbo.
Broadcast history
The season originally aired Sundays at 8:30-10:00 pm (EST) as part of The NBC Sunday Mystery Movie.
DVD release
The season was released on DVD by Universal Home Video.
Episodes
No. in series |
No. in season |
Title | Directed by | Written by | Runtime | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
18 | 1 | "Lovely But Lethal" | Jeannot Szwarc | Teleplay: Jackson Gillis Story: Myrna Bercovici | 73 minutes | September 23, 1973 |
Cosmetics queen Viveca Scott (Vera Miles) has developed a seemingly magic wrinkle remover, but the formula has been stolen by her former lover, Karl Lessing (Martin Sheen), a chemist for her company, who refuses to sell it back to her at any price. Taunted by Lessing, Scott bludgeons him in a fit of rage before he can sell it to her ruthless competitor, David Lang (Vincent Price). When Lang's secretary (Sian Barbara Allen) becomes a potential blackmailer Scott kills her as well. | ||||||
19 | 2 | "Any Old Port in a Storm" | Leo Penn | Teleplay: Stanley Ralph Ross Story: Larry Cohen | 98 minutes | October 7, 1973 |
Wine connoisseur Adrian Carsini (Donald Pleasence) runs a small winery specializing in unprofitable but prized wines. He is so highly regarded that he is about to be named the industry's Man-of-the-Year. His half-brother, Rick (Gary Conway), only wants to spend money on various hobbies and interests like sports and fast cars and has also been married several times. When Rick gets tired of Adrian's indulgences, he announces his decision to sell the land to mass producers of cheap, profitable wines. Adrian knocks him out and leaves him to die in an airtight wine cellar. Adrian travels to New York to accept an award and attend wine auctions, establishing his alibi. Upon his return, Adrian concocts a scuba diving accident to cover the crime. Columbo befriends Carsini while slyly searching for clues to link him to the murder. Julie Harris plays Adrian Carsini's formidable secretary. | ||||||
20 | 3 | "Candidate for Crime" | Boris Sagal | Teleplay: Irving Pearlberg & Alvin R. Friedman and Roland Kibbee & Dean Hargrove Story: Larry Cohen | 98 minutes | November 4, 1973 |
Harry Stone (Ken Swofford), a campaign manager for Nelson Hayward, is coercing the womanizing senatorial candidate (Jackie Cooper) to end his affair with a personal secretary (Tisha Sterling), which Stone regards as too risky during a campaign. Stone, however, does approve of a publicity stunt Hayward plans to pull, which involves fabricating death threats against himself, to promote his tough stance against crime. Hayward then uses this to his advantage: he lures Stone to Hayward's beach house (while driving Hayward's car and wearing Hayward's coat), where the candidate shoots and kills Stone, making it look like a case of mistaken identity as a result of the imaginary assassins. Joanne Linville plays Hayward's wife, and a young Katey Sagal has a small role as a secretary. Katey Sagal's father, Boris Sagal, directed the episode. | ||||||
21 | 4 | "Double Exposure" | Richard Quine | Stephen J. Cannell | 73 minutes | December 16, 1973 |
Dr. Bart Keppel (Robert Culp) is a "motivation research specialist" who has made a name for himself on the subject of subliminal advertising (which involves inserting frames of an advertised product into the reels of a film, so subconsciously a viewer's mind will crave what is pictured). Keppel's more lucrative sideline is blackmail: he takes pictures of married clients with a girl hired to tempt them. When his latest victim, Vic Norris, refuses to be blackmailed and threatens to expose him, Keppel plots to kill him. First Keppel plants a dish of salty caviar at a reception he is hosting for his clients. A subliminal cut of a refreshing drink is used to lure Norris out of a screening room where he is watching a promotional film Keppel is supposedly narrating (in fact they are listening to a prerecorded narration). Keppel sneaks out and shoots Norris in the building lobby, then arranges things to appear the crime was committed by Norris's wife. When Keppel's projectionist Roger White (Chuck McCann) discovers the cuts and pieces together the plot, Keppel shoots him as well. Columbo incriminates Keppel using his own science by showing him a film laced with subliminal frames of images taken of where the murder weapon was supposedly hidden. This episode received the Emmy Award in the category for Outstanding Limited Series. | ||||||
22 | 5 | "Publish or Perish" | Robert Butler | Peter S. Fischer | 73 minutes | January 13, 1974 |
Publisher Riley Greenleaf (Jack Cassidy) decides to kill his prolific author Alan Mallory (Mickey Spillane) to keep him from defecting to another publisher. He hires ex-con and avid homemade bomb enthusiast Eddie Kane (John Chandler) to do the job. While Greenleaf is getting drunk at a nearby bar, Kane walks into Mallory's office and shoots him. To cover his tracks, Greenleaf kills Kane with one of his own bombs, making it look like an accident. Columbo must discover the link between the two crimes. This episode has a split screen of Greenleaf's alibi and Mallory's murder. Spillane was the real-life author of Mike Hammer detective mysteries. Jack Cassidy played the villain in a total of three Columbo episodes--this one, "Murder by the Book," and "Now You See Him...." Mariette Hartley plays a publisher's assistant. | ||||||
23 | 6 | "Mind Over Mayhem" | Alf Kjellin | Teleplay: Steven Bochco and Dean Hargrove & Roland Kibbee Story: Robert Specht | 73 minutes | February 10, 1974 |
When Dr. Howard Nicholson (Lew Ayres) threatens to expose Neil Cahill (Robert Walker, Jr.) for plagiarizing a paper from a recently deceased scientist, Dr. Marshall Cahill (José Ferrer), director of a high-tech Pentagon think tank, kills Nicholson to protect his son. He installs a cybernetic robot codenamed MM-7 (Robby the Robot) to take his place overseeing a war exercise. Dr. Cahill steals a car from the motor pool and drives to Dr. Nicholson's house. In the driveway, Dr. Cahill runs him over, then carries his body into the house, ransacking it to make it look like a burglary gone wrong. To cover up damage the car received from the impact, Dr. Cahill backs his own car into the death car. Also starring Jessica Walter as Mrs. Nicholson and Lee Montgomery as the child genius Steven Spelberg. | ||||||
24 | 7 | "Swan Song" | Nicholas Colasanto | Teleplay: David Rayfiel Story: Stanley Ralph Ross | 94 minutes | March 3, 1974 |
Gospel-singing superstar Tommy Brown (Johnny Cash) is hugely successful. But he's unable to enjoy the usual benefits of his fame and wealth. His zealous wife Edna (Ida Lupino) can prove he had committed statutory rape with one of his backup singers, Maryann. With this proof, she blackmails him from enjoying the company of other women and even from spending the proceeds from his own concerts. She wants every penny to go towards building a tabernacle for the Lord. One day, Tommy decides he's had enough and decides to kill Edna and Maryann. He drugs both women to sleep on their small, private plane flight to Los Angeles, and then parachutes from the plane, making it seem like he was thrown clear in a tragic crash caused by flying through bad weather. Edna's brother Luke (Bill McKinney) insists the police handle the case as a homicide, while the FAA is ready to write it off to an accident. | ||||||
25 | 8 | "A Friend in Deed" | Ben Gazzara | Peter S. Fischer | 94 minutes | May 5, 1974 |
When Hugh Caldwell (Michael McGuire) accidentally kills his wife in the heat of a fight, he seeks help from his friend and neighbor, deputy police commissioner Mark Halperin (Richard Kiley). Halperin sees an opportunity to kill his own wife (Rosemary Murphy), a wealthy heiress who freely shares her wealth with the needy, so he helps Caldwell cover up the first crime and forces him to assist the following night, arranging it so that a cat burglar (Val Avery), who has recently been active in their neighborhood, is seen as the culprit in both murders. When Columbo realizes what happened, he enlists the burglar's help in catching the real perpetrators. |
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.