Ellery Queen (TV series)
Ellery Queen is an American TV drama series, developed by Richard Levinson and William Link, who based it on the fictional character of the same name. The series ran for a single season on NBC from September 11, 1975, to April 4, 1976. Jim Hutton stars as the eponymous sleuth, along with David Wayne as his father, Inspector Richard Queen.
Each episode revolves around author Queen investigating a murder, usually with the assistance of his father. The series uses some of the same dramatic devices found in the early Queen novels and radio shows. This includes Hutton breaking the fourth wall, to challenge the viewer to solve the mystery.
Plot
Set in post-World War II New York City the show revolved around author and amateur detective Ellery Queen, a bachelor who lives with his widowed father, Inspector Richard Queen. Ellery solves cases while writing his latest book, usually with assistance from his father, and Inspector Queen's right-hand-man, Sergeant Velie.Similar to the early Queen books and radio episodes, the audience is challenged to solve the mystery. For the television series, this led to Hutton breaking the fourth wall before the confrontation scene. This gave the viewers a short exposition about the case, and leaving the viewer to put together the clues.
The final act always used the detective cliché of calling together all the suspects, with Ellery Queen presenting the solution. The great detective's detailed exposition allowed audience members to assess how they had guessed right and wrong. In some episodes, Queen's explanation disproved the theory of a rival sleuth.
The series departed from the original stories in two respects. An element of mild humour was added by making the Ellery Queen character slightly physically clumsy, and the character of rival radio detective Simon Brimmer was created for the series.
Cast
- Jim Hutton as Ellery Queen
- David Wayne as Inspector Richard Queen
- Tom Reese as Sgt. Thomas Velie
Recurring
- John Hillerman as Simon Brimmer, a radio host and Queen's frenemy. He frequently competes with Ellery, and jumps to conclusions about the murderer based on one piece of minor evidence.
- Ken Swofford as Frank Flannigan, a reporter who competes with Queen on several cases.
- Nina Roman as Grace, Inspector Queen's secretary.
- Arch Johnson as Deputy Commissioner Hayes, Inspector Queen's boss.
- Maggie Nelson as Vera, Frank Flannigan's secretary.
Guest stars
- Julie Adams
- Rene Auberjonois
- Don Ameche
- Dana Andrews
- Eve Arden
- Jim Backus
- Ken Berry
- Lloyd Bochner
- Tom Bosley
- George Burns
- Gretchen Corbett
- Joan Collins
- William Demarest
- Troy Donohue
- Rhonda Fleming
- Anne Francis
- Eva Gabor
- Lynda Day George
- Larry Hagman
- Pat Harrington
- Rosanna Huffman
- Robert Loggia
- Guy Lombardo
- Ida Lupino
- Nan Martin
- Roddy McDowall
- Ed McMahon
- Vera Miles
- Ray Milland
- Sal Mineo
- Dina Merrill
- Donald O'Connor
- Bert Parks
- Walter Pidgeon
- Vincent Price
- Pernell Roberts
- Cesar Romero
- Barbara Rush
- Dean Stockwell
- Dee Wallace
- Ray Walston
- Betty White
Production
In 1974, Levinson and Link retooled their idea into a new pilot, this time with Jim Hutton and David Wayne as Ellery and Inspector Queen. A television pilot premiered on March 23, 1975, with the made-for-TV movie Ellery Queen: Too Many Suspects. Levinson and Link adapted the script from the 1965 Ellery Queen novel The Fourth Side of the Triangle. NBC ordered a series based on the pilot in May 1975.
A single season of 22 episodes followed. The theme music was by Elmer Bernstein. The last episode aired on April 4, 1976, after which NBC cancelled the series. The series ranked 68 out of 97 shows that season. Levinson and Link later retooled the idea of an author and amateur sleuth who solves murders into the CBS series, Murder, She Wrote.
Reception
, reviewing the series at its premiere in September 1975, called it "a garage-sale period piece"; he said "the presence of Guy Lombardo, some ancient autos and the oldest of detective story conventions are supposed to evoke nostalgia. They do not—and the format's stasis is numbing."In 1979, Levinson and Link won a Special Edgar Award for creating the Columbo and Ellery Queen TV series.