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Ellery Queen The Adventure of the Sinister Scenario (1975–1976) Online

Ellery Queen The Adventure of the Sinister Scenario (1975–1976) Online
Original Title :
The Adventure of the Sinister Scenario
Genre :
TV Episode / Crime / Drama / Family / Mystery
Year :
1975–1976
Directror :
Peter H. Hunt
Cast :
Jim Hutton,David Wayne,Noah Beery Jr.
Writer :
Frederic Dannay,Manfred Lee
Type :
TV Episode
Time :
48min
Rating :
8.2/10
Ellery Queen The Adventure of the Sinister Scenario (1975–1976) Online

Gil Mallory, an actor playing Ellery Queen in a motion picture, is supposed to be shot on camera, then jump up and nab the woman who shot him, exclaiming "Bulletproof vest!" The rehearsal with blanks goes fine. But the ensuing take with the same gun finds it loaded with real bullets, and Mallory drops dead. The film crew tries to carry on, and soon stunt man Mike Hewitt is killed when the car he was driving is rigged to wipe out before he was ready. Are the two murders linked -- and how?
Episode cast overview:
Jim Hutton Jim Hutton - Ellery Queen
David Wayne David Wayne - Inspector Richard Queen
Noah Beery Jr. Noah Beery Jr. - Lionel Briggs (as Noah Beery)
Carole Cook Carole Cook - Gossip Columnist
Don DeFore Don DeFore - Dave Pierce
Troy Donahue Troy Donahue - Gilbert Mallory
Vincent Price Vincent Price - Director Michael Raynor
Barbara Rush Barbara Rush - Claire Mallory
Paul Carr Paul Carr - Lt. Braden
Paul Fix Paul Fix - Capt. Benjamin Blake
Susan Damante Susan Damante - Pamela Courtney
Jack Murdoch Jack Murdoch - Al Garvin (as Jack Murdock)
James Sikking James Sikking - Mike Hewitt
Rod Porter Rod Porter - Asst. Director
Karl Lukas Karl Lukas - Sgt. Harris

Ellery and Richard Queen spend the entire time complaining about the poor choice of actors that are portraying them in the film. Richard Queen makes references to Lee Bowman and Hugh Marlowe, who actually played Ellery Queen on TV in the 1950s.

This is the only episode in which Tom Reese does not appear.


User reviews

Fenius

Fenius

When you add a guest cast including Vincent Price to this regular cast, you expect a lot. This one delivers pretty well. It just isn't quite plot wise what some of the other episodes of the series are.

We keep expecting more & more each show as these are so good. One thing I'd like to note here. According to legend, Jim Hutton spent 24-7 at the studio working on this series. It really shows as Hutton is at his best during the entire series.

There are times when Hutton makes the shows go even when the plot isn't quite where it could be. This episode is one of them. NBC suggested Hutton for this show. Pairing him with David Wayne was a touch of genius. Just having them on this movie set with Price here is plenty of reason to watch.
Bele

Bele

Episode 17, "The Adventure of the Sinister Scenario," is a hugely enjoyable departure for the series, with Inspector Richard Queen and son Ellery at Hollywood's low budget Crown Eagle Studios, where director Michael Raynor (Vincent Price) is shooting a mystery film about both Queens. Lionel Briggs (Noah Beery, then busy on THE ROCKFORD FILES), cast as the Inspector, is upset that many of his lines have been given to the temperamental star playing Ellery, Gilbert Mallory (Troy Donohue), who owns a piece of the picture. Mallory is having an affair with his co-star, Pamela Courtney (Susan Damante), a constant source of humiliation for his wife Claire (Barbara Rush, previously seen as a less glamorous suspect in episode 1). Studio publicist Dave Pierce (Don De Fore) treats the Queens to lunch before shooting resumes with a rewritten scene which has Pamela Courtney shooting Mallory, wearing a bulletproof vest to 'finesse' her into thinking she had killed him; however, the prop gun fires three real bullets, and the phony vest worn by the actor fails to prevent a real murder from taking place on the set. Capt. Benjamin Blake (Paul Fix, THE RIFLEMAN), an old friend of Inspector Queen, allows them both to remain and assist the reluctant investigation conducted by Lt. Braden (Paul Carr) and Sgt. Harris (Karl Lukas), offering an amusing battle of wits between New York and L. A. police procedures. Property man Al Garvin (Jack Murdock), swearing he loaded blanks in the prop gun that morning, believes he may be a suspect due to a recent threat against Mallory. But when the stunt man, Mike Hewitt (James B. Sikking, later of HILL STREET BLUES), gets killed in a car with faulty brakes, Ellery learns the key to the mystery, and 'directs' the final gathering of the suspects (and winds up 'finessing' the murderer). The diminutive Inspector Queen 'shoots' his son in a reenactment of the initial crime, after bitterly complaining about the casting of the equally diminutive Lionel Briggs in his part, suggesting Chester Morris ("Boston Blackie"), Brian Donlevy, or Pat O'Brien (and Lee Bowman for Ellery's part). Preferring instead to go sightseeing (name dropping such luminous starlets as Alice Faye, Hedy Lamarr, Dorothy Lamour, and Norma Shearer), the distracted Inspector confuses Sgt. Harris for Sgt. Velie (which explains the absence of Tom Reese, the only episode in which Velie does not appear). The producers had already used Vincent Price on COLUMBO, a small role in "Lovely but Lethal," yet despite a great deal of screen time the usually reliable actor turns in an atypical performance, initially shrill and hammy before tapping it down toward the end. The unbilled Jack De Mave shows up briefly as Sonny North, the actor replacing the deceased Gilbert Mallory in Ellery's part.