Post-55th Anniversary Viewing
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Honey West
"The Abominable Snowman"
Originally aired October 1, 1965
Frndly said:
Someone wants a novelty salesman's sample case---badly enough to kill for it.
Wiki said:
Episode 3, "The Abominable Snowman," has a plot where cocaine is being smuggled inside snow globes, and is one of the earliest references in popular TV culture to cocaine as "snow".
This is the city: Los Angeles, California. At scenic Griffith Observatory, Honey delivers a sample case to a client, novelty vendor Mr. Lucas (Henry Hunter), who's promptly pursued by a third party in a black limo (George Keymas) as he drives away. Honey joins the chase down the windy roads (good stunt driving sequence here), and Lucas ends up careening down a ravine. Honey climbs down in her heels (though at one point it looks like she's actually wearing slippers) to hear Lucas's last words--"Snowman...snowman"--and takes a snow globe that he's clutching. (Another case where I've never seen actually seen the film, and I can tell what they're likely riffing on here.) When she leaves his side, the pursuing driver scopes out the site of the crash.
Honey and Sam are hostilely questioned by Lieutenant Stone (Barry Kelley) at the office (where Honey is at least massaging her feet). Stone is particularly interested in what happened to the sample case, which Honey left at the scene. Honey is able to identify the killer's car, which is identified as stolen and disposed of by the driver. Honey proceeds to the Comfort Novelty Company, where she questions the manager, Reedy Comfort (Henry "we named the dog Indiana" Jones), about the globe...while the driver lurks around and Sam watches from a facing building with binoculars. Honey fights off the armed killer--who wants the "snowman"--in the elevator while Sam does the same with an armed chauffeur who sneaks up on him (uncredited Paul Stader). The globe ends up broken in Honey's purse, and back at the office while they're examining it, Honey's lip goes numb when she rubs some smeared lipstick, and she and Sam realize that it was filled with
she don't lie, she don't lie, she don't lie...cocaine.
The chauffeur is identified as working for a Count Opestu. Mr. Comfort goes to Honey for protection when he receives a threat over the globe, so she leaves him in the apartment with Bruce (now credited as himself) while she and Sam don disguises to attend a charity ball being thrown by the handicapped count (Leon Askin--the first season of
Hogan's Heroes on CBS was up against
The Addams Family, which was on ABC before
Honey West). Honey is approached by the killer, whom Sam helps to take care of. Then Honey sneaks into the count's study (climbing up a lattice after tying the halves of her dress around her legs as pants) to find the sample case, but is caught by him and his henchman/chauffeur. She manages to deal with them and grabs the case, only to be stopped at the door by a gun-toting Mr. Comfort, a.k.a. the Snowman...but Sam sneaks up on him after having been delayed by his own assailant.
Stone mentions that the agency used to belong to Honey's father; and Honey says that Sam was her father's junior partner. The secret entrance to the apartment is now a wall panel rather than a back panel of a bar alcove.
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Honey West
"A Matter of Wife and Death"
Originally aired October 8, 1965
Frndly said:
A scuba diver is the suspect as Honey searches for a murderer who has apparently selected his next target: divorcee Maggi Lynch (Dianne Foster).
The van got a makeover for the series, too; and its logo now says "TV Repairing" rather than "TV Service". Sam uses it to keep an eye on a sailboat where Honey is minding a client, Maggie Lynch (Dianne Foster). A scuba diver swims up to plant an explosive, so Honey and her client take to the drink, swimming away before the boat goes off.
Lt. Kovacs (Michael Fox, now available after the format change to
Burke's Law) visits the office for some exposition about how Maggie is a businesswoman who's been receiving threats. There's now a panel in a closet in the apartment--apparently an exit. Honey's present when Maggie receives a visit from Vince Zale (James Best), who rented her the boat. The suspect list builds as Maggie receives a call from her ex-husband, Alex Sebastian; and Sam, surveilling from outside, drives off a man lurking around in a boating outfit. Honey visits the seaside digs of Sebastian (Henry Brandon), an importer/exporter who tells her of how a junior partner of his named Webb broke up their marriage. Honey informs Sebastian that Webb is dead, and Sebastian subsequently visits Webb's grave, looking very pleased. Sam watches via a miniature TV camera (complete with magic shot changes) that Honey planted as Sebastian is later paid a visit and harpooned by a scuba diver, who fights Sam off to get away.
Honey sneaks aboard Maggie's own
Minnow-style yacht, which was said to be having motor trouble during the sailboat outing, to find a scuba outfit. The seaman, Fred Cody (Henry Beckman), pays a visit to Maggie's apartment while Sam's there, and after a fight sings about how Sebastian's business was a cover for a diamond smuggling operation that Maggie masterminded, and tells of how he's been tailing Maggie to find out where she left a stash of diamonds that she was supposed to drop but kept for herself after the Webb affair went south. Maggie rendezvouses with Vince at the yacht, which is taken out to retrieve the diamonds after Sam sneaks aboard. An armed Maggie finds Honey hiding in a cupboard. When Honey confronts Maggie about how she already retrieved the diamonds, Maggie reveals that she has Vince diving after a box of explosives that she planted. After Sam helps Honey subdue Maggie, he proceeds to the drink to try to stop Vince, but is too late to prevent the plume of water.
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Middle school...?
They didn't want to split three ways? Sloppy.
He got greedy...something like that.
Did anything ever happen that could lead to the arrest and conviction of the blackmailers?
Other than threatening to kill Honey and Sam? I was disappointed that there wasn't a fight scene between Honey and the burly masseuse.
The show's Wiki article says that TV Honey was modeled to be the American equivalent of Cathy Gale and Emma Peel, but
The Avengers wouldn't air in the US until the following hiatus season.
Turned out he was selling it back to them.
Sounds dubious. I suppose some putty could have come off. Enough to keep the dead-man's switch alive? Eh. It's a bad system, in any case.
Would the material of the platform matter? At one point Patterson tells Tog that the detectives have handed him the solution on a gold platform, but there was no supporting indication that was literal. Though Sam did say that if they'd taken the platform, it would have worked...as if there was a motivation to have potentially taken it.
Possibly a Geiger counter.
Didn't quite behave like one, though.
Any thief who knew about the alarm could have just scraped off the putty in situ.
Now that's true. Honey actually stuffed it into a convenient hole in the base, but some of it could probably have been fished out.
Tog carries a tranquilizer gun? What's he going to do with Honey, take her back to China? Seems like this guy is in it for more than the owls.
Drop her in the drink, I think.
They really need to get quieter gadgets.
It's kinda cute that they make mistakes sometimes.
Excellent. This makes up for the recent lack of drink in Hawaii Five-O . Plus, I'd rather see Anne Francis wet than Jack Lord.
Indeed on both counts. I'll give this to the show, it was trying with its location action pieces.
Yeah, they were definitely intended to be racy, in that quaint 50s paperback way. Novel Honey inherited her detective biz from her father, who was a Philip Marlowe type of character. She was more likely to be found in a bikini at a waterfront hot dog stand than in an evening gown at an upper-crustic restaurant, and there was prose nudity and titillating situations and double entendres. The one I read was pretty fun. It turns out that a new publisher has more of them in Kindle editions, but still not the complete series.
Don't you worry, they'll be out with all the good stuff sensitivity-rewritten in no time.
Again, that fast-paced half-hour format. Gotta keep things moving.
Burke's Law was an hour, though. If anything, the BL episode felt padded.
No, I got it. But I think it was Obi-Wan, wasn't it? I'm not much of a Warsie.
Whereas there was a time when I practically could have recited the first film.
Now that's just wrong.
Interesting to know, though. If you come across a one-season wonder that nobody's ever heard of, chances are it was up against a ratings giant that everyone has.
No comment on the clip with the station-specific lineup promotion? I had to wonder how many stations and news teams Anne had to do takes for.