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Post-55th Anniversary Viewing
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Honey West
"The Perfect Un-Crime"
Originally aired January 28, 1966
Honey and Sam engage in a bit of a clue scavenger hunt to rendezvous with a client, Arthur Bird (Byron Foulger)--a nervous nebbish of a department store accountant who figured out a system to embezzle the store's money, and now wants them to burgle the store to put it back. Sam's incredulous at the idea, but Honey takes a liking to Arthur and embraces the novel challenge. Aunt Meg scopes out the office of the manager, C. G. Rockwell (David Brian), by posing as a wealthy client who wants to make a return. After the detectives devise a plan, Honey gets her umbrella stuck in the store's elevator as a diversion for the engineer (John Harmon); while Sam, posing as an electrician, sabotages the alarm system and steals a key to the freight elevator. Bird arrives at the van, where the detectives are staking out the store, beaten by someone who wanted the money.
They take him back to the apartment and he reluctantly divulges the combination of the safe, which he was supposed to open for them. While the detectives are chloroforming the watchman (Bob Stephenson), Bird gets a call at the apartment from the threatening party. Honey and Sam are caught at the open safe at gunpoint by Rockwell and his assistant--who turn out to be the ones who were after Arthur for the money. The detectives make a break for it back into the store, Honey very briefly posing as a mannequin in the game of cat and mouse through the departments. In Sporting Goods, Sam uses a variety of weapons to fend off the baddies, which includes engaging in a baseball bat duel with Rockwell. The detectives finally manage to knock both out by tossing golf balls all over the floor, then Honey tosses the bag of money on them so they can be caught with it as the police arrive, having been called by the awakened watchman...who takes all the credit for foiling the burglary in the papers.
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Honey West
"Like Visions and Omens and All That Jazz"
Originally aired February 4, 1966
Honey and Sam are surveilling as wealthy cosmetics queen Victoria Tilson (June Vincent) warns her skydiving daughter Tina (Mimsy Farmer) not to go up because of the predictions of her fortune teller, Faustini. Tina has chute trouble during her dive, but manages to deploy it in time. This is the latest in a series of accidents for Tina, such that Mrs. Tilson has hired the detectives to find out who wants her daughter dead. They surveil as Mrs. T has a session with Faustini (Nehemiah Persoff), who's really into scenery-chewing theatrics. The detectives immediately set their sights on him. Honey consults an agent friend, Marty (Benny Rubin), to learn more about Faustini, a former actor; Marty offers insight into how Faustini pulls his scam through research. On her way out, Honey makes an unsolicited suggestion regarding a trio of auditioning bodybuilders, that he should let their hair grow and give them guitars.
Tina is almost run down while leaving the club where her boyfriend and pilot, Pete Lynch (Fred Beir), plays piano in a jazz trio. Honey finds that the car was rented by Tina's bookie ex-boyfriend, Artie Dixon (Norman Alden). When pressed, Artie admits to having been paid by an anonymous party to scare but not kill Tina. He subsequently calls Tina to meet him at the bidding of the unseen party. She finds Artie dead, is chloroformed, and the mystery party gets her prints on the gun. Tina is later seen fleeing the scene. Honey breaks into Faustini's place and is caught at gunpoint ruffling through his files...but the mystic ends up being shot by an unseen party through a draped window. (At this point, the cast list leaves only one suspect.) Mrs. Tilson is blackmailed for the gun with Tina's fingerprints on it, and Honey makes the drop at the airport...to Pete Lynch. He's trying to force Honey into his plane as Sam drives up. A runway chase and firefight ensues, with Pete firing at and chasing Sam in the taxiing plane. Pete ends up hoofing it for whatever reason, though, and Honey chases him and hoists him up with a forklift.
In the coda, the jazz trio has gotten a new piano player, and the club a new act--a guitar group called the Sophisticates, who are the bodybuilders, still in their trunks but sporting long-haired wigs.
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Post-55th Anniversary Viewing
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Honey West
"The Perfect Un-Crime"
Originally aired January 28, 1966
Wiki said:A thief recruits Honey and Sam to put back the money he stole from his own department store.
Note: The scene of Honey posing as a mannequin was inspired by the Twilight Zone episode "The After Hours", which starred Anne Francis.
Honey and Sam engage in a bit of a clue scavenger hunt to rendezvous with a client, Arthur Bird (Byron Foulger)--a nervous nebbish of a department store accountant who figured out a system to embezzle the store's money, and now wants them to burgle the store to put it back. Sam's incredulous at the idea, but Honey takes a liking to Arthur and embraces the novel challenge. Aunt Meg scopes out the office of the manager, C. G. Rockwell (David Brian), by posing as a wealthy client who wants to make a return. After the detectives devise a plan, Honey gets her umbrella stuck in the store's elevator as a diversion for the engineer (John Harmon); while Sam, posing as an electrician, sabotages the alarm system and steals a key to the freight elevator. Bird arrives at the van, where the detectives are staking out the store, beaten by someone who wanted the money.
They take him back to the apartment and he reluctantly divulges the combination of the safe, which he was supposed to open for them. While the detectives are chloroforming the watchman (Bob Stephenson), Bird gets a call at the apartment from the threatening party. Honey and Sam are caught at the open safe at gunpoint by Rockwell and his assistant--who turn out to be the ones who were after Arthur for the money. The detectives make a break for it back into the store, Honey very briefly posing as a mannequin in the game of cat and mouse through the departments. In Sporting Goods, Sam uses a variety of weapons to fend off the baddies, which includes engaging in a baseball bat duel with Rockwell. The detectives finally manage to knock both out by tossing golf balls all over the floor, then Honey tosses the bag of money on them so they can be caught with it as the police arrive, having been called by the awakened watchman...who takes all the credit for foiling the burglary in the papers.
_______
Honey West
"Like Visions and Omens and All That Jazz"
Originally aired February 4, 1966
Frndly said:Honey's future looks dim as she tangles with a clairvoyant who dabbles in blackmail.
Honey and Sam are surveilling as wealthy cosmetics queen Victoria Tilson (June Vincent) warns her skydiving daughter Tina (Mimsy Farmer) not to go up because of the predictions of her fortune teller, Faustini. Tina has chute trouble during her dive, but manages to deploy it in time. This is the latest in a series of accidents for Tina, such that Mrs. Tilson has hired the detectives to find out who wants her daughter dead. They surveil as Mrs. T has a session with Faustini (Nehemiah Persoff), who's really into scenery-chewing theatrics. The detectives immediately set their sights on him. Honey consults an agent friend, Marty (Benny Rubin), to learn more about Faustini, a former actor; Marty offers insight into how Faustini pulls his scam through research. On her way out, Honey makes an unsolicited suggestion regarding a trio of auditioning bodybuilders, that he should let their hair grow and give them guitars.
Tina is almost run down while leaving the club where her boyfriend and pilot, Pete Lynch (Fred Beir), plays piano in a jazz trio. Honey finds that the car was rented by Tina's bookie ex-boyfriend, Artie Dixon (Norman Alden). When pressed, Artie admits to having been paid by an anonymous party to scare but not kill Tina. He subsequently calls Tina to meet him at the bidding of the unseen party. She finds Artie dead, is chloroformed, and the mystery party gets her prints on the gun. Tina is later seen fleeing the scene. Honey breaks into Faustini's place and is caught at gunpoint ruffling through his files...but the mystic ends up being shot by an unseen party through a draped window. (At this point, the cast list leaves only one suspect.) Mrs. Tilson is blackmailed for the gun with Tina's fingerprints on it, and Honey makes the drop at the airport...to Pete Lynch. He's trying to force Honey into his plane as Sam drives up. A runway chase and firefight ensues, with Pete firing at and chasing Sam in the taxiing plane. Pete ends up hoofing it for whatever reason, though, and Honey chases him and hoists him up with a forklift.
In the coda, the jazz trio has gotten a new piano player, and the club a new act--a guitar group called the Sophisticates, who are the bodybuilders, still in their trunks but sporting long-haired wigs.
Sam: I wonder whoever dreamed up that act?
Honey: You wouldn't believe it, Sam.
Honey: You wouldn't believe it, Sam.
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Yes. Though I wasn't clear what the investigations of people in the organization were for in the long run.So they had been intending to investigate the nurse when they found her dead?
He goes on to play Jason McGuire in Dark Shadows.I don't get it, but I get it.
And it has Richard Kiel inside! And he just calmly closes it again.It's an awesome secret panel that can be accidentally triggered by the new nurse within five minutes.![]()
They need a reason at this point?Is she in the world behind the secret panel now? Why do they have secret panels and two-way mirrors?
And I was thinking before that, "Why is she driving her own car to the house? Would a nurse be driving that?"Honey and Sam are not detail oriented.![]()
Guess they needed it to plummet worse than 10 percent.The stock has already been devalued because of his silence-- no need to resort to murder.
Not specified.Who is Fake King? A conspirator who had plastic surgery or just some slob who happens to look like the real King?
I thought it was pretty Wild Westian, hence the joke.Speaking of which, that underground hot spring is pretty Bondian.
Very fourth wall-breaking. Basically the only reason that trap wasn't fatal was S&P. Nobody even pulls them out to make sure they don't drown. Also, would you even need to electrocute a hot spring, or would just knocking somebody into one be enough? It's boiling water.That's pretty Bondian, too-- both the trick and the quip.
Apparently she just knew too much. And yes.Why was the nurse murdered? And did Ash just disappear from the story or what?
Same reason his brother dressed as a Scot. They were antiquarians.So why did he dress up in historical cosplay and ride a horse straight to Honey's office?
The last brother was the real McCoy.Because of the steed? Hahahaha. No, you're right, the three fake brothers was definitely an Avengers-style gimmick.
The logo should be kept in memoriam.Thank you! I'll see if I can edit out that logo.
She's naked under those clothes!We'll never look at trench coats the same way again.![]()
Nothing so far but that it used to be his agency. I wouldn't expect more from TV of the era.I wonder how much info they give about TV Honey's father.