Columbo season 4
Columbo | |
---|---|
Season 4 | |
No. of episodes | 6 |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Original release | September 15, 1974 April 27, 1975 | –
Season chronology | |
This is a list of episodes from the fourth 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 | Murderer played by | Victim(s) played by | Original air date | Runtime | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
26 | 1 | "An Exercise in Fatality" | Bernard Kowalski | Story by : Larry Cohen Teleplay by : Peter S. Fischer | Robert Conrad as Milo Janus | Philip Bruns as Gene Stafford | September 15, 1974[1] | 94 min | |
Renowned exercise guru Milo Janus (Robert Conrad) runs a chain of successful gyms. His charm is not enough to calm the anger of franchise owner Gene Stafford (Philip Bruns), who has found out how Janus overcharges his franchises for equipment and supplies, depositing the profits in offshore bank accounts. When Stafford threatens to organize other victims of Janus and to go public with a class action suit, Janus kills him. He makes it look like Stafford was working out, trying to lift weights too heavy for him, with the result being that the barbell fell and crushed his windpipe. Collin Wilcox plays Ruth Stafford (the victim's distraught and sometimes boozy ex-wife/widow, who thoroughly mistrusts Janus), Gretchen Corbett plays Janus's secretary, and Pat Harrington, Jr. plays a shifty business associate of Janus. Final clue/twist: From the way the shoelaces on the corpse were tied, Columbo deduces that Stafford did not tie his own sport shoes. Columbo concludes that the murderer must have put the shoes on Stafford’s feet, when he dressed the corpse in exercise clothing, and only Janus knew before the discovery of the body that Stafford was wearing exercise gear. Throughout the episode multiple hints to the solution are given (including a sustained close-up of the victim's shoes, Columbo tying his own shoes several times, Columbo discussing his shoes with other characters, and a character named "Lacy"). | |||||||||
27 | 2 | "Negative Reaction" | Alf Kjellin | Peter S. Fischer | Dick Van Dyke as Paul Galesko | Antoinette Bower as Frances Galesko and Don Gordon as Alvin Deschler | October 6, 1974[2] | 91 min | |
After years of marriage to his domineering wife, Frances (Antoinette Bower), professional photographer Paul Galesko (Dick Van Dyke) decides to kill her. He hires ex-con Alvin Deschler (Don Gordon) to rent an isolated ranch house. Galesko persuades his wife to accompany him there and she grudgingly agrees. He ties her to a chair, photographs the scene, and then shoots her. He sets things up so it will appear he is elsewhere when the pictures were taken. Galesko meets Deschler at a junkyard. After shooting Deschler with a revolver, Galesko shoots himself in the leg with the pistol used in the first murder, then plants that gun on Deschler so that it will appear the "kidnapper" was killed in self-defense. JoAnna Cameron plays Galesko's assistant, with whom he is planning a romantic getaway. Michael Strong, Larry Storch, Vito Scotti, and John Ashton guest star, as does Joyce Van Patten, playing a nun running a homeless shelter who assumes, when she meets Columbo, that he is down and out and in need of some food and a better coat. Final clue/twist: Columbo stages a false accusation using a mirror-inverted version of the kidnapping photo Galesko used to fabricate an alibi. The reverse negative shows a different time on a clock in the photo, a time for which Galesko has no alibi. An increasingly riled Galesko accuses Columbo of framing him with false evidence, and becomes more incensed when Columbo tells him the original photo was accidentally destroyed. Galesko grabs a camera from a shelf where there are twelve other cameras, and shows Columbo a negative that is still inside it. Galesko says the negative proves him right about which way the clock is pointing in the original photograph. Galesko has thus given himself away. He had no way of knowing which camera had been used as part of the kidnapping scheme, or that the negative was still in the back of that camera. Galesko, defeated, realizes that Columbo had staged the false arrest with the exact purpose of getting him to lose his cool so he would rashly identify the camera. The outside set of Deschler's hotel room is the set of Psycho. | |||||||||
28 | 3 | "By Dawn's Early Light" | Harvey Hart | Howard Berk | Patrick McGoohan as Lyle Rumford | Tom Simcox as William Haynes | October 27, 1974[3] | 94 min | |
Colonel Lyle C. Rumford (Patrick McGoohan), head of the Haynes Military Academy, an all-boys school, is told by the Board of Trustees president William Haynes (Tom Simcox), with whom Rumford has a contentious relationship, that due to declining enrollment it must be converted into a coed school. Haynes also makes clear that Rumford will no longer be in charge of the revamped institution. Rumford rigs a school cannon by blocking its discharge with a cleaning rag, then modifies a shell with a more powerful explosive so that the cannon will explode when Haynes fires it the next morning, at a ceremonial occasion. Rumford pins the accident on a cadet, Roy Springer (Mark Wheeler), who has a history of behavioral demerits. Eventually Rumford’s own fanatical sense of duty provides Columbo the clues that lead to Rumford’s incrimination. Final clue/twist: Rumford, an absolute stickler for the academy’s rules, is determined to find a bottle of prohibited cider that he knows is on the premises. Columbo himself finds the cider, and realizes there is a connection between it and the murder. He gains the confidence of the cadets who made the cider, and has them tell him everything about how and when it was made. Once he learns that information, he asks Rumford if he had seen the cider previously. When Rumford says yes, it incriminates him. Columbo tells him he could have seen the cider only on the morning of the murder (the cider had been hung out to ferment at night, and as such was only visible around sunrise), and only if he was standing very near the cannon (because of the location of the trees on the academy grounds). So on the morning of the murder Rumford was not asleep, as he had claimed; instead, he must have been at the cannon. With this episode McGoohan won the first of his two Emmy Awards for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series. His second was for Agenda for Murder. Father and son Bruce Kirby and Bruno Kirby co-star, as a sergeant and a cadet, respectively. Bruce Kirby appears in a number of Columbo episodes. Madeleine Sherwood plays Rumford's no-nonsense secretary. Location filming took place at The Citadel in South Carolina. | |||||||||
29 | 4 | "Troubled Waters" | Ben Gazzara | Story by : Jackson Gillis and William Driskill Teleplay by : William Driskill | Robert Vaughn as Hayden Danzinger | Poupée Bocar as Rosanna Wells | February 9, 1975[4] | 93 min | |
While aboard a Mexican cruise he takes frequently, auto executive Hayden Danziger (Robert Vaughn) has been having an affair with the lounge singer Rosanna Wells (Poupée Bocar). When Wells threatens to expose their affair to Danziger's wife, Sylvia (Jane Greer), Danziger decides to get rid of Wells. To set up his alibi, he inhales some amyl nitrite to feign a heart attack in the swimming pool, so that he will be checked into the ship's hospital. During a lapse in security, Danziger dons a crewman's uniform, sneaks out of his hospital bed, and waits in Wells's cabin for her performance break. When Wells comes back, Danziger shoots her, plants evidence to implicate a band musician, Lloyd Harrington (Dean Stockwell) – who had been in a relationship with Wells before she discarded him – ditches the pistol, and returns to the hospital before the doctors can find him missing. Columbo, vacationing on the cruise with his wife, is pressed into service by the ship's captain (Patrick Macnee). Bernard Fox and Robert Douglas also guest star. Final clue/twist: Columbo convinces Danziger that he can only arrest Harrington if they find the gloves he used during the murder, which would have gunpowder residue on them. So Danziger puts on another pair of rubber gloves and, down in the ship’s engines where he cannot be heard, fires a gun from the magician’s show. The gloves are then conveniently left by Danziger to be found by the ship’s crew. However when given the gloves to analyze, Columbo is no longer interested in powder burns, instead he finds Danziger's fingerprints on the inside of the gloves. | |||||||||
30 | 5 | "Playback" | Bernard L. Kowalski | Booker Bradshaw & David P. Lewis | Oskar Werner as Harold van Wick | Martha Scott as Margaret Midas | March 2, 1975[5] | 70 min | |
Harold Van Wick (Oskar Werner), the controlling, arrogant, gadget-obsessed president of Midas Electronics, has wired his estate-home with closed-circuit television cameras and video recorders. His mother-in-law Margaret Midas (Martha Scott), who owns the company, and who blames a steep drop in profits on Van Wick's costly fascination with obscure gadgetry, orders him to resign his post by the following morning, or she will expose his philandering ways to his wife, her daughter, Elizabeth (Gena Rowlands). Van Wick has already set in motion a scheme to murder her. He rigs his high-tech home security system and shoots Margaret when she is in the viewing field of one camera, feeding a recording of an empty study to the guard monitoring the estate's rooms. Having already forced open a window and planted footprints outside it to make the murder look like the deed of a burglar, he then uses a timer to play back the tape of the shooting to the gatehouse guard's monitor to make it look like Margaret was shot by an intruder after Van Wick had left the house for a party. Robert Brown played Arthur Midas, Margaret's son and Elizabeth's brother. Patricia Barry plays the owner of an art gallery which provided Van Wick with his ostensible alibi, and Trisha Noble plays her sexy assistant, who may have had an affair with Van Wick. Final clue/twist: Columbo notices, while viewing security monitor recordings from both before and after the murder, that Van Wick's invitation for the party was still on his desk after leaving for the party. Van Wick had presented the invitation to get access to the party that provided his alibi. So Margaret had to have been shot sometime before the security guard viewed it on the monitor, and, more damningly, Van Wick would practically have had to step over the body to retrieve his invitation before leaving for the party. | |||||||||
31 | 6 | "A Deadly State of Mind" | Harvey Hart | Peter S. Fischer | George Hamilton as Mark Collier | Stephen Elliott as Carl Donner and Lesley Ann Warren as Nadia Donner | April 27, 1975[6] | 70 min | |
Psychiatrist Dr. Mark Collier (George Hamilton) is having an affair with a patient of his, rich housewife Nadia Donner (Lesley Ann Warren). One day, Nadia invites Mark to a weekend sex vacation at the Donner beach house. Collier shows up at the beach house only to be unpleasantly surprised by Nadia's husband, Carl (Stephen Elliott). The two men get into a violent confrontation over Collier's affair with and drugging of Nadia, with Carl threatening to damage Collier's reputation. When Collier surprises Carl by attempting to leave with Nadia in tow, Carl attacks him. A scuffle ensues, which ends with Collier bludgeoning Carl with a fireplace poker. After telling Nadia to explain it to the police as a home invasion that turned tragic, done by several masked men, Collier drives off, almost running over a blind man walking his dog past the beach house. Investigating the scene, Columbo is not satisfied with Nadia's version of events, wondering why Nadia didn't see the headlights of the burglars' car. When Columbo tells Collier that Nadia's story is not credible, Collier secretly hypnotizes her into, in effect, committing suicide by taking a deadly dive from her fifth floor balcony into the swimming pool below. Final clue/twist: Columbo claims to have a witness to the first murder. Collier is confronted with the eyewitness, a man wearing dark sunglasses who looks just like the blind man Collier narrowly avoided hitting with his car shortly after the murder. The man settles down on the couch, hands Columbo a match, and then identifies Collier as the driver he saw at around the time of the murder. Collier, as confident as ever, says that he has not been fooled, that he knows the man is blind, and thus cannot be a witness to anything. Collier challenges the man to read from a magazine he hands him, and is stunned when the man does read from it. Columbo reveals that the man is the brother of the actual blind man. But Collier has incriminated himself. In “knowing” that the witness was blind, he has established that he was at the scene of the crime. He has in effect been an eyewitness against himself. |
References
- ^ "Columbo Peter "By the way Falk returns". Los Angeles Times. September 15, 1974. Retrieved November 7, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "TV Listings for Sunday Evening - Columbo - "Negative Reaction"". October 6, 1974. Retrieved November 7, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Peter Falk is Columbo - 'By Dawn's Early Light'". October 27, 1974. Retrieved November 7, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Peter Falk is Columbo - 'Troubled Waters'". February 9, 1975. Retrieved November 7, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Peter Falk is Columbo - 'Playback'". March 2, 1975. Retrieved November 7, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Peter Falk is Columbo - 'A Deadly State of Mind'". April 27, 1975. Retrieved November 7, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.