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PERRY MASON
 Perry Mason CAST(1957-1966)
Perry
Mason ............................................Raymond Burr
Della Street...............................................
Barbara Hale Paul Drake ............................................William
Hopper Hamilton Burger .....................................William
Talman Lt. Arthur Tragg (1957-1965).........................
Ray Collins David Gideon (1961-1962)................................
Karl Held Lt. Anderson (1961-1965).............................
Wesley Lau Lt. Steve Drumm (1965-1966).............. Richard
Anderson Sgt. Brice (1959-1966)....................................
Lee Miller Terrence Clay (1965-1966)..............................
Dan Tobin
CAST
(1973-1974)
Perry Mason .........................................Monte Markham
Della Street..............................................
Sharon Acker Paul Drake.............................................
Albert Stratton Lt. Arthur Tragg............................................
Dane Clark Hamilton Burger.....................................
Harry Guardino Gertrude Lade ...........................................Brett
Somers
PRODUCERS
Gail Patrick Jackson, Arthur Marks, Art Seid, Sam White, Ben Brady
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 245 Episodes
CBS
September 1957-September 1962 Saturday
7:30-8:30 September 1962-September 1963
Thursday 8:00-9:00 September 1963-September 1964 Thursday
9:00-10:00 September 1964-September 1965 Thursday
8:00-9:00 September 1965-September 1966 Sunday
9:00-10:00 September 1973-January 1974 Sunday
7:30-8:30
U.S. Legal Drama/Mystery
Perry
Mason is the longest running lawyer show in American television
history. Its original run lasted nine years and its success in both
syndication and made-for-television movies confirm its impressive
stamina. Mason's fans include lawyers and judges who were influenced
by this series to enter their profession. The Mason character was
created by mystery writer Erle Stanley Gardner and delivered his
first brief in the novel The Case of the Velvet Claws (1933).
From 1934 to 1937 Warners produced six films featuring Mason. A
radio series also based on Mason ran every weekday afternoon on
CBS radio from 1944 to 1955 as a detective/soap opera. When the
CBS television series was developed as an evening drama, the radio
series was changed from Perry Mason to The Edge of Night
and the cast renamed so as not to compete against the television
series.
The
title character is a lawyer working out of Los Angeles. Mason, played
by Raymond Burr, is teamed with two talented and ever faithful assistants:
trusty and beautiful secretary Della Street, played by Barbara Hale,
and the suave but boyish private detective Paul Drake, played by
William Hopper. In each episode this trio worked to clear their
innocent client of the charge of murder against the formidable district
attorney Hamilton Burger, played by William Talman. Most episodes
follow this simple formula: the guest characters are introduced
and their situation shows that at least one of them is capable of
murder. When the murder happens, an innocent person (most often
a woman) is accused, and Mason takes the case. As evidence mounts
against his client, Mason pulls out a legal maneuver involving some
courtroom "pyrotechnics." This not only proves his client innocent,
but identifies the real culprit. These scenes are easily the best
and most memorable. It is not because they are realistic. On the
contrary, they are hardly that. What is so engaging about them is
the combination of Mason's efforts to free his client, perhaps a
surprise witness brought in by Drake in the closing courtroom scene,
and a dramatic courtroom confession. The murderer being in the courtroom
during the trial and not hiding out in the Bahamas provides the
single most important image of each episode. The murderer forgoes
the fifth amendment and admits his/her guilt in an often tearful
outburst of "I did it! And I'm glad I did!" This happens under the
shocked, amazed eyes of district attorney Burger and the stoic,
sure face of defense attorney Mason.
Although
it is often identified with other lawyer dramas such as L. A.
Law and The Defenders, Perry Mason is more of a detective
series. Each episode is a carefully structured detective puzzle
that both established and perpetuated a number of conventions associated
with most television detective series. Perry Mason uses the
legal profession and the trial situation as a forum for detective
work. Although strictly formulaic, each episode is guided by the
elements of the variations that distinguish one episode from another.
For example, since nearly every episode began with the guest characters
rather than with the series regulars, these guest characters set
the tone for the rest of the episode. If it is going to be youth
oriented, these characters are young. If it is going to be a contested
will, the heirs are introduced.
The
credit for the series' success is split equally between Burr, the
Perry Mason production style and the series' creator Gardner. Burr
provided the characterization of a cool, calculating attorney, while
the production style builds tension in plots at once solidly formulaic
and cleverly surprising, and Gardner, as an uncredited executive
story editor, made sure each episode carefully blended legal drama
with clever detective work. In all, the series won three Emmys,
two for Burr and one for Hale.
The
series made a brief return in 1973 with the same production team
as the original series, but with a new cast. Monte Markham replaced
Burr. That this version did not survive 15 episodes reveals that
one of the key draws of the original series is the casting. It is
interesting to note, however, that Markham's Mason was closer to
the one featured in the original novels. Both were brash, elegant
and coolly businesslike in their dealings with clients, something
Burr never was. But it is Burr's coolness and control that became
so identified with the character that, for the television audience,
there was no other Mason than Burr.
Burr
returned to his role in 1985 for the beginning of an almost ten
year run of made-for-television movies beginning with Perry Mason
Returns. This is followed by The Case of the Notorious Nun
(1986). Burr is back as Mason, albeit a bit older, grayer and
bearded, with Barbara Hale as his executive secretary. Since William
Hopper died in 1970, William Katt (who is the real life son of Barbara
Hale) is featured in the first nine episodes as Paul Drake, Jr.
In The Case of the Lethal Lesson (1989), Katt is replaced
by a graduating law student Ken Malansky, played by William R. Moses.
Each plot is developed over two hours instead of one and the extra
time is made up of extended chases and blind alleys. Yet the basic
formula stays the same.
This newest version of Perry Mason takes an interesting twist
in the spring of 1994. After Burr's death in the fall of 1993, executive
producers Fred Silverman and Dean Hargrove followed the wishes of
the estate of Erle Stanley Gardner and kept the character alive
but off-screen. First to replace him as visiting attorney was Paul
Sorvino as Anthony Caruso in The Case of the Wicked Wives
(1993) and then Hal Holbrook as "Wild Bill" McKenzie in The Case
of the Lethal Lifestyle (1994). In each movie, Mason is conveniently
absent. Street and Malansky are still available as assistants for
the "visiting" attorney and the series is still called A Perry Mason
Mystery, so that, production after production, the character lives
on.
-J.
Dennis Bounds
FURTHER
READING
Fugate, Francis L., and Roberta B. Fugate. Secrets of the World's
Best Selling Writer: The Storytelling Techniques of Erle Stanley
Gardner. New York: Morrow, 1980.
Hughes,
Dorothy B. Erle Stanley Gardner: The Case of the Real Perry Mason.
New York: Morrow, 1978.
Kelleher,
Brian, and Diana Merrill. The Perry Mason Show Book. New
York: St. Martin's, 1987.
Martindale,
David. The Perry Mason Casebook. New York: Pioneer, 1991.
Meyers,
Richard. TV Detectives. San Diego, California: Barnes, 1988.
See
also Burr,
Raymond; Detective
Programs
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