List of Danger Man episodes
The following is a list of episodes of the British television series Danger Man.
Episode list
Episodes were usually not aired in production order. Broadcast order varied widely between the UK and US. In fact, CBS, the US broadcaster, used it only as a summer replacement for Wanted: Dead or Alive and did not air even half of the run.
Although aired over the course of 18 months, the first 39 episodes are considered one series.
Series 1 (1960–1962)
Broadcast as Danger Man in the UK and US.
Airdate is for ATV London [1] ITV regions varied date and order.
Episode No. | Prod No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original UK airdate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1-1 | 002 | "View from the Villa" | Terry Bishop | Brian Clemens and Ralph Smart | 11 September 1960 |
Frank Delroy, an American banker is murdered and five million dollars is missing. Drake travels to Italy to find the money. | |||||
1–2 | 004 | "Time to Kill" | Ralph Smart | Brian Clemens and Ian Stuart Black | 18 September 1960 |
Drake balks when he is ordered to kill an assassin and intends to capture him. His plans are thwarted by an interfering Swedish school teacher. | |||||
1–3 | 028 | "Josetta" | Michael Truman | Ralph Smart | 25 September 1960 |
Drake helps a blind woman find and identify her brother's killer. | |||||
1–4 | 016 | "The Blue Veil" | Charles Frend | Don Inglis and Ralph Smart | 2 October 1960 |
Drake flies to the Arabian desert to investigate stories of slavery and helps a stranded showgirl. | |||||
1–5 | 017 | "The Lovers" | Peter Graham Scott | Jo Eisinger and Doreen Montgomery | 9 October 1960 |
Drake has a surprise when he receives a telephone call from an old enemy named Miguel Torres. Torres asks for Drake's help in preventing an assassination. | |||||
1–6 | 012 | "The Girl in Pink Pyjamas" | Peter Graham Scott | Ian Stuart Black and Ralph Smart, story by Brian Clemens | 16 October 1960 |
A strikingly lovely blonde is found wandering in a dazed condition along a lonely road in a Balkan state. She provides Drake with a clue to the mystery surrounding the attempted assassination of the country’s president. | |||||
1–7 | 007 | "Position of Trust" | Ralph Smart | Jo Eisinger | 23 October 1960 |
Drake travels to a Middle East country to find how opium is supplied to criminal syndicates. | |||||
1–8 | 025 | "The Lonely Chair" | Charles Frend | John Roddick and Ralph Smart | 30 October 1960 |
Drake impersonates a wealthy industrialist whose daughter has been kidnapped. | |||||
1–9 | 018 | "The Sanctuary" | Charles Frend | John Roddick and Ralph Smart | 6 November 1960 |
To uncover an IRA cell Drake impersonates a prisoner who has just been released after serving a sentence for a violent bomb outrage. His deception lands him into a web of drama and danger. | |||||
1–10 | 009 | "An Affair of State" | Peter Graham Scott | Oscar Brodny | 13 November 1960 |
Drake flies to a small Caribbean state when an American economics expert, sent there to check on the country’s finances and gold reserves before America agrees to a large loan, is reported to have committed suicide. | |||||
1–11 | 001 | "The Key" | Seth Holt | Jack Whittingham, story by Ralph Smart | 20 November 1960 |
Drake loses no time in getting to know Logan and his attractive Continental wife, Maria. He tells Logan that he has been ordered to contact him with instructions to encode a message for cabling to Washington. | |||||
1–12 | 008 | "The Sisters" | Seth Holt | Jo Eisinger, story by Brian Clemens | 27 November 1960 |
Which girl is telling the truth? This is the problem that faces Drake when a beautiful refugee from a mid-European country flees to England and pleads for political asylum. | |||||
1–13 | 024 | "The Prisoner" | Terry Bishop | Ralph Smart and Robert Stewart | 4 December 1960 |
A U.S. Diplomat has been forced to live within the walls of his embassy for five years, denied egress by the host country. Drake convinces a concert pianist to impersonate the diplomat, in an attempt to win his freedom. | |||||
1–14 | 014 | "The Traitor" | Terry Bishop | John Roddick | 11 December 1960 |
What makes a man a traitor? Drake finds out when his latest assignment takes him to Kashmir, in Northern India, and to drama high up a mountain in a lonely bungalow with a renegade Englishman and his beautiful wife. | |||||
1–15 | 021 | "Colonel Rodriguez" | Julian Aymes | Ralph Smart | 18 December 1960 |
The treacherous Colonel Rodriguez has arrested an innocent American journalist on charges of spying. Drake must find a means of freeing him. | |||||
1–16 | 029 | "The Island" | Pennington Richards | Brian Clemens and Ralph Smart | 1 January 1961 |
Drake, an heiress, and two assassins are stranded on a small island after a plane crash. The assassins and Drake strive to convince the sole inhabitant on the island the truth about who is a prisoner and who is a guard. | |||||
1–17 | 003 | "Find and Return" | Seth Holt | Jo Eisinger | 8 January 1961 |
A woman is wanted by the British authorities on charges of espionage. Drake travels to the Middle East to find her and retrieve her passport. | |||||
1–18 | 034 | "The Girl Who Liked GI's" | Michael Truman | Marc Brandel and Ralph Smart | 15 January 1961 |
In Munich, Drake investigates the murder of a GI and makes a date with his German girlfriend. Is she an innocent or a spy? | |||||
1–19 | 031 | "Name, Date and Place" | Charles Frend | Ralph Smart and John Roddick | 22 January 1961 |
Does a "Murder Incorporated" organisation exist? Drake arranges his own murder. | |||||
1–20 | 037 | "Vacation" | Patrick McGoohan | Ralph Smart | 29 January 1961 |
Travelling to Nice, Drake sits next to a man he recognises as an assassin. Drake takes his place, but who is the victim? | |||||
1–21 | 030 | "The Conspirators" | Michael Truman | Ralph Smart and John Roddick | 5 February 1961 |
Drake is sent to a remote island to protect the wife of a murdered diplomat who is writing a book exposing the truth. | |||||
1–22 | 033 | "The Honeymooners" | Charles Frend | Ralph Smart and Lewis Davidson | 2 April 1961 |
A groom accused of murder and awaiting execution in the Far East is a pawn in a power struggle between the country's Prime Minister and Defence Minister. All is not what it seems. | |||||
1–23 | 036 | "The Gallows Tree" | Michael Truman | Ralph Smart and Marc Brandel | 9 April 1961 |
In Scotland, a stolen car is recovered bearing the fingerprints of long dead masterspy. Is he still alive and working? | |||||
1–24 | 022 | "The Relaxed Informer" | Anthony Bushell | Ralph Smart and Robert Stewart | 16 April 1961 |
In Bavaria, Drake intercepts an enemy courier. Who is supplying the secrets? What is the connection to an isolated religious sect? | |||||
1–25 | 020 | "The Brothers" | Charles Frend | Ralph Smart | 23 April 1961 |
A diplomatic satchel is stolen by bandits when a plane crashes off the coast of Sicily. Drake must deal with the bandits to retrieve the satchel. | |||||
1–26 | 006 | "The Journey Ends Halfway" | Clive Donner | Ian Stuart Black | 30 April 1961 |
Drake uses the guise of a Czech engineer to find out who is betraying people trying to escape from Communist China. | |||||
1–27 | 011 | "Bury the Dead" | Clive Donner | Ralph Smart, story by Brian Clemens | 7 May 1961 |
In Sicily, Drake finds out the truth about the death of another agent who was investigating a gun-running operation. | |||||
1–28 | 013 | "Sabotage" | Peter Graham Scott | Michael Pertwee and Ian Stuart Black | 14 May 1961 |
A transport plane flying over South East Asia explodes. Drake helps the widow of the pilot find the cause of the tragedy. | |||||
1–29 | 027 | "The Contessa" | Terry Bishop | John Roddick and Ralph Smart | 21 May 1961 |
Drake works undercover as a seaman to infiltrate a drug smuggling operation in Italy. | |||||
1–30 | 032 | "The Leak" | Anthony Bushell | Ralph Smart and Brian Clemens | 28 May 1961 |
Drake travels to the Middle East to find out why people near a nuclear plant are showing signs of radiation poisoning. | |||||
1–31 | 038 | "The Trap" | Pennington Richards | Ralph Smart and John Roddick | 4 June 1961 |
A woman working as a cipher clerk at the American embassy in London travels to Italy with her new fiancee. Drake follows to find out whether it is true love. | |||||
1–32 | 039 | "The Actor" | Michael Truman | Marc Brandel | 11 June 1961 |
A Hong Kong radio station is embedding secrets in its broadcasts. Drake gets a job there to find out who is the spy. | |||||
1–33 | 035 | "Hired Assassin" | Charles Frend | Ralph Smart and John Roddick | 18 June 1961 |
Drake infiltrates a terrorist group planning to kill a Latin American president. | |||||
1–34 | 019 | "The Deputy Coyannis Story" | Peter Graham Scott | Jo Eisinger | 16 December 1961 |
Drake is sent to a Balkan country to find out if aid money is being stolen. | |||||
1–35 | 023 | "Find and Destroy" | Charles Frend | Ralph Smart and John Roddick | 23 December 1961 |
A miniature submarine is beached on the coast of South America. Drake has to destroy it before enemy agents can discover its secrets. | |||||
1–36 | 005 | "Under the Lake" | Seth Holt | Jack Whittingham | 30 December 1961 |
A counterfeit operation is circulating US dollars. Drake follows a man and his daughter to find the source of the fake money. | |||||
1–37 | 015 | "The Nurse" | Peter Graham Scott | Ralph Smart and Brian Clemens | 6 January 1962 |
Drake helps a pretty Scots nurse protect the heir to the throne of a Middle East country. | |||||
1–38 | 026 | "Dead Man Walks" | Charles Frend | Ralph Smart and Brian Clemens | 13 January 1962 |
A group of scientists researching bacterial warfare made a dramatic discovery. Now they are being killed. Drake travels to Kashmir to find out why. | |||||
1–39 | 010 | "Deadline" | Peter Graham Scott | Jo Eisinger, story by Ian Stuart Black | 20 January 1962 |
An African country is on the brink of civil war after a murder. Drake plunges into jungle to find those responsible. |
Series 2 (1964–1965)
Series 2 and 3 were broadcast as Danger Man in the UK and Secret Agent in the US. Airdate is for ATV Midlands,.[2] ITV[1] regions varied date and order.
Episode No. | Prod No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original airdate UK |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2-1 | 048 | "Yesterday's Enemies" | Charles Crichton | Donald Jonson | 13 October 1964 |
Secrets are going astray in Beirut. Has a former British agent set up his own spy ring? | |||||
2-2 | 043 | "The Professionals" | Michael Truman | Wilfred Greatorex and Louis Marks | 20 October 1964 |
An M9 agent is missing. Drake goes undercover in Prague to find him and is targeted by a Czech spy and his femme fatale. | |||||
2–3 | 049 | "Colony Three" | Don Chaffey | Donald Jonson | 27 October 1964 |
British communists are disappearing behind the Iron Curtain. Drake follows their trail to a replica of a British town used to acquaint Russian infiltrators with British ways. | |||||
2–4 | 047 | "The Galloping Major" | Peter Maxwell | David Stone | 3 November 1964 |
Posing as Major Sullivan, Drake is sent to protect a new African government from election-time deceit and violence. Dodging an industrialist's predatory wife (Jill Melford), Drake discovers the real deceit, and his last-minute plot makes the election more honest than anyone else intended. | |||||
2–5 | 042 | "Fair Exchange" | Charles Crichton | Wilfred Greatorex and Marc Brandel | 10 November 1964 |
British agent Elizabeth Lanzig (Lela Goldoni) vows revenge on the East German spymaster who tortured her. Drake is ordered to stop her, and finally succeeds by kidnapping the son of a rival spymaster (Andre van Gyseghem) and exchanging him for her. | |||||
2–6 | 040 | "Fish on the Hook" | Robert Day | John Roddick and Michael Pertwee | 17 November 1964 |
The name "Fish" hides the identity of the organiser of a complex espionage system who is in danger of being exposed unless Drake is successful in his hazardous mission to Egypt. | |||||
2–7 | 044 | "The Colonel's Daughter" | Philip Leacock | David Weir | 24 November 1964 |
In India, a retired colonel ekes out his pension by collecting and selling butterfly specimens. When the colonel's assistant dies mysteriously, Drake is sent to investigate, and ends up getting help from a local policeman, whose own investigation Drake pursues. Finally, both trails entwine. | |||||
2–8 | 051 | "The Battle of the Cameras" | Don Chaffey | Philip Broadley | 1 December 1964 |
On the French Riviera, Drake poses as playboy gambler Peter Simons to gain the confidence of crafty spy czar A.J.A. Kent (Niall MacGinnis) and his accomplices, the beautiful Martine (Dawn Addams) and judo master Genicot (Frederick Bartman). Compromised by an overeager assistant who is photographed and identified, Drake feigns gullible drunkenness and turns a trap around on his enemies. | |||||
2–9 | 052 | "No Marks for Servility" | Don Chaffey | Ralph Smart | 8 December 1964 |
International extortionist Gregori Benares marries a lovely young Englishwoman and takes her to Rome; they stay in a villa where the butler is John Drake. An ally of the shy wife and implacable enemy of the sadistic Benares, Drake exposes the man's kidnapping plot. | |||||
2–10 | 050 | "A Man to be Trusted" | Peter Maxwell | Raymond Bowers | 15 December 1964 |
Posing as a Scotland Yard detective, Drake arrives in the West Indies to investigate a murder and test the reliability of the local contact for British intelligence, a flamboyant Colonel Mora, played by Harvey Ashby. After close calls with women and voodoo cults, Drake sorts the evil from the good. | |||||
2–11 | 041 | "Don't Nail Him Yet" | Michael Truman | Philip Broadley | 22 December 1964 |
British intelligence suspects that Rawson is selling secrets. Drake poses as a wimpy schoolteacher picked on by teenagers, wins Rawson's friendship, and trails him to a soccer game, but resists simply pulling Rawson in until he can prove the treason. Following the man to a bookstore, Drake sees his quarry bolt, but discovers an accomplice (Sheila Allen) and a sinister spymaster. | |||||
2–12 | 054 | "A Date with Doris" | Quentin Lawrence | Philip Broadley | 29 December 1964 |
In a revolutionary Latin American state, Drake's friend Peter is framed for the murder of a general's mistress. Extracting the wounded Peter is a job for Drake, undercover as a journalist; and he finds an unlikely ally. When the general himself joins the chase, the escape becomes a matter of hairbreadth timing. | |||||
2–13 | 046 | "That's Two of Us Sorry" | Quentin Lawrence | Jan Read | 5 January 1965 |
Drake is sent to a remote Scottish island to investigate a set of fingerprints that belong to a spy who was long thought dead. The results surprise (and chagrin) everyone. | |||||
2–14 | 055 | "Such Men Are Dangerous" | Don Chaffey | Ralph Smart | 12 January 1965 |
Drake takes the place of an ex-convict recruited as an assassin by an organisation which believes its mission is to eliminate undesirable world leaders (identified in the episode as the Knights Templar). When sent on his first assignment, Drake allows his victim to escape, revealing his identity. | |||||
2–15 | 056 | "Whatever Happened to George Foster" | Don Chaffey | David Stone | 19 January 1965 |
By accident Drake discovers that a new Latin American republic is being sabotaged by a British industrialist for his own ends. Inexorably, Drake hunts down the industrialist's shady past and trades it for the small nation's autonomy. | |||||
2–16 | 057 | "A Room in the Basement" | Don Chaffey | Ralph Smart | 2 February 1965 |
Drake's old friend Keith is kidnapped by the opposition and held in the Embassy of Romania in Geneva. Called into unofficial action by Keith's wife, Susan (Jane Merrow), Drake enlists the help of two friends and Susan herself. She poses as a rich hysteric and he as her doctor. The four engineer a daring rooftop-to-basement rescue. | |||||
2–17 | 058 | "The Affair at Castelevara" | Quentin Lawrence | James Foster | 9 February 1965 |
Drake is sent to a Latin American country where an heroic old revolutionary is scheduled for execution. The Americans have a plan to save him, but Drake has a better idea, one that involves a documentary film and a chase through a theatre that sports a Rock Hudson poster. | |||||
2–18 | 053 | "The Ubiquitous Mr Lovegrove" | Don Chaffey | David Stone | 16 February 1965 |
Speeding on his way to the airport, Drake swerves to avoid a couple of young boys chasing a ball and loses control of his car. The rest of this story is supplied by Drake's subconscious: A duel of wits in which the hobo he passed on the road right before his accident morphs into the suave, sinister casino owner Mr. Alexander, whose unsavory deeds range from attempting to blackmail Drake to passing secrets via microdots on gambling chits. | |||||
2–19 | 045 | "It's Up to the Lady" | Michael Truman | Philip Broadley | 23 February 1965 |
Charles Glover, an idealistic Briton, flees eastward, and Drake follows Glover's wife Paula to a Greek village, where the opposition, in the person of one Nicos, is determined to bag the couple. Drake must convince the wife to return with her husband to England, where he is told the man will receive amnesty. | |||||
2–20 | 059 | "Have a Glass of Wine" | Peter Maxwell | David Stone | 2 March 1965 |
A spoof of France, and a chase across its wine country—mostly by night. Drake follows a blackmailed Englishwoman to France where her military secrets are passed to a Russian agent posing as a French wine merchant. They are intercepted by a local female spy who believes she has outwitted both, until Drake turns the tables and brings his own bottle. | |||||
2–21 | 060 | "The Mirror's New" | Michael Truman | Philip Broadley | 9 March 1965 |
A British diplomat in Paris goes missing for a day, and claims he can't remember it. Investigating, Drake improvises, first as a German-Irish encyclopaedia salesman and later as the diplomat's gambling buddy. Tortured by two men (one of them Frank Maher, McGoohan's own stunt double), Drake finds the diplomat's triple life has been financed by a dead man. | |||||
2–22 | 061 | "Parallel Lines Sometimes Meet" | Don Chaffey | Malcolm Hulke | 16 March 1965 |
Two English scientists, the Brooks, disappear from a beach. Pursuing them to the West Indies, Drake finds a disputed dead man, hears a tale of zombie mineworkers, and meets Russian agent Nicola Tarasova (Moira Redmond). Both spies find themselves following the trail of Dessiles, a Russian atomic scientist wooed by an African government. Dessile's mine is the site of a narrow escape for Drake, along with temporary ally Tarasova and the missing Brooks couple. |
Series 3 (1965–1966)
Some books list episodes 3-1 to 3–10 as part of series 2 due to change of studio from 3–11. Airdates are again as for ATV Midlands.
Episode No. | Prod No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original airdate UK |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
3-01 | 067 | "The Black Book" | Michael Truman | Philip Broadley | 30 September 1965 |
A British Embassy official is being blackmailed and Drake is sent to expose the blackmailers and eliminate their hold over the official. The trail leads to a black book of western blackmail targets. | |||||
3-02 | 066 | "A Very Dangerous Game" | Don Chaffey | Ralph Smart and David Stone | 7 October 1965 |
Drake takes the place of a defector in a plan to infiltrate Chinese Intelligence. | |||||
3-03 | 065 | "Sting in the Tail" | Peter Yates | Philip Broadley | 14 October 1965 |
Drake provokes the jealously of a political assassin, wanted by the Parisian police, to leave the safety of Beirut. | |||||
3-04 | 062 | "You Are Not in Any Trouble, Are You?" | Don Chaffey | Philip Broadley | 21 October 1965 |
In order to infiltrate a murder organisation Drake commissions his own murder. | |||||
3-05 | 070 | "Loyalty Always Pays" | Peter Yates | David Stone | 28 October 1965 |
The last message from an M9 agent in Africa reveals that China is about to gain a foothold in a country where Britain has financial interests. Drake is sent to discredit the Chinese. | |||||
3-06 | 064 | "The Mercenaries" | Don Chaffey | Ralph Smart | 4 November 1965 |
Drake has the job, following a murdered M9 agent, of infiltrating a group of mercenaries that are planning to depose an African leader. | |||||
3-07 | 068 | "Judgement Day" | Don Chaffey | Donald Jonson story by Michael J. Bird | 11 November 1965 |
Drake sent to the Middle East to bring back a German scientist accused of war crimes has to defend him against Israeli agents wanting their own brand of justice. | |||||
3-08 | 063 | "The Outcast" | Michael Truman | Donald Jonson | 18 November 1965 |
When a Wren is murdered carrying secret papers and her missing boyfriend is the chief suspect, Drake follows and befriends him in search of the truth. | |||||
3-09 | 069 | "English Lady Takes Lodgers" | Michael Truman | David Stone | 25 November 1965 |
Drake investigates an agency in Lisbon dealing in stolen secrets and comes across a boarding house landlady dealing in stolen passports. | |||||
3–10 | 071 | "Are You Going to be More Permanent?" | Don Chaffey | Philip Broadley | 2 December 1965 |
When M9 controllers mysteriously disappear in Geneva and a traitor is identified as one of three persons, Drake takes up the position of the new controller. | |||||
3–11 | 072 | "To Our Best Friend" | Patrick McGoohan | Ralph Smart | 9 December 1965 |
Drake finds himself assigned to find out if a colleague is a double agent. Unfortunately for him, that colleague is also his best friend. | |||||
3–12 | 073 | "The Man on the Beach" | Peter Yates | Philip Broadley | 16 December 1965 |
Drake is sent to Jamaica to identify a M9 double agent operating from a luxury hotel but who spends his time drinking and lying on the beach much to his superiors' annoyance. | |||||
3–13 | 075 | "Say It with Flowers" | Peter Yates | Jacques Gillies | 23 December 1965 |
When money is drawn from the account of a dead freelance agent, Drake is sent to the clinic in Switzerland where the man had died three months previously. | |||||
3–14 | 074 | "The Man Who Wouldn't Talk" | Michael Truman | Donald Jonson and Ralph Smart | 30 December 1965 |
When the M9 regional controller is captured in Bulgaria, Drake must effect a rescue before he talks under torture. | |||||
3–15 | 076 | "Someone is Liable to Get Hurt" | Michael Truman | Philip Broadley | 6 January 1966 |
A Caribbean country's elections are threatened by an impending arms deal, but the local M9 agent has disappeared. Drake is sent to investigate. | |||||
3–16 | 077 | "Dangerous Secret" | Stuart Burge | Ralph Smart and Donald Jonson | 13 January 1966 |
A leading pacifist scientist creates a lethal virus and not trusting the government flees to France pursued by Drake and other interested parties wanting the virus. | |||||
3–17 | 078 | "I Can Only Offer You Sherry" | George Pollock | Ralph Smart | 20 January 1966 |
A leak from a British embassy in the middle east leads Drake to an unassuming secretary and, posing as a journalist, he befriends her. | |||||
3–18 | 079 | "The Hunting Party" | Pat Jackson | Philip Broadley | 27 January 1966 |
Drake poses as a butler to a man, and his domineering wealthy wife, suspected of leaking information to the newspapers. But how does he do it? | |||||
3–19 | 080 | "Two Birds with One Bullet" | Peter Yates | Jesse Lasky and Pat Silver | 10 March 1966 |
At a forthcoming Caribbean election in a British colony, M9 learn one of the parties plan to kill their own candidate to discredit the British. Drake has to protect the potential victim. | |||||
3–20 | 081 | "I'm Afraid You Have the Wrong Number" | George Pollock | Ralph Smart | 17 March 1966 |
A British spymaster is kidnapped by enemy counterintelligence agents in Geneva. Drake has to find him and spring him before he talks and betrays the ring he has created in the enemy's embassy. | |||||
3–21 | 082 | "The Man With the Foot" | Jeremy Summers | Raymond Bowers | 24 March 1966 |
Drake is sent on extended holiday when his cover is blown but he is pursued by another agent. | |||||
3–22 | 083 | "The Paper Chase" | Patrick McGoohan | Philip Broadley and Ralph Smart | 31 March 1966 |
Confidential papers are stolen from an embassy official in Rome. Drake is sent to recover them. | |||||
3–23 | 084 | "Not So Jolly Roger" | Don Chaffey | Tony Williamson | 7 April 1966 |
A wartime offshore sea fort being used as a pirate radio station is transmitting secrets to an enemy submarine. One agent has already been murdered on the fort. Drake has to find out how the transmissions are being done and find the culprit amongst the crew. |
Series 4 (1968)
Airdates are for ATV Midlands. ATV London broadcast on 19 February and 26 February 1967 respectively.
Episode No. | Prod No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original airdate UK |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
4-1 | 085 | "Koroshi" | Michael Truman and Peter Yates | Norman Hudis | 5 January 1968 |
An M9 agent is murdered in Tokyo while transmitting a message about the impending assassination of a United Nations mediator. Drake is assigned to protect the official. | |||||
4-2 | 086 | "Shinda Shima" | Peter Yates | Norman Hudis | 12 January 1968 |
Assigned to take the place of an electronics expert to infiltrate a Japanese murder brotherhood, Drake follows a trail to Shinda Shima ('the murdered island'). |
These two episodes, which were shot in colour, were broadcast in the US as the European cinema movie version, Koroshi. The show's abrupt cancellation, to make way for production and broadcast of star Patrick McGoohan's The Prisoner, resulted in these final two shows airing in the UK early in 1968, when they were broadcast as fill-in episodes for The Prisoner which had fallen behind the scheduled UK transmission dates, replacing advertised Prisoner episodes that were not yet ready for broadcast. They were originally intended to be broadcast after the finale of The Prisoner in the UK. Some parts of the UK, as well as the US, never saw the episodes in their original form until their DVD release.
References
- 1 2 Before 1968 ATV transmitted weekdays in the Midlands and weekends in London. See History of ITV
- ↑ 'A Complete Production Guide' by Andrew Pixley