Perry Mason (TV series): Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Acting for Two]]: Burr in a season nine episode.
* [[Acting for Two]]: Burr in a season nine episode.
* [[Always Murder]]: A strong codifier in television - this show quite popularly used the idea that if the initial issue didn't involve murder, the viewer could be sure that only meant there would be a murder later on to thicken the plot.
* [[Always Murder]]: A strong codifier in television - this show quite popularly used the idea that if the initial issue didn't involve murder, the viewer could be sure that only meant there would be a murder later on to thicken the plot.
* [[Always on Duty]]: The various homicide lieutenants seemed to turn up at every murder that occurred in L. A., no matter the time of day (or night).
* [[Always on Duty]]: The various homicide lieutenants that seemed to turn up at every murder that occurred in L. A., no matter the time of day (or night).
* [[Amoral Attorney]]: Very often played straight when an attorney turned up among the murder suspects. Either played straight or averted with District Attorney Hamilton Burger, depending on the writer. Guest prosecutors tended to run the gamut as well.
* [[Amoral Attorney]]: Very often played straight when an attorney turned up among the murder suspects. Either played straight or averted with District Attorney Hamilton Burger, depending on the writer. Guest prosecutors tended to run the gamut as well.
* [[Asshole Victim]]: Many of the murder victims were blackmailers, thieves, murderers themselves or just [[Jerkass|someone so irritating]] or otherwise evil that absolutely nobody would mind their being dead. Oddly enough, any crimes that the victims do (including murder) are often not investigated by Tragg and Burger which means [[Karma Houdini|they would have likely gotten away with them]].
* [[Asshole Victim]]: Many of the murder victims were blackmailers, thieves, murderers themselves or just [[Jerkass|someone so irritating]] or otherwise evil that absolutely nobody would mind their being dead. Oddly enough, any crimes that the victims do (including murder) are often not investigated by Tragg and Burger which means [[Karma Houdini|they would have likely gotten away with them]].
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* [[Mobile Menace]]: Tragg likes popping up at the worst possible times for Perry and his clients, with no notice and often very improbably.
* [[Mobile Menace]]: Tragg likes popping up at the worst possible times for Perry and his clients, with no notice and often very improbably.
* [[Motive Rant]]
* [[Motive Rant]]
* [[Nice Hat]]
* [[Nice Hat]]: Lieutenant Tragg's fedora.
* [[Official Couple]]: Perry and Della.
* [[Official Couple]]: Perry and Della.
* [[Perp Sweating]]
* [[Perp Sweating]]

Revision as of 21:21, 12 May 2019

"Who can we get on the case?
We need Perry Mason
Someone to put you in place
Calling Perry Mason again"

Perry Mason is an iconic 1957-1966 CBS series descended from the radio drama of the same name and inspired by (and frequently dramatizing) the series of books by Erle Stanley Gardner. Perry Mason (Raymond Burr) is a skilled defense attorney who takes seemingly hopeless cases and turns them into victories. Aided by his secretary Della Street (Barbara Hale) and private investigator Paul Drake (William Hopper), he specializes in discovering the one fact that unravels the case against his client, and often ends up getting the true criminal to confess on the stand.

It got revived in 1973 as The New Perry Mason with a completely different cast, but the series lasted only one season. It was then revived again as Perry Mason Returns in 1985 with the surviving original cast plus William "The Greatest American Hero" Katt as Paul Drake, Jr. The success of this TV movie spurred the production of 29 more Perry Mason TV movies between 1985 and 1994, with the last installment airing after Raymond Burr's death in 1993. (NBC made a few more TV movies without Raymond Burr before calling it quits.)

The series is very popular overseas — a Turkish version (also called Perry Mason) was produced in 1983.

In an odd twist, the series made the jump from radio to TV twice — and this instance was the second. The first time was in 1956, but at the last minute Erle Stanley Gardner withdrew his support for the project, and it was retooled into... the soap opera The Edge of Night. The attorney also inspired a song by Ozzy Osbourne.

Many episodes of the 1943-1955 radio series have fallen into the public domain in the United States, and can be downloaded courtesy of the Internet Archive.

Tropes used in Perry Mason (TV series) include:
  1. For those wondering, in California, at least, the Grand Jury requirement can be waived for a pre-trial hearing in front of a judge