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Roy Markham (Markham)

Created by Sterling Silliphant and Robert C. Dennis

This short-lived American TV series, intended as a summer replacement, tried to cash in on the success of Perry Mason and Peter Gunn (and preceded Burke’s Law), consummate pro Ray Milland starred as suave, wealthy, educated, ex-patriate Brit ROY MARKHAM, a successful, but rather bored criminal attorney who decides to take a more hands-on approach to criminal law, becoming a private investigator.

The show was developed from an episode of the anthology show Suspicion entitled “Eye To Eye,”  based on the novel by Leigh Brackett, which served as a pilot. In it, he had a suite of offices, and a secretary, Jean, but in the subsequent series he worked out of his swank apartment, and used an answering machine. At first he had an occasional asisstant, John Riggs (played by Simon Scott), to do most of the legwork, but that only lasted a few shows. For the most part, Roy worked alone. Although many of the best episodes took places in the Brash New World of 1960 New York City, his cases, ranging from corporate fraud to blackmail and murder, took him all over the world, and were far less convincing.

Part of the problem was that they didn’t go all over the world to shoot those episodes — and it showed. Mozambique, Paris, Venice and Salzburg all looked like they were shot on the same set, and most likely were.

Still, Markham, ever the distinguished gent, always looked the part. He favoured tweeds, a display handkerchief, scotch and soda, and those most elegant of early sixties props, cigarettes.  The show never really caught on, however, despite consistently convincing performances by Milland.  Suave and charming? Yes, but he could turn on the menace and toughness when he had to. Unfortunately, the plots were all over the place, ranging from the ridiculous to some truly amazing — and surprisingly dark–stuff (“A Cry from the Penthouse”).

“This is run-of-the-mill private eyeball stuff,” ventured one critic, “The plots come out of a meatgrinder.”

Co-creator Sterling Silliphant was probably best known  for his screenplay for In the Heat of the Night, which won the Academy Award in 1967, and for creating the television series Naked City and Route 66. His film credits include MarloweThe Towering Inferno, CharlyThe Poseidon Adventure, Shaft in Africa, and his TV credits stretch from The Mickey Mouse Club to the Travis McGee made-for-TV flick to The Man From Black Hawk, Rawhide, Longstreet, Checkmate, and Mr. Lucky.

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Report respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

 
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