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Daniel Pike (The View from Daniel Pike)

Created by Edward Boyd
(1916-89)

Forget Scotland the Brave — this is Scotland the Hard…

DANIEL PIKE is a Glasgow-based private investigator and debt collector who was featured in a fondly remembered but short-lived Scottish television series in the early 70’s. He’s a hard man who decorates his office with pictures of riots, violence and atrocities committed by humans against humans. He’s described by some as looking like a “well-dressed cement-mixer.”

He’s got a mouth on him too. After brushing off one potential client whose daughter he has once tracked down, he returns to his office only to find the same man sitting behind HIS desk, going through his bills. “Do I have to marry you to get rid of you?” he asks.

Later, when on the hunt for the daughter again, he has this exchange with the owner of a hotel as he checks in:

PIKE: (CASUALLY) This young lady …
HAMISH: Miss Stevens …
PIKE: She have a little red Mini?
HAMISH: She has indeed. Are you acquainted with her?
PIKE: No. I just like little red Minis.

And follows it up with this when he catches up with the owner of the Mini in question:

NELLY: I’ve been talking to Hamish MacKenzie . He mentioned my name and you asked if I had a little red Mini.
PIKE: I’m hooked on little red Minis. I’ve got a pocketful of lump sugar for feeding little red Minis.
NELLY: So you didn’t know I was up here?
PIKE (after a moment): Was reading this crappy book the other day. Bloke kept going on about something called the Fallacy of the Central Position. You know, the feeling that the sun shines out of your particular backside.
NELLY: Not with you.
PIKE: The world’s filled with little red minis.

Still, Pike did had a softer side–he even had a blind jazz pianist girlfriend, Sweet Sam. Both Pike and Sam’s characters had originally made their debut in an 1971 in an episode of Menace, an anthology series.

Pike’s creator was Edward “Eddie” Boyd, a well-known Glasgow scriptwriter for radio, TV and film. The series had a devoted following, but has–as far as I know–never been released on DVD or Blu-Ray. To add insult to injury,  two episodes (‘A Slight Case of Absalom’ and ‘Four Walls’) have been lost, apparently for good.

TELEVISION

SHORT STORIES

NOVELIZATIONS

FROM THE PEANUT GALLERY

FURTHER INVESTIGATION

Respectfully submitted by Dale Stoyer.

 

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