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Richard Diamond, Private Detective

Richard Diamond, Private Detective is an American detective drama, created by Blake Edwards, which aired on radio from 1949 to 1953, and on television from 1957 to 1960.

Richard Diamond, Private Detective
Dick Powell costumed as Richard Diamond, Private Detective in a publicity photo
Running time30 minutes
Country of originUnited States
Language(s)English
Home station
StarringDick Powell
Written by
Directed by
  • William P. Rousseau
  • Blake Edwards
  • Jaime del Valle
Original releaseApril 24, 1949 –
September 20, 1953
Opening theme"Leave It to Love"


Richard Diamond, Private Detective
David Janssen as Richard Diamond (1959)
Also known asCall Mr. D
GenreCrime drama
Written byBlake Edwards
Directed by
Starring
Composers
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons4
No. of episodes77 (list of episodes)
Production
Producers
  • Mark Sandrich Jr.
  • David Heilweil
  • Vincent M. Fennelly
  • Richard Carr
Production locations
CinematographyGeorge E. Diskant
Editors
  • Arthur Hilton
  • Chandler House et al
Camera setupSingle-camera
Running time24–25 minutes per episode
Production companyFour Star Television
Original release
Network
ReleaseJuly 1, 1957 (1957-07-01) –
September 6, 1960 (1960-09-06)

Radio edit

Dick Powell starred in the Richard Diamond, Private Detective radio series as a wisecracking former police officer turned private detective. Episodes typically open with a client visiting or calling cash-strapped Diamond's office and agreeing to his fee of $100 a day plus expenses, or Diamond taking on a case at the behest of his friend and former partner, Lt. Walter Levinson. Diamond often suffers a blow to the head in his sleuthing pursuits. Most episodes end with Diamond at the piano, singing a standard, popular song, or showtune from Powell's repertoire to Helen Asher (his girlfriend) in her penthouse at 975 Park Avenue.

Levinson was played variously by Ed Begley, Arthur Q. Bryan, Ted DeCorsia and Alan Reed. Helen was played by Virginia Gregg and others. Another regular cast member was Wilms Herbert as Walt's bumbling sergeant, Otis, who also "doubled" on the show as Helen's butler, Francis.

Many of the shows were either written or directed by Edwards. Its theme, "Leave It to Love", was whistled by Powell at the beginning of each episode.

It began airing on NBC Radio on April 24, 1949, picked up Rexall as a sponsor on April 5, 1950, and continued until December 6, 1950. With Camel cigarettes as a sponsor, it moved to ABC from January 5, 1951, to June 29, 1951, with Rexall returning for a run from October 5, 1951, until June 27, 1952. Substituting for Amos 'n' Andy, it aired Sunday evenings on CBS (again, for Rexall) from May 31, 1953 until September 20, 1953.[1]

Television series edit

 

General Foods bought the program from Powell as a summer replacement for December Bride in 1957.[2]

The television debut of Richard Diamond occurred on November 22, 1956, when Don Taylor portrayed the character in the "Double Cross" episode on Chevron Hall of Stars.[3]

Powell's company, Four Star Television, produced the television version of Richard Diamond, Private Detective, which premiered in the summer of 1957 on CBS. It returned to CBS in January 1958 for the second season and in February 1959 for the third season, again on CBS. In the fall of 1959, the fourth and final season aired on NBC.[citation needed]

David Janssen, before The Fugitive, starred as Diamond, a former officer of the New York Police Department and a hard-boiled private detective in the film noir tradition. Don Taylor played the title role in a 1956 television pilot, broadcast as an episode of the anthology series Chevron Hall of Stars. The first two television seasons followed radio's characterization the most closely (several episodes were adapted from the radio series). Diamond, known for his charm and wisecracks as much as his virility, was still based in New York, though Janssen never sat at a piano and sang, as Powell had typically ended most of the radio episodes. In the noirish opening sequence, clad in hat, suit, and tie, he walks down a dimly lit street toward the camera and lights up a cigarette, the light revealing his face. After the first season when the sponsor was Maxwell House, the show was sponsored by Kent cigarettes, and Frank DeVol’s playfully mysterious theme was heard underneath an announcer hawking either "Maxwell House – Good to the Last Drop" or “Kent with the Micronite filter.” In syndicated rebroadcasts of the series, the revised title, Call Mr. D., flashes on the screen, and DeVol's music is replaced by Pete Rugolo’s far more recognizable theme—although that did not appear until Season 3.[citation needed]

Following the second season, the setting was switched from New York City to Los Angeles, and the production was entirely redesigned. The 18 episodes comprising Season 3 aired from February to mid-June of 1959, and Diamond’s character now bore only slight resemblance to his California-based noirish predecessors Sam Spade and Philip Marlowe. By the late 1950s, the glamour of Hollywood was becoming an irresistible fantasy for millions of viewers, and the popularity of Warner Brothers’ 77 Sunset Strip—which involved a good deal of location shooting and began airing four months before Diamond's third season—undoubtedly influenced a newer P. I. image that often seemed more inspired by Hugh Hefner than by Dashiell Hammett. Diamond no longer occupied a low-rent, cloistered office, but now operated from a modern, beautifully appointed ranch house—complete with a swimming pool—in the Hollywood Hills. With panoramic sliding glass doors providing views of the mountains and the city, his sunken living room featured a bar and a loveseat, where he could be found many evenings entertaining young women before a fire. Following the lead of the Sunset Strip private eyes, he also drove a convertible—in this case a 1959 DeSoto Fireflite. The Hefner-like fantasy was enhanced by gadgets, especially Diamond's car phone, which connected him directly to an answering service overseen by the shapely, enigmatic “Sam.” Season 3's modern, more youthful ambience was complemented by a jazz score by composer/arranger Pete Rugolo, who created a set of big-band, Stan Kenton-esque cues for each of the episodes. In the highly stylized opening sequence, Rugolo's robust theme is preceded by tense melodic fragments underscoring a series of frenetic, silhouette images of Diamond running, before walking forward—again in hat, suit, and tie—to light a cigarette, suggesting a re-boot of the original noirish conception. (Rugolo's score soon became so popular that in 1959 a full album of his Diamond cues, The Music from Richard Diamond, was released on the Mercury label.)[citation needed]

In the fourth season, which aired on NBC, the writers retained Los Angeles as the setting, but the Hefner-esque fantasy elements were considerably toned down. Now Diamond again operated from an office reminiscent of what he had known in New York, and his beautiful ranch house was replaced by an attractive—though more conventional—apartment. His car phone still connected him to Sam, but he now drove a 1959 Ford Galaxie convertible—absent the impressive tail fins of his DeSoto. Though the opening titles remained, Rugolo's score was replaced by a more sedate theme, "Nervous" by Richard Shores, later to be used during the highlight sequence that began every episode of The Dick Powell Show. The CBS Season 3 re-boot had aired on Sunday nights at 10 pm, but NBC moved the time slot to 7:30 pm Monday, and Season 4 began airing on October 5, 1959, with a 17-episode run that concluded late in January. Because its numbers were no longer strong, the season's nine additional episodes were delayed, resuming only as a summer replacement on Tuesday, July 5, 1960, and concluding in early September. Though the old noirish elements were more prominent, the look of the final season seems inspired more by cost-cutting than aesthetics, and the production values appear far less glamorous than Season 3.[citation needed]

In addition to Janssen, the series had other recurring characters. Mirroring Diamond's history with the New York Police Department, the radio version featured his friend, police Lt. Walt Levinson (often played by Ed Begley, Sr.), and on TV, veteran actor Regis Toomey, portraying Diamond's former superior, Lt. Dennis "Mac" McGough, came aboard in the first episode, which aired in July 1957. Toomey then appeared intermittently in seven more, including “Snow Queen,” the final episode of Season 2, which aired on June 26, 1958. Radio's version also gave Diamond a steady girl friend, wealthy socialite Helen Asher (played by Virginia Gregg), a story arc that was neglected by television until the first episode of Season 3, when Diamond meets fashion designer Karen Wells, played by Barbara Bain. But this may have created a conundrum for the producers, since radio's Diamond was also an unrestrained flirt, and Powell's character often shamelessly ogled his beautiful clients before returning to Helen each week. In one TV episode, “Soft Touch,” Karen catches Diamond about to two-time her, and after five episodes, the “steady-girl-friend” arc had disappeared, with Diamond once again playing the field. When he first reached Los Angeles, Diamond had no history with the local police, and his encounters with them are often contentious. In Season 4, Russ Conway was cast as Lieutenant Pete Kile for five episodes, and their relationship soon turns to one of mutual respect, if not always warmth. The omnipresent Sam entered the picture (at least partially—viewers never saw much of her face) in Season 3 and remained for the duration of the series. She was played for most of Season 3 by Mary Tyler Moore in her first regular series role, and later replaced by Roxane Brooks.[citation needed]

Cast edit

Television guest stars edit

Television episode list edit

Season 1: 1957 edit

Ep Title Director Writer Original air date
11"The Mickey Farmer Case"Roy Del RuthRichard CarrJuly 1, 1957 (1957-07-01)
22"Custody"Tom GriesEllis MarcusJuly 8, 1957 (1957-07-08)
33"Escape from Oak Lane"Tom GriesEdmund MorrisJuly 15, 1957 (1957-07-15)
44"The Homicide Habit"UnknownUnknownJuly 22, 1957 (1957-07-22)
55"Picture of Fear"Oscar RudolphDavid T. ChandlerJuly 29, 1957 (1957-07-29)
66"Hit and Run"Oscar RudolphEllis Arnold KadisonAugust 5, 1957 (1957-08-05)
77"The Big Score"Oscar RudolphDavid T. ChandlerAugust 12, 1957 (1957-08-12)
88"The Chess Player"Mark Sandrich Jr.Philip MacDonaldAugust 19, 1957 (1957-08-19)
99"The Torch Carriers"Bernard KowalskiGene LevittAugust 26, 1957 (1957-08-26)
1010"The Pete Rocco Case"Bernard KowalskiRichard CarrSeptember 9, 1957 (1957-09-09)
1111"Venus of Park Avenue"Mark Sandrich Jr.George Worthing Yates & David T. ChandlerSeptember 16, 1957 (1957-09-16)
1212"Merry-Go-Round Case"Roy Del RuthRichard CarrSeptember 23, 1957 (1957-09-23)

Season 2: 1958 edit

Ep Title Original air date
131"The Space Society"January 2, 1958 (1958-01-02)
142"The Dark Horse"January 9, 1958 (1958-01-09)
153"The Payoff"January 16, 1958 (1958-01-16)
164"Double Jeopardy"January 23, 1958 (1958-01-23)
175"Arson"January 30, 1958 (1958-01-30)
186"The Ed Church Case"February 6, 1958 (1958-02-06)
197"Chinese Honeymoon"February 13, 1958 (1958-02-13)
208"Rodeo"February 20, 1958 (1958-02-20)
219"A Cup of Black Coffee"February 27, 1958 (1958-02-27)
2210"The George Dale Case"March 6, 1958 (1958-03-06)
2311"Juvenile Jacket"March 13, 1958 (1958-03-13)
2412"Pension Plan"March 27, 1958 (1958-03-27)
2513"Short Haul"April 10, 1958 (1958-04-10)
2614"Another Man's Poison"April 17, 1958 (1958-04-17)
2715"The Purple Penguin"April 24, 1958 (1958-04-24)
2816"Lost Testament"May 1, 1958 (1958-05-01)
2917"The Percentage Takers"May 8, 1958 (1958-05-08)
3018"Widow's Walk"May 22, 1958 (1958-05-22)
3119"Bungalow Murder"May 29, 1958 (1958-05-29)
3220"One Foot in the Grave"June 12, 1958 (1958-06-12)
3321"Snow Queen"June 26, 1958 (1958-06-26)

Season 3: 1959–60 edit

Ep Title Original air date
341"The Sport"February 15, 1959 (1959-02-15)
352"Pack Rat"February 22, 1959 (1959-02-22)
363"Body of the Crime"March 1, 1959 (1959-03-01)
374"Soft Touch"March 8, 1959 (1959-03-08)
385"Boomerang Bait"March 15, 1959 (1959-03-15)
396"Matador Murder"March 22, 1959 (1959-03-22)
407"Murder at the Mansion"March 29, 1959 (1959-03-29)
418"Marineland Mystery"April 5, 1959 (1959-04-05)
429"Charity Affair"April 12, 1959 (1959-04-12)
4310"Two for Paradise"April 19, 1959 (1959-04-19)
4411"Crown of Silla"May 3, 1959 (1959-05-03)
4512"Jukebox"May 10, 1959 (1959-05-10)
4613"Echo of Laughter"May 17, 1959 (1959-05-17)
4714"The Limping Man"May 24, 1959 (1959-05-24)
4815"Hideout"May 31, 1959 (1959-05-31)
4916"Rough Cut"June 7, 1959 (1959-06-07)
5017"Family Affair"June 14, 1959 (1959-06-14)
5118"Design for Murder"June 21, 1959 (1959-06-21)
5219"Hoodlum"October 5, 1959 (1959-10-05)
5320"Act of Grace"October 12, 1959 (1959-10-12)
5421"Bookie"October 19, 1959 (1959-10-19)
5522"The Client"October 26, 1959 (1959-10-26)
5623"The Runaway"November 2, 1959 (1959-11-02)
5724"No Laughing Matter"November 9, 1959 (1959-11-09)
5825"The Messenger"November 16, 1959 (1959-11-16)
5926"The Counselor"November 23, 1959 (1959-11-23)
6027"The Image"November 30, 1959 (1959-11-30)
6128"The Adjuster"December 7, 1959 (1959-12-07)
6229"Marked for Murder"December 14, 1959 (1959-12-14)
6330"The Caller"December 21, 1959 (1959-12-21)
6431"One Dead Cat"December 28, 1959 (1959-12-28)
6532"Dead to the World"January 11, 1960 (1960-01-11)
6633"Seven Swords"January 18, 1960 (1960-01-18)
6734"The Fine Art of Murder"January 25, 1960 (1960-01-25)

Season 4: 1960 edit

Ep Title Original air date
681"The Popskull"June 28, 1960 (1960-06-28)
692"And Whose Little Baby Are You?"July 5, 1960 (1960-07-05)
703"Fallen Star"July 19, 1960 (1960-07-19)
714"Coat of Arms"August 2, 1960 (1960-08-02)
725"Double Trouble"August 9, 1960 (1960-08-09)
736"The Lovely Fraud"August 16, 1960 (1960-08-16)
747"Accent on Murder"August 23, 1960 (1960-08-23)
758"East of Danger"August 30, 1960 (1960-08-30)
769"Running Scared"September 6, 1960 (1960-09-06)
7710"The Mouse"September 13, 1960 (1960-09-13)

Adaptations edit

In 1968, Four Star president David Charnay announced a feature film revival starring David Janssen, but nothing came of the plans. A pair of unauthorized Richard Diamond short stories set in 1948 were published in book form in 2016.

References edit

  1. ^ Dunning, John (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio (Revised ed.). New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 576–577. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3. Retrieved 2019-09-08.
  2. ^ "'Dick Diamond' To Sub 'Dec. Bride'". Variety. January 30, 1957. p. 24. Retrieved May 27, 2023.
  3. ^ Bang, Derrick (April 16, 2020). Crime and Spy Jazz on Screen, 1950-1970: A History and Discography. McFarland. p. 32. ISBN 978-1-4766-6747-8. Retrieved June 14, 2023.

External links edit

  • Richard Diamond, Private Detective at IMDb  
  • Richard Diamond, Private Eye at epguides.com
  • Richard Diamond, Private Eye at The Thrilling Detective web-site
  • Richard Diamond Private Eye Podcast
  • Richard Diamond, Private Detective in the Internet Archive's Old-Time Radio Collection
  • Richard Diamond, Private Eye theme by Pete Rugolo
  • Richard Diamond on Old Time Radio Outlaws

richard, diamond, private, detective, american, detective, drama, created, blake, edwards, which, aired, radio, from, 1949, 1953, television, from, 1957, 1960, dick, powell, costumed, publicity, photorunning, time30, minutescountry, originunited, stateslanguag. Richard Diamond Private Detective is an American detective drama created by Blake Edwards which aired on radio from 1949 to 1953 and on television from 1957 to 1960 Richard Diamond Private DetectiveDick Powell costumed as Richard Diamond Private Detective in a publicity photoRunning time30 minutesCountry of originUnited StatesLanguage s EnglishHome stationNBC ABC CBSStarringDick PowellWritten byBlake Edwards Harvey EastonDirected byWilliam P Rousseau Blake Edwards Jaime del ValleOriginal releaseApril 24 1949 September 20 1953Opening theme Leave It to Love Richard Diamond Private DetectiveDavid Janssen as Richard Diamond 1959 Also known asCall Mr DGenreCrime dramaWritten byBlake EdwardsDirected byThomas Carr Don McDougall Tom Gries et alStarringDavid Janssen Regis Toomey Barbara Bain Russ ConwayComposersFrank DeVol seasons 1 amp 2 Pete Rugolo season 3 Richard Shores season 4 Country of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons4No of episodes77 list of episodes ProductionProducersMark Sandrich Jr David Heilweil Vincent M Fennelly Richard CarrProduction locationsNew York City Los AngelesCinematographyGeorge E DiskantEditorsArthur Hilton Chandler House et alCamera setupSingle cameraRunning time24 25 minutes per episodeProduction companyFour Star TelevisionOriginal releaseNetworkCBS Television 1957 59 NBC 1959 60 ReleaseJuly 1 1957 1957 07 01 September 6 1960 1960 09 06 Contents 1 Radio 2 Television series 2 1 Cast 2 2 Television guest stars 3 Television episode list 3 1 Season 1 1957 3 2 Season 2 1958 3 3 Season 3 1959 60 3 4 Season 4 1960 4 Adaptations 5 References 6 External linksRadio editDick Powell starred in the Richard Diamond Private Detective radio series as a wisecracking former police officer turned private detective Episodes typically open with a client visiting or calling cash strapped Diamond s office and agreeing to his fee of 100 a day plus expenses or Diamond taking on a case at the behest of his friend and former partner Lt Walter Levinson Diamond often suffers a blow to the head in his sleuthing pursuits Most episodes end with Diamond at the piano singing a standard popular song or showtune from Powell s repertoire to Helen Asher his girlfriend in her penthouse at 975 Park Avenue Levinson was played variously by Ed Begley Arthur Q Bryan Ted DeCorsia and Alan Reed Helen was played by Virginia Gregg and others Another regular cast member was Wilms Herbert as Walt s bumbling sergeant Otis who also doubled on the show as Helen s butler Francis Many of the shows were either written or directed by Edwards Its theme Leave It to Love was whistled by Powell at the beginning of each episode It began airing on NBC Radio on April 24 1949 picked up Rexall as a sponsor on April 5 1950 and continued until December 6 1950 With Camel cigarettes as a sponsor it moved to ABC from January 5 1951 to June 29 1951 with Rexall returning for a run from October 5 1951 until June 27 1952 Substituting for Amos n Andy it aired Sunday evenings on CBS again for Rexall from May 31 1953 until September 20 1953 1 Television series edit nbsp David Janssen 1957 General Foods bought the program from Powell as a summer replacement for December Bride in 1957 2 The television debut of Richard Diamond occurred on November 22 1956 when Don Taylor portrayed the character in the Double Cross episode on Chevron Hall of Stars 3 Powell s company Four Star Television produced the television version of Richard Diamond Private Detective which premiered in the summer of 1957 on CBS It returned to CBS in January 1958 for the second season and in February 1959 for the third season again on CBS In the fall of 1959 the fourth and final season aired on NBC citation needed David Janssen before The Fugitive starred as Diamond a former officer of the New York Police Department and a hard boiled private detective in the film noir tradition Don Taylor played the title role in a 1956 television pilot broadcast as an episode of the anthology series Chevron Hall of Stars The first two television seasons followed radio s characterization the most closely several episodes were adapted from the radio series Diamond known for his charm and wisecracks as much as his virility was still based in New York though Janssen never sat at a piano and sang as Powell had typically ended most of the radio episodes In the noirish opening sequence clad in hat suit and tie he walks down a dimly lit street toward the camera and lights up a cigarette the light revealing his face After the first season when the sponsor was Maxwell House the show was sponsored by Kent cigarettes and Frank DeVol s playfully mysterious theme was heard underneath an announcer hawking either Maxwell House Good to the Last Drop or Kent with the Micronite filter In syndicated rebroadcasts of the series the revised title Call Mr D flashes on the screen and DeVol s music is replaced by Pete Rugolo s far more recognizable theme although that did not appear until Season 3 citation needed Following the second season the setting was switched from New York City to Los Angeles and the production was entirely redesigned The 18 episodes comprising Season 3 aired from February to mid June of 1959 and Diamond s character now bore only slight resemblance to his California based noirish predecessors Sam Spade and Philip Marlowe By the late 1950s the glamour of Hollywood was becoming an irresistible fantasy for millions of viewers and the popularity of Warner Brothers 77 Sunset Strip which involved a good deal of location shooting and began airing four months before Diamond s third season undoubtedly influenced a newer P I image that often seemed more inspired by Hugh Hefner than by Dashiell Hammett Diamond no longer occupied a low rent cloistered office but now operated from a modern beautifully appointed ranch house complete with a swimming pool in the Hollywood Hills With panoramic sliding glass doors providing views of the mountains and the city his sunken living room featured a bar and a loveseat where he could be found many evenings entertaining young women before a fire Following the lead of the Sunset Strip private eyes he also drove a convertible in this case a 1959 DeSoto Fireflite The Hefner like fantasy was enhanced by gadgets especially Diamond s car phone which connected him directly to an answering service overseen by the shapely enigmatic Sam Season 3 s modern more youthful ambience was complemented by a jazz score by composer arranger Pete Rugolo who created a set of big band Stan Kenton esque cues for each of the episodes In the highly stylized opening sequence Rugolo s robust theme is preceded by tense melodic fragments underscoring a series of frenetic silhouette images of Diamond running before walking forward again in hat suit and tie to light a cigarette suggesting a re boot of the original noirish conception Rugolo s score soon became so popular that in 1959 a full album of his Diamond cues The Music from Richard Diamond was released on the Mercury label citation needed In the fourth season which aired on NBC the writers retained Los Angeles as the setting but the Hefner esque fantasy elements were considerably toned down Now Diamond again operated from an office reminiscent of what he had known in New York and his beautiful ranch house was replaced by an attractive though more conventional apartment His car phone still connected him to Sam but he now drove a 1959 Ford Galaxie convertible absent the impressive tail fins of his DeSoto Though the opening titles remained Rugolo s score was replaced by a more sedate theme Nervous by Richard Shores later to be used during the highlight sequence that began every episode of The Dick Powell Show The CBS Season 3 re boot had aired on Sunday nights at 10 pm but NBC moved the time slot to 7 30 pm Monday and Season 4 began airing on October 5 1959 with a 17 episode run that concluded late in January Because its numbers were no longer strong the season s nine additional episodes were delayed resuming only as a summer replacement on Tuesday July 5 1960 and concluding in early September Though the old noirish elements were more prominent the look of the final season seems inspired more by cost cutting than aesthetics and the production values appear far less glamorous than Season 3 citation needed In addition to Janssen the series had other recurring characters Mirroring Diamond s history with the New York Police Department the radio version featured his friend police Lt Walt Levinson often played by Ed Begley Sr and on TV veteran actor Regis Toomey portraying Diamond s former superior Lt Dennis Mac McGough came aboard in the first episode which aired in July 1957 Toomey then appeared intermittently in seven more including Snow Queen the final episode of Season 2 which aired on June 26 1958 Radio s version also gave Diamond a steady girl friend wealthy socialite Helen Asher played by Virginia Gregg a story arc that was neglected by television until the first episode of Season 3 when Diamond meets fashion designer Karen Wells played by Barbara Bain But this may have created a conundrum for the producers since radio s Diamond was also an unrestrained flirt and Powell s character often shamelessly ogled his beautiful clients before returning to Helen each week In one TV episode Soft Touch Karen catches Diamond about to two time her and after five episodes the steady girl friend arc had disappeared with Diamond once again playing the field When he first reached Los Angeles Diamond had no history with the local police and his encounters with them are often contentious In Season 4 Russ Conway was cast as Lieutenant Pete Kile for five episodes and their relationship soon turns to one of mutual respect if not always warmth The omnipresent Sam entered the picture at least partially viewers never saw much of her face in Season 3 and remained for the duration of the series She was played for most of Season 3 by Mary Tyler Moore in her first regular series role and later replaced by Roxane Brooks citation needed Cast edit David Janssen as Richard Diamond Regis Toomey as Lt Dennis Mac McGough seasons 1 2 Russ Conway as Lt Pete Kile season 4 Barbara Bain as Karen Wells season 3 Mary Tyler Moore as Sam season 3 Roxane Brooks as Sam seasons 3 4 Television guest stars edit Nick Adams Philip Ahn Charles Aidman Claude Akins Frank Albertson Jack Albertson Chris Alcaide Merry Anders John Anderson Eleanor Audley Phyllis Avery Joanna Barnes Patricia Barry Harry Bartell Arthur Batanides Barbara Baxley Don Beddoe Ed Begley Harry Bellaver John Beradino James Best Edward Binns Joey Bishop Patricia Blair Whitney Blake Dan Blocker Willis Bouchey Lane Bradford Jocelyn Brando Steve Brodie Charles Bronson Hillary Brooke Geraldine Brooks Richard Carlyle Jack Cassidy Phyllis Coates Joe Conley Ellen Corby Jerome Cowan Christopher Dark Ted de Corsia Francis De Sales King Donovan Richard Devon Brad Dexter Lawrence Dobkin James Drury Don Durant Jack Elam Ross Elliott Tommy Farrell James Flavin Dick Foran Robert Foulk Douglas Fowley Robert Gist Ned Glass Barry Gordon Tom Greenway Dabbs Greer Virginia Gregg Don Haggerty Kipp Hamilton Peter Hansen Stacy Harris Irene Hervey Jonathan Hole James Hong Clegg Hoyt John Hoyt Robert Karnes Don Keefer DeForest Kelley Sandy Kenyon Gail Kobe Charles Lane Joi Lansing Harry Lauter Ruta Lee Peter Leeds Bethel Leslie Nan Leslie Lisa Lu Keye Luke John Lupton Ross Martin Sean McClory Howard McNear Carole Mathews Joyce Meadows Eve Miller John Mitchum Rita Moreno Vic Morrow Jeanette Nolan Jay Novello Alan Reed Richard Reeves Stafford Repp Addison Richards Mark Roberts Carlos Romero Hayden Rorke Mort Sahl Walter Sande Gloria Saunders William Schallert Jacqueline Scott Karen Sharpe Doris Singleton Lyle Talbot Gloria Talbott Vaughn Taylor Lee Van Cleef Herb Vigran June Vincent James Westerfield Jesse White Jean Willes Gloria WintersTelevision episode list editSeason 1 1957 edit Nº Ep Title Director Writer Original air date11 The Mickey Farmer Case Roy Del RuthRichard CarrJuly 1 1957 1957 07 01 22 Custody Tom GriesEllis MarcusJuly 8 1957 1957 07 08 33 Escape from Oak Lane Tom GriesEdmund MorrisJuly 15 1957 1957 07 15 44 The Homicide Habit UnknownUnknownJuly 22 1957 1957 07 22 55 Picture of Fear Oscar RudolphDavid T ChandlerJuly 29 1957 1957 07 29 66 Hit and Run Oscar RudolphEllis Arnold KadisonAugust 5 1957 1957 08 05 77 The Big Score Oscar RudolphDavid T ChandlerAugust 12 1957 1957 08 12 88 The Chess Player Mark Sandrich Jr Philip MacDonaldAugust 19 1957 1957 08 19 99 The Torch Carriers Bernard KowalskiGene LevittAugust 26 1957 1957 08 26 1010 The Pete Rocco Case Bernard KowalskiRichard CarrSeptember 9 1957 1957 09 09 1111 Venus of Park Avenue Mark Sandrich Jr George Worthing Yates amp David T ChandlerSeptember 16 1957 1957 09 16 1212 Merry Go Round Case Roy Del RuthRichard CarrSeptember 23 1957 1957 09 23 Season 2 1958 edit Nº Ep Title Original air date131 The Space Society January 2 1958 1958 01 02 142 The Dark Horse January 9 1958 1958 01 09 153 The Payoff January 16 1958 1958 01 16 164 Double Jeopardy January 23 1958 1958 01 23 175 Arson January 30 1958 1958 01 30 186 The Ed Church Case February 6 1958 1958 02 06 197 Chinese Honeymoon February 13 1958 1958 02 13 208 Rodeo February 20 1958 1958 02 20 219 A Cup of Black Coffee February 27 1958 1958 02 27 2210 The George Dale Case March 6 1958 1958 03 06 2311 Juvenile Jacket March 13 1958 1958 03 13 2412 Pension Plan March 27 1958 1958 03 27 2513 Short Haul April 10 1958 1958 04 10 2614 Another Man s Poison April 17 1958 1958 04 17 2715 The Purple Penguin April 24 1958 1958 04 24 2816 Lost Testament May 1 1958 1958 05 01 2917 The Percentage Takers May 8 1958 1958 05 08 3018 Widow s Walk May 22 1958 1958 05 22 3119 Bungalow Murder May 29 1958 1958 05 29 3220 One Foot in the Grave June 12 1958 1958 06 12 3321 Snow Queen June 26 1958 1958 06 26 Season 3 1959 60 edit Nº Ep Title Original air date341 The Sport February 15 1959 1959 02 15 352 Pack Rat February 22 1959 1959 02 22 363 Body of the Crime March 1 1959 1959 03 01 374 Soft Touch March 8 1959 1959 03 08 385 Boomerang Bait March 15 1959 1959 03 15 396 Matador Murder March 22 1959 1959 03 22 407 Murder at the Mansion March 29 1959 1959 03 29 418 Marineland Mystery April 5 1959 1959 04 05 429 Charity Affair April 12 1959 1959 04 12 4310 Two for Paradise April 19 1959 1959 04 19 4411 Crown of Silla May 3 1959 1959 05 03 4512 Jukebox May 10 1959 1959 05 10 4613 Echo of Laughter May 17 1959 1959 05 17 4714 The Limping Man May 24 1959 1959 05 24 4815 Hideout May 31 1959 1959 05 31 4916 Rough Cut June 7 1959 1959 06 07 5017 Family Affair June 14 1959 1959 06 14 5118 Design for Murder June 21 1959 1959 06 21 5219 Hoodlum October 5 1959 1959 10 05 5320 Act of Grace October 12 1959 1959 10 12 5421 Bookie October 19 1959 1959 10 19 5522 The Client October 26 1959 1959 10 26 5623 The Runaway November 2 1959 1959 11 02 5724 No Laughing Matter November 9 1959 1959 11 09 5825 The Messenger November 16 1959 1959 11 16 5926 The Counselor November 23 1959 1959 11 23 6027 The Image November 30 1959 1959 11 30 6128 The Adjuster December 7 1959 1959 12 07 6229 Marked for Murder December 14 1959 1959 12 14 6330 The Caller December 21 1959 1959 12 21 6431 One Dead Cat December 28 1959 1959 12 28 6532 Dead to the World January 11 1960 1960 01 11 6633 Seven Swords January 18 1960 1960 01 18 6734 The Fine Art of Murder January 25 1960 1960 01 25 Season 4 1960 edit Nº Ep Title Original air date681 The Popskull June 28 1960 1960 06 28 692 And Whose Little Baby Are You July 5 1960 1960 07 05 703 Fallen Star July 19 1960 1960 07 19 714 Coat of Arms August 2 1960 1960 08 02 725 Double Trouble August 9 1960 1960 08 09 736 The Lovely Fraud August 16 1960 1960 08 16 747 Accent on Murder August 23 1960 1960 08 23 758 East of Danger August 30 1960 1960 08 30 769 Running Scared September 6 1960 1960 09 06 7710 The Mouse September 13 1960 1960 09 13 Adaptations editIn 1968 Four Star president David Charnay announced a feature film revival starring David Janssen but nothing came of the plans A pair of unauthorized Richard Diamond short stories set in 1948 were published in book form in 2016 References edit Dunning John 1998 On the Air The Encyclopedia of Old Time Radio Revised ed New York NY Oxford University Press pp 576 577 ISBN 978 0 19 507678 3 Retrieved 2019 09 08 Dick Diamond To Sub Dec Bride Variety January 30 1957 p 24 Retrieved May 27 2023 Bang Derrick April 16 2020 Crime and Spy Jazz on Screen 1950 1970 A History and Discography McFarland p 32 ISBN 978 1 4766 6747 8 Retrieved June 14 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Richard Diamond Private Detective Richard Diamond Private Detective at IMDb nbsp Richard Diamond Private Eye at epguides com Richard Diamond Private Eye at The Thrilling Detective web site Richard Diamond Private Eye Podcast Richard Diamond Private Detective in the Internet Archive s Old Time Radio Collection Richard Diamond Private Eye theme by Pete Rugolo Richard Diamond on Old Time Radio Outlaws Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Diamond Private Detective amp oldid 1209273362, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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