The Case of the Capricious Corpse
- Episode aired Oct 4, 1962
- 1h
Joane Proctor and her boyfriend worry about what might happen to a home for disabled children when benefactor Carleton Gage dies. When one of his heirs dies, the boyfriend concocts an idea t... Read allJoane Proctor and her boyfriend worry about what might happen to a home for disabled children when benefactor Carleton Gage dies. When one of his heirs dies, the boyfriend concocts an idea that backfires when Joane is charged with murder.Joane Proctor and her boyfriend worry about what might happen to a home for disabled children when benefactor Carleton Gage dies. When one of his heirs dies, the boyfriend concocts an idea that backfires when Joane is charged with murder.
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- Chambermaid
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Rather than going into the plot, I always seem to find a lot of interesting people in the guest casts. What surprised me with this one is that some of these folks did a lot of soap opera work. Another surprise was there were no name guests this time, all of them were people who did supporting roles most of their careers.
Regardless, this is one of the few that Lt. Tragg and Lt. Anderson both appear in. Tragg was such a good character I actually miss him in the later seasons but understand his health went downhill and Ray Collins just could do these anymore. The show really kept quiet about cast things like health. Earlier in this series William Talman (Burger) was actually fired from the show for a few episodes. He had major health issues the last couple of seasons (Lung Cancer from smoking) too.
But Gage slips into a coma before Perry Mason arrives and later John Morley his second heir is found dead. What to do, but try and jiggle with the times of death so that Morley's wife and Shepard's sister is the beneficiary. I won't go into the details but it's what puts Shepard in the jackpot for murder.
I mean Farr and Shepard should have realized there was a murder afoot when Morley is found dead. Anyone with half a brain would have.
Not my favorite Mason at all.
Carleton Gage is a wealthy man that has lived his life funding an orphanage for kids. On his death bed he learns that the two people that he is going to leave his fortune, George Gabe and Ernest Demming, are going to split the orphanage up and sell the property. Now he wants to write a new will. But before he can sign, Carleton falls into a coma.
Now George Gabe, a man that loves playboy life and has a posse of ex-wives, and Earnest Demming, another fun-loving playboy, is set to inherit the kid's school. But a bright spot occurs when Earnest is found dead by Joane Proctor and Nick Blake (both supporters of the school) they want everyone to think Earnest is still alive so that his wife can get the inheritance and keep the support of the school going. But covering up this small detail will land Joane and Nick in some terrible hot water.
This story was more complex than needed. There is much information in this episode that at times makes the storyline complicated. Not to say that the information was not germane to the story but rather there was so much information it seemed to take away from the interesting plot. When the episode finally comes to a conclusion, the viewer has had so much information dished-out that the feeling one gets is of relief. --Relief is not what any writer wants from a script.
Did you know
- TriviaAlthough first used in this episode, the segment with the '57 Dodge going over the cliff was repeated in S9-E19 (the Case of the Sausalito Sunrise) even though the car used in that chase was a '59 Dodge.
- GoofsThe car Joane Proctor drives up to the vegetable stand in is a 1957 Dodge sedan, but the car that goes over the cliff is a 1957 Dodge coupe that clearly has been crushed in the middle-front end and hood before going over the cliff. Most likely, it was taken from a junkyard. The fuel filler door is also open for no apparent reason.
- Quotes
[last lines]
Paul Drake: By the way, what do you suppose will happen to Nicholas and Joane?
Perry Mason: Probation, most likely, since their motives were good, even though their actions were more than slightly illegal.
- ConnectionsEdited into Perry Mason: The Case of the Sausalito Sunrise (1966)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1