The Case of the Vanishing Victim
- Episode aired Jan 23, 1966
- 1h
Miriam Fielding is charged with poisoning her husband when he is killed in a plane he was piloting. They had a rocky marriage and she suspects him of stealing money from his company. Perry s... Read allMiriam Fielding is charged with poisoning her husband when he is killed in a plane he was piloting. They had a rocky marriage and she suspects him of stealing money from his company. Perry suspects the murder may not be what it appears.Miriam Fielding is charged with poisoning her husband when he is killed in a plane he was piloting. They had a rocky marriage and she suspects him of stealing money from his company. Perry suspects the murder may not be what it appears.
- Stacey Fielding
- (as George Wallace)
Featured reviews
When Lt. Drumm was at the airport when the FAA was searching through the rubble they had collected, he said that he was looking for the flask that the pilot had been chugging out of before he took off. Then Det. Brice came over with the large plaid fabric container in which the flask had been. How did it get into the container when the pilot had been drinking from it just before he fell out of the sky?
The poster kapelusznik18 said that the exchange between Perry and Burger in the courtroom was "shyster-like double-talk". It was perfect rule of law and if you want to understand it, use CC on your TV. And if you've watched PM episodes for a while you should be familiar with the way lawyers speak at times in court.
Also I have a correction to a Goof posted where Lorraine Keely came out of the shower to see Mr. Mason sitting in her living room instead of her landlady and her hair was piled on top of her head. It was not wet as a poster had assumed. It was dry, so in order to have it absolutely dry as she left in her car all she had to do was undo the clips, comb it out, and voila she's done.
Jeanne Cooper (soon to begin a long career in soap operas) plays Marian Fielding, married to a famous chemist (George D. Wallace), and both dislike each other. Stacey (Wallace) also pilots his own plane and gets himself killed. Just a convenient accident? The main focus is a flask of whiskey Stacey took with him -- which may have been poisoned. Fairly clever way to kill the guy, who was also leading a double life, all pointing the finger of guilt to Marian.
I agree with the last reviewer, if you're a COLUMBO fan, this mystery has some parallels to the famous Johnny Cash episode, suspected of poisoning a thermos of coffee, which lead to the death of his nasty wife in a plane crash. You be the judge.
Either way, it's a dynamic story, guessing the outcome is fun, even during the 9th season, when most series at the end of their run did not offer up fresh material. One of the best whodunits of the season, again thanks to Frankel and atmospheric direction by Harmon Jones. Jones was known for directing DEATH VALLEY DAYS.
Lisa Gaye, who appeared seven times on the series, plays Laraine. By the way, George Wallace went on to become a sci fi cult star, Commando Cody.
Watch this one closely (all about the faces), and note the chic 60s fashions and sleek cars, a neat time capsule all by itself. Why we love Perry Mason. Definitely, the series was a showcase for 50s and 60s car buffs.
SEASON 9 EPISODE 17 remastered CBS dvd box set. Volumes one and two. Thanks to METV for running these oldies twice daily.
Did you know
- TriviaThis episode has the first reference to the Vietnam War in the series.
- GoofsWhen Perry and Paul are in apartment 9C, Perry finds a wall safe with the door ajar and opens it along the top edge using a handkerchief to avoid leaving fingerprints. But after finding nothing in the safe, he wipes the side edge of the door clean with his handkerchief as he closes it, thus removing any fingerprints that might have been there.
- Quotes
Hamilton Burger: He has treated us in this case to a time-wasting exhibition of legal hocus-pocus which reaches a new low - even for him.
Details
- Runtime
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1