The Saint: The Latin Touch


09:00 am - 10:00 am, Today on KAVC Retro TV (48.2)

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About this Broadcast
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The Latin Touch

Season 1, Episode 2

In Rome, Templar helps a pretty young American---to be kidnapped.

repeat 1962 English Stereo
Action Action/adventure Crime Drama Mystery & Suspense

Cast & Crew
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Alexander Knox (Actor) .. Governor Hudson Inverest
Doris Nolan (Actor) .. Maude Inverest
Bill Nagy (Actor) .. Tony Unciello
Warren Mitchell (Actor) .. Marco Di Cesari
Peter Illing (Actor) .. Inspector Buono
Marie Burke (Actor) .. Signora Unciello
Suzan Farmer (Actor) .. Sue Inverest
Charles Irwin (Actor) .. Eddie Harmer
Roy Patrick (Actor) .. Georgio
David Calderisi (Actor) .. Vittorio
Tony Arpino (Actor) .. Warder
Don Archell (Actor) .. Coliseum Passerby
Paul Beradi (Actor) .. Club Patron
Norman Fisher (Actor) .. Coliseum Vendor
Caron Gardner (Actor) .. Restaurant Patron
Ned Lynch (Actor) .. Club Patron
Norman Morris (Actor) .. Tourist
Peter Roy (Actor) .. Club Patron
Robert Vossler (Actor) .. Waiter

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Alexander Knox (Actor) .. Governor Hudson Inverest
Born: January 16, 1907
Died: April 26, 1995
Trivia: Canadian actor Alexander Knox launched his stage career in Britain in 1929; two years later he made his film film, The Ringer. After a successful British stage career, Knox came to America in 1941, where he found steady film work playing learned types. In The Sea Wolf (1941), Knox was the pedantic Weyland, the opponent/doppelganger of brutish sea captain Wolf Larsen (Edward G. Robinson); while in This Above All (1942), Knox lent credibility to his role as clergyman who does but really doesn't condone a clandestine love affair. Knox's most daunting American film assignment was the title role in Wilson (1944), producer Darryl F. Zanuck's budget-busting valentine to the 28th president of the United States. Too healthy and fit to be totally convincing as Woodrow Wilson, Knox nonetheless sustained audience interest in an otherwise ponderous film marathon, and received an Oscar nomination -- which he might have won had not Wilson been one of the most conspicuous failures in Hollywood history. Nonetheless, the film allowed Knox to command star billing for his next few American pictures, including the enjoyable 1949 outing The Judge Steps Out, a light comedy loosely based on the Judge Crater disappearance. In the early 1950s, Knox found himself playing a few villains, at least until Hollywood's doors closed on him during the Blacklist era (that a man who once played a U.S. president should even be suspected of subversive leanings is quite ironic). The actor returned to Britain for choice character roles in such films as The Sleeping Tiger (1954), The Night My Number Came Up (1955) and Oscar Wilde (1957). In 1967, Knox was signed up for a term as a fictional U.S. president in the James Bond extravaganza You Only Live Twice (1967). Active in films until the mid 1980s, Knox also kept busy as a screenwriter and mystery novelist.
Doris Nolan (Actor) .. Maude Inverest
Born: July 14, 1916
Died: July 29, 1998
Trivia: Mainly known as a stage actress, blonde Doris Nolan played Katharine Hepburn's elegant sister in the second screen version of Philip Barry's Holiday (1938). She was quite effective in the role but Hepburn took no prisoners and screen stardom was not to be. After a few less memorable attempts, Nolan returned to Broadway where she would spend two years in the hit wartime comedy The Doughgirls. She married Canadian actor Alexander Knox and together they resettled in Great Britain when he got in trouble with the House Un-American Activities Committee.
Bill Nagy (Actor) .. Tony Unciello
Born: January 01, 1928
Died: January 19, 1973
Trivia: Born in Canada, actor Bill Nagy spent the bulk of his career in England...playing Americans. He was particularly adept at gangsters and thugs, as witness such films as Joe MacBeth (1956) and Mickey Spillane's The Girl Hunters (1963) and his TV guest-star stints on The Avengers, The Saint, and Secret Agent. Nagy had a varied choice of roles in British/American productions like Road to Hong Kong (1962), A Countess from Hong Kong (1967) and The Adding Machine in Hong Kong...er, The Adding Machine (1968). In First Man into Space (1957), Nagy convincingly played a New Mexico police chief, although the film's British countryside was decidedly more forrested than the real American Southwest. In a later sci-fi assignment, Nagy played the President of a quasi-American nation where reproduction is a capital crime in the futuristic Z P G (1972). Perhaps the biggest moneymaking film with which Bill Nagy was associated was Goldfinger; as Midnight, Nagy was a member of a powerful gangster cartel which was inhospitably rubbed out by the villainous Mr. Goldfinger (Gert Frobe).
Warren Mitchell (Actor) .. Marco Di Cesari
Born: January 14, 1926
Trivia: Warren Mitchell might be the finest actor in England of his generation, which overlaps with Laurence Olivier, Ralph Richardson, John Gielgud, Albert Finney, Michael Caine, Ben Kingsley, and Alan Bates. Mitchell is certainly among the best of his profession from that era and the rival to any of those actors; the difference is that Mitchell has made his career almost exclusively in England. Born Warren Misell to an Orthodox Jewish family in London in 1926, he grew up over his grandmother's fish-and-chips shop in the East End. Misell's mother died when he was 13 and his father did his best holding the family together on his own. At around the same time, young Misell was partly alienated from his family when he chose to fulfill his obligation to the football team for which he was playing by participating in a game on Yom Kippur, the most sacred day in the Jewish calendar. Misell made it on his own as an actor through some lean years; after training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, he married, had a family, and watched as his wife got steadier work than he did for many years while he raised the family. Misell's earliest professional credits on stage and screen date from 1954, when the 29-year-old actor, having changed his name to Warren Mitchell, appeared in a production of Can-Can at the Coliseum in London and made an appearance in the feature film Passing Stranger. He did The Threepenny Opera at the Royal Court Theatre, found some television work, and played ever larger roles in movies through the 1950s. Science fiction fans will remember him as Professor Crevett in The Crawling Eye; it was one of many avuncular and older-man roles that Mitchell played successfully in his thirties, following a pattern slightly similar to that of his colleague Lionel Jeffries. His screen work fairly exploded in the late '50s and kept Mitchell busy in character roles for the next decade. American audiences of a certain age may remember him as Abdul in the Beatles's feature film Help! (1965), and he also did some delightful work in episodes of The Avengers. In 1966, Mitchell got the role that turned him into a star when he won the lead in the television series Till Death Us Do Part. In the series, created by Johnny Speight, Mitchell played belligerent, bigoted, working-class, right-wing zealot Alf Garnett, head of a family that included his long-suffering wife, slightly bubble-headed daughter, and dedicated socialist son-in-law. Mitchell became an instant star on the series, which was an immediate hit in England and was popular enough to attract attention from America, where it was translated by producers Norman Lear and Bud Yorkin into All in the Family and became a star vehicle for Carroll O'Connor, in Alf's transatlantic equivalent, Archie Bunker. Mitchell ended up playing the role of Alf Garnett in numerous follow-up seasons and revivals, as well as a feature film, and the part became a defining point in his career. It also proved to be very controversial, as Mitchell brought so much humanity, and just enough gentleness, to the role of Alf Garnett that one could not be entirely repulsed by the character. Many pundits and columnists felt that he made the bigoted, racist figure too appealing, but others found him to be a compelling presence in the highly repulsive, deeply flawed character, which is the goal of any real actor. Luckily for his career, Mitchell was able to quickly move into other, better, and different roles, on stage and television, and now he had the recognition to get the offers. This culminated with a wave of recognition, highlighted by the Society of West End Theatre Award (the British equivalent of the Tony Award) for his portrayal of Willy Loman in Death of a Salesman in 1979. Amid essaying roles in a vast range of modern and classical works, Mitchell also portrayed Shylock in the public television production of Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice. In more recent years, Mitchell has been acclaimed for his King Lear as well, and entered the 21st century as one of the most highly regarded and popular actors in England.
Peter Illing (Actor) .. Inspector Buono
Born: January 01, 1904
Died: January 01, 1966
Marie Burke (Actor) .. Signora Unciello
Born: January 01, 1894
Died: January 01, 1988
Suzan Farmer (Actor) .. Sue Inverest
Born: June 16, 1942
Birthplace: Kent, England
Charles Irwin (Actor) .. Eddie Harmer
Born: January 01, 1888
Died: January 12, 1969
Trivia: Before turning to films, Irish-born Charles Irwin enjoyed a long career as a music hall and vaudeville monologist. Irwin's talking-picture debut was the appropriately titled 1928 short subject The Debonair Humorist. Two years later, he proved a dapper and agreeable master of ceremonies for Universal's big-budget Technicolor musical The King of Jazz (1930). As the 1930s wore on, his roles diminished into bits and walk-ons; he fleetingly showed up as a green-tinted "Ozite" in The Wizard of Oz (1939) and appeared as the British racetrack announcer describing the progress of "Little Johnny Jones" in Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942). Before his retirement in 1959, Charles Irwin essayed such one-scene assignments as territorial representative Andy Barnes in the first few Bomba the Jungle Boy pictures and Captain Orton in The King and I (1956).
Roy Patrick (Actor) .. Georgio
Born: December 04, 1935
David Calderisi (Actor) .. Vittorio
Born: June 21, 1940
Tony Arpino (Actor) .. Warder
Don Archell (Actor) .. Coliseum Passerby
Paul Beradi (Actor) .. Club Patron
Norman Fisher (Actor) .. Coliseum Vendor
Caron Gardner (Actor) .. Restaurant Patron
Ned Lynch (Actor) .. Club Patron
Norman Morris (Actor) .. Tourist
Peter Roy (Actor) .. Club Patron
Robert Vossler (Actor) .. Waiter

Before / After
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Heartland
08:00 am