The Alfred Hitchcock Hour: Final Escape


12:05 am - 01:05 am, Friday, January 9 on KFYR MeTV (5.3)

Average User Rating: 8.08 (24 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favorites


About this Broadcast
-

Final Escape

Season 2, Episode 18

A prisoner determined to break out of a maximum-security prison matches wits with his warden. Perry: Edd Byrnes. Tollman: Stephen McNally. Doc: Robert Keith. Lawyer: Stacy Harris.

repeat 1964 English HD Level Unknown
Drama Anthology

Cast & Crew
-

Edward Byrnes (Actor) .. Paul Perry
Edd Byrnes (Actor) .. Perry
Stephen McNally (Actor) .. Tollman
Robert Keith (Actor) .. Doc
Stacy Harris (Actor) .. Lawyer
Nicholas Colasanto (Actor) .. Work Partner
Ray Kellogg (Actor) .. Blacksmith
Bernie Hamilton (Actor) .. Convict
John G. Kellogg (Actor) .. Guard #1
John Alderson (Actor) .. Guard #3

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

Edward Byrnes (Actor) .. Paul Perry
Born: July 30, 1933
Trivia: Actor Edward Byrnes broke into films around 1957, playing a few bits (he can be seen as one of Jimmy Piersall's buddies in the 1957 biopic Fear Strikes Out) and minor roles. Signed to a Warner Bros. contract, Byrnes connected with the public in the role of a punkish villain in Girl on the Run, the 90-minute pilot episode of 77 Sunset Strip. Audience response to the young actor was so overwhelmingly positive that he was signed as a regular for the Sunset Strip series proper. As hipster parking lot attendant Gerald Lloyd Kookson III, aka "Kookie," he skyrocketed to teen idoldom via the simple expedient of combing his hair at least once per episode. He went on to parlay this schtick into a Top 40 song hit, "Kookie, Kookie, Lend Me Your Comb." During the second season of 77 Sunset Strip, Byrnes followed the example of fellow Warner contractees James Garner and Clint Walker, threatening to quit the series if he wasn't given more money and better scripts. Warners acquiesced to his demands: The studio also improved the social status of Byrnes' character on the series, promoting him to junior detective. After leaving the series in 1963, Byrnes moved to Europe, where he flourished as a star of spaghetti Westerns and espionage flicks. A pop-culture icon by the late '70s, Byrnes made occasional returns to Hollywood in such campy roles as Dick Clark-clone Vince Fontaine in Grease (1978). In addition, Ed Byrnes played "the Emcee" on the 1979 anthology series Sweepstakes, and in 1974, "Kookie" hosted the pilot episode of the evergreen quiz show Wheel of Fortune.
Edd Byrnes (Actor) .. Perry
Born: July 30, 1933
Birthplace: New York City, New York
Stephen McNally (Actor) .. Tollman
Born: July 29, 1911
Died: June 04, 1994
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Practiced law in the 1930s before pursuing acting. Perfomed on stage in New York before moving to Los Angeles in 1942 to act in dozens of films during the 1940s and 1950s. Started his stage career using his real name Horace McNally, then changed his stage name to Stephen McNally (name of his son). Was a one-time president of the Catholic Actors Guild. Known for playing hard-hearted characters or villains.
Robert Keith (Actor) .. Doc
Born: February 10, 1898
Stacy Harris (Actor) .. Lawyer
Born: July 26, 1918
Died: March 13, 1973
Trivia: Canadian-born actor Stacy Harris was a fixture on American radio and television for decades, with occasional movie roles breaking up those small-screen engagements. Born in Big Timber, Quebec in 1918, he turned to acting full-time after the Second World War. With his authoritative voice, he was a natural for heroic roles and established himself on radio with an eight-year stint on This Is Your FBI. His big-screen debut came in 1951 in Appointment With Danger, an Alan Ladd starring vehicle in which one of the other key players was Jack Webb who, at the time, was also doing his show Dragnet on the radio and about to bring it to television. Harris became a memorable presence in the Dragnet stock company, appearing four times in the series' original 1950s run, as well as in the 1954 feature film of the same name -- these were interspersed with work in hundreds of television episodes across the 1950s and early 1960s. It was in the revived 1960s Dragnet series, however, that he got some of his best screen time, dividing his portrayal between portrayals of criminals and those on the side of the law -- in the former capacity, with his courtly good looks, finely chiseled features and authoritative voice, all a little reminiscent of an older Robert Ryan, he was a regular reminder to viewers that not all criminals look like or comport themselves as criminals. His best work of the series, however, was the last episode in which he appeared, "Forgery: The Ranger." The role of Clifford Ray Owens aka Barney Regal was a tour-de-force for the actor, playing a felon (who was, astoundingly, masquerading as a forest ranger) who is driven as much by serious psychiatric problems as greed. In 25 minutes of screen time, Harris dominates every moment and evokes a huge range of emotions, including sympathy and pity, which was unusual in the writing approach of the series.Harris appeared regularly in Webb's other series in the years before his death in 1973, at age 54.
Nicholas Colasanto (Actor) .. Work Partner
Born: January 19, 1924
Died: February 12, 1985
Birthplace: Providence, Rhode Island
Trivia: American actor Nicholas Colasanto worked in feature films and extensively in television as both an actor and a director, but he is best remembered for playing Coach Pantusso, the sweetly addle-pated bartender and former baseball coach, on the long-running NBC sitcom Cheers. Colasanto passed away just before the show's third year.
Ray Kellogg (Actor) .. Blacksmith
Born: November 15, 1905
Bernie Hamilton (Actor) .. Convict
Born: June 12, 1928
Died: December 30, 2008
Birthplace: East Los Angeles
Trivia: One of the postwar "new breed" of African-American actors, Bernie Hamilton wasn't about to settle for subservient roles when he entered films. He started off well in the role of Ernie, one of several black ballplayers in The Jackie Robinson Story (1950), and managed to maintain his integrity thereafter in a motion-picture world that was not politely inclined to nonwhites. In 1964 Hamilton had his best film role, as the black husband of white Barbara Barrie in the groundbreaking One Potato, Two Potato (1964). As more opportunities availed themselves to African-American performers, Hamilton was able to take parts that didn't call attention to the race issue, though he still made his share of appearances in such black-oriented pictures as The Organization (1971) and Bucktown (1975). Fans of the '70s cop series Starsky and Hutch will remember Bernie Hamilton in the role of Captain Dobey, S. and H.'s superior officer.
John G. Kellogg (Actor) .. Guard #1
Born: June 03, 1916
Died: February 22, 2000
Trivia: After stock experience in New England and a starring role in a Broadway flop, American actor John Kellogg was selected to play the lead in the road company of the long-running service comedy Brother Rat. He continued working steadily on stage until interrupted by World War II service. After a smattering of movie exposure at other studios, Kellogg signed a Columbia contract in 1946. Good-looking and dependable enough for secondary roles but not quite star material, Kellogg was seen in such films as Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (1943), A Walk in the Sun (1945), Johnny O'Clock (1947) and 12 O'Clock High (1949).
John Alderson (Actor) .. Guard #3
Born: April 10, 1916
Trivia: Character actor, onscreen from 1952.

Before / After
-

Mannix
01:05 am