Cannon: Hard Rock Roller Coaster


02:05 am - 03:05 am, Saturday, December 27 on WAPT MeTV (16.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Hard Rock Roller Coaster

Season 2, Episode 14

A smuggler is playing Cannon for a fool, using the detective to find a cache of diamonds. Cannon: William Conrad. Ross McClintok: John Vernon. Raymond Durstin: Fritz Weaver. Dawn: Charlotte Stewart. Carl: Kelly Thordsen.

repeat 1973 English HD Level Unknown
Crime Drama Mystery & Suspense

Cast & Crew
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John Vernon (Actor) .. Ross McClintok
Fritz Weaver (Actor) .. Raymond Durstin
Charlotte Stewart (Actor) .. Dawn
Kelly Thordsen (Actor) .. Carl
William Conrad (Actor) .. Frank Cannon

More Information
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Did You Know..
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John Vernon (Actor) .. Ross McClintok
Born: February 24, 1932
Died: February 01, 2005
Trivia: Respected in North America and the United Kingdom, actor John Vernon has worked steadily on stage, television, and feature films since the 1950s. A native of Montréal, Canada, Vernon's formal studies began after he won a scholarship to London's Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. Prior to attending the school, Vernon gained experience in amateur theater. During his time in London, Vernon worked with several repertory companies. In 1956, he voiced the part of Big Brother in 1984, but he did not make his formal film debut until 1958 in The Long Rifle and the Tomahawk. By the mid-'50s, Vernon had returned to Canada and went on to specialize in Shakespearean television shows and theater presentations. Vernon made his first Broadway bow in Royal Hunt of the Sun. From there he went to Hollywood to start a prolific career as a supporting and occasional lead actor. Vernon was frequently cast as a villain.
Fritz Weaver (Actor) .. Raymond Durstin
Born: January 19, 1926
Died: November 26, 2016
Birthplace: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Trivia: Upon earning his BA degree from the University of Chicago, Fritz Weaver began his formal acting training at the H-B studios. Paying his dues with such regional stock companies as Virginia's Barter Theatre and Massachussett's Group 20 Players, Weaver made his first off-Broadway appearance in a 1954 production of The Way of the World. His inaugural Broadway effort was 1955's The Chalk Circle. Weaver went on to appear in such classic stage roles as Hamlet and Peer Gynt, and also amassed a remarkable list of film credits, including two Twilight Zone appearances. In 1964, he made his film debut as the unstable Colonel Caserio in the doomsday thriller Fail Safe. The following year, he starred on Broadway in Baker Street, a musicalization of Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories. In 1970, he won the Tony award for his work as Jerome Malley in Child's Play. Most often cast as aristocratic villains in films (his resemblance to William F. Buckley has not gone unnoticed by producers), Fritz Weaver made his biggest international impact in the sympathetic role of Josef Weiss in the TV miniseries Holocaust (1978). Weaver worked mostly in television for the rest of his career (save for a supporting role in 1999's The Thomas Crown Affair), with guest spots in shows like The Love Boat, Murder, She Wrote, The X-Files, Frasier and Law & Order. Weaver died in 2016, at age 90.
Charlotte Stewart (Actor) .. Dawn
Born: February 27, 1941
Birthplace: Yuba City, California
Kelly Thordsen (Actor) .. Carl
Born: January 01, 1916
Died: January 01, 1978
William Conrad (Actor) .. Frank Cannon
Born: September 27, 1920
Died: February 11, 1994
Birthplace: Louisville, Kentucky, United States
Trivia: Actor/director/producer William Conrad started his professional career as a musician. After World War II service, he began building his reputation in films and on Hollywood-based radio programs. Due to his bulk and shifty-eyed appearance, he was cast in films as nasty heavies, notably in The Killers (1946) (his first film), Sorry Wrong Number (1948) and The Long Wait (1954). On radio, the versatile Conrad was a fixture on such moody anthologies as Escape and Suspense; he also worked frequently with Jack "Dragnet" Webb during this period, and as late as 1959 was ingesting the scenery in the Webb-directed film 30. Conrads most celebrated radio role was as Marshal Matt Dillon on Gunsmoke, which he played from 1952 through 1961 (the TV Gunsmoke, of course, went to James Arness, who physically matched the character that the portly Conrad had shaped aurally). In the late 1950s, Conrad went into the production end of the business at Warner Bros., keeping his hand in as a performer by providing the hilariously strident narration of the cartoon series Rocky and His Friends and its sequel The Bullwinkle Show. During the early 1960s, Conrad also directed such films as Two on a Guillotine (1964) and Brainstorm (1965). Easing back into acting in the early 1970s, Conrad enjoyed a lengthy run as the title character in the detective series Cannon (1971-76), then all too briefly starred as a more famous corpulent crime solver on the weekly Nero Wolfe. Conrad's final TV series was as one-half of Jake and the Fatman (Joe Penny was Jake), a crime show which ran from 1987 through 1991.

Before / After
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Mannix
01:05 am