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Showing posts with label Peter Falk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Falk. Show all posts

Friday, November 8, 2024

When ‘Columbo’ Starred with Two Film Divas

 

Peter Falk's "Columbo" investigated two film stars who resorted to murder in
 "Requiem for a Falling Star" & "Forgotten Lady, with Anne Baxter & Janet Leigh.

 

This is a round-up of when the rumpled TV detective starred with two one-time screen goddesses in classic Columbo episodes.

Anne Baxter's Nora Chandler finds Peter Falk's Columbo amusing--to a point!

The episodes: Requiem for a Falling Star, the Columbo episode that first aired January 21, 1973, was directed by Richard Quine, who was good with actors and had a flair for humor. This season two episode showcases Anne Baxter as “fading” leading lady Nora Chandler, who will kill to preserve her career. Mel Ferrer is Baxter's snarky nemesis, with echoes of Addison DeWitt from All About Eve. Pippa Scott is the star’s assistant, about to marry this arch enemy! Costume designer Edith Head, who worked with Baxter many times, most famously in The Ten Commandments, makes an appearance as herself. 

Janet Leigh's Grace Wheeler may be one of Columbo's most gentle suspects!

Forgotten Lady, the other deadly film diva Columbo episode, was directed by TV and film veteran Harvey Hart, also very good with actors. The season five premiere aired September 14, 1975. Janet Leigh guest stars as movie musical star Grace Wheeler, John Payne as one-time partner Ned Diamond, and Sam Jaffe as her older husband, Dr. Henry Willis. Maurice Evans is the butler, Raymond.

 The Set-Up: Female guest villains Anne Baxter and Janet Leigh are both mature movie stars, with Baxter then 49 in her episode and Leigh 48 in hers. Both stars are somewhat sympathetic villains, compelled to extreme measures to maintain their star status.

Anne Baxter's star sports some major shades, while she & Mel Ferrer's gossip hound
 give each other shade in Columbo's "Requiem for a Falling Star."

Anne Baxter is child star turned leading lady Nora Chandler, who is being blackmailed by gossip writer Jerry Parks, played by Mel Ferrer, who does smarmy so well. Pippa Scott is Jean, Nora’s long-time/long-suffering secretary/assistant. Despite protestations otherwise, Jean has been offering Nora gossip nuggets as pillow talk to Jerry. Nora stalks Jean to Jerry’s birthday party and slashes the tire of her vehicle. Jean borrows Jerry’s vehicle, with Nora waiting at Jerry’s. When the car arrives, Nora has poured gasoline all over the drive way and lights it up. Does Nora actually know who the driver is?

Film star Grace Wheeler contemplates her future, which doesn't include her
 disapproving husband, in Columbo's "Forgotten Lady." Starring Janet Leigh.

Janet Leigh is Grace Wheeler, former song and dance movie star, who leaves a That’s Entertainment!-style movie event, giddy with plans to revive her musical career, but on Broadway. Shades of Debbie Reynolds in Irene! She enlists former co-star and friend Ned Diamond to direct and produce. Grace must know her older, wealthy doctor spouse won’t approve, because she already has a typically convoluted Columbo plot to off him. The star swans upstairs with some extra sleeping medication and her comeback plans get doused, as expected. After her hubby takes his pill, plus one by his wife, Grace steals back upstairs later with a gun. She shoots him and puts the gun in his hand, to make it look like a suicide.

Anne Baxter's Nora Chandler is the gracious star to Peter Falk's fawning Columbo.

Enter Lt. Columbo: In Requiem for a Falling Star, Peter Falk’s wiley Lt. Columbo comes on the scene, feigning surprise and fawns over living legend Nora Chandler. Anne Baxter’s winking grande dame demeanor makes Columbo’s professed shock and awe quite believable. From then on, there is a mutual admiration society between the two worthy adversaries. In Forgotten Lady, the dynamic is quite different. Though Lt. Columbo seems shocked that he’s investigating at the home of one of his and Mrs. Columbo’s favorite stars, Janet Leigh’s Grace Wheeler is more genteel and increasingly fragile. And Falk’s Columbo, while dogged as ever, is more sensitive to the star’s story.

The Leading Ladies: Anne Baxter offers a charismatic star performance whose character Nora Chandler would be right at home with All About Eve’s Margo Channing and Eve Harrington. Nora has Margo’s larger than life persona and Eve’s cunning charm. She does seem genuinely taken with Lt. Columbo and Baxter and Falk play off each other wonderfully. The scene in the finale where Nora is caught by Columbo looks like a nod to Margo Channing, who catches Eve taking imaginary bows in Margo’s costume. Interestingly, Baxter had just performed in Applause, the musical version of All About Eve, as Margo Channing!

Anne Baxter as Nora Chandler, surprised to find Columbo on her tail at the finale!

Anne Baxter in the title role of "All About Eve" is similarly surprised!

Janet Leigh is one of the most empathetic golden era film actresses, so despite being the villain of the piece, it's not hard to sympathize with her desperate actions. Some plot twists along the way make you even more on her side, if you don't think about it too much! While Leigh’s Grace has a safe harbor marriage to the wealthy retired doc, she longs to be back in the spotlight. This seems to have been Leigh’s story off-camera, too. Though she had a loving marriage to a wealthy businessman, Leigh never quite made the top tier in Hollywood, then aged out by the end of the ‘60s, all of which seemed to eat at her. And though Janet was still beautiful, she looks reed thin and pinched, with every line showing on her 50-ish face. Much, much later, daughter Jamie Lee Curtis alluded to her mother having an eating disorder. This gives her performance as desperate Grace even more poignancy. Though I didn’t quite buy the finale’s revelation, it’s still touching.

Janet Leigh's star with a fear of fading away was not too far from her own life.
With Peter Falk as Columbo, in "Forgotten Lady."

Star Style: Anne Baxter sports a fun ‘70s style wardrobe—not by Edith Head—and in one scene sports a slinky magenta top that shows off her trim figure. All that is capped with a Lauren Bacall-style mane of hair! As the veteran star, Anne plays with her typical intensity, but also with great humor.

Anne Baxter has a wow moment, before putting on her jacket,
as the star on the run! In the Columbo episode, "Requiem for a Falling Star."

Janet Leigh also looks stylish, though undercut by her wraith-like figure. Leigh had aged drastically in just six years after sporting a trim but curvy figure in the sexy House on Green Apple Road. Janet would age much like fellow MGM star Lana Turner: bleached helmet hair, tan, and very thin. Still, Janet wore some glam gowns and retained her warm appeal. As the troubled star, Forgotten Lady is one of Janet’s best latter day performances.

As film star Grace Wheeler, Janet Leigh looks lovely, but much older than 48,
in the Columbo episode "Forgotten Lady."

Janet Leigh facing 50 reminded me of 60-ish Lana Turner.
 

Falk as Columbo: Peter Falk is in fine form in these classic Columbo episodes. Falk, along with Carroll O' Connor, were both two middle-aged character actors who hit it big in the '70s by creating their iconic characters Lt. Columbo and Archie Bunker. Both actors enjoyed their belated superstardom and have been remembered for these roles over 50 years now. While I admire Falk’s acting, I often feel the same toward his character as Kevin McCarthy’s studio head does in Requiem for a Falling Star, who resents Columbo’s dogging Nora: “Lieutenant, you have an obtuse manner which some people find ingratiating. I do not. Do you follow me?”

Columbo meets legendary designer Edith Head, courtesy of Anne Baxter's
Nora Chandler, in "Requiem for a Falling Star."

Edith Head's cameo is fun, as she was then Universal's head film costume designer. Peter Falk would hand Head her 8th Oscar for The Sting in 1974. 

Falk would borrow a few elements from Requiem for a Falling Star in a much later Columbo episode he directed, It's All in the Game. Faye Dunaway starred as an even more charming and throaty-voiced femme fatale, who also tries to get him to wear a new tie!

It’s so fun to revisit these '70s Mystery Movies, as they hold up quite well with strong writing, emphasis on characterizations, and terrific acting by star Peter Falk and his mix of young and veteran guest stars.

Peter Falk's Columbo, this time wowed by the presence of Janet Leigh's
Grace Wheeler, in the episode "Forgotten Lady."

Here’s my look at Anne Baxter in the title role of All About Eve: https://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/2020/04/mankiewicz-masterpiece-all-about-eve.html

And here’s Janet Leigh in another close to the bone performance as an unhappy housewife, in 1970’s House on Greenapple Road: https://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/2022/10/janet-leigh-haunting-in-house-on.html

 

Anne Baxter's larger than life Nora Chandler was giving me a serious Charles Busch
 vibe from "Die, Mommie, Die!" 

 

 

 

Saturday, March 5, 2022

Jack Cassidy’s Killer Trio From ‘Columbo’

Peter Falk & Jack Cassidy went head to head in three episodes of "Columbo."


I’ve always been fond of Columbo and the “mystery movie” series was one of my first go-to nostalgia binges during the Covid era. Funny thing, as much as I loved Peter Falk as an actor, I was never crazy about Columbo as a character. The reason I still find Columbo so watchable decades later is for the great plots and guest villains. Columbo’s killers came in two categories: those who found the detective’s persistence irritating, and the others who were charmed by his dogged ways. I’m with the first category, but still love the show!

When Jack Cassidy's "Columbo" villain offers victims champagne, real pain follows!

Columbo often invited favorite guest villains back for encore performances. One frequent flier star was Jack Cassidy. With three guest shots, Jack Cassidy was a classic Columbo killer. Jack’s villains were smart, supercilious, and elegantly sinister. And yes, all three of Cassidy’s killers found Lt. Columbo nerve-grating!

The first aired "Columbo"episode is one of the best, directed by Steven Spielberg.

Steven Spielberg, then 24, got on well with "Columbo" star Peter Falk.

Jack Cassidy's first appearance as a guest villain on Columbo aired Sept. 15, 1971. This was Columbo’s debut as a NBC series, though “Murder by the Book” wasn’t filmed first. The episode was considered so smart that it should kick off the show. Young Steven Spielberg and Steve Bochno directed and wrote the episode, which had much to do with the fresh take on the familiar detective trope.

Martin Milner of "Adam 12" is guest victim to Jack Cassidy's villain in "Columbo."

Martin Milner, in the midst of his successful Adam 12 series at NBC, plays the guest victim. These stars seemed to get the short end of the stick, but Columbo was a very popular series, so it was probably an easy gig for great exposure.

Cassidy and Milner’s characters are a money-making mystery writing team. As Jim Ferris, Milner’s writer does most of the actual work, and wants to strike off on his own; Cassidy's Ken Franklin is the smoothie who does most of the media promotion. Franklin lives high on the hog and does not take kindly to the professional divorce. Ken also has a big insurance policy on Jim, and decides to cash in, by killing his former cash cow.

Jack Cassidy's stylish killer works the media & bell bottoms with buttons up the calves' sides!

Ken lures Jim to his rustic getaway for one last hurrah together. He previously trashed their LA office to make it look like violence had occurred. Ken shoots Jim and dumps the body on Franklin’s own lawn, to appear like a hit job.

One problem: the gal who runs the local store by his "cabin" saw Jim in Ken's car. But the real problem for Ken is that Columbo is on this case and that means constantly on his ass!

Jack Cassidy, stylishly directed by Steven Spielberg, in his first "Columbo" guest shot.


This episode was one of Steven Spielberg's last TV series gigs and it's terrific: tightly wound, with subtle notes of style. I love the opening shot of the writers' office windows and their great view, as Cassidy pulls up outside, accompanied by the sound of a typewriter—remember those? How about smarmy Cassidy's car, with its "Have a nice day" bumper sticker? Spielberg’s camera angles for Cassidy’s duplicitous murderer make the audience feel they are seeing his hidden side.

With two previous pilots behind him, Peter Falk eases into his Lt. Columbo role and would continue refine the character as the show went on. Falk especially shines opposite smooth criminal Jack Cassidy, with his bumbling demeanor, and theirs becomes a sly duel of wits. 

Barbara Colby, memorable as a storekeeper with a crush on Jack Cassidy & his cash!

Barbara Colby is a standout as Lilly La Sanka, the blackmailing storekeeper who's in way over her head. Colby was an actress who was a quirky standout in the '70s, an era when performers could look like real people. Despite her questionable actions, Colby makes her Lilly sympathetic, funny, and sexy. Sadly, Barbara Colby was a real-life murder victim four years later, when she and actor/boyfriend James Kiernan were randomly shot in a parking garage July 24, 1975. Colby was a regular on Cloris Leachman’s Phyllis and had just turned 36.

Jack Cassidy's real life personality and persona parallels his portrayals as suave criminals. Money always was a motive. The murders were meticulously plotted. As Ken Franklin, he's coasting, not contributing, but seeks revenge when the real talent decides to break away. With Cassidy’s piercing pale blue eyes, aristocratic profile, flashy smile, and cultured voice, Jack reminds me of WB star Zachary Scott and all the cultured cads he used to play.

Jack Cassidy, turning on the charm as "Columbo" guest killer Ken Franklin.

In real life, Jack was hard living, a heavy drinker and smoker, and a party animal. As Ken, he's constantly got a smoke going, and it's a bit of a surprise that Jack was only 44. Or to put it in context, Jack was just two years younger than Paul Newman. Still, Cassidy's handsome and on his acting game here. He gives subtle variations of the elegant villain he plays on Columbo. Here, Ken Franklin’s phony plays the press like a violin and he is also a ladies’ man.

Jack Cassidy's second "Columbo" guest star role finds him again in the book business.

For Jack Cassidy's second Columbo outing, 1974’s “Publish or Perish,” he is a publisher rather than a writer. Yet, it's again the case of a writer wanting to part ways with him that incurs Cassidy’s character's greedy wrath.

Riley Greenleaf, homage to The Talented Mr. Ripley's Dickie Greenleaf, is a publisher about to lose a successful writer that he discovered. Like the previous episode, Cassidy's character has taken out a massive insurance policy on his golden goose. Greenleaf hires a creepy Vietnam vet with a passion for explosives to take writer Alan Mallory out... and not for dinner. Wily Riley creates an excellent alibi for himself by going on bender, creating public scenes, getting into a fender bender, and finally getting arrested as drunk and disorderly. The overly-planned murder takes place, but a few tell-tale twists of fate screw up the scenario. This raises Columbo's suspicions and the match between criminal and cop is on.

Jack Cassidy's Riley Greenleaf consorts with a killer in "Columbo's" "Publish or Perish."

Columbo was filled with in-jokes, and one is when Columbo meets Greenleaf’s rival publisher at the famed Chasen’s eatery. Columbo is chagrined at a menu with no prices, and asks for a bowl of chili. The snooty old waiter is horrified, natch, but rustles some up. This is funny because Chasen’s chili was renowned, a favorite of Elizabeth Taylor, who had it flown in to the set of Cleopatra in Italy. Columbo is in disbelief when a bowl of chili and glass of ice tea sets him back $6.75. He points out during the series, as a detective, Columbo makes $11,000 a year. We're talking nearly 50 years ago, folks!

While Columbo is at the crime scene, he rambles on about topics with no relation to the crime scene, often relating to his wife. Here, he talks about how Mrs. Columbo kept him up to watch a Bette Davis movie on the late show. He goes on about what a great actress Davis was—Falk got a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination, co-starring with Bette in '61's A Pocket Full of Miracles

Mickey Spillane, killed in a chocolate brown leisure suit, as "Columbo" guest victim!

Some fun '70s visual style goes on in “Publish or Perish.” The first murder is depicted with three split screens: the killer-for-hire; the victim at work; and mastermind Riley enacting his alcohol-fueled alibi. The fashion style finds Cassidy’s villain sporting lots of turtle necks, while the writer, played by Mickey Spillane, sports a chocolate brown leisure suit! Mariette Hartley is a total '70s babe with flowing Cher hair, a slinky braless jersey gown, and a red California western girl look at Chasen’s, complete with a red cowboy hat.

Mariette Hartley looking '70s sexy in the "Columbo" episode "Publish or Perish."

John Chandler always played psychos that creeped me out as a kid, who is killer Eddie Kane here. Apparently in real life, Chandler came from a wealthy family, studied acting, and was a yoga enthusiast! All this, despite the fact he looks like Steve Buscemi, Sr. His character Eddie reminds me of the gruff vet that Seinfeld’s Elaine hires to write the Peterman catalogue. Side note: In his first two appearances, Cassidy's characters ply with fine champagne, before inflicting fatal pain on their secondary victims.

John Chandler, TV boomer villain, looks like Steve Buscemi, Sr. in "Publish or "Perish."

Chandler's "Columbo" killer/victim reminds me of this "Seinfeld" weirdo!

Paul Shenar is very handsome and no-nonsense as Sgt. Young, who works with Columbo. Fans will remember him as the evil drug lord in Scarface. Mickey Spillane is surprisingly relaxed and engaging as the pulp author who wants to take his writing to the next level, and with a new publisher.

Handsome Paul Shenar played a fellow detective in "Columbo's" "Publish or Perish."

That '70s guy Jack Bender looks like a cuter Stuart from "The Big Bang Theory!"

Sad sack Stuart from "The Big Bang Theory."

Jack Bender as Wolpert, the guy who delivers the writing is a total ‘70s guy, with his curly fro, big brown eyes, and stylish '70s shirts. He reminds me of a better-looking Stuart from The Big Bang Theory. Ironically, he went on to become a prolific TV director, including a TV bio of The David Cassidy Story!

Jack Cassidy's Riley Greenleaf sets up his "drunk" alibi & insults a few strangers, too.

Ironically, Jack Cassidy later repeated Riley Greenleaf's fake bender later for real, on December 12, 1976. Cassidy tried to get friends to join him for a night out, but settled for barhopping through West Hollywood. When Jack returned home, he passed out with a lit cigarette, and died in the subsequent fire.

Jack Cassidy's finale as a "Columbo" guest killer cast him as a magician.

Jack Cassidy’s final Columbo appearance was in “Now You See Him.” Cassidy plays “The Great Santini,” a magician who wants to make his blackmailer boss disappear. This episode aired February of 1976, the year Cassidy died.

"The Great Santini" VS "The Great Columbo" in "Now You See Him."

This episode was directed by Harvey Hart, a prolific TV director who was good with actors. Nehemiah Persoff is the sweaty and surly restaurant club owner who blackmails his star attraction when he discovers his Nazi past. Persoff projects such an animalistic antagonism that you actually feel bad for the magician was an SS prison guard as a young man. Robert Loggia is the tough head waiter, who seems more suited as a bouncer. Bob Dishy is rather grating than ingratiating as the dogged younger detective who’s always at Columbo’s heels. Except for old-school Cassidy, Loggia and the rest of the middle-aged males all sport that shaggy hair to try and look like the young ‘70s dudes.

Nehemiah Persoff is a great "Columbo"guest villain/victim as the blackmailer boss.

It was an era of less viewer repeat options, but I’m still puzzled as to why Columbo had the same actors as guest stars multiple times. As memorable as they are, stars like Jack Cassidy and Robert Culp played the same superior, snide, and impatient characters. And while Columbo had some golden era guests like Janet Leigh and Anne Baxter, I’d love to have seen some greats like Crawford, Davis, Natalie Wood, Edward G. Robinson, Tony Curtis, or Henry Fonda, to name a few that were doing television at this point.

Jack Cassidy is "The Great Santini" in disguise; this "Columbo" is "Now You See Him."

As The Great Santini, Jack Cassidy’s character is a bit more empathetic, since he is the victim of blackmail. When it’s apparent that his boss wants more than a pound of flesh, Cassidy’s illusionist feels he has no other option than to kill. The magician conjures up an incredibly convoluted plot to off the boss during his act, and also provide himself an alibi. While ingenious, it’s also a bit of an eye roll. When Columbo comes to investigate, the alibi makes it even more of a challenge for the detective. By this point, Falk is well into his run as Columbo, and his dumb like a fox routine is fully polished, especially against Cassidy’s master illusionist.

A Jack Cassidy villain with an ascot, natch. In his final "Columbo" ep., Jack was 49.

Cassidy’s grace and style make him quite believable as the magic man. While The Great Santini is just as impatient and perturbed by the persistent Lt. Columbo, he’s also a bit melancholy, which Cassidy conveys effortlessly.

Jack Cassidy’s style suggested a different era, with his dapper looks and style, in the laid-back ‘70s. In fact, his style was so studio era classic that Cassidy was called upon to play John Barrymore in 1976’s W.C. Fields and Me. Even Jack’s appearances on Columbo found the actor elegant in an array of turtlenecks and ascots, leather, hound tooth, or corduroy jackets, and even his bell bottoms were creased and in one case, adorned with buttons.

Jack Cassidy’s villains were all smiling charm and confidence on the outside, but threatened with having it all taken away. While similar, Jack’s killers were given Cassidy’s considerable charisma and talent as an actor.

If there had been a "Mildred Pierce" remake in the '70s, Jack Cassidy would have been perfect
as Mildred's playboy Monty!

Here’s my look at Faye Dunaway’s Emmy-winning turn on Columbo: https://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/2020/07/faye-falk-are-flirtatious-fun-in.html

FYI: I put all the movie overflow on my public FB movie page. 

Check it out & join!  https://www.facebook.com/groups/178488909366865/

 

 

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Faye & Falk are Flirtatious Fun in ‘Columbo’ 1993

Faye Dunaway & Peter Falk, as the socialite suspect & detective, may banter but know that 'It's All in the Game."


This second go-round of the Columbo series had one of its highlights with hi-octane guest star Faye Dunaway in the 1993 episode, “It’s All in the Game.” The plot, while fine-tuned, plays second fiddle to the flirtatious sparring of Dunaway as a L.A. socialite suspected of murder and the ever-dogged Lt. Columbo.
Faye Dunaway plays a socialite with a secret, and her gambler boyfriend is the key.
At 52, Dunaway looks divine in her 'Columbo' guest shot.

Dunaway is Lauren Staten, a vivacious society woman shown throwing a swanky party, when she gets a drop-in by her younger lover, Nick Franco. She urges him to leave, to go play poker, while she plays hostess. It turns out Lauren is in cahoots with another, younger woman, Lisa Martin, who’s also connected to Nick. They have teamed, in a plot to kill him, and make it look like a bungled burglary. All goes as planned until Columbo comes on the scene, and no detail ever escapes his squinting eye.
Peter Falk's Columbo, as rumpled as ever, is hiding his pajama top in this scene!

At first, Lauren is not overly concerned, but soon finds she’s underestimated the detective. She decides to use her feminine wiles on him, to a point, and charm him away. Columbo seems taken by this elegant woman’s attentions. As the story goes on, their respective tricks of the trade heighten, and you wonder if the much heard about Mrs. Columbo has something to worry about!
The society dame and the detective wine and dine each other.

No spoilers are given here, except the title of this episode tells you that Columbo will remain true to the Mrs. And while you are aware that the society dame and the detective are playing each other, you also sense they respect each other’s skills and ultimate motives. While Dunaway’s Lauren Staten and the younger woman’s motives remain ambiguous until the end, you come to realize Staten’s no heartless killer.
Dunaway and Falk at a police station line up; the 'Game' is just about up...

Usually, Columbo’s suspects start off cordial but become increasingly frazzled toward the detective’s increasing visits, designed to keep them off-kilter. Here, Faye’s wealthy woman is intrigued and finds him a worthy adversary, and vice-versa with Columbo. Compliments, gifts, and even kisses are exchanged. While their relationship intensifies, Falk’s detective eventually gets his woman, though the finale is a bit of a departure from most Columbo episodes.
While Claudia Christian and Armando Pucci are fine as Lisa and Nick, it’s Peter Falk and Faye Dunaway all the way.  Falk has his Columbo performance down to a science by now, a little less showy than the early years. Also, Falk wrote this Columbo episode!
Faye Dunaway won her lone Emmy in '94 for her 'Columbo' guest shot.

Faye Dunaway won a well-deserved Emmy for her guest shot on this ’93 Columbo episode. After 1981’s Mommie Dearest, Dunaway played mostly a series of baroque bitches, not unlike Elizabeth Taylor after she starred in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
How often have you ever seen Faye Dunaway look so light-hearted?
What a joy to see Faye in her later years looking fabulous and giving a restrained performance as an empathetic woman. In her scenes with Falk, Faye gets to have fun and be flirtatious, and Dunaway’s enchanting. As the plot unravels, you see Lauren Staten’s sincere motivations, and Dunaway is quite moving in the denouement. Faye’s fashion style here is so timeless; she could step off the screen and be perfectly in vogue nearly 30 years later. It’s a gem of a role, and Faye Dunaway rocks it! Enjoy Faye and Falk create some fine chemistry here.


The LA socialite gets roses from Lt. Columbo. This episode is a bouquet to Faye Dunaway.