Philip Odell
Created by Lester Powell (1912 --)

Private eye PHILIP ODELL (as played by Canadian Robert Beatty) was the star of a popular radio series that originated as part of BBC's "Light Programme" back in the late forties, and ran right into the sixties, with various actors portraying the steadfast Heather McMara.. The series was popular enough to spin-off not just a series of novels by Powell, but even a 1951 feature film.

When we first meet Odell in the first installment of his first adventure, Lady in a Fog, he's in London on his way home to Ireland, when his flight is delayed by fog. So he decides to drop in his old pal Heather. But Heather's brother has just been found drowned in the Thames, and Odell is reluctantly drawn into the investigation, much to the chagrin of Inspector Rigby, who considers Odell a viable suspect , especially when the murders continue.

Somehow, he never did quite make it back to Dublin -- instead, he became a London-based eye, and with Heather as his assistant, they stumbled, staggered and tripped over all sorts of strange cases, full of thrills and chills, such as when they're hired by a famous detective story writer who is convinced that the character he created in his books has come to life and is sending him messages.  

According to a 1959 magazine article from The New Zealand Listener, Odell, at least as portrayed by Beatty, came across as an affable, down-to-earth type:

"... a humanitarian, interested and concerned in people (with) an instinctive understanding of their foibles and motives, and neither condemns nor approves. The opposition is tough, the men and women involved are hard, unprincipled, sophisticated and intelligent. It is small wonder, then, that Lester Powell admits, "Odell makes mistakes in a human way and puzzles out the solution of a problem much as you or I would."

This may account for this perennial attraction for audiences: there are no hidden clues, no over-ripe red herrings, nothing kept for the denouement."

The feature film had Cesar "Joker" Romero playing Odell as an American journalist whose flight is also delayed, but in this one, he meets Heather for the first time in a club.

Of course, the one that interests the Canadian in me is the final radio serial, Tea on an Island (1961), wherein Odell and Heather tangle with Montreal drug traffickers. One of the installments is tantalizingly entitled "Canada's Cultural Conscience." let me assure you -- my ears pricked up when I read that.

Alas, Professor Jeffrey Richards, presenter of BBC Radio 4's series The Radio Detectives, stated in a 1999 article from The Sherlock Holmes Magazine that the BBC hadn't preserved any episodes of the series, although allegedly since that article's publication, there have been rumours that some episodes may have survived in private hands.

Also intriguing is that Powell, who wrote films, and radio and television shows, penned at least two early (pre-Steed/Mrs. Gale) episodes of The Avengers, including... "Mission to Montreal" (broadcast October 1962).

Before becoming a writer for radio and television, Lester Powell was a draughtsman, poultry farmer, and journalist. He also created The Inch Man, a 1951-52 BBC series about Stephen Inch, a house dick working in a busy London hotel, and The Hidden Motive, a 1952 BBC serial relating the efforts of "Doc" Job, an eccentric insurance investigator.

Meanwhile, actor Robert Beatty became quite well known in the U.K., and seemed to have had a long and successful career. He starred as Det. Insp. Mike Maguire, a Canadian Mountie assigned to Scotland Yard, in the 11958-59 TV series Towers of London, and played Quentin Barnaby, an insurance investigator in Destination - Fire!, a series by Philip Levene. He also played General Sternwood in the Afternoon Theatre adaptation of Raymond Chandler The Big Sleep in 1977.

Canada, Montreal, Mounties, Chandler, private eyes -- I love the interconnectedness of it all!

RADIO

NOVELS

FILM

RELATED LINKS

Report submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.


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