McGill
Created by Richard Harris and Dennis Spooner

Imagine Richard Kimball of The Fugitive with a P.I. ticket.

McGILL (A.K.A. "Mac") was the infamous "man in a suitcase," a discredited former American CIA agent, charged (falsely, of course) with treason and forced to resign from the agency, who wandered England and Europe. makes a living accepting odd -- some of them very odd -- jobs, a sort of intinerant private eye. Meanwhile, he worked at clearing his name.

His cases ranged from wandering daughter jobs and the recovery of stolen loot to bounty hunting, and bodyguard work. At one point he even accepts work from British Intelligence.

It must be because he was good at what he did -- it certainly couldn't be the big front he put up. McGill's only possessions were his battered brown suitcase of clothes, and a gun. Although not actually wanted by the authorities (because he was forced to resign, there was never a trial), he kept on the move, using a string of different cars, mostly Hillman Imps, and lived in a series of rented rooms mostly in London, but he accepted work all over the U.K., and even abroad, venturing to Lisbon, Paris, Rome, the Greek Islands, Africa and East Germany, where a strange assignment landed him back in the shadowy world of international espionage.

A well-liked show, that had a huge following among boys of the time. And what wasn't to love? No bosses, no parents, and McGill was so cool he could fight with a cigarette in his mouth, and never lose it.

This show was filmed at England's Pinewood Studios and on location, and starred American actor Richard Bradford. In fact, he was the only regular cast member. The show was produced by Britain's Incorporated Television Company, and broadcast in the States by ABC, where it developed a cult following. In fact, the two-part episode "Variation On A Million Bucks" was re-edited and released as an American TV movie called To Chase A Million in 1967.

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Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.


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