Barnaby Jones
Created by Quinn Martin?
Mmmmmdoggies...Folksy, soft-spoken, slow-walking, elderly Los
Angeles private detective BARNABY JONES was originally
introduced on an episode of Cannon,
when he came out of retirement to find his son's killer. He succeeded,
and decided to come out of retirement, and resume control of the
family detective agency, teaming up with his son's widow, Betty.
The rest was television history. Barnaby Jones went on to a long and successful run on CBS. As well, Barnaby was the probably first credible senior citizen P.I., setting the standard for all the superannuated eyes that followed.
Actor Buddy Ebsen, best known as the backwoods patriarch of The Beverly Hillbillies, was already a respectable 65 when he stepped into the gumshoes of Barnaby Jones, and 72 when CBS finally pulled the plug. Hoot all you want about Jed Clampett, P.I., and makes all the cracks you want about the office bottle containing Geritol. That was certainly the reaction when the show made its debut in 1973. But for anyone who gave this much-misunderstood show a chance, they were rewarded with some great entertainment.
To its credit, the producers didn't downplay Barnaby's age, nor did they get cute about it. They simply treated him with respect and dignity, made us aware of his limitations but focussed on his strengths. Not for Barnaby, then, the routine TV fare of fisticuffs and car chases. Rather he relied on his keen intellect, his home crime lab and good old detective work (a real rarity on the tube) to get the goods on the bad guys.
And what bad guys they were! Barnaby Jones' villains turned out to be some of the nastiest sickos ever presented on network television. There was true evil here, and it was made all the nastier by the fact it often wore the face of middle-class, suburban familiarity. The bad guys were not just the usual gangsters and thugs often, they were bank managers, neighbourhood kids, shop owners, and the like. Their motives, if you could call them that, often turned out to be nothing more than just plain boredom or the quest for "kicks."
Yet, week after week, the mild-mannered, grandfatherly Barnaby, who looked like a strong wind would blow him away, proved to be more than a match for all of them. Every week, in his slow, methodical way, he analyzed the evidence, knocked on doors, took down names, and brought the bad guys to justice, even as they raced around like chickens with their heads cut off, growing increasingly frantic. All to no avail. As TV critic Ric Meyers once put it, "Barnaby Jones was the Droopy Dog of the TV private eye."
And like that perpetually persistent cartoon pooch, the show
itself just kept on rolling along. Believe it or not, this sucker
ran for 174 episodes, becoming the second-longest running private
eye series on television (only Mannix
lasted longer). As one TV executive put it, "You couldn't
kill that thing with a stick!"
Of course, as with any long-running TV series, certain plot lines and even guest stars were recycled endlessly. Actor Gary Lockwood showed up as a villian at least a half-dozen times. "And he was a low-down skunk in everyone of them!" Ebsen later recalled. "Every time I saw him, I'd say, "Didn't I put you in jail once?' ''
And Barnaby's sense of family loyalty was beyond admirable, verging into parody. Simply put, his secretary/widowed daughter-in-law Betty had to be the stupidest and most danger-prone woman who ever walked the face of the earth. She was kidnapped, threatened and attacked so often she made Joe Mannix's secretary Peggy look like a good insurance risk.
Still, for those of us who "got' this show, mere mention
of it brings back a heapin' helpin' of fond memories. Barnaby
Jones, as portrayed by Ebsen, was a likable old coot. Likeable
enough, in fact, that he appeared in the 1984-85 season of Matt Houston as Matt's Uncl Roy,
a retired CIA op and sometime private eye. And it was an even
bigger treat to see him make one last appearance as Barnaby years
after the show had faded away, in the 1993 Beverly Hillbillies
movie. At one point in the film, Granny turns up missing and Miss
Jane hires Barnaby Jones, amazingly still private eying at eighty-five,
to look for her. A class act, having the original Jed pop up.
TELEVISION
- 1st Season
- "Requiem for a Son" (January 28, 1973)
- "To Catch a Dead Man" (February 4, 1973)
- "Sunday: Doomsday" (February 25, 1973)
- "The Murdering Class" (March 4, 1973)
- "Perchance to Kill" (March 11, 1973)
- "The Loose Connection" (March 18, 1973)
- "Murder in the Doll's House" (March 25, 1973)
- "Sing a Song of Murder" (April 1, 1973)
- "See Some Evil...Do Some Evil" (April 8, 1973)
- "Murder-Go-Round" (April 15, 1973)
- "To Denise, With Love and Murder" (April 22, 1973)
- "A Little Glory, a Little Death" (April 29, 1973)
- "Twenty Million Alibis" (May 6, 1973)
- 2nd Season
- "Blind Terror" (September 16, 1973)
- "Death Leap" (September 23, 1973)
- "Echo of a Murder" (September 30, 1973)
- "Day of the Viper" (October 7, 1973)
- "Trial Run for Death" (October 4, 1973)
- "Catch Me If You Can" (October 21, 1973)
- "Divorce - Murderer's Style" (October 28, 1973)
- "The Deadly Prize" (November 4, 1973)
- "Stand-In for Death" (November 11, 1973)
- "The Black Art of Dying" (November 25, 1973)
- "The Killing Defense" (December 2, 1973)
- "Fatal Flight" (December 9, 1973)
- "Secret of the Dunes" (December 16, 1973)
- "Venus as in Fly Trap" (January 6, 1974)
- "The Deadly Jinx" (January 13, 1974)
- "The Platinum Connection" (January 20, 1974)
- "Programmed for Killing" (January 27, 1974)
- "A Gold Record for Murder" (February 10, 1974)
- "Friends Till Death" (February 17, 1974)
- "Rendezvous with Terror" (February 24, 1974)
- "Dark Legacy" (March 3, 1974)
- "Woman in the Shadows" (March 10, 1974)
- "Image in a Cracked Mirror" (March 24, 1974)
- "Foul Play" (March 31, 1974)
- 3rd Season
- "A Gathering of Thieves" (September 10, 1974)
- "Dead Man's Run" (September 17, 1974)
- "The Challenge" (September 24, 1974)
- "Conspiracy of Terror" (October 1, 1974)
- "Odd Man Loses" (October 8, 1974)
- "Forfeit by Death" (October 15, 1974)
- "Blueprint for a Caper" (October 29, 1974)
- "Mystery Cycle" (November 12, 1974)
- "Dark Homecoming" (November 19, 1974)
- "Time to Kill" (November 26, 1974)
- "Death on Deposit" (December 3, 1974)
- "Web of Deceit" (December 10, 1974)
- "The Last Contract" (December 31, 1974)
- "Trap Play" (January 7, 1975)
- "Murder Once Removed" (January 21, 1975)
- "Counterfall" (February 4, 1975)
- "Dangerous Summer" (February 11, 1975)
- "Image of Evil" (February 18, 1975)
- "Fantasy of Fear" (February 25, 1975)
- "Doomed Alibi" (March 11, 1975)
- "The Deadlier Species" (March 18, 1975)
- "Poisoned Pigeon" (March 25, 1975)
- "Jeopardy for Two" (April 1, 1975)
- "Bond of Fear" (April 15, 1975)
- 4th Season
- "The Deadly Conspiracy, Part Two" (September 19, 1975; Part One aired on Cannon)
- "Theater of Fea" (September 26, 1975)
- "The Orchid Killer" (October 3, 1975)
- "The Price of Terror" (October 10, 1975)
- "Honeymoon with Death" (October 17, 1975)
- "The Alpha-Bravo War" (October 24, 1975)
- "Flight to Danger" (October 31, 1975)
- "Double Vengeance" (November 7, 1975)
- "Fatal Witness" (November 14, 1975)
- "Beware the Dog" (November 21, 1975)
- "Blood Relations" (November 28, 1975)
- "A Taste for Murder" (December 4, 1975)
- "Final Burial" (December 11, 1975)
- "Portrait of Evil" (December 18, 1975)
- "Dead Heat" (January 1, 1976)
- "The Lonely Victims" (January 8, 1976)
- "Hostage" (January 15, 1976)
- "Silent Vendetta" (January 29, 1976)
- "Shadow of Guilt" (February 5, 1976)
- "Deadly Reunion" (February 12, 1976)
- "Dangerous Gambit" (February 26, 1976)
- "Wipeout" (March 4, 1976)
- "The Eyes of Terror" (March 11, 1976)
- "The Stalking Horse" (March 18, 1976)
- 5th Season 1976
- "Blood Vengeance" (October7 , 1976)
- "Deadline for Dying" (October 14, 1976)
- "Sins of Thy Father" (October 21, 1976)
- "The Fatal Dive" (October 28, 1976)
- "Final Ransom" (November 11, 1976)
- "Band of Evil" (November 18, 1976)
- "Voice in the Night" (December 2, 1976)
- "The Bounty Hunter" (December 16, 1976)
- "Renegade's Child" (December 23, 1976)
- "Fraternity of Thieves" (December 30, 1976)
- "Sister of Death" (January 6, 1977)
- "The Deadly Charade" (January 13, 1977)
- "Testament of Power" (January 20, 1977)
- "Copy-Cat Killing" (January 27, 1977)
- "A Simple Case of Terror" (February 3, 1977)
- "The March athon Murders" (February 17, 1977)
- "Duet for Dying" (February 24, 1977)
- "Circle of Treachery" (March 3, 1977)
- "Anatomy of Fear" (March 17, 1977)
- "The Killer on Campus" (March 24, 1977)
- "The Deadly Valentine" (March 31, 1977)
- "Duet for Danger" (May 5, 1977)
- "The Inside Man" (May 12, 1977)
- "Run Away to Terror" (May19, 1977)
- 6th Season
- "Death Beat" (September 15, 1977)
- "The Mercenaries" (September 22, 1977)
- "The Wife Beater" (September 29, 1977)
- "Yesterday's Terror" (October 13, 1977)
- "The Damocles Gun" (October 20, 1977)
- "Gang War" (October 27, 1977)
- "Daughter of Evil" (November 3, 1977)
- "The Captives" (November 10, 1977)
- "The Reincarnation" (November 17, 1977)
- "Shadow of Fear" (November 24, 1977)
- "The Devil's Handmaiden" (December 1, 1977)
- "Prisoner of Deceit" (December 15, 1977)
- "Deadly Becoming" (December 22, 1977)
- "Child of Danger" (December 29, 1977)
- "The Scapegoat" (January 5, 1978)
- "A Ransom in Diamonds" (January 12, 1978)
- "Prime Target" (January 19, 1978)
- "Final Judgment, Part One" (January 26, 1978)
- "Final Judgment, Part Two" (January 26, 1978)
- "Uninvited Peril" (February 2, 1978)
- "Terror on a Quiet Afternoon" (February 9, 1978)
- "The Coronado Triangle" (March 2, 1978)
- 7th Season
- "Blind Jeopardy" (September 21, 1978)
- "A Dangerous Affair" (September 28, 1978)
- "Deadly Sanctuary" (October 12, 1978)
- "Hitch-hike to Terror" (October 19, 1978)
- "Nest of Scorpions" (October 26, 1978)
- "Death of a Friendship" (November 9, 1978)
- "A Frame for Murder" (November 16, 1978)
- "Stages of Fear" (November 23, 1978)
- "Victim of Love" (November 30, 1978)
- "Memory of a Nightmare" (December 14, 1978)
- "The Picture Pirates" (December 21, 1978)
- "Academy of Evil" (December 28, 1978)
- "The Medium" (January 4, 1979)
- "Echo of a Distant Battle, Part One" (January 11, 1979)
- "Echo of a Distant Battle, Part Two" (January 11, 1979)
- "The Enslaved" (January 18, 1979)
- "Dance with Death" (January 25, 1979)
- "The Protectors" (February 1, 1979)
- "Fatal Overture" (February 8, 1979)
- "Master of Deception" (February 22, 1979)
- "A Short Happy Life" (March 1, 1979)
- "Child of Love, Child of Vengeance, Part One" (March 15, 1979)
- "Child of Love, Child of Vengeance, Part Two" (March 22, 1979)
- "Target for a Wedding" (April 12, 1979)
- "Temptation" (April 19, 1979)
- 8th Season
- "Man on Fire" (September 20, 1979)
- "Nightmare in Hawaii, Part One" (September 27, 1979)
- "Nightmare in Hawaii, Part Two" (September 27, 1979)
- "A Desperate Pursuit" (October 11, 1979)
- "Design for Madness" (October 18, 1979)
- "Girl on the Road" (October 25, 1979)
- "Indoctrination in Evil" (November 1, 1979)
- "Homecoming for a Dead Man" (November 8, 1979)
- "False Witness" (November 29, 1979)
- "School of Terror" (December 20, 1979)
- "Cry for Vengeance" (December 27, 1979)
- "Run to Death" (January 3, 1980)
- "The Price of Anger" (January 10, 1980)
- "The Killing Point" (January 17, 1980)
- "Focus on Fear" (January 31, 1980)
- "Murder in the Key of C" (February 7, 1980)
- "Killer without a Name" (February 14, 1980)
- "Death Is the Punchline" (February 21, 1980)
- "The Final Victim" (March 6, 1980)
- "The Silent Accuser" (March 13, 1980)
- Deadline for Murder" (March 27, 1980)
- "The Killin' Cousin" (April 3, 1980)
RELATED LINKS
Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith. Thanks to Alberta Bond for the Hillbillies tip.
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