Mission: Impossible | |
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Season 6 | |
No. of episodes | 22 |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | September 18, 1971 – February 26, 1972 |
Season chronology | |
The sixth season of the original Mission: Impossible originally aired Saturdays at 10:00–11:00 pm (EST) on CBS from September 18, 1971 [1] to February 26, 1972. [2]
Character | Actor | Main | Recurring |
Jim Phelps | Peter Graves | Entire season | |
Barney Collier | Greg Morris | Entire Season | |
Casey | Lynda Day George | Entire Season | |
Willy Armitage | Peter Lupus | Entire Season | |
Dr. Doug Robert | Sam Elliott | Episode 2 |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | Prod. code [3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
128 | 1 | "Blind" | Reza S. Badiyi | Arthur Weiss | September 18, 1971 | 126 |
Lynda Day George joins the regular cast as Casey. Jim undergoes surgery to be temporarily blinded in order to pose as an ex-federal investigator [who had been caught in an explosion caused by the Syndicate at an industrial facility] to protect an undercover officer in the Syndicate from being exposed by a Syndicate rival. Guest stars:Harold J. Stone; Tom Bosley; Jason Evers | ||||||
129 | 2 | "Encore" | Paul Krasny | Harold Livingston | September 25, 1971 | 125 |
To bring down a pair of crime syndicate bosses by finding evidence of a murder committed by them years before, the IMF must convince one of them (William Shatner) that he has travelled back in time to his youth in 1937. Final appearance of Sam Elliott as Doug. Third of three episodes starring both Sam Elliott and Peter Lupus. | ||||||
130 | 3 | "The Tram" | Paul Krasny | S : Paul Playdon T : James L. Henderson & Samuel Roeca | October 2, 1971 | 131 |
The IMF must infiltrate a Syndicate financial meeting – held at a mountain resort only accessible by aerial tramway – to discover the group's Swiss bank account number. | ||||||
131 | 4 | "Mindbend" | Marvin Chomsky | James D. Buchanan & Ronald Austin | October 9, 1971 | 130 |
A Syndicate boss has been using a psychopathic doctor to brainwash former prison inmates to assassinate public officials and then kill themselves immediately after, and Barney must go undercover and resist the doctor's "training" to expose them. | ||||||
132 | 5 | "Shape-Up" | Paul Krasny | Ed Adamson and Norman Katkov | October 16, 1971 | 133 |
The IMF has to break the Syndicate control over a waterfront and its docks by making the local boss believe a ship is haunted by the ghost of a man he killed. | ||||||
133 | 6 | "The Miracle" | Leonard J. Horn | Dan Ullman | October 23, 1971 | 129 |
The IMF makes a Syndicate drug smuggler (Joe Don Baker) believe he has received the heart of a priest in a transplant operation, faked for the benefit of him and his associate (Billy Dee Williams), and that he is taking on the donor's personality traits in order to intercept a large heroin shipment. | ||||||
134 | 7 | "Encounter" | Barry Crane | Howard Berk | October 30, 1971 | 132 |
In order to put two Syndicate operators out of commission, Casey disguises herself as the alcoholic wife (Elizabeth Ashley) of one of the operators and fakes a Syndicate plot to murder her so as to convince the two operators that each is double-crossing the other. | ||||||
135 | 8 | "Underwater" | Sutton Roley | Arthur Weiss | November 6, 1971 | 134 |
When an underling steals a shipment of diamonds out from under the nose of a Syndicate fence (Fritz Weaver) and hides them underwater offshore, Casey makes the fence and the underling believe SCUBA diver Jim has already found them in order to retrieve the gems and the $75 million earmarked for their sale. | ||||||
136 | 9 | "Invasion" | Leslie H. Martinson | James L. Henderson & Samuel Roeca | November 13, 1971 | 137 |
After a murderous East European People's Republic enemy agent (Kevin McCarthy) steals the secrets of the US Distant Early Warning (DEW) system against nuclear missile strikes, he is made to believe the United States has been invaded by the country he's spying for in order to retrieve the document and uncover the identity of his "control" who knows where the copy of DEW microfilm plans are hidden; in a twist ending neither the agent or the IMF know is that the "control" has ordered a hitman to kill the agent. Triva the IMF vs the East European People's Republic had clashed before in episode # 126 "The Party". Similar to 1/3 "Operation Rogosh" | ||||||
137 | 10 | "Blues" | Reza S. Badiyi | S : Orville H. Hampton S/T : Howard Berk | November 20, 1971 | 139 |
Posing as an aspiring singer, Barney makes a Syndicate record executive (William Windom) believe he has an audio recording of the night the executive threw a woman off a balcony. | ||||||
138 | 11 | "The Visitors" | Reza S. Badiyi | Harold Livingston | November 27, 1971 | 135 |
A wealthy media tycoon (Steve Forrest), secretly controlled by the Syndicate, has one of his own reporters murdered when the man gets too close to the truth; Jim and Casey make the tycoon believe they are extraterrestrials with the secret to eternal life in order for the tycoon to publicly expose corrupt candidates in an upcoming election. | ||||||
139 | 12 | "Nerves" | Barry Crane | T : Garrie Bateson S/T : Henry Sharp | December 4, 1971 | 140 |
When a paranoid Syndicate enforcer (Christopher George, Lynda Day George's husband) threatens to release deadly nerve gas in a heavily populated area to force the release of his brother from prison, the IMF must recover the defective gas canister before it leaks and kills thousands. Guest starring Tyne Daly as the enforcer's girlfriend and Rafer Johnson as his partner. | ||||||
140 | 13 | "Run for the Money" | Marvin Chomsky | Edward J. Lakso | December 11, 1971 | 128 |
To bring down a Syndicate man running illegal parimutuel betting parlors and stop the saboteur blowing up their competition, the IMF pits the two men against each other by making the saboteur believe he's buying a stolen and disguised super-horse. | ||||||
141 | 14 | "The Connection" | Barry Crane | T : Ken Pettus S/T : Edward J. Lakso | December 18, 1971 | 136 |
In order to take down the largest supplier of uncut heroin on the eastern seaboard (Anthony Zerbe) and uncover both his opium source and his US distributor, the IMF makes him believe an island off the coast of Georgia is really off the coast of Africa. Guest star Joe Maross | ||||||
142 | 15 | "The Bride" | John Llewellyn Moxey | Jackson Gillis | January 1, 1972 | 127 |
Casey poses as the Irish mail-order bride of a Syndicate boss (James Gregory) in order to disrupt an international money laundering ring. | ||||||
143 | 16 | "Stone Pillow" | Leslie H. Martinson | Howard Browne | January 8, 1972 | 142 |
In order to discover the location of film negatives an inmate is using to blackmail a Syndicate boss, cellmate Jim must bust the inmate out of prison for real. | ||||||
144 | 17 | "Image" | Don McDougall | Samuel Roeca & James L. Henderson | January 15, 1972 | 138 |
When a Syndicate boss threatens to flee the country to avoid prosecution and take a secret list of corrupt officials with him, tarot reader Barney convinces him he has a heretofore unknown (and separated) conjoined twin to get him to divulge the list's location. | ||||||
145 | 18 | "Committed" | Reza S. Badiyi | S : Laurence Heath T : Arthur Weiss | January 22, 1972 | 141 |
Casey gets herself committed to a prison-like mental hospital in order to save the only witness in a murder trial against a Syndicate boss from being driven insane by the corrupt staff. | ||||||
146 | 19 | "Bag Woman" | Paul Krasny | Ed Adamson and Norman Katkov | January 29, 1972 | 144 |
When a government agent is killed by a Syndicate hitman (George Stanford Brown), Barney inpersonates him; however after Barney's cover is accidentally blown during an operation to discover the identity of a West coast politician demanding "protection" bribes from the Syndicate, the rest of the team races to warn bag woman Casey that the satchel she's carrying is actually a bomb. | ||||||
147 | 20 | "Double Dead" | Barry Crane | T : Laurence Heath S/T : Jackson Gillis | February 12, 1972 | 143 |
When Willy is captured stealing the $10 million bankroll of a pair of Syndicate loan sharks, the rest of the IMF must not only turn the loan sharks against each other in order to get the money, but also rescue Willy before a Syndicate doctor can break him using a truth serum. | ||||||
148 | 21 | "Casino" | Reza S. Badiyi | Walter Brough and Howard Berk | February 19, 1972 | 145 |
To take down a Syndicate casino owner (Jack Cassidy), the IMF makes his Syndicate bosses believe he's planning to rob his own vault and flee with the money to the Caribbean. The owner ends up with the stolen money; given a choice of going on a one way ride with his boss or testifying before state legislate on organized crime and gambling-the owner decides to testify. The seventh season episode "Kidnap" (S07/E11) refers to this episode. | ||||||
149 | 22 | "Trapped" | Leslie H. Martinson | S : Rick Husky T : Samuel Roeca & James L. Henderson | February 26, 1972 | 146 |
To recover $8 million stolen during an Army payroll heist in Southeast Asia and nab a smuggling family, the IMF convinces one brother (Bert Convy) that the other brother (Jon Cypher) is trying to have him killed. However, after Jim is shot during the mission, he develops amnesia. |
Mission: Impossible is an American espionage television series, financed and filmed by Desilu Productions, that aired on CBS from September 1966 to March 1973. It was revived in 1988 for two seasons on ABC, and later inspired the series of theatrical motion pictures starring Tom Cruise beginning in 1996.
The year 1970 in television involved some significant events. Below is a list of notable television-related events in that year.
The year 1972 involved some significant events in television. Below is a list of notable television-related events.
The year 1968 in television involved some significant events. Below is a list of television-related events in 1968.
The year 1966 in television involved some significant events. Below is a list of television-related events in that year.
Peter Graves was an American actor who portrayed Jim Phelps in the television series Mission: Impossible from 1967 to 1973 and in its revival from 1988 to 1990. His elder brother was actor James Arness. Graves also played airline pilot Captain Clarence Oveur in the 1980 comedy film Airplane! and its 1982 sequel Airplane II: The Sequel.
Anthony Jared Zerbe is an American actor. His notable film roles include the post-apocalyptic cult leader Matthias in The Omega Man, a 1971 film adaptation of Richard Matheson's 1954 novel, I Am Legend; as an Irish Catholic coal miner and one of the Molly Maguires in the 1970 film The Molly Maguires; as a corrupt gambler in Farewell, My Lovely; as the leper colony chief Toussaint in the 1973 historical drama prison film Papillon; as Abner Devereaux in Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park; as villain Milton Krest in the James Bond film Licence to Kill; Rosie in The Turning Point; Roger Stuart in The Dead Zone; Admiral Dougherty in Star Trek: Insurrection; and Councillor Hamann in The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions.
Lynda Louise Day George is an American television and film actress whose career spanned three decades from the 1960s to the 1980s. She was a cast member on Mission: Impossible (1971–1973). She was also the wife of actor Christopher George.
Lee H. Katzin was an American film director.
Richard William Bull was an American film, stage and television actor. He was best known for his performances as "Doc" on Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea and Nels Oleson on Little House on the Prairie.
Mission: Impossible is a series of American action spy films, based on the 1966 TV series created by Bruce Geller. The series is mainly produced by Tom Cruise, who plays Ethan Hunt, an agent of the Impossible Mission Force (IMF). The films have been directed, written, and scored by various filmmakers and crew, while incorporating musical themes from the original series by Lalo Schifrin.
The first season of the original Mission: Impossible, as created by Bruce Geller, premiered on CBS on September 17, 1966 and concluded on April 22, 1967. It originally aired Saturdays at 9:00–10:00 pm (EST) on CBS from September 17, 1966 to January 7, 1967 and at 8:30–9:30 pm (EST) from January 14 to April 22, 1967.
The second season of the original Mission: Impossible originally aired Sundays at 10:00–11:00 pm (EST) on CBS from September 10, 1967 to March 17, 1968.
The third season of the original Mission: Impossible originally aired Sundays at 10:00–11:00 pm (EST) on CBS from September 29, 1968 to April 20, 1969.
The fourth season of the original Mission: Impossible originally aired Sundays at 10:00–11:00 pm (EST) on CBS from September 28, 1969 to March 29, 1970.
The fifth season of the original Mission: Impossible originally aired Saturdays at 7:30–8:30 pm (EST) from September 19, 1970 to March 6, 1971. "The Merchant" originally aired Wednesday, March 17, 1971 at 7:30–8:30 pm (EST).
The seventh and final season of the original Mission: Impossible originally aired Saturdays at 10:00–11:00 pm (EST) on CBS from September 16 to December 9, 1972 and Fridays at 8:00–9:00 pm (EST) from December 22, 1972 to March 30, 1973.
Joseph Anthony Giorgio was an Italian-American actor and magician and known for his portrayal of Bruno Tattaglia in Francis Ford Coppola's 1972 film The Godfather.