Mission: Impossible | |
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Season 3 | |
No. of episodes | 25 |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | September 29, 1968 – April 20, 1969 |
Season chronology | |
The third season of the original Mission: Impossible originally aired Sundays at 10:00–11:00 pm (EST) on CBS from September 29, 1968 [1] to April 20, 1969. [2]
Character | Actor | Main | Recurring |
Jim Phelps | Peter Graves | Entire season | |
Rollin Hand | Martin Landau | Entire Season | |
Cinnamon Carter | Barbara Bain | Entire Season (She did not appear in episodes 8 and 22) | |
Barney Collier | Greg Morris | Entire Season (He did not appear in episode 22) | |
Willy Armitage | Peter Lupus | Entire Season (He did not appear in episodes 9, 18 and 22) |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | Prod. code [3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
54 | 1 | "The Heir Apparent" | Alexander Singer | Robert E. Thompson | September 29, 1968 | 52 |
Cinnamon impersonates a lost princess to foil the planned coup of a would-be military dictator (Charles Aidman). Cinnamon Carter poses as the blind elderly Princess who apparently survived the attempt on her life. | ||||||
55 | 2 | "The Contender: Part 1" | Paul Stanley | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | October 6, 1968 | 54 |
Barney impersonates a boxer to prevent gangsters (Ron Randell, John Dehner) from corrupting U.S. sports. Sugar Ray Robinson guest stars as a gangster's henchman; Robert Conrad has a cameo as Barney's sparring partner. The IMF will return to the boxing ring in the seventh season episode "The Fighter" (S07/E17). | ||||||
56 | 3 | "The Contender: Part 2" | Paul Stanley | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | October 13, 1968 | 55 |
The conclusion of the previous episode. | ||||||
57 | 4 | "The Mercenaries" | Paul Krasny | Laurence Heath | October 27, 1968 | 51 |
The IMF travel to Africa to stop a gold-hungry mercenary (Pernell Roberts) and end his reign of terror. | ||||||
58 | 5 | "The Execution" | Alexander Singer | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | November 10, 1968 | 56 |
To stop a brutal racketeer (Vincent Gardenia) from controlling the U.S. grocery industry, the IMF must convince his hitman to turn state's evidence. | ||||||
59 | 6 | "The Cardinal" | Sutton Roley | John T. Dugan | November 17, 1968 | 58 |
To secure power, a general replaces a country's beloved cardinal (Paul Stevens) with a lookalike (also played by Paul Stevens); the team devises a plan to switch them back. | ||||||
60 | 7 | "The Elixir" | John Florea | Max Hodge | November 24, 1968 | 59 |
In South America, the IMF must prevent a vain, Evita-like matriarch (Ruth Roman) from seizing power in a coup. | ||||||
61 | 8 | "The Diplomat" | Don Richardson | Jerry Ludwig | December 1, 1968 | 53 |
The IMF must discredit an enemy diplomat (Fernando Lamas) who is supplying a foreign power with the locations of U.S. missile control centers. Cinnamon did not appear in this episode. | ||||||
62 | 9 | "The Play" | Lee H. Katzin | Lou Shaw | December 8, 1968 | 57 |
The IMF must discredit a foreign minister of culture whose influence prevents his premier from establishing a non-aggression pact with the United States. Willy did not appear in this episode. There is no dossier scene. | ||||||
63 | 10 | "The Bargain" | Richard Benedict | Robert E. Thompson | December 15, 1968 | 61 |
In Miami, the IMF must prevent a crime syndicate from funding an exiled dictator's (Albert Paulsen) plan to launch a counter-revolution. There is no dossier scene. | ||||||
64 | 11 | "The Freeze" | Alexander Singer | Paul Playdon | December 22, 1968 | 63 |
A bank robber (Donnelly Rhodes) plans to wait in prison on a lesser charge until the statute of limitations expires on his theft; the IMF must convince him to retrieve the loot early, before his double-crossed partners get wind of the con. | ||||||
65 | 12 | "The Exchange" | Alexander Singer | Laurence Heath | January 5, 1969 | 60 |
Cinnamon is captured behind the Iron Curtain, and Jim must kidnap, break, and trade an enemy agent before she breaks, bargaining with a treacherous officer (John Vernon) in the process. This is the first episode which begins in medias res , showing the IMF team in the middle of an ongoing mission before Cinnamon is captured and imprisoned. | ||||||
66 | 13 | "The Mind of Stefan Miklos" | Robert Butler | Paul Playdon | January 12, 1969 | 62 |
A double agent within U.S. intelligence is being fed false information, but his suspicious handler (Edward Asner) asks for a security check. Miklos (Steve Ihnat), an enemy mastermind, is sent to investigate and the IMF must convince him that the information is true and the handler is the traitor. | ||||||
67 | 14 | "The Test Case" | Sutton Roley | Laurence Heath | January 19, 1969 | 64 |
A "hired gun" bacteriologist (David Hurst) is developing a deadly but short-lived virus for the Warsaw Pact; the IMF must eliminate him and his virus. | ||||||
68 | 15 | "The System" | Robert Gist | Robert Hamner | January 26, 1969 | 65 |
When a crime boss escapes justice the IMF must trick an underling operating a crooked casino into turning state's evidence. This episode was remade as the second episode in the revival series. | ||||||
69 | 16 | "The Glass Cage" | John Moxey | S : Alf Harris T : Paul Playdon | February 2, 1969 | 66 |
Barney and Willy get arrested in an Eastern Bloc nation to fake the escape of a resistance leader, who is in an escape-proof cell. | ||||||
70 | 17 | "Doomsday" | John Moxey | Laurence Heath | February 16, 1969 | 68 |
When a nearly bankrupt European industrialist (Alf Kjellin) tries to recover his fortune by selling a nuclear bomb to the highest bidder, the IMF must keep the weapon out of the hands of third-world nations. | ||||||
71 | 18 | "Live Bait" | Stuart Hagmann | T : James D. Buchanan & Ronald Austin S/T : Michael Adams | February 23, 1969 | 67 |
An enemy internal security chief (Anthony Zerbe) uses his own assistant (Martin Sheen) in the hope of out-foxing the IMF and exposing a high-ranking American agent. Larry Linville guest stars. Willy did not appear in this episode. | ||||||
72 | 19 | "The Bunker: Part 1" | John Moxey | Paul Playdon | March 2, 1969 | 69 |
Imprisoned underground in an Eastern European nation, a brilliant scientist is being forced to develop a deadly missile. | ||||||
73 | 20 | "The Bunker: Part 2" | John Moxey | Paul Playdon | March 9, 1969 | 70 |
In the conclusion of the previous episode, the IMF must rescue the scientist (Milton Selzer) and his wife (Lee Meriwether) before another nation's master of disguise can assassinate him. | ||||||
74 | 21 | "Nitro" | Bruce Kessler | Laurence Heath | March 23, 1969 | 71 |
A near-eastern ultra-nationalist assigns a demolitions expert (Mark Lenard) to kill his nation's leadership so a peace treaty can be replaced with a declaration of war. The IMF must act in time. | ||||||
75 | 22 | "Nicole" | Stuart Hagmann | Paul Playdon | March 30, 1969 | 73 |
Jim, shot and captured during exfiltration, is joined by an attractive double agent (Joan Collins) – but whose side is she really on? (Unusual for a non-season 1 episode, only two regular IMF members – Jim and Rollin – appear.) | ||||||
76 | 23 | "The Vault" | Richard Benedict | S : John Kingsbridge S/T : Judy Burns | April 6, 1969 | 72 |
Coup plotters (Nehemiah Persoff, Jerry Riggio) have looted a treasury to unseat a South American president (Rodolfo Acosta). | ||||||
77 | 24 | "Illusion" | Gerald Mayer | Laurence Heath | April 13, 1969 | 74 |
The IMF must eliminate two of the three contenders for chief of secret police in an eastern European nation. | ||||||
78 | 25 | "The Interrogator" | Reza S. Badiyi | Paul Playdon | April 20, 1969 | 75 |
An enemy officer (Henry Silva) knows a deadly secret, but is under interrogation in another hostile nation. This is the final episode to feature Martin Landau as Rollin Hand and Barbara Bain as Cinnamon Carter. |