Return of the Saint | |
---|---|
Created by | Leslie Charteris |
Starring | Ian Ogilvy |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of episodes | 24 |
Production | |
Running time | 48–50 min |
Production companies | ITC for ATV and RAI |
Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 10 September 1978 – 11 March 1979 |
Related | |
The Saint |
Return of the Saint is a British action-adventure television series that aired for one series in 1978 and 1979 in Britain on ITV, and was also broadcast on CBS in the United States. It was co-produced by ITC Entertainment and the Italian broadcaster RAI and ran for 24 episodes.
Return of the Saint is a revival/updating of The Saint , a programme based upon the stories of Leslie Charteris that had originally aired from 1962 to 1969, and starred Roger Moore as Simon Templar (the character, in turn, had been introduced by Charteris in a series of novels and short stories dating back to 1928). The new series starred Ian Ogilvy as Templar, an independently wealthy, somewhat mysterious 'do-gooder' known as 'The Saint'. Templar is shown travelling around Britain and Europe, helping out the people he encounters, though he is also often summoned by past acquaintances.
The series borrowed a few storytelling elements from its predecessor. Once again, each episode began with Simon narrating an introduction to set the scene for viewers, and each pre-credit sequence ended with an animated halo appearing above Templar's head as he was identified. Return also made a recurring reference to the 1930s–40s film series, and the 1940s radio series that starred Vincent Price as Templar: just before the opening credits begin, a short musical phrase is heard that is not part of the theme music for the Return of the Saint, but is the character's signature theme from film and radio. Unlike the film series, and occasional episodes of the Roger Moore series, Ogilvy's series did not feature any recurring characters besides Simon.
Other than these cosmetic touches, there is no continuity implied between the Ogilvy and Moore series.
One major difference between the two series is that the original was mostly filmed in British studios and locations (although set in various places around the world), while many episodes of Return were filmed on location throughout Europe. The music was written by John Scott and, like the last colour series of The Saint, incorporated Leslie Charteris' own theme, which had previously been used in films and on radio. For the French version, Scott's music was replaced with a theme incorporating vocals (as had happened to previous Saint composer Edwin Astley with Danger Man ), but Charteris' eight-note theme remained.
Jaguar seized promotional opportunities with Return of the Saint. A decade and a half earlier, Jaguar had turned down the producers of The Saint when approached about the E-Type; the producers had instead used a Volvo P1800. In Return Templar drives an XJ-S with the number plate "ST 1". Miniature versions were made by Corgi and proved popular.
According to Burl Barer in his history of The Saint, the series was originally conceived as Son of the Saint, with Ogilvy's character identified as the offspring of Simon Templar. As production neared, it was decided to drop the relative angle and make the series about the original character, albeit updated to the late 1970s.
Unlike the earlier series, Return of the Saint did not adapt any Charteris stories; however, several teleplays (such as "The Imprudent Professor" and "Collision Course") were adapted as novels that were credited to Charteris but written by others. A number of Saint books were reprinted with covers depicting Ogilvy as Templar as a tie-in with the series; these collectable volumes carried the Return of the Saint title. The adaptation of "Collision Course", retitled Salvage for the Saint was published in 1983 (several years after the series ended) and was the 50th and final Saint book to be published in a series of publications dating back to the 1920s.
The two episodes from the "Collision Course", were also re-edited together to form the syndicated television movie titled The Saint and the Brave Goose. [1]
Ogilvy became very popular in Britain and Europe because of the series and in the early 1980s was considered a major contender for replacing Moore as James Bond. Ogilvy never got the role but did record a series of popular audiobook adaptations of the Bond novels in the late 1970s and played a Bond-like character for a 1980s TV commercial.
Broadcasts of the series on CBS, which lasted into 1980, sparked a revival of interest in Moore's original series.
Robert S. Baker, who developed and produced the earlier The Saint series for Roger Moore, performed the same duties with Return of the Saint. Years later, Baker was also executive producer of the 1997 Saint film starring Val Kilmer as Templar.
Return of The Saint is now seen as the last of the action/adventure television series produced by ITC Entertainment.
Saint creator Leslie Charteris makes an Alfred Hitchcock-style walk-on cameo appearance in the "Collision Course" two-parter.
Episode # | Original Air Date (UK) | Episode Title | Description |
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1–01 | 10 September 1978 | "The Judas Game" | British Intelligence persuade Simon Templar to go to Albania and rescue their agent Selma Morrell, who is a former girlfriend of his. Guest cast: Judy Geeson, Maurice Roëves, Olga Karlatos, Moray Watson |
1–02 | 17 September 1978 | "The Nightmare Man" | Templar and an actress friend investigate after a woman says she foresaw in a dream that an Italian diplomat will be assassinated in London. Guest cast: Joss Ackland, Moira Redmond, John Bennett |
1–03 | 24 September 1978 | "Duel in Venice" | Templar is forced to play a game of cat and mouse with a ruthless mercenary who has kidnapped a friend's daughter. Guest cast: Cathryn Harrison, Maurice Colbourne, Carole André |
1–04 | 1 October 1978 | "One Black September" | Templar is paired with a female Israeli agent trying to track down an Arab terrorist turned informer, who has gone to ground in London. Guest cast: Prunella Gee, Garrick Hagon, Aubrey Morris |
1–05 | 8 October 1978 | "The Village That Sold its Soul" | Templar witnesses a woman's murder outside a remote Italian village. With help from the village priest, Templar brings the killer to justice. Guest cast: Giancarlo Prete, Maurice Denham, Tony Calvin |
1–06 | 15 October 1978 | "Assault Force" | Templar helps a dissident carry out the abduction of an official from an Asian country, but they are betrayed by someone who secretly works for the regime Guest cast: Kate O'Mara, Burt Kwouk, Bryan Marshall |
1–07 | 22 October 1978 | "Yesterday's Hero" | Templar investigates when a former British agent released after years of captivity begins a bizarre campaign against a former colleague. Guest cast: Ian Hendry, Annette Andre, Gerald Flood |
1–08 | 29 October 1978 | "The Poppy Chain" | Templar impersonates a member of a heroin smuggling gang and travels to the South of France to meet the head of the organisation. Guest cast: Jenny Hanley, Laurence Naismith, Grégoire Aslan |
1–09 | 5 November 1978 | "The Arrangement" | Templar helps a writer whose husband is murdered by her friend, the wife of a politician, who wants her own husband murdered in return. Guest cast: Carolyn Seymour, Sarah Douglas, Michael Medwin |
1–10 | 12 November 1978 | "The Armageddon Alternative" | Templar must track down a bomber who will detonate a nuclear device in London unless an artist is executed in public. Guest cast: George Cole, Anouska Hempel, Donald Houston |
1–11 | 19 November 1978 | "The Imprudent Professor" | Templar is hired by a woman to protect her father, a scientist whose invention has made him a target for foreign powers. Guest cast: Catherine Schell, Susan Penhaligon, Anthony Steel |
1–12 | 26 November 1978 | "Signal Stop" | Templar investigates when a woman witnesses a man's murder from a passing train. The two are in danger when the killer tries to cover his tracks. Guest cast: Ciaran Madden, Frederick Jaeger, Ian Cullen |
1–13 | 3 December 1978 | "The Roman Touch" | Templar stages a pop singer's kidnapping to free her from her unscrupulous manager, only for the man to kidnap her back. Guest cast: Kim Goody, Laurence Luckinbill, Linda Thorson, The Saints |
1–14 | 10 December 1978 | "Tower Bridge is Falling Down" | Templar helps a woman whose father was killed by his ruthless business partner. Templar devises an elaborate con to expose the man. Guest cast: John Woodvine, Alfie Bass, Paul Maxwell |
1–15 | 17 December 1978 | "The Debt Collectors" | Templar helps a woman whose sister, imprisoned on espionage charges, has broken out of prison and gone on the run. Guest cast: Mary Tamm, Diane Keen, Anton Rodgers |
1–16 | 7 January 1979 | "Collision Course Part I: The Brave Goose" | Templar helps a widow of a powerboat racer, who is being menaced by her late husband's criminal associates. Guest cast: Gayle Hunnicutt, Stratford Johns, Derren Nesbitt |
1–17 | 14 January 1979 | "Collision Course Part II: The Sixth Man" | The gang want gold that the dead man helped them to steal years earlier, and force Templar and the woman to help them find it. Guest cast: Gayle Hunnicutt, Stratford Johns, Derren Nesbitt |
1–18 | 21 January 1979 | "Hot Run" | Templar investigates when a man is shot dead on a ski slope and discovers the dead man was linked to a gang who are planning a gold robbery. Guest cast: Rula Lenska, Barry Andrews, Struan Rodger |
1–19 | 28 January 1979 | "Murder Cartel" | Templar impersonates an infamous hitman in order to infiltrate the organisation planning the assassination of an oil sheikh. Guest cast: Britt Ekland, Helmut Berger, Marne Maitland |
1–20 | 4 February 1979 | "The Obono Affair" | Templar is called in when the young son of an African dictator is held for ransom. He discovers that someone close to the dictator is behind events. Guest cast: Jack Hedley, Thomas Baptiste, Muriel Odunton |
1–21 | 11 February 1979 | "Vicious Circle" | Templar investigates when his racing driver friend dies in a car crash and discovers that he was run off the road by a hired killer. Guest cast: Elsa Martinelli, Tessa Wyatt, Mel Ferrer |
1–22 | 25 February 1979 | "Dragonseed" | Templar investigates when the son of a billionaire is killed in a helicopter crash and finds that dark family secrets provide the motive for murder. Guest cast: Sam Wanamaker, Paolo Malco, Shane Rimmer |
1–23 | 4 March 1979 | "Appointment in Florence" | Templar investigates after a friend is killed by terrorists. He tracks one of them to Florence, but the rest of gang follow him there. Guest cast: Stuart Wilson, James Aubrey |
1–24 | 11 March 1979 | "The Diplomat's Daughter" | Templar helps a French woman whose gambler brother is in debt to crooks, and has been coerced into helping them smuggle drugs into the UK. Guest cast: Lynn Dalby, Karl Held, Murray Head |
The Saint is the nickname of the fictional character Simon Templar, featured in a series of novels and short stories by Leslie Charteris published between 1928 and 1963. After that date, other authors collaborated with Charteris on books until 1983; two additional works produced without Charteris's participation were published in 1997. The character has also been portrayed in The Saint franchise, which includes motion pictures, radio dramas, comic strips, comic books, and three television series.
Sir Roger George Moore was an English actor. He was the third actor to portray fictional secret agent James Bond in the Eon Productions/MGM Studios film series, playing the character in seven feature films between 1973 and 1985. Moore's seven appearances as Bond, from Live and Let Die to A View to a Kill, are the most of any actor in the Eon-produced entries.
Leslie Charteris, was a British-Chinese author of adventure fiction, as well as a screenwriter. He was best known for his many books chronicling the adventures of his hero Simon Templar, alias "The Saint".
The Saint may refer to:
The Persuaders! is a British action comedy television series starring Tony Curtis and Roger Moore, produced by ITC Entertainment, and initially broadcast on ITV and ABC in 1971. The show has been called 'the last major entry in the cycle of adventure series that began 11 years earlier with Danger Man in 1960', as well as 'the most ambitious and most expensive of Sir Lew Grade's international action adventure series'. The Persuaders! was filmed in Britain, France, and Italy between May 1970 and June 1971.
The Saint's Return is a 1953 British crime thriller film directed by Seymour Friedman and starring Louis Hayward, Naomi Chance and Sydney Tafler. It was produced by Hammer Film Productions in London and released in the United States as The Saint's Girl Friday.
The Saint is a British crime television series that aired in the United Kingdom on ITV between 1962 and 1969. It was based on the literary character Simon Templar created by Leslie Charteris in the 1920s and featured in many novels over the years. In the television series, Templar was played by Roger Moore. Templar helps those whom conventional agencies are powerless or unwilling to protect, often using methods that skirt the law. Chief Inspector Claud Eustace Teal is his nominal nemesis who considers Templar a common criminal, but often grudgingly tolerates his actions for the greater good.
The Saint is a 1997 American action thriller film directed by Phillip Noyce, written by Jonathan Hensleigh and Wesley Strick, and starring Val Kilmer in the title role, with Elisabeth Shue and Rade Šerbedžija. The plot of the film revolves around the title character who is a high tech thief and master of disguise, who becomes the anti-hero while using the moniker of various saints. He paradoxically lives in the underworld of international industrial theft and espionage. The film was a modest financial success with a worldwide box office of $169.4 million, rentals of $28.2 million, and continuous DVD sales.
Ian Raymond Ogilvy is an English actor, playwright and novelist.
Vendetta for the Saint is a 1964 mystery novel featuring the character of Simon Templar, alias "The Saint". Vendetta for the Saint was the first full-length Saint novel published since The Saint Sees it Through, 18 years earlier. A television adaptation of the novel was released as a theatrical film, also entitled Vendetta for the Saint, in 1969.
Enter the Saint is a collection of three interconnected adventure novellas by Leslie Charteris first published in the United Kingdom by Hodder and Stoughton in October 1930, followed by an American edition by The Crime Club in April 1931.
The Saint Goes West is a collection of three mystery novellas by Leslie Charteris, first published in the United States in 1942 by The Crime Club, and in the United Kingdom the same year by Hodder and Stoughton.
The Saint in the Sun is a collection of short stories by Leslie Charteris, featuring the Robin Hood-inspired crimefighter, Simon Templar, whom Charteris introduced in 1928. The book was first published in 1963 by The Crime Club in the United States and by Hodder and Stoughton in the United Kingdom in 1964. This was the 36th book of Simon Templar adventures, and was the first published after the start of the TV series The Saint starring Roger Moore as Templar.
Salvage for the Saint is the title of a 1983 mystery novel featuring the character of Simon Templar, alias "The Saint". The novel was written by Peter Bloxsom, based on the two-part Return of the Saint episode "Collision Course" by John Kruse, but as was the custom at this time, the author credit on the cover went to Leslie Charteris, who created the Saint in 1928, and who served in an editorial capacity.
Meet the Tiger is an action-adventure novel written by Leslie Charteris. In England it was first published by Ward Lock in September 1928; in the United States it was first published by Doubleday's The Crime Club imprint in March 1929 with the variant title Meet – the Tiger!. It was the first novel in a long-running series of books featuring the adventures of Simon Templar, alias "The Saint". It was later reissued under a number of different titles, including the unofficial Crooked Gold by Amalgamated Press in 1929 which failed to credit the authorship of Charteris, and the best-known reissue title, The Saint Meets the Tiger. In 1940 the Sun Dial Press changed the title to Meet – the Tiger! The Saint in Danger.
The Saint's Vacation is a 1941 adventure film produced by the British arm of RKO Pictures. The film stars Hugh Sinclair as Simon Templar, also known as "The Saint", a world-roving crimefighter who walks the fine edge of the law. This was the seventh of eight films in RKO's film series about the character created by Leslie Charteris. It was Sinclair's first appearance as Templar, having taken over the role from George Sanders, who then stepped into RKO's "Falcon" series.
Patricia Holm is the name of a fictional character who appeared in the novels and short stories of Leslie Charteris between 1928 and 1948. She was the on-again, off-again girlfriend and partner of Simon Templar, alias "The Saint", and shared a number of his adventures. In addition, by the mid-1930s, Holm and Templar shared the same flat in London, although they were unmarried. Although such co-habitation between unmarried partners is commonplace today, it was rare, shocking in the 1930s. The two also appeared to have a somewhat "open" relationship, with Holm accepting Templar's occasional dalliances with other women.
Claud Eustace Teal is a fictional character who made many appearances in a series of novels, novellas and short stories by Leslie Charteris featuring The Saint, starting in 1929. A common spelling variation of his first name in reference works and websites is Claude, however in his works Charteris uses the spelling without the 'e'.
The Saint is a 2017 American action film directed by Ernie Barbarash and starring Adam Rayner in the title role of Simon Templar, created by Leslie Charteris. This was Roger Moore's final film appearance and the film was dedicated to his memory as he died two months before the release; Moore portrayed Templar in a 1960s TV series of the same title. Filmed in 2013 as a television pilot for a proposed TV series, the film was not originally intended for release when the series was not picked up. It eventually saw release direct-to-video in 2017 when it was released in tribute to Moore following his death. Ian Ogilvy, who portrayed Templar in a 1970s TV series titled Return of the Saint, also appears.
The Saint franchise consists of European and American action-mystery thrillers, including film, radio, and television mediums. Based on the writings of Leslie Charteris, the plot centers around the titular vigilante investigator who operates outside the bounds of the law, under various disguises and aliases; commonly known as the moniker "the Saint".