| Return of the Saint | |
|---|---|
| Format | Action adventure |
| Created by | Leslie Charteris |
| Starring | Ian Ogilvy |
| Country of origin | |
| No. of episodes | 24 |
| Production | |
| Running time | 60 min. |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | ITV |
| Original run | September 10, 1978 – March 11, 1979 |
| Chronology | |
| Preceded by | The Saint |
Return of the Saint was a British action-adventure television series that aired for one season in 1978 and 1979 in Britain on ITV, and was also broadcast on CBS in the United States. It was produced by ITC Entertainment and ran for 24 episodes.
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Premise
The premise of the series is identical to that of the 1960s TV series, and the later instalments in the Charteris canon. The series starred Ian Ogilvy as Simon 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. The series also made a recurring reference to the 1930s-40s film series. as well as the 1940s radio series that starred Vincent Price as Templar: as the halo appears over Simon's head and just before the opening credits begin, a short phrase of music is heard; this is not actually part of the specially composed theme music for the Return of the Saint series, but is in fact the signature theme of the Saint from film and radio.
Production
The series itself is a revival of The Saint, a long-running 1960s series that starred Roger Moore as Templar. One major difference between the two series is that the original was mostly filmed in British studios and locations, while many episodes of Return were filmed on location throughout Europe. The music was written by John Scott and, like the last colour season of the previous ITC production, 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 did seize promotional opportunities with Return of the Saint. A decade and a half before, Jaguar had turned down the producers of the earlier Saint series when approached about the E-type; the producers had instead used a Volvo P1800. This time around Simon Templar drives an early 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 Leslie 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 of "Collision Course" were also edited together to form the syndicated TV-movie, The Saint and the Brave Goose.
Legacy
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 audio book 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 would also serve as executive producer of the 1997 Saint film starring Val Kilmer as Templar.
Charteris cameo
Saint creator Leslie Charteris makes an Alfred Hitchcock-style walk-on cameo appearance in the "Collision Course" two-parter.
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Episodes
| Episode # | Original Air Date (UK) | Episode Title | Guest cast |
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September 10, 1978 | The Judas Game | Judy Geeson, Maurice Roeves, Olga Karlatos, Moray Watson, Mona Bruce |
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September 17, 1978 | The Nightmare Man | Joss Ackland, Moira Redmond, John Bennett, Norman Eshley, Zienia Merton, John Bailey, Roy Evans, Ève Karpf |
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September 24, 1978 | Duel in Venice | Cathryn Harrison, Maurice Colbourne, Carole Andre |
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October 1, 1978 | One Black September | Prunella Gee, Garrick Hagon, Aubrey Morris, Stephen Greif, Nadim Sawalha, Martin Benson, Ron Tarr |
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October 8, 1978 | The Village That Sold its Soul | Giancarlo Prete, Maurice Denham, Tony Calvin |
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October 15, 1978 | Assault Force | Kate O'Mara, Burt Kwouk, Bryan Marshall, Carolle Rousseau, Norman Bird, Jack McKenzie, Clifford Earl |
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October 22, 1978 | Yesterday's Hero | Ian Hendry, Annette Andre, Gerald Flood, Tony Steedman, Norman Eshley, John Rolfe, Tony Vogel, Charles Pemberton |
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October 29, 1978 | The Poppy Chain | Jenny Hanley, Laurence Naismith, Gregoire Aslan, Christopher Timothy, Anton Phillips, Kim Fortune |
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November 5, 1978 | The Arrangement | Carolyn Seymour, Sarah Douglas, Michael Medwin, Ian McCulloch, Donald Pickering, Peter Burton, David Healy, Reg Lye, Sandra Dickinson, Edmund Pegge |
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November 12, 1978 | The Armageddon Alternative | George Cole, Anouska Hempel, Donald Houston, Gordon Gostelow, Frank Gatliff, Ian Collier |
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November 19, 1978 | The Imprudent Professor | Catherine Schell, Susan Penhaligon, Anthony Steel, Godfrey James, Richard LeParmentier, Peter Childs, Bill Simpson |
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November 26, 1978 | Signal Stop | Ciaran Madden, Frederick Jaeger, Ian Cullen, Brian Glover, Sabina Franklyn, Ralph Arliss, Heather Wright, Royston Tickner, George Sweeney, Kevin Selway |
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December 3, 1978 | The Roman Touch | Kim Goody, Laurence Luckinbull, Linda Thorson |
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December 10, 1978 | Tower Bridge is Falling Down | John Woodvine, Alfie Bass, Fiona Curzon, Paul Maxwell, Jacki Piper, Alan Browning, Neil Hallett, Sally Lahee |
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December 17, 1978 | The Debt Collectors | Mary Tamm, Diane Keen, Anton Rodgers, Neil McCarthy, Geoffrey Keen, Esmond Knight |
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January 7, 1979 | Collision Course Part I: The Brave Goose | Gayle Hunnicutt, Stratford Johns, Derren Nesbitt, Prentis Hancock, Cyril Luckham, Michelle Newell, Edward Brayshaw, John Hallam, Michael Robbins |
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January 14, 1979 | Collision Course Part II: The Sixth Man | Gayle Hunnicutt, Stratford Johns, Derren Nesbitt, Prentis Hancock, Cyril Luckham, Michelle Newell, Edward Brayshaw, John Hallam |
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January 21, 1979 | Hot Run | Rula Lenska, Barry Andrews, Struan Rodger, Lorraine De Selle |
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January 28, 1979 | Murder Cartel | Britt Ekland, Helmut Berger, Marne Maitland |
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February 4, 1979 | The Obono Affair | Thomas Baptiste, Jack Hedley, Derek Newark, Robert Gillespie, Jerome Willis |
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February 11, 1979 | Vicious Circle | Tessa Wyatt, Mel Ferrer, Elsa Martinelli |
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February 25, 1979 | Dragonseed | Annamaria Macchi, Sam Wanamaker, Paolo Malco, Shane Rimmer |
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March 4, 1979 | Appointment in Florence | Stuart Wilson, James Aubrey, Carla Romanelli |
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March 11, 1979 | The Diplomat's Daughter | Lyn Dalby, Karl Held, Murray Head, David Garth |
External links
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