THE SNOOP SISTERS (pilot)
The Scandalous Biography Caper (7 of 10)
An aging actress has collaborated on an autobiography which contains so many scandals, it could hurt a lot of people. But just before her publisher gets their hands on it, she's murdered. The investigating police detective on the case, is driven to distraction when his 2 elderly aunts-- a vivacious widow and her spinster sister, who happens to be a famous and successful author of murder mysteries-- decide to investigate on their own. It's like 2 "Miss Marples" (or 2 "Jessica Fletchers") for the price of 1. Hilarity ensues!
In the wake of DO NOT FOLD, SPINDLE OR MUTILATE (1971, on ABC), NBC did this pilot reuniting half of that film's cast which a year later became part of the NBC Tuesday Mystery Movie (along with BANACEK, TENAFLY and FARRADAY & COMPANY). Typically of too many series back then, where a pilot was aired long before a series was given the go-ahead, I never saw this one until about 50 years after it was made! And I loved THE SNOOP SISTERS, and felt it deserved more than just 4 episodes (or 5, if you include the pilot).
Helen Hayes (AIRPORT) is "Ernesta Snoop", brilliant author & bane of her detective-nephew's professional career. She's the kind of sweet little old lady I would have loved to have had as an aunt or a grandmother. She's also a terror if she gets behind the wheel of her antique automobile.
Mildred Natwick (who later turned up as Rock Hudson's mother on McMILLAN & WIFE) is "Gwendolyn Snoop Nicholson", who types as her sister dictates, and shares her love for solving crimes. It's amazing and uncanny how they think so much alike they often finish each other's sentences, sometimes without even doing it outloud.
Laurence Pressman (SHAFT, NINE TO FIVE) is "Lieutenant Ostrowski", who's always concerned about his aunts, but annoyed whenever they turn up on a case he's working on. Though I've seen Pressman in numerous things over the years, in this film, he makes almost no dent, and I have to say it was a good thing when the part was RECAST for the series a year later.
Art Carney (THE HONEYMOONERS, HOUSE CALLS) is "Barney", a retired cop hired by Ostrowski to watch over his aunts, and keep them out of trouble, both of which often becomes impossible when he's dealing with two ladies who always insist on doing whatever they want at any given time. I tend to like Carney in almost anything he's ever done-- EXCEPT this film, where I just found him intensely annoying, especially when he kept saying the word "WRONG!" every time something rubbed him the wrong way. His role was ALSO recast for the series, and, again, it was a huge improvement!
Paulette Goddard (THE GHOST BREAKERS) is "Norma Treat", a retired actress less known for her film career than for her scandalous life. Crazy enough, near the climax of the story, a major clue is contained in a film she allegedly had a minor role in, but the film used in this episode is actually THE GHOST BREAKERS, where she starred opposite Bob Hope! (Funny enough, that and this are the only 2 films of Goddard's I currently have in my entire collection.)
Also in the cast are Charlie Callas, Jill Clayburgh, Bill Dana, Ed Flanders, Kurt Kasznar, Ed Platt (one of his last roles), Kent Smith, Craig Stevens, Fritz Weaver and Bart Burns (though I confess, I missed the latter-- I swear, outside of his playing "Pat Chambers" on MIKE HAMMER, most other things I've seen him in, he's practically invisible onscreen).
This film is more "character study" than "murder mystery", as I found it almost impossible to follow, plot-wise. But, kinda like a Raymond Chandler mystery, it's the characters and the mood that's at the forefront, for good or bad. The short-lived series was a definite improvement over the pilot, and has been issued on DVD twice-- the 2nd time, with the earlier, unrelated film that also featured Myrna Loy & Sylvia Sidney. I'm hoping somebody decides to put out ALL the remaining NBC Mystery Movies on disc-- preferably Blu-Ray, to avoid the severe problem that VEI's current McCLOUD box set has.
Incidentally, "The Female Instinct" was only the title when it went into syndication. When it was first-run, it was simply... "The Snoop Sisters". (NBC did this with a lot of their stand-alone pilots.)