Anyone remember Timothy Hutton's previous series, "Nero Wolfe"? He both produced and co-starred in this series, along with the recently deceased Maury Chaykin. The series had a wonderful '50s look and feel. Hutton also cleverly used the same group of actors to play different characters throughout the series, giving it a real "theatrical group" type of feeling. Definitely some very good TV.
I'm watching
NERO WOLFE right now. I had NO IDEA Maury Chaykin had passed away until this minute. I never heard about it at all last summer. Damn. It's a funny thing, I've seen him in a couple of other parts, and I don't think I ever would have thought of him as Wolfe. But he was superb in the role.
I've seen 3 different actors play Wolfe. My first was William Conrad. The show was good-- Conrad was AWFUL. And I like Conrad. The problem was, he had all the abusiveness and none of the class.
I've also seen the 1977 tv-movie with Thayer David (from
DARK SHADOWS). He was by a wide margin the BEST thing about it (David Hurst as Fritz a close second). The rest was dull, uninspired, and had NO style at all. Despite this, I actually give David a slight edge on Chaykin. It's a shame he didn't get to do more. He actually passed away before his
NW film was finally aired by the network, which kept dragging its feet.
THE GOLDEN SPIDERS was very impressive, but when they came back for the regular series, there was a MASSIVE jump in quality. That's when Hutton took over. I never really liked anything he did before that, but Archie Goodwin seemed a role he was born to play. One of the best decisions they could have made was to make Archie the main character (which he did not appear to be in the 1981 series). He's SO likeable, you just wanna follow everything he does.
NERO WOLFE is one of those rare series where the quality was SO good, it stands apart from most of the detective series made over the years. I'd put it in the same class with the Jeremy Brett
SHERLOCK HOLMES, the David Suchet
POIROT, and the Powers Booth
PHILIP MARLOWE (well, the 1st season, anyway, the ones with the Maurice Binder opening credits).
NW is also one show where I find the plots almost impenetrable, and often impossible to follow... but the show has so much STYLE, I don't care! I'm usuallly enjoying myself too much, figuring, why worry about the plot, it'll make sense by the end.
I wish they'd done a LOT more.
It recently occured to me there was another actor in the 80's who COULD have, should have played Wolfe. He was the right size for it, he was able to project both power and sensitivity, AND, in real life, he loved orchids!
Raymond Burr.