Perry Mason The Case Of The Gambling Lady Imdb

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Each week Perry Mason, noted Los Angeles attorney, would find himself in the midst of some sordid murder case. Typically, the client would approach Perry at the beginning of the episode with some relatively simple legal issue and then quickly find themselves the defendant in a capital murder case. Herman Albright, who has a crush on the model he handles for an agency, asks his wife for a divorce when her gambling debts become too much. He agrees to perform a favor to pay the debt. It results in his murder and the model is charged. Directed by Jesse Hibbs. With Raymond Burr, Barbara Hale, William Hopper, William Talman. Carla Chaney is in jail awaiting her trial for murder. She has fired or lost multiple attorneys so Perry is given her case. She tells him about proof she didn't commit the murder but even Perry has a hard time believing her story.

Absent Artist
Accosted Accountant
Ancient Romeo
Angry Astronaut
Angry Dead Man
Angry Mourner
Antic Angel
Arrogant Arsonist
Artful Dodger
Avenging Angel

Badgered Brother
Baffling Bug
Baited Hook
Barefaced Witness
Bartered Bikini
Bashful Burro
Bedeviled Doctor
Betrayed Bride
Bigamous Spouse
Black-eyed Blonde
Blind Man's Bluff
Blonde Bonanza
Bluffing Blast
Blushing Pearls
Bogus Books
Bogus Buccaneers
Borrowed Baby
Borrowed Brunette
Bouncing Boomerang
Bountiful Beauty
Brazen Bequest
Bullied Bowler
Buried Clock

Calendar Girl
Candy Queen
Capering Camera
Captain's Coins
Capricious Corpse
Carefree Coronary
Careless Kidnaper
Careless Kitten
Caretaker's Cat
Cautious Coquette
Cheating Chancellor
Clumsy Clown
Constant Doyle
Corresponding Corpse
Counterfeit Crank
Cowardly Lion
Crafty Kidnaper
Credulous Quarry
Crimson Kiss
Crippled Cougar
Crooked Candle
Crying Cherub
Crying Comedian
Curious Bride

Dangerous Dowager
Deadly Debt
Daring Decoy
Deadly Double
Deadly Toy
Deadly Verdict
Dead Ringer
Decadent Dean
Demure Defendant
Desperate Daughter
Devious Delinquent
Difficult Detour
Dodging Domino
Double-entry Mind
Drifting Dropout
Drowning Duck
Drowsy Mosquito
Dubious Bridegroom
Duplicate Case
Duplicate Daughter

Elusive Element
Empty Tin
Envious Editor

Fanciful Frail
Fancy Figures
Fan Dancer's Horse
Fatal Fetish
Fatal Fortune
Festive Felon
Fickle Filly
Fickle Fortune
Fiery Fingers
Fifty Millionth Frenchman
Final Fadeout
Feather Cloak

Flighty Father
Floating Stones
Foot-Loose Doll
Frantic Flyer
Fraudulent Foto
Frightened Fisherman
Frustrated Folksinger
Fugitive Fraulein
Fugitive Nurse

Gallant Grafter
Gambling Lady
Garrulous Gambler
Garrulous Go-between
Gilded Lily
Glamorous Ghost
Glittering Goldfish
Golden Fraud
Golden Girls
Golden Oranges
Golden Venom
Golfer's Gambit
Greek Goddess
Green-eyed Sister
Grinning Gorilla
Grumbling Grandfather
Guilty Clients

Half-Wakened Wife
Hasty Honeymooner
Hateful Hero
Haunted Husband
Hesitant Hostess
Howling Dog

Ice-cold Hands
Ill-fated Faker
Illicit Illusion
Impatient Partner
Impetuous Imp
Injured Innocent
Irate Inventor

Jaded Joker
Jealous Journalist
Jilted Jockey

Lame Canary
Larcenous Lady
Latent Lover
Laughing Lady
Lavender Lipstick
Lawful Lazarus
Lazy Lover
Left-handed Liar
Libelous Locket
Lonely Eloper
Lonely Heiress
Long-legged Models
Loquacious Liar
Lost Last Act
Lover's Gamble
Lover's Leap
Lucky Legs
Lucky Loser
Lurid Letter

Madcap Modiste
Malicious Mariner
Married Moonlighter
Meddling Medium
Melancholy Marksman
Midnight Howler
Mischievous Doll
Misguided Missile
Misguided Model
Missing Button
Missing Melody
Moth-Eaten Mink
Murderous Mermaid
Mystified Miner
Mythical Monkeys

Nautical Knot
Nebulous Nephew
Negligent Nymph
Nervous Accomplice
Nervous Neighbor
Nimble Nephew
Nine Dolls

One-eyed Witness
Ominous Outcast

Paper Bullets
Pathetic Patient
Paul Drake's Dilemma

Perjured Parrot
Petulant Partner
Pint-sized Client
Place Called Midnight
Playboy Pugilist
Poison Pen Pal
Polka-dot Pony
Positive Negative
Posthumous Painter
Potted Planter
Prankish Professor
Prodigal Parent
Promoter's Pillbox
Provocative Protégé
Prudent Prosecutor
Purple Woman

Reckless Rock Hound
Red Riding Boots
Reluctant Model
Renegade Refugee
Resolute Reformer
Restless Redhead
Rolling Bones
Romantic Rogue
Roving River
Ruinous Road
Runaway Corpse
Runaway Racer

Sad Sicilian
Sardonic Sergeant
Sausalito Sunrise
Scandalous Sculptor
Scarlet Scandal
Screaming Woman
Shapely Shadow
Shattered Dream
Shifty Shoe-box
Shoplifter's Shoe
Silent Partner
Silent Six
Simple Simon
Singing Skirt
Singular Double
Skeleton's Closet
Slandered Submarine
Sleepy Slayer
Sleepwalker's Niece
Spanish Cross
Spurious Sister
Stand-in Sister
Startled Stallion
Stuttering Bishop
Substitute Face
Sulky Girl
Sunbather's Diary
Surplus Suitor

Tandem Target
Tarnished Trademark
Telltale Tap
Terrified Typist
Thermal Thief
Torrid Tapestry
Tragic Trophy
Traveling Treasure
Treacherous Toupée
Tsarina's Tiara
12th Wildcat
Twice Told Twist
Two-faced Turnabout

Ugly Duckling
Unsuitable Uncle
Unwelcome Bride
Unwelcome Well

Vagabond Vixen
Vanishing Victim
Velvet Claws
Violent Vest
Violent Village

Wandering Widow
Wary Wildcatter
Watery Witness
Waylaid Wolf
Wayward Wife
Weary Watchdog
Wednesday Woman
Wintry Wife
Witless Witness
Woeful Widower
Wooden Nickels
Wrathful Wraith
Wrongful Writ

Breck as Clay Culhane with Anna-Lisa as Nora Travers in Black Saddle (1959)
Born
March 13, 1929
DiedFebruary 6, 2012 (aged 82)
Alma materUniversity of Houston
OccupationActor
Years active1956-2002
Spouse(s)Diane Breck
ChildrenChristopher Breck

Joseph Peter Breck (March 13, 1929 – February 6, 2012) was an American character actor. The rugged, dark-haired Breck played the gambler and gunfighterDoc Holliday on the ABC/Warner Bros. Television series Maverick as well as Victoria Barkley's (Barbara Stanwyck) hot-tempered, middle son Nick in the 1960s ABC/Four StarWestern, The Big Valley. Breck also had the starring role in an earlier NBC/Four Star Western television series entitled Black Saddle.

Early years[edit]

Joseph Peter Breck was born in Rochester, New York. He grew up living with his grandparents in Haverhill, Massachusetts, because they felt they could provide a more stable home environment than his father, who often traveled as a jazz musician. He attended the University of Houston, where he studied English and drama.[1]

Family[edit]

Breck was the son of bandleader Joe Breck, who was nicknamed 'The Prince of Pep', and whose band once included trombone player Jerry Colonna.[2] His parents divorced when Peter was eight. Peter went with Joe, while his younger brother George accompanied their mother, resulting in a decades-long separation.[2] In 1959 an Associated Press photograph showed the brothers reunited after being out of touch for 22 years. The caption explained: 'George told newsmen he saw Peter on television and recognized a resemblance. He went to the actor's studio and the relationship was confirmed.'[3]

Career[edit]

Early career[edit]

After post-World War II United States Navy service in the 1940s on the aircraft carrierUSS Franklin D. Roosevelt(CV-42), Breck played professional basketball for the Rochester Royals during the 1948-49 season. He then worked as a ranch hand while studying drama at the University of Houston, and went on to make his on-screen debut in a 1958 film that was eventually released under the title The Beatniks.

As well as performing in live theatre, Breck had several guest-starring roles on a number of popular series, such as Sea Hunt, several episodes of Wagon Train, Have Gun – Will Travel, Perry Mason and Gunsmoke. In 1956, he and David Janssen appeared in John Bromfield's syndicated series Sheriff of Cochise in the episode entitled 'The Turkey Farmers'. He appeared in another syndicated series too in the episode 'The Deserter' of the American Civil War drama Gray Ghost, with Tod Andrews in the title role.

When Robert Mitchum saw Breck in George Bernard Shaw's play The Man of Destiny in Washington, D.C., he offered Breck a role as a rival driver in Thunder Road (1958). Mitchum helped Breck to relocate to Los Angeles, California. As Breck then did not have his own car, Mitchum lent him his Jaguar.[4] Mitchum introduced Breck to Dick Powell who contracted him to Four Star Productions where Breck appeared in the CBS western anthology series, Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater.

Perry mason the case of the gambling lady imdb

Breck appeared with fellow guest star Diane Brewster in the 1958 episode 'The Lady Gambler' of the ABC western series, Tombstone Territory, starring Pat Conway and Richard Eastham. That same year, Breck appeared in an episode of the syndicated Highway Patrol, starring Broderick Crawford. He was also cast in an episode of NBC's The Restless Gun, starring John Payne. He appeared in a 1958 episode of 'Gunsmoke' playing the role of murder suspect, Hoyt Fly, a cowboy working a Texas cattle drive. That same year, Breck played the role of bad guy in an episode of Wagon Train, 'The Story of Tobias Jones', opposite Lou Costello.

From January 1959 to May 1960 Breck starred as Clay Culhane, the gunfighter-turned-lawyer in the ABC western Black Saddle, with secondary roles for Russell Johnson, Anna-Lisa, J. Pat O'Malley and Walter Burke. Unlike in The Big Valley, in which Breck played an easily angered rancher, he is low-key, restrained and considerate as the lawyer Culhane.

Breck was later a contract star with Warner Bros. Television, where he appeared as Doc Holliday on Maverick,[5] a part that had been played twice earlier in the series by Gerald Mohr and by Adam West on ABC's Lawman. Breck appeared in several other ABC/WB series of the time, such as Cheyenne, 77 Sunset Strip, The Roaring Twenties (as trumpet player Joe Peabody in the episode 'Big Town Blues'), and The Gallant Men. He was cast as a young Theodore Roosevelt in the 1961 episode 'The Yankee Tornado' of the ABC/WB Western series, Bronco, starring Ty Hardin. 'The Yankee Tornado' features Will Hutchins of the ABC/WB Western series Sugarfoot in a crossover appearance.[citation needed]

Breck's first starring role in a film was Lad, A Dog (1962).[6] The next year, he played the leading roles in both Samuel Fuller's Shock Corridor and the science fiction horror film The Crawling Hand. He also costarred in the cavalry movie, The Glory Guys. Between 1963 and 1965 Breck made three guest appearances on Perry Mason, including the roles of defendant William Sherwood in the 1964 episode, 'The Case of the Antic Angel', and defendant Peter Warren in the 1965 episode, 'The Case of the Gambling Lady'. During this time, he appeared on episodes of such television series as Mr. Novak, The Outer Limits, Bonanza[citation needed]and The Virginian.[7][8]

Breck claimed to have been considered for leads on two successful television series produced by Quinn MartinThe Fugitive (1963) and 12 O'Clock High (1964) with Breck commenting that 'If you are a leading man in Hollywood you either draw $250,000 like Steve McQueen or you had better be in a series'.[9]

The Big Valley[edit]

The Big Valley cast with Breck at far right

From 1965 to 1969, Breck starred on The Big Valley as Nick Barkley, foreman of the Barkley ranch and son to Barbara Stanwyck's character, Victoria Barkley. The second of four children, Nick was hotheaded, short-tempered, and very fast with a gun. Always spoiling for a fight and frequently wearing leather gloves, Breck's character took the slightest offense to the Barkley name personally and quickly made his displeasure known, as often with his fists as with his vociferous shouts. Often this proved to be a mistake and only through the calming influence of his mother and cooler-headed siblings, Jarrod (Richard Long), half-brother Heath (Lee Majors), sister Audra (Linda Evans) and Eugene (Charles Briles; written out after season 1 when he was drafted into the Army), would a difficult situation be rectified. Having been a Barbara Stanwyck admirer since the 1940s, when he was a teenager, Breck developed an on- and off-screen chemistry with her, practicing longer lines and even being a ranch foreman on the set. After the series was canceled, he stayed close to her until her death.

After The Big Valley[edit]

In 1970 he appeared as Lafe Harkness on the TV western 'The Men From Shiloh' (rebranded name for The Virginian) in the episode titled 'Hannah.' Most of his roles in the 1970s and 1980s were television guest-starring performances on such series as Alias Smith and Jones, Mission: Impossible, McMillan & Wife, S.W.A.T., The Six Million Dollar Man (again with Lee Majors), The Incredible Hulk and The Dukes of Hazzard, as well as roles as himself on Fantasy Island, and The Fall Guy which also starred former television 'brother' Lee Majors.

In the mid-1980s, Breck moved to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, with his wife Diane and their son, Christopher. He was asked by a casting director to teach a weekly class to young actors on film technique. That once-a-week class became a full-time acting school - The Breck Academy - which he operated for 10 years. In 1990, Breck appeared in the Canadian cult film Terminal City Ricochet.

On January 20, 1990, while teaching at the drama school, Breck was notified of Barbara Stanwyck's death. She requested no funeral nor memorial.

In 1991, he appeared as Sham-Ir, the chief of all genies, in the NBC-TV movie special I Still Dream of Jeannie, the second reunion film which reunited I Dream of Jeannie TV series co-stars Barbara Eden and Bill Daily, along with Al Waxman and Ken Kercheval.

In the movie The Unnamable II: The Statement of Randolph Carter (1993), Breck played Sheriff Hatch.

In 1996, he appeared in an episode of the new version of The Outer Limits.

Breck provided the voice of Farmer Brown in 'Critters', a 1998 episode of The New Batman Adventures.[10]

His last television performance was on an episode of John Doe in 2002. Prior to his death, most of his film performances have been in undistributed films that are shown only at film festivals.

Personal life[edit]

Perry Mason The Case Of The Gambling Lady Imdb List

Breck married dancer Diane Bourne in 1960.[note 1] They had a son, Christopher, who died of leukemia.[1]

Death[edit]

In June 2010 Breck's wife Diane announced on his website that the actor had been suffering from dementia and could no longer sign autographs for fans, although she said that he still read and enjoyed their letters. Despite this diagnosis, she said he was still physically healthy and did not require medication.[11]

Thereafter, Diane Breck reported that her husband was hospitalised on January 10, 2012. On February 6, 2012 Peter Breck died from his illness at the age of 82[12] in Vancouver, British Columbia.[1]

Partial filmography[edit]

  • Thunder Road (1958) - Stacey Gouge (uncredited)
  • The Beatniks (1958, released in 1960) - Mooney
  • I Want to Live! (1958) - Ben Miranda (uncredited)
  • The Wild and the Innocent (1959) - Chip
  • Portrait of a Mobster (1961) - Frank Brennan
  • Lad, A Dog (1962) - Stephen Tremayne
  • Hootenanny Hoot (1963) - Ted Grover
  • The Crawling Hand (1963) - Steve Curan
  • Shock Corridor (1963) - Johnny Barrett
  • The Virginian, episode 'Rope of Lies' (1964) - Jess Carver
  • The Glory Guys (1965) - Lt. Bunny Hodges
  • Benji (1974) - Dr. Chapman
  • The Incredible Hulk (1980) - Hull
  • The Dukes of Hazzard (1981)- J.J. Sunday
  • The Sword and the Sorcerer (1982) - King Leonidas
  • Terminal City Ricochet (1990) - Ross Glimore
  • Highway 61 (1991) - Mr. Watson
  • The Unnamable II: The Statement of Randolph Carter (1992) - Sheriff Hatch
  • Decoy (1995) - Wellington
  • Lulu (1996)
  • Enemy Action (1999) - Gen. Turner
  • Jiminy Glick in Lalawood (2004) - Tibor

Notes[edit]

  1. ^Breck's obituary in The New York Times incorrectly gave his wife's name as Diana rather than Diane.

References[edit]

Perry Mason The Case Of The Gambling Lady Imdb Free

  1. ^ abcGates, Anita (February 10, 2012). 'Peter Breck, TV Actor Known for 'The Big Valley,' Dies at 82'. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 17 July 2017. Retrieved 17 July 2017.
  2. ^ abThomas, Bob (March 7, 1959). 'TV Star Peter Breck Finds Brother After 22 Years Separation'. Newport Daily News. p. 6. Retrieved April 21, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^'TV Star and Brother Reunited'. The Morning Herald. March 7, 1959. p. 12. Retrieved April 21, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^http://www.peterbreck.ca/introduction.htm
  5. ^Barnes, Mike (February 10, 2012). ''Big Valley' star Peter Breck Dies at 82'. The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 17 July 2017. Retrieved July 17, 2017.
  6. ^'Lad: A Dog (1962)'. Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved October 22, 2009.
  7. ^https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0741024/
  8. ^https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0740968/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
  9. ^Crosby, Joan. 'Warner Bros Can't Afford Peter Breck', Ocala Star Banner (pg. 12), July 26, 1965.
  10. ^Ethan Minovitz, Ethan (12 February 2012). 'Peter Breck, Nick in 'The Big Valley,' dead at 82'. Big Cartoon News. Archived from the original on 10 December 2012. Retrieved 12 February 2012.
  11. ^Breck, Diane. 'June 2, 2010 Update'. The Official Peter Breck Website. Aithra Productions Ltd. Retrieved 2010-07-11.
  12. ^Barnes, Mike. ''Big Valley' star Peter Breck Dies at 82'. The Hollywood Reporter.

External links[edit]

  • Peter Breck on IMDb
  • Peter Breck at AllMovie

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