R.C.M.P. | |
---|---|
Genre | Crime drama |
Created by | F. R. Crawley |
Starring | Gilles Pelletier Don Francks John Perkins |
Theme music composer | Bill McCauley |
Country of origin | Canada United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 39 |
Production | |
Executive producer | F. R. Crawley |
Producers | Harry Horner Bernard Girard |
Running time | 30 mins. |
Production companies | Crawley Films CBC BBC Australian Broadcasting Commission |
Original release | |
Network | CBC |
Release | 28 October 1959 – 19 October 1960 |
R.C.M.P. was a Canadian television drama series about the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The series ran a single season, consisting of 39 weekly half-hour episodes that aired from 28 October 1959 to 19 October 1960 on CBC.
Cast
The series starred French-Canadian actor Gilles Pelletier as Corporal Jacques Gagnier, who was in charge of the rural northern Shamattaw station. English-Canadian actor Don Francks played Constable Bill Mitchell, and American actor John Perkins played Constable Frank Scott.[1]
Actors in supporting roles were Hugh Webster, Murray Westgate, Robert Christie, James Doohan, John Drainie, Katherine Blake, and Alfie Scopp.[2] A nine-member indigenous family, from a grandmother to an infant, were flown in from the Hudson Bay area to appear in some episodes.[1]
Cooperation of Royal Canadian Mounted Police
The series had the cooperation of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and the producers were allowed access to their case files. Charles Rivett-Carnac, who had 36 years of active service before being appointed as RCMP commissioner, worked closely with the producers.[1]
Earl Rettig, the president of NBC division California National Productions, which syndicated R.C.M.P. in the United States, stated "Hollywood motion pictures and television producers for years have been negotiating in vain for a working agreement with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. This is why CNP feels very fortunate in having secured rights to the series."[3]
Production
The series was created by Canadian film-maker Radford Crawley in collaboration with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the BBC and the Australian Broadcasting Commission.[4] It was shot on a new soundstage at Old Chelsea, a community of Chelsea, Quebec, and on location in Aylmer, Quebec and Outlook, Saskatchewan.[2] The series took place in the fictional western Canadian town of Shamattawa, a Cree name meaning 'the meeting of the rivers'.[5]
The main writers for the series were George Salverson, Munroe Scott and Vincent Tilsley of the BBC, who also acted as script editor. Music was composed by William McCauley.[2] The CBC aired the series at a cost of $8,000 per episode, and the BBC paid $10,000 per episode.[2]
The series had a budget of $1,400,000, and took a year to film. The producers bought an old airplane without wings, and mounted it in a field. When there wasn’t enough natural snow, snow was shoveled in front of the airplane’s engine to produce a blizzard effect. Special heaters were used outdoors to keep the cameras operating in freezing weather.[1]
R.C.M.P. was realistic in portraying small-town Canadian life, and often had the look of a documentary.[4] The series used the characters’ rural isolation, the changing weather conditions, and the cultural differences between whites and natives as focal points for episode stories.[2]
Crawley had hoped to sell the series to a United States television network, and was disappointed with needing to settle for less profitable syndication status, but the American television networks weren't interested in buying a foreign series unless they were involved in its production. Though Crawley had hired Hollywood-based Bernard Girard as head of production, that did not satisfy the U.S. networks, who wanted more control over the series they broadcast,[4] so the series was syndicated to United States television stations.[2]
Episodes
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Crash on 21" | Harry Horner | George Salverson | 28 October 1959 | |
Corporal Jacques Gagnier risks his life to help a man trapped in his overturned gasoline tanker. | |||||
2 | "Poison Pen" | George Gorman | George Salverson | 4 November 1959 | |
An anonymous letter writer creates fear and distrust among the people of Shamattawa. Corporal Gagnier investigates. | |||||
3 | "The Accused" | Harry Horner | George Salverson | 11 November 1959 | |
Constable Frank Scott is accused of assaulting one of Shamattawa’s leading citizens. | |||||
4 | "Husband Trouble" | George Gorman | Vincent Tilsley | 18 November 1959 | |
Vera Cord’s evidence sent her husband to jail. Now he’s being released, and she fears revenge. | |||||
5 | "The Ten-Mile Tombstone" | George Gorman | Vincent Tilsley | 25 November 1959 | |
Townspeople are suspicious when Stephen Ford buys an expensive headstone for his wife’s grave, because everyone knows she made his life miserable. | |||||
6 | "David and Goliath" | Don Haldane | Munroe Scott | 2 December 1959 | |
Constable Mitchell disguises himself as a beatnik to convict a narcotics peddler. | |||||
7 | "The Smiling People" | Bernard Girard | George Salverson | 9 December 1959 | |
An Eskimo woman is charged with murder, and a plane carrying the basic requirements for a British court hearing arrives at Seal Bay in the Arctic. | |||||
8 | "The Safeman Cometh" | Harry Horner | George Salverson | 16 December 1959 | |
A safecracker has been working his way across Ontario, and Constable Mitchell states that the man will come to Shamattawa. | |||||
9 | "Little Girl Lost" | Fergus McDonell | Vincent Tilsley | 23 December 1959 | |
Gerta and Bart are having marital problems, and are using their young daughter as a weapon against each other. | |||||
10 | "The Replacement" | Bernard Girard | Bernard Girard | 30 December 1959 | |
While tracking a killer Corporal Gagnier becomes involved with the troubles of a murdered constable’s widow. | |||||
11 | "Gunslinger" | George Gorman | Bernard Girard | 6 January 1960 | |
The teenage son of an abusive father wants a Wild West gunfight on the main street of Shamattawa at high noon. | |||||
12 | "The Counterfeiter" | George Gorman | George Salverson | 13 January 1960 | |
When Allison Andrews comes to Shamattawa Corporal Gagnier receives a marriage proposal. | |||||
13 | "Bad Medicine" | Don Haldane | George Salverson | 20 January 1960 | |
On a visit to trappers near Muskrat River Corporal Gagnier discovers two criminals hiding out in a cabin. | |||||
14 | "Three Big Men" | Don Haldane | Vincent Tilsley | 10 February 1960 | |
Corporal Gagnier tries to find out why three gangsters have come to Shamattaw. | |||||
15 | "Trackdown" | Fergus McDonell | George Salverson | 17 February 1960 | |
When Corporal Gagnier tries to locate a missing priest he discovers a murderer. | |||||
16 | "Johnny Wolf" | Paul Almond | George Salverson | 24 February 1960 | |
Johnny Wolf’s father had been an artist and a war hero. Why had Johnny turned violent? | |||||
17 | "The Marked Man" | Paul Almond | Munroe Scott | 2 March 1960 | |
The owner of a paper mill has had several bad accidents. Corporal Gagnier attempts to find out what’s happening at the mill. | |||||
18 | "The Hunt" | George Gorman | Vincent Tilsley | 16 March 1960 | |
When Corporal Gagnier investigates the theft of a truck the investigation takes an unusual turn. | |||||
19 | "Tourist Bait" | Harry Horner | Munroe Scott | 23 March 1960 | |
Well-armed bank robbers arrive in Shamattawa. They are looting the vault when Constable Scott walks into the bank. | |||||
20 | "Moonshine" | Bernard Girard | Munroe Scott | 30 March 1960 | |
Constable Scott is sent to an Indian Reserve to investigate illegal alcohol and discovers a murder. | |||||
21 | "The Extortionist" | Don Haldane | Vincent Tilsley | 6 April 1960 | |
Matthew Standing took the law into his own hands when an extortionist threatened his family. Corporal Gagnier knows one of the jury members at Standing’s trial is the extortionist. | |||||
22 | "The Longest Week of the Year" | George Gorman | Bernard Girard | 13 April 1960 | |
A trapper is caught in a blizzard with a frozen foot. When his family report him missing Gagnier and Scott travel by dog sled to rescue him. | |||||
23 | "Number Thirty Four" | George Gorman | Vincent Tilsley | 20 April 1960 | |
Jack Reardon is convinced everyone is against him and decides to protect himself with a rifle. | |||||
24 | "Back to School" | George Gorman | Vincent Tilsley | 27 April 1960 | |
Corporal Gagnier attends a refresher training course in Ottawa. Before the course is over he is warned about breaking regulations. | |||||
25 | "Target For the Law" | George Gorman | Munroe Scott | 4 May 1960 | |
A man whose wife plans to divorce him is threatened by the man she wants to marry. The husband is then found shot to death. | |||||
26 | "Killer Instinct" | Don Haldane | George Salverson | 11 May 1960 | |
Dave Pickett, a paroled convict, is afraid his instinct to kill will overpower him again. His parole officer, Corporal Gagnier, tries to help. | |||||
27 | "The Gentle Executioner" | George Gorman | George Salverson | 18 May 1960 | |
A case of arsenic poisoning comes to the attention of Corporal Gagnier. | |||||
28 | "Day of Reckoning" | Fergus McDonell | Vincent Tilsley | 25 May 1960 | |
Ruth Hopwood is attacked on her way home and her family is sure Tony Fletcher is the guilty party, even though Ruth denies it. Her family threatens to take the law into their own hands when the RCMP won’t arrest Tony. | |||||
29 | "Violence at the Wedding" | George Gorman | George Salverson | 1 June 1960 | |
A former suitor of the bride brings bootleg liquor to the wedding reception that Gagnier is attending. | |||||
30 | "Battle of the Innocents" | Don Haldane | George Salverson | 8 June 1960 | |
When Boomer Jackson kills his wife Corporal Gagnier tries to arrest him. | |||||
31 | "The Haystack Murder" | Bernard Girard | George Salverson | 15 June 1960 | |
A haystack catches fire and a charred body is found. Corporal Gagnier investigates and finds a second body. | |||||
32 | "Thin Ice" | George Gorman | Vincent TIsley | 13 June 1960 | |
Gagnier and Scott go after bank robber Paul Donnelly. The trail leads them over a frozen lake. | |||||
33 | "Storm O’Brien" | Bernard Girard | Munroe Scott | 24 August 1960 | |
Corporal Gagnier must perform an operation while a doctor gives instructions over the telephone. | |||||
34 | "Breakout" | Don Haldane | Charles E. Israel | 31 August 1960 | |
Convict Pete Mallory breaks out of jail. | |||||
35 | "The Third Question" | Bernard Girard | Charles W. Curran and Bernard Girard | 14 September 1960 | |
Money is missing from the church mission collection box, and a little boy can’t be found. | |||||
36 | "Mop-Up" | George Gorman | Bernard Girard | 21 September 1960 | |
A typical day at the Shamattawa RCMP detachment — a stolen police car, a wife-beater, a lost car, bad checks, and bones under a bed. | |||||
37 | "Shotgun Lady" | Don Haldane | George Salverson | 5 October 1960 | |
Elderly Ann Gowley welcomes all visitors by firing shots and hurling threats. | |||||
38 | "The Rustler" | Paul Almond | George Salverson | 12 October 1960 | |
The cattle belt of Saskatchewan is plagued by cattle rustling. | |||||
39 | "Piggy-Bank Robbery" | George Gorman | Alan Phillips | 19 October 1960 | |
Constable Scott wonders why a thief stole only a piggy bank from a wealthy home. |
Broadcast
The series aired on CBC in Canada, premiering on 28 October 1959, and airing its finale episode on 19 October 1960. In the United Kingdom, the series aired on BBC beginning in July 1960.[3] In the United States the series aired in broadcast syndication.[4]
R.C.M.P. was dubbed into the French, Spanish, Italian and German languages, and was broadcast is numerous European and South American countries.[3]
References
- 1 2 3 4 The Long (Red) Arm of the Law, TV Guide, March 18, 1961, pages 8 - 11
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Allan, Blaine, Directory of CBC Television Series, 1952 - 1982, Queen's University, 1996
- 1 2 3 U.S. TV Getting 'RCMP', Ottawa Citizen, April 27, 1960, page 7
- 1 2 3 4 Remembering the R.C.M.P TV series
- ↑ Barrett, Cindy, Seeking a New Direction, Maclean’s, February 2, 1987
External links
- R.C.M.P. at IMDb
- R.C.M.P. at the Classic TV Archive
- R.C.M.P. at Canadian Communication Foundation