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Cozy Mystery (and Other Favorite) Books, Movies, and TV

Mapp and Lucia Miniseries … Definitely Cozy, Not Mystery…

July 22, 2007

What can I say? I know that I have mentioned (more than once!) E. F. Benson’s charming series about Lucia… and her nemesis, Mapp. Yes, “nemesis” sounds rather harsh, but “rival” might be too gentle a word! These two women vie for the highest social ranking of the village, and all of that is done with outward smiles and nods of the head. Although the series is not a cozy mystery, it is about as cozy a series of books or television shows as you will ever find.

To our great fortune, Great Britain gave us this wonderful television series back in 1985… Mapp and Lucia, Series 1. These made-for-television shows have three of Great Britain’s very best of “the best actors”: Geraldine McEwan, Prunella Scales, and Nigel Hawthorne. Some of you may recognize Geraldine McEwan from the recent Agatha Christie’s Marple, Carrie’s War and Barchester Chronicles. Once you see her as Lucia, you will probably always see a glint of Lucia in every roll she masters.  Prunella Scales was wonderful as the long-suffering wife on Fawlty Towers. And, Yes, Minister and Yes, Prime Minister, as well as The Madness of King George would not have been possible without the acting talents of Nigel Hawthorne .

The series takes place in the late 1920s, in a small village, where there can only be one lady supreme. Tilling is an idyllic setting, and until Lucia arrives, Miss Mapp has been able to control the comings and goings of all the village’s inhabitants. Unfortunately for Miss Mapp, Lucia arrives like a tornado, bringing Georgie (Georgino mio!) with her, and as the viewer soon finds out, Lucia is not going to allow the town’s current hierarchy to remain the same… Lucia will reign!

The books, as well as the shows, involve characters… there isn’t a lot of action. The shows take place in a quaint seaside  village, with ordinary people, many of whom apparently live on family inheritances, leaving their entire days and nights free to pursue social activities. The show is not meant to teach us a moral lesson, inform us about tough philosophical questions, or solve all of life’s problems. It is simply a show that makes us smile, or in some cases laugh. I have watched the shows several times, and will certainly watch them again.

If you are interested in watching these show, I definitely recommend watching them in their correct order. Mapp and Lucia, Series 2 is from 1986, and this series continues the daily lives of the Tilling inhabitants. As delightful as these television shows are, I hope that they get people to start reading E. F. Benson’s novels. The books surpass this wonderful television series… and that’s saying a lot!

(Be forewarned, though… If you are planning on reading the novels, these delightful television movies don’t take place until the fourth book of Benson’s series. My guess is that when they were making the movies/shows, they had to pick a specific time span, and the fourth book is the one that actually gets these two adversaries together.)

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NYPD Blue VS. Morse, Sherlock Holmes, Prime Suspect

July 20, 2007

OK… First things first… I have to admit that I never got on the NYPD Blue bandwagon. I definitely tried, but I just couldn’t quite "get the show" the way other people were… One of my good cozy mystery reading friends absolutely loved the show, so I tried to like it on different occasions. Try as I did, I just didn’t "get it."

So, after I finished the Edgar’s’ Best Television Episode Awards, I was left with some doubts as to my taste in television mystery shows.

In 1996, NYPD Blue beat out Rumpole of the Bailey (YES>>>John Mortimer’s classic Rumpole show!!!), Sherlock Holmes (YES>>> the one with Jeremy Brett!!!), and Prime Suspect (YES>>> Helen Mirren’s glorious detective show!!!)

Previously (1994), NYPD Blue beat the Inspector Morse show. Need I describe that show to anyone? I mean, is there anyone who hasn’t seen the great portrayal of John Thaw as Endeavour Morse!?! 

After seeing just how well NYPD Blue did with the prestigious Edgars, I think that there are only two things that I can say:

1)  Tell me it ain’t so!

2)  I will have to try to watch NYPD Blue again…  It must be one heck of a terrific show if it was considered better than all of the above-mentioned great shows!

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The Edgars Television Awards… Just How Old Do You Feel!?!?

July 19, 2007

I posted the Edgar Awards’ Best Episode for a Television Series winners and nominees a few days ago, and  BOY, do I feel old!

The following lists of television shows were amongst the winners and nominees. (I know that there were many other shows, but for the purposes of this blog, I only used some of the Edgar winning and nominated shows.)  

Some of these shows actually bring a smile to my face… I haven’t thought of them in so many years, and they invoke great memories of playing outside, choosing a favorite character to be for that particular, care-free, imaginative play time… Back when it was safe enough to go outside to run around and play all day, with a mere "See you later, Mom." and the "Be back for dinner." response. (I mean, didn’t everybody "dibs" being Honey West?!?!)

Let’s see how far back you go!  On your mark… Get set… Enjoy your own favorite memories…

The 1990s brought us such mystery shows as: 
     Prime Suspect
     Inspector Morse
     Silent Witness
     Rumpole
     Sherlock Holmes
     Hercule Poirot
     Quantum Leap
     Law and Order
     The Practice
     The X-Files
     The Commish
     Picket Fences
     Murder, She Wrote
     L. A. Law
     Simon and Simon
     NYPD Blue
The 1980s brought us mystery shows that included:
     The Return of Sherlock Holmes
     Rumpole (Yes, again…)
     P. D. James’ Adam Dalgliesh
     Simon and Simon (Another show that went on to the 1990s list)
     Cagney and Lacey
     Moonlighting
     Murder, She Wrote (Jessica was also busy in the 1990s!)
     Matlock
     The New Mike Hammer
     Remington Steele
     Quincy
     Magnum, P. I.
     Lou Grant
     Hill Street Blues
     Matt Houston
     Wiseguy
     Miami Vice
The 1970s’ mystery shows (and I have to admit… I remember them very well!) included:
     Columbo
     Quincy
     Rockford Files
     Streets of San Francisco
     Kojak
     Vega$
     Baretta
     Police Story
     Policewoman
     Hawaii Five-O
     McCloud
     Mannix
     Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law
     Toma
     Mod Squad
     Petrocelli
     Rod Serling’s Night Galery
     ABC Movie of the Week
     NBC Movie of the Week
The 1960s:  (Hmmm… maybe I only remember these in recent reruns!)
     Judd for Defense
     Mission: Impossible 
     Alfred Hitchcock Presents 
      I, Spy
     Honey West  
     The Fugitive 
     The Defenders
     Dupont Show of the Week
     Kraft Suspense Hour and Kraft Mystery Theatre 
     Dow Hour of Great Mysteries 
     Bob Hope Presents
The 1950s: (Now I KNOW I wouldn’t have remembered Dragnet without the benefit of reruns!)
     Dragnet
     Studio One
     Alcoa Hour
     Elgin Hour
     Playhouse 90 
    

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Agatha Christie's Marple… (with Geraldine McEwan)

July 17, 2007

Just recently, one of my very favorite actresses took a stab at portraying one of the most famous cozy mystery characters of all time… Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple. Geraldine McEwan (the particular actress) brings a fresh portrayal of Miss Marple with almost the same mischievous glint in her expressive eyes as she displayed while portraying E. F. Benson’s Lucia. (That last sentence will probably only make sense to those of you who have been lucky enough to see the first season of Mapp and Lucia… another cozy, although not a mystery, production.)

In 2005, Great Britain (a Granada production) gave us yet another wonderful “television event.” For the purposes of this review, I will refer to these shows as the “Miss Marple”series… Yes, I know that before McEwan we had Margaret Rutherford, Helen Hayes, and Joan Hickson, amongst several other actress who portrayed Miss Jane Marple, but for the purposes of this blog, McEwan is Miss Marple.

Hmmm… “McEwan is Miss Marple.”

I have read reviews that state… essentially… that McEwan is NOT Miss Marple. I have to say that I strongly disagree. I think that McEwan puts into the Miss Marple character the same patient grace that she seems most capable of conveying. She is able to smile demurely while delivering a quick-witted come-back which her targeted person thinks is simply an observation. She is absolutely delightful as Miss Marple. So delightful, that I can imagine Agatha Christie saying “Yes, by gosh, she’s got it!”

As usual, we get the beautiful backdrop of quaint villages, whether they are Miss Marple’s very own St. Mary Mead, or another locale where Miss Marple is visiting. We have all of the obligatory eccentric characters and the gorgeous wardrobe is of course, authentic to the period. The series delivers just what we expect from the PBS imported British “Mystery! programmes.”

Series 1 includes: The Murder at the Vicarage (1930), with another one of my very favorite “British exports”… Sir Derek Jacobi. And, for all of you Ballykissangel fans out there… You will be delighted to see your favorite priest (Stephen Tomkinson) as the police inspector, who as usual, sees beyond Miss Marple’s elderly lady façade. Also presented in series one are: The Body in the Library (1942) with the phenomenal Joanna Lumley, A Murder is Announced (1950), and 4:50 from Paddington (1957), which all of you Christie fans might know as What Mrs. McGillicuddy Saw!

Series 2 includes: Sleeping Murder (1976), By the Pricking of My Thumbs (1968), The Moving Finger (1943), and  The Sittaford Mystery (1931) I have to admit that I did not care for By the Pricking of my Thumbs at all. Miss Marple seems totally superfluous in this Tommy and Tuppence “movie.” And, since I never cared for that particular Christie series, it stands to reason that I didn’t like this show. I felt like McEwan’s talents were being wasted by having her play second fiddle to an alcoholic Tuppence.

Series 3 includes: Towards Zero (1944), Nemesis (1971, At Bertram’s Hotel (1965), and Ordeal by Innocence (1958). While I haven’t seen the third season of these shows, I am a little concerned that Ordeal by Innocence and Towards Zero are not Miss Marple books. I sure hope that Miss Marple isn’t again used as a secondary character as she was in the second season’s By the Pricking of My Thumbs!

All in all, if you are looking for a really fun time, these “movies” might be exactly what you want!

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