Nº
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Title
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Directed by:
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Written by:
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Air date
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1 | "Over Defence Is Out" | Stuart Rosenberg | Richard Alan Simmons | September 18, 1965 (1965-09-18) |
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O'Brien represents a client who was charged with murder after being released from prison. Guest star: Vincent Gardenia |
2 | "Bargain Day on the Street of Regret" | Bernard L. Kowalski | Irving Gaynor Neiman | September 25, 1965 (1965-09-25) |
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After winning a boxer in a dice game, O'Brien must defend him when he is charged in a fatal stabbing. Guest stars: Herschel Bernardi and Robert Blake. |
3 | "Notes on a Spanish Prisoner" | Stuart Rosenberg | Harold Gast | October 2, 1965 (1965-10-02) |
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A bunco artist (Buddy Hackett) is defended by O'Brien after he is conned out of money by his girlfriend. |
4 | "Never Bet on Anything That Talks" | Robert Gist | Robert van Scoyk | October 9, 1965 (1965-10-09) |
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O'Brien's English bookie is charged in the death of an accountant, but the person who can clear him is nowhere to be found. |
5 | "What Can Go Wrong" | Lamont Johnson | Irving Gaynor Neiman | October 16, 1965 (1965-10-16) |
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After discovering that a man is dating his ex-wife (Joanna Barnes), O'Brien delightedly sets him up as a "pigeon" in order to trap a killer. Guest stars: Roger Moore and Michael Constantine. |
6 | "Goodbye and Keep Cool" | James Sheldon | Gene Wang | October 23, 1965 (1965-10-23) |
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A woman (Cloris Leachman) is accused of murdering her husband, and retains O'Brien to defend her. Guest star: Robert Loggia. |
7 | "A Gaggle of Girls" | Stuart Rosenberg | Robert J. Crean | October 30, 1965 (1965-10-30) |
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O'Brien is retained by a Mother Superior in order to persuade the owner of an adjoining cafe to permit St. Anthony's Youth Center to use its garden. |
8 | "The Trouble with Archie" | Bernard L. Kowalski | George Bellak | November 6, 1965 (1965-11-06) |
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O'Brien investigates the death of a partner in the Seventh Avenue Dress House where his ex-wife works. Guest stars: Lou Jacobi, Theodore Bikel, Simon Oakland and Alice Ghostley. |
9 | "How Do You Get to Carnegie Hall?" | Robert Gist | George Bellak | November 13, 1965 (1965-11-13) |
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A "heist artist" who is accused of fatally stabbing a dealer of rare violins is defended by O'Brien. Guest stars: Norman Fell, Dana Elcar, Kurt Kasznar, Frank Langella, and former boxer Jake LaMotta. |
10 | "Charlie's Got All the Luck" | Tom Gries | Heywood Peters | November 20, 1965 (1965-11-20) |
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While being bugged by his ex-wife to sign the lease on her luxurious apartment, O'Brien must defend a client involved in a fatal shooting that follows a fixed horse race. Guest stars: Martin Sheen, Tony Roberts, and Philip Bosco. |
11 | "Picture Me a Murder" | Lawrence Dobkin | George Bellak | November 27, 1965 (1965-11-27) |
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O'Brien represents a movie producer (Alan Alda) who was charged with resisting arrest while filming an "underground" movie. Guest stars: Claude Akins, Charles Grodin, Jessica Walter, and Joanna Pettet. |
12 | "Dead End on Flugel Street" | Paul Bogart | Robert van Scoyk | December 3, 1965 (1965-12-03) |
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A burlesque comedian (Milton Berle) is involved in murder when his straight man is killed after making advances on the comedian's wife. |
13 | "No Justice for the Judge" | Abner Biberman | David Ellis | December 10, 1965 (1965-12-10) |
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An eccentric judge (Burgess Meredith) engages O'Brien to represent him on charges of mental disability that could remove him from the bench. Guest stars: Robert Emhardt, Barnard Hughes, and Ken Kercheval. |
14 | "Leave It to Me" | Paul Bogart | Philip H. Reisman Jr. | December 17, 1965 (1965-12-17) |
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O'Brien tries to have a will declared invalid before three greedy heirs (Angela Lansbury, George Rose and Thayer David) kill each other in a house that's booby-trapped from cellar to attic. |
15 | "Alarums and Excursions" | Richard C. Sarafian | Robert J. Crean | January 7, 1966 (1966-01-07) |
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A foster father (John McGiver), who is content to keep collecting welfare checks, hires O'Brien to keep seven children with him after an adoption judge takes the youths away from him. |
16 | "The 10-Foot, 6-Inch Pole" | Stuart Rosenberg | Don Mankiewicz | January 14, 1966 (1966-01-14) |
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O'Brien charges that an assistant district attorney (Murray Hamilton) failed to prosecute a broker (Albert Paulsen) in the death of an accountant. |
17 | "A Horse Called Destiny" | Abner Biberman | Robert van Scoyk | January 21, 1966 (1966-01-21) |
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O'Brien represents a spiritualist in the murder of a wealthy client whose death he has predicted. |
18 | "The Blue Steel Suite" | * | David Ellis | January 28, 1966 (1966-01-28) |
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Held as a hostage in a jail break, O'Brien is asked to take a prisoner's complaints to the public. |
19 | "The Partridge Papers" | Lawrence Dobkin | George Bellak | February 4, 1966 (1966-02-04) |
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O'Brien is forced to operate out of a hospital, after suffering a broken leg in a hit-and-run accident. Writer James Partridge, who was with him at the time of the accident, thinks the "accident" was meant for him, based on his work for British Intelligence. |
20 | "The Greatest Game: Part 1" | Abner Biberman | George Bellak | March 4, 1966 (1966-03-04) |
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A Balkan girl (Britt Eklund) steals the Viktor Emblem, a jewel-encrusted egg from a national shrine, and O'Brien is retained to negotiate for its return. |
21 | "The Greatest Game: Part 2" | Abner Biberman | George Bellak | March 11, 1966 (1966-03-11) |
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O'Brien's negotiations for the Viktor Emblem get more complicated when the person holding it has his life threatened.
NOTE: This two part episode was recut into "Too Many Thieves," a 1967 theatrical release. |
22 | "The Only Game in Town" | * | Robert van Scoyk | March 18, 1966 (1966-03-18) |
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Taking the bench as an interim judge on the New York Supreme Court, O'Brien deals with the case of a seaman (Alejandro Rey) accused of murdering a co-worker with a longshoreman's hook. Gene Hackman plays the prosecutor in the case. |