The New Adventures of Charlie Chan explained

Genre:Crime drama
Director:Leslie Arliss
Charles Bennett
Don Chaffey
Charles F. Haas
Alvin Rakoff
Starring:J. Carrol Naish
James Hong
Composer:Emil Newman
Country:United States
United Kingdom
Language:English
Num Seasons:1
Num Episodes:39
Executive Producer:Leon Fromkess
Producer:Rudolph C. Flothow
Sidney Marshall
Camera:Single-camera
Runtime:25 mins.
Company:Vision Productions (episodes 1-5)
ITC Entertainment
Television Programs of America
Channel:Syndication

The New Adventures of Charlie Chan is a crime drama series that aired in the United States in syndicated television from June 1957 to 1958.[1] The first five episodes were made by Vision Productions in the United States, before production switched to the United Kingdom under ITC Entertainment and Television Programs of America.

Overview

The series, consisting of 39 half-hour monochrome episodes, follows the investigations of the fictional detective Charlie Chan, created by Earl Derr Biggers in 1925. The series follows the convention, established in the Charlie Chan films, of having the Asian character Chan played by a Western actor while his son(s) were played by actual Asians.

James Hong, who played Number One Son, said J. Carrol Naish had Hong fired from the show after Naish engaged in a racist outburst.[2] [3]

Cast

Main

Guest stars

Guest stars, most notably under ITC, include:

Episode list

Season 1

This list appears to be in production order. The first five episodes were filmed in the US by Vision, the remaining episodes in the UK by ITC.

  1. "Your Money or Your Wife"
  2. "Secret of the Sea"
  3. "The Lost Face"
  4. "Blind Man's Buff"
  5. "The Great Salvos"
  6. "The Counterfeiters"
  7. "The Death of a Don"
  8. "Charlie's Highland Fling"
  9. "The Patient in Room 21"
  10. "The Rajput Ruby"
  11. "The Final Curtain"
  12. "Death at High Tide"
  13. "The Circle of Fear"
  14. "An Exhibit in Wax"
  15. "Backfire"
  16. "Patron of the Arts"
  17. "A Hamlet in Flames"
  18. "Dateline: Execution"
  19. "The Sweater"
  20. "The Noble Art of Murder"
  21. "Three Men on a Raft"
  22. "No Holiday for Murder"
  23. "No Future for Frederick"
  24. "Safe Deposit"
  25. "Voodoo Death"
  26. "The Expatriate" (aka "Ex-Patriot")
  27. "The Airport Murder Case"
  28. "The Hand of Hera Dass"
  29. "The Chippendale Racket"
  30. "The Invalid"
  31. "The Man in the Wall"
  32. "Something Old, Something New"
  33. "The Man with 100 Faces"
  34. "The Point of No Return"
  35. "A Bowl By Cellini"
  36. "Without Fear"
  37. "Kidnap"
  38. "Rhyme or Treason"
  39. "Three for One"

Comic book

DC Comics published a six-issue comic adaptation from June 1958 to April 1959, written by John Broome and drawn by Sid Greene.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Brooks, Tim . Marsh, Earle F. . The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946-Present . Ballantine Books. 2007-10-17. 9. 969. 978-0-345-49773-4.
  2. CBS Sunday Morning, August 31, 2022
  3. News: James Hong: An actor's guide to longevity . 15 March 2023 . CBS News . January 22, 2022.
  4. Book: Cowsill . Alan . Irvine . Alex . Manning . Matthew K. . McAvennie . Michael . Wallace . Daniel . DC Comics Year By Year: A Visual Chronicle . 2019 . DK Publishing . 978-1-4654-8578-6 . 84.