The Beachcomber (TV series)
This article is about the 1960s TV series. For the similarly titled Canadian series of the 1970s-90s, see The Beachcombers.
The Beachcomber | |
---|---|
Also known as | Mystery Adventure: The Beachcomber |
Genre | Adventure |
Created by | Walter Newman |
Written by | Robert Sabaroff |
Starring |
Cameron Mitchell Don Megowan Sebastian Cabot Santy Josol |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 39 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Robert Stambler |
Producer(s) | Nat Perrin |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company(s) | Incorporated Television Company |
Release | |
Original release | 20 February – 13 November 1962 |
The Beachcomber was an ITC Entertainment adventure TV series which ran for one series of 39 half-hour episodes in 1962.
Narrated by Cameron Mitchell, the series followed a rich executive who retired from the rat-race to become a beachcomber on a small South Pacific island.
Main cast
- Cameron Mitchell as John Lackland
- Don Megowan as Captain Huckabee
- Sebastian Cabot as Commissioner Andrew Crippen
- Bill Hess as Alfy
- George Mitchell as the Reverend Snow
- Joan Staley as Linda
- Jerry Summers as Tarmu
Guest stars in the series included Adam West, Frank Silvera and Cesar Romero
Episode list
- The Brooch
- The Shark Affair
- Pat Hand
- The Hijackers
- Forbidden Island
- The Chase
- Captain Huckabee's Beard
- The Taming of Andrew
- Death Do Us Part
- The Larcenous Lover
- Girl in Hiding
- Honor Bound
- Tambu
- The Black Pearl
- Charlie Six Kids
- Empty Village
- The Floating Fortune
- Honest Larceny
- Neilani
- Mr. Winters
- Rongorongo Man
- The Day of the Whale
- The Fugitive
- The Mask of Talugi
- Home to Roost
- Devil in Paradise
- The Reward
- Tribal Law
- Flight to Freedom
- Long Live the Sultan
- The Prodigal Pretender
- The Spaniard
- Man with a Guitar
- The Ransom
- The Search for Robert Herrick
- The Two-Sided Triangle
- A Rooster Named Red
- Roll of Thunder
- Paradise Lost
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.