The concept for
The Court of Last Resort
was developed from a popular
true crime
column of the same name. Written by lawyer-turned-author
Erle Stanley Gardner
, the column appeared in the monthly magazine
Argosy
for ten years beginning in September 1948.
[1]
Gardner enlisted assistance from police, private detectives, and other professional experts to examine the cases of dozens of convicts who maintained their innocence long after their appeals were exhausted.
[1]
The TV show centers on seven attorneys who take on the cases of wrongly accused or unjustly convicted defendants. Episodes dramatized various cases investigated by the Court from its inception through "the present". The members of the Court were portrayed by actors during the episode, but the actual members often appeared at the conclusion of the program, with one of them reflecting on the case that had just been dramatized.
The series aired October 4, 1957 ? April 11, 1958, on
NBC
[2]
:?336?
at 8 p.m. EST on Fridays. It was rebroadcast on
ABC
on Wednesdays from August 1959 to February 17, 1960.
[3]
The program was sponsored by the
P. Lorillard Company
, a cigarette manufacturer.
[4]
Joe De Santis
in "The Mary Morales Case" (March 21, 1958)
Episode #
|
Episode title
|
Original airdate
|
1-1
|
"The Gordon Wallace Case" (
pilot
)
|
October 4, 1957
|
1-2
|
"The Tomas Mendoza Case"
|
October 11, 1957
|
1-3
|
"The Forbes-Carroll Case"
|
October 18, 1957
|
1-4
|
"The Wesley Ferguson Case"
|
October 25, 1957
|
1-5
|
"The George Zaccho Case"
|
November 1, 1957
|
1-6
|
"The Karl Hooft Case"
|
November 8, 1957
|
1-7
|
"The Conrad Murray Case"
|
November 15, 1957
|
1-8
|
"The Darlene Fitzgerald Case"
|
November 22, 1957
|
1-9
|
"The James Dawson Case"
|
November 29, 1957
|
1-10
|
"The Clarence Redding Case"
|
December 6, 1957
|
1-11
|
"The Jim Thomson Case"
|
December 13, 1957
|
1-12
|
"The John Smith Case"
|
December 20, 1957
|
1-13
|
"The Westover Case"
|
January 3, 1958
|
1-14
|
"The Arnold McHugh Case"
|
January 10, 1958
|
1-15
|
"The Steve Hrdlika Case"
|
January 24, 1958
|
1-16
|
"The Phillip Huston Case"
|
January 31, 1958
|
1-17
|
"The Peter Stevens Case"
|
February 7, 1958
|
1-18
|
"The Lester Arnold Case"
|
February 14, 1958
|
1-19
|
"The Frank Clark Case"
|
February 21, 1958
|
1-20
|
"The Jacob Loveless Case"
|
February 28, 1958
|
1-21
|
"The Joe Credo Case"
|
March 7, 1958
|
1-22
|
"The Stephen Lowell Case"
|
March 14, 1958
|
1-23
|
"The Mary Morales Case"
|
March 21, 1958
|
1-24
|
"The Joel Sheldon Case"
|
March 28, 1958
|
1-25
|
"The Todd-Loomis Case"
|
April 4, 1958
|
1-26
|
"The Allen Cutler Case"
|
April 11, 1958
|
Elliott Lewis
was the producer, John M. Lucas was the director, and Leonard Heideman was the writer.
[6]
A review of the premiere episode in the trade publication
Variety
called
The Court of Last Resort
"a potential winner".
[6]
The review said, "Story and action were handled with care, discipline, and with an aura of public service devoid of the violence and pyrotechnics usually associated with such police dramas."
[6]
It also singled out Bettger's "especially effective" portrayal of Larsen.
[6]
- ^
a
b
Schulz, Kathryn
(January 25, 2016).
"Dead Certainty"
.
The New Yorker
. Conde Nast: 60
. Retrieved
February 17,
2016
.
- ^
Hughes, Dorothy B.
(1978).
Erle Stanley Gardner: The Case of the Real Perry Mason
. New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc.
ISBN
0-688-03282-6
.
- ^
Hyatt, Wesley (6 October 2015).
Short-Lived Television Series, 1948-1978: Thirty Years of More Than 1,000 Flops
. McFarland. p.?84.
ISBN
978-1-4766-0515-9
. Retrieved
December 1,
2020
.
- ^
Adams, Val (January 9, 1958).
"Sentence passed on TV crime show"
.
The New York Times
. p.?67
. Retrieved
December 1,
2020
? via
ProQuest
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
Brooks, Tim; Marsh, Earle (1999).
The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946-Present
(7th?ed.). New York: The Ballentine Publishing Group. p.?213.
ISBN
0-345-42923-0
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
"Court of Last Resort"
.
Variety
. October 9, 1957. p.?28
. Retrieved
February 16,
2024
.