Note: Three times a month, we
turn to the works of Erle Stanley Gardner, either the novels or the classic TV
series that sent us hardcore readers to the novels. The first three seasons on CBS (1957-58-59) have a noir look and a
delightfully lurid handling of stories of folly and murder. The motives are
classic: overweening ambition; wishful thinking; irresistible desires and
aversions; cowardice and cupidity; and wanting to speed blackmailers into the
scalding hells they deserve. Because the Sixties zeitgeist prized “relevance,”
the stories became less sensational and more topical, from corporate espionage
to folk singing to the JD problem to open-wheel race cars to Playboy clubs to the
space program to Vic Tanny-type health clubs. Ironic that the emphasis on “ripped
from the headlines,” along with the corny soundtrack of Sixties teevee crime drama,
makes the Sixties episodes feel more dated than the timeless Fifties fables of
ambition, anxiety, and anger crowding out good sense, moderation and caution.
The Singular Episode in
Color
The original Perry Mason TV series (1957 - 1966) was shot
in black and white. In the first three seasons, the designers and crew worked
their magic with grayscale and composition to achieve the noir vision. The
high-contrast visuals and low-key lighting, for example, make Evelyn’s troubles
more nightmarish in The
Case of the Restless Redhead and make sleazier the civic corruption in
the stylish The
Case of the Fraudulent Foto.
Only one episode of the 271 was filmed in color. CBS
execs had decreed that all shows would be in color for the 1966-67 season.
President Wiliam S. Paley wanted to see what full-spectrum Perry Mason looked
like so in Season 9, the experiment entitled The Case of the Twice-Told
Twist was broadcast* on February 27, 1966**.
Designers took the color bit and ran, which was what designers
did in the early days of color TV. They used red and orange for walls,
linen,
and cars.
As for clothes, though Barbara Hale*** pops against the pecky
cypress paneling in the office and looks stunning in
red silk, not well served by colorful attire are Victor Buono,
Beverly
Powers, and Lisa Pera
(with the blue blue really blue eyes that some Russian women have). I gape, gawking
at the yellow
mohair sweater. One scene has Paul chasing a suspect down on L.A.’s Olvera
Street (shot for Mexico), with its merchant stalls, craft shops, and restaurants.
The pedestrian marketplace flashes with so much bright stuff that it looks as
cluttered and fussy as an interior on Murder,
She Wrote.
With an example of only one episode, it is hard to judge
if Perry Mason in color packs the punch of the other 270 B&W shows. As hinted above, the visual fatigue drains us viewers with 2025 eyes. On the positive side, Victor Buono puts in his usual skillful
performance as a corrupter of youth. The confession scene is pretty cool. The deal-breaker
that in the end drags the episode into Meh territory: campy and unbelievable are
the juvenile delinquents playing Artful Dodgers to Buono’s Fagin. They dress
like the Young Engineers Club at Beverly Hills 90210 High School.
I am of two minds about colorizing the original Perry
Mason. My objection is whatever effects the original designers intended cannot
be captured by the AI colorizing process as it stands today. What if training
images to prime the AI were all based on color TV shows in the early days of
color - bright and saturated and exhausting? AI-generated color and design
tends to look garish anyway probably because of the taste of the IT bros who don’t know kitsch when they see it. I
can’t imagine what the process would do to the red highlights Hale sometimes put
in her hair, but I suspect the reds would be, like Agent Scully’s, “a little
too red.” How would an AI know how to use color to add emotion to the
scene? Colorizing from AI algorithms would
inevitably distract from the mood, atmosphere, and drama conveyed by images and
design originally conceived and captured for black and white.
But the realistic part of me grants a colorized classic Perry
Mason will attract audiences. Black and white alienates many people, especially
those that can’t bring themselves to believe in the distant past of 60 years
ago we lived our lives in color. It would be great if colorizing Perry Mason
would make the youngs put down the mobile and pay attention to the greatest
courtroom series ever and its depth, creativity, convoluted plots, and high-minded
morality (In The Case of the Impatient Partner, Perry says, “I always
have faith, Mr. Fallon. Faith in what Judge Learned Hand
called ‘the eventual supremacy of reason.’”).
By paying undivided attention, youth would learn to live
with the bending of time and space. Like in The Case of the Sulky Girl, a
scene supposedly taking place at 11:00 p.m. was obviously shot during the
day. As for space, in The Case of the Crooked Candle, the inside of a sailboat
is larger than its outside indicates, making us wonder if Perry and Della have
wandered into Interstellar’s tesseract. At times out and out
magic occurs as when in The Case of the Silent Partner, Lt. Tragg is
driven to an apartment in a black 1957
Buick Roadmaster Riviera, but when he arrives moments later it is in a
black 1957
Buick Special.
*CBS later cancelled the show due to low ratings ("Who
wants to go up against Bonanza," asks a TV actor in the last
episode TCOT Final Fade-out). Producer Gail Patrick Jackson told The New
York Times that the network assumed everybody connected to the show was
exhausted due to its grueling shooting schedule. Too true, Burr, obviously tired,
frankly discussed burnout as early as 1963.
** I was not quite 10 years of age at the time and I don't recall public reaction to the color episode. I do remember, however, the high media interest and public semi-hysteria when Mia Farrow cut off her hair in late February 1966. Farrow said in her memoir you'd think nothing else was happening in the world.
*** At 19, in 1941, she began fashion modelling to pay for
her education at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts. Besides that wonderful smile, she
looked amazing in anything
she wore.