O.S.S. is a wartime television drama series that was co-produced by Buckeye Productions and ATV. It ran for 26 half-hour monochrome episodes during the 1957–1958 season and was distributed by ITC Entertainment and networked in the United States by ABC.
O.S.S. | |
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Also known as | Office of Strategic Services |
Genre | Drama |
Written by | Paul Dudley |
Directed by |
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Starring |
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Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 26 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producer | Jules Buck |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 14 September 1957 9 March 1958 | –
The series followed the adventures of Frank Hawthorne, an agent with the American Office of Strategic Services, who operated behind Nazi lines in occupied France.
Main cast
edit- Ron Randell as Captain Frank Hawthorn
- Lionel Murton as The Chief
- Robert Gallico as O'Brien
Guest stars included Lois Maxwell, Christopher Lee and Roger Delgado.
Production
editThe pilot was shot in November 1956.[1] The budget was around $1,200,000.[2]
The star was Australian actor Ron Randell.[3]
In October 1957 Randell injured his hand filming one sequence and required stitches.[4]
Episode list
editThis episode list is based on the airdate order on ABC, which appears to match the production order and the air-date order for the (unrelated) ABC Weekend TV in the UK.
- "Operation Fracture"
- "Operation Tulip"
- "Operation Powder Puff"
- "Operation Death Trap"
- "Operation Orange Blossom"
- "Operation Pay Day"
- "Operation Foul Ball"
- "Operation Blue Eyes"
- "Operation Flint Axe"
- "Operation Sweet Talk"
- "Operation Big House"
- "Operation Love Bird"
- "Operation Pigeon Hole"
- "Operation Yo-yo"
- "Operation Yodel"
- "Operation Sardine"
- "Operation Firefly"
- "Operation Eel"
- "Operation Barbecue"
- "Operation Blackbird"
- "Operation Post Office"
- "Operation Newsboy"
- "Operation Chopping Block"
- "Operation Dagger" "Operation Buried Alive"
- "Operation Meatball"
- "Operation Jingle Bells"
References
edit- ^ "Flamingo Series on OSS to Roll". Variety. November 1956.
- ^ "Variety (February 1957)". Variety. February 1957.
- ^ Vagg, Stephen (10 August 2019). "Unsung Aussie Actors – Ron Randell: A Top Twenty". Filmink.
- ^ "London". Variety. 16 October 1957. p. 86.
External links
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