The second season of the original Mission: Impossible originally aired Sundays at 10:00–11:00 pm (EST) on CBS from September 10, 1967[1] to March 17, 1968.[2]
Mission: Impossible | |
---|---|
Season 2 | |
No. of episodes | 25 |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | September 10, 1967 March 17, 1968 | –
Season chronology | |
Cast
editCharacter | Actor | Main | Recurring |
Jim Phelps | Peter Graves | Entire season | |
Rollin Hand | Martin Landau | Entire season | |
Cinnamon Carter | Barbara Bain | Entire season | |
Barney Collier | Greg Morris | Entire season | |
Willy Armitage | Peter Lupus | Entire season |
Episodes
editNo. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code [3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
29 | 1 | "The Widow" | Lee H. Katzin | Barney Slater | September 10, 1967 | 33 |
First episode to feature Peter Graves as Jim Phelps. The IMF capture a heroin distributor and Cinnamon goes undercover as his "widow" in order to shut down part of "the Syndicate." | ||||||
30 | 2 | "Trek" | Leonard J. Horn | Laurence Heath | September 17, 1967 | 29 |
The IMF team must recover some Incan gold artifacts, but their mission is further complicated when the one man who can lead them to the stolen artifacts goes blind. Mark Lenard co-stars. | ||||||
31 | 3 | "The Survivors" | Paul Stanley | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | September 24, 1967 | 28 |
The IMF team must rescue two top-secret government scientists and their wives who have been working on a revolutionary new weapon, Project 12. First episode made in production order with Peter Graves as Jim Phelps. | ||||||
32 | 4 | "The Bank" | Alf Kjellin | Brad Radnitz | October 1, 1967 | 30 |
The head of a bank in the East Zone (James Daly) murders would-be defectors after being entrusted with their money, and the IMF must permanently prevent him before he can use the embezzled money to launch a new Nazi movement. | ||||||
33 | 5 | "The Slave: Part 1" | Lee H. Katzin | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | October 8, 1967 | 32A |
Slavery is still practiced in a Persian Gulf nation, but there is tension in the nation's leadership on the issue. IMF is tasked with stopping this trade, by exploiting this tension. The IMF's plan is to unleash a cloud of bats inside the prince's bedroom (a scene reminiscent of Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds) in order to kidnap the princess and sell her at the slave market. | ||||||
34 | 6 | "The Slave: Part 2" | Lee H. Katzin | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | October 15, 1967 | 32B |
Continuation of the previous episode. Barbara Bain is sold to a slave trader, and then switched with the kidnapped princess just before the auction. The princess is an English woman who has convinced her husband, the king's brother, that slavery is wrong. The IMF contrives to get the king's brother to the slave auction, where he discovers his own wife being sold at auction. The king's brother then demands an end to slave markets in his country. | ||||||
35 | 7 | "Operation Heart" | Leonard J. Horn | John O'Dea & Arthur Rowe | October 22, 1967 | 31 |
When an innocent American archaeologist becomes entangled in a plot to assassinate the president of a country (Pernell Roberts), the IMF must rescue the seriously ill American and prevent the president being killed by his chief of security (Michael Strong). | ||||||
36 | 8 | "The Money Machine" | Paul Stanley | Richard M. Sakal | October 29, 1967 | 34 |
An African financier (Brock Peters) is printing counterfeit currency that could destroy his nation's economy. The IMF must put him out of business and recover the stolen printing plates he is using to make the counterfeits. | ||||||
37 | 9 | "The Seal" | Alexander Singer | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | November 5, 1967 | 35 |
A stolen jade statuette is sacred to a small Asian country, and in order to prevent an international incident the IMF must recover it from the private high-security collection of a wealthy but paranoid American defense contractor (Darren McGavin) by using the services of the newest member of the IMF Team--a specially trained cat named Rusty. Cat star Orangey guest stars as IMF agent cat Rusty. | ||||||
38 | 10 | "Charity" | Marc Daniels | Barney Slater | November 12, 1967 | 36 |
In order to recover millions of dollars (in the form of platinum bars) stolen from the needy by a married couple (Fritz Weaver, Hazel Court) and to put a stop their charity racket for good, the IMF team goes to the couple’s estate on the French/Italian border where a group of millionaires have been invited for the collection of $1 million supposedly to build a new hospital wing. The Wayne Manor set from the 1960s TV series Batman is featured in this episode and for the first time in the series. It will be featured again in the fourth season episode "The Numbers Game" (S04/E02). | ||||||
39 | 11 | "The Council: Part 1" | Paul Stanley | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | November 19, 1967 | 37A |
By taking over honest businesses, a criminal enterprise headed by Frank Wayne (Paul Stevens) is corrupting the nation’s economy by depositing millions of dollars into Swiss bank accounts, causing an intolerable drain of U.S. gold reserves. In order to get the syndicate’s records, turn them over to the proper authorities, and put an end to the organization, Rollin poses as Wayne, and Jim poses as an ambitious prosecutor. | ||||||
40 | 12 | "The Council: Part 2" | Paul Stanley | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | November 26, 1967 | 37B |
Continuation of the previous episode. This two-part story was released theatrically outside the US as Mission: Impossible vs. the Mob.[4] | ||||||
41 | 13 | "The Astrologer" | Lee H. Katzin | James F. Griffith | December 3, 1967 | 39 |
When the exiled leader of a country was seized by the head of the secret police, he possessed microfilm containing the names of officials and citizens who support him which, if returned to the country, would result in their murder and kill their chance of liberation. In order to rescue him and ensure the microfilm does not return to the country, Cinnamon poses as an astrologer, and Barney and Rollin secretly board an aircraft transporting the leader and perform an in-flight rescue operation through the cargo compartment of the aircraft. | ||||||
42 | 14 | "Echo of Yesterday" | Leonard J. Horn | Mann Rubin | December 10, 1967 | 38 |
The head of Europe’s munitions plant (Wilfrid Hyde-White) is planning to turn over complete control of his vast industrial empire to the leader of a resurging neo-Nazi group (Eric Braeden). In order to stop them, Jim poses as an American Nazi, and Cinnamon poses as a photographer resembling the industrial leader’s former wife to re-awaken old memories of her murder committed by Adolf Hitler. | ||||||
43 | 15 | "The Photographer" | Lee H. Katzin | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | December 17, 1967 | 40 |
The IMF must break the enemy's encryption code to prevent a pneumonic plague release in the United States. This was the final episode produced under the Desilu banner. | ||||||
44 | 16 | "The Spy" | Paul Stanley | Barney Slater | January 7, 1968 | 41 |
A map of NATO's missile defense system must be duplicated in order to fool a female spy. This was the first episode produced for Paramount. | ||||||
45 | 17 | "A Game of Chess" | Alf Kjellin | Richard M. Sakal | January 14, 1968 | 42 |
A gold shipment, sent to fund an anti-communist resistance movement, has been seized by the country's government and the IMF must get it to its intended recipients, but an international chess champion and con artist is also after the gold. | ||||||
46 | 18 | "The Emerald" | Michael O'Herlihy | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | January 21, 1968 | 43 |
Microfilm detailing an enemy plot is affixed to an emerald in the possession of a notorious arms dealer; the IMF must obtain the microfilm and eliminate the enemy agent who has been sent to buy the gem. | ||||||
47 | 19 | "The Condemned" | Alf Kjellin | Laurence Heath | January 28, 1968 | 44 |
When a childhood friend of Phelps' is sentenced to death in Latin America, the IMF go "off-book" to save him. This episode has no tape scene or dossier scene, and Cinnamon Carter (Barbara Bain) does not appear, nor is she mentioned. This inspired the 1988 Australian-filmed series continuation as "The Condemned" (S01/E04), in that series' first reunion of the original and revival series characters. | ||||||
48 | 20 | "The Counterfeiter" | Lee H. Katzin | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | February 4, 1968 | 45 |
The IMF must arrange the arrest of the owner (Edmond O'Brien) of a chain of medical clinics who is distributing counterfeit pharmaceuticals. | ||||||
49 | 21 | "The Town" | Michael O'Herlihy | Sy Salkowitz | February 18, 1968 | 46 |
In an "off-book" mission, Phelps accidentally discovers that a small town is filled with enemy sleeper agents; he is drugged and declared paralyzed by a stroke, but Rollin smells a rat. Will Geer guest stars. | ||||||
50 | 22 | "The Killing" | Lee H. Katzin | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | February 25, 1968 | 47 |
Conventional law-enforcement methods cannot stop a criminal mastermind (Gerald S. O'Laughlin), but his superstitions may be his undoing. | ||||||
51 | 23 | "The Phoenix" | Robert Totten | Story by : Edward DeBlasio and John D.F. Black Teleplay by : John D.F. Black | March 3, 1968 | 48 |
A museum curator (Alf Kjellin) must be prevented from giving an experimental alloy to a foreign power. | ||||||
52 | 24 | "Trial by Fury" | Leonard J. Horn | Sy Salkowitz | March 10, 1968 | 49 |
The IMF must save a Latin American political prisoner who is falsely accused of being an informant by other prisoners while being held in isolation in his totalitarian country's prison camp. This episode was filmed at the Stalag 13 set which was also in use for Hogan's Heroes. | ||||||
53 | 25 | "Recovery" | Robert Totten | William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter | March 17, 1968 | 50 |
When U.S. bomber crashes behind the Iron Curtain, the IMF must recover its fail-safe before a brilliant U.S. defector (Bradford Dillman) can reveal its secrets to the communists. This episode has no dossier scene. |
References
edit- ^ TV Listings for September 10, 1967
- ^ TV Listings for March 17, 1968
- ^ White, Patrick J. (1991). The Complete Mission: Impossible Dossier. New York: Avon Books. ISBN 0-380-75877-6.
- ^ Mission: Impossible vs. The Mob at IMDb