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Patrick Macnee | John Wickham Gascone Berresford Steed | |
Diana Rigg | Emma Peel (1965-1967) | |
Honor Blackman | ||
Linda Thorson | ||
Patrick Macnee | John Steed | |
Diana Rigg | Emma Peel | |
Honor Blackman | Catherine Gale | |
Linda Thorson | Tara King | |
Ian Hendry | Dr. David Keel | |
Patrick Newell | Mother | |
Ingrid Hafner | Carol Wilson | |
Douglas Muir | One-Ten | |
Terence Plummer | Executioner | |
Valentino Musetti | Ali | |
Julie Stevens | Venus Smith | |
Edwin Richfield | Alex | |
Norman Chappell | Fleming | |
Frank Maher | Barman | |
Richard Neller | Board Member |
Director |
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Producer | Julian Wintle
Brian Clemens Albert Fennell |
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Writer | Tony Williamson
Roger Marshall Brian Clemens Terry Nation |
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Cinematography |
Gilbert Taylor
Frank Watts |
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Musician |
Laurie Johnson
Howard Blake |
A quirky spy show of the adventures of eccentrically suave British Agent John Steed (Patrick Macnee) and his predominately female partners. |
1. The Girl From Auntie | |
When Steed returns home early from a holiday, he finds Mrs. Peel replaced by an actress, Georgie Price-Jones. Subsequently everyone involved in the hiring of Georgie is stabbed to death with double-O knitting needles. It seems the real Mrs. Peel has become Lot 17 of 'Art Incorporated', an organization which prides itself on being able to obtain any object for any one as long as the price is right.
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2. The 13th Hole | |
Steed and Mrs. Peel join an exclusive golf club to catch a government scientist passing secrets to the Iron Curtain.
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3. Quick-Quick-Slow Death | |
When a foreign agent is caught trying to dispose of a body, the investigation leads Steed and Mrs. Peel to a dancing school that's infiltrating the country with enemy spies.
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Features
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