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  1. Paul Drake is a fictional private detective in the Perry Mason series of murder mystery novels by Erle Stanley Gardner. Drake is described as tall and slouching, nondescript (as suits his profession), and frequently wearing an expression of droll humor. He often smoked cigarettes especially when he had a subject of interest under surveillance.

    • Based on A Book Series
    • Crash Diet
    • Partners
    • Enduring Format
    • Never Lost
    • Cultural Impact
    • Lack of Diversity
    • Famous Guest Stars
    • 80s Return
    • HBO Revival

    Perry Mason began life like a lot of television showsthese days do - as a series of books. Erle Stanley Gardner began writing the mystery series in 1933, which included over 80 different novels and short stories. The series ran for decades, up through the run of the television series. Gardner himself made a cameo in the show as a judge. Gardner was...

    Perry Mason is synonymous with Raymond Burr, an imposing man with a gentle demeanor. Hundreds of actors auditioned for the role, including William Hopper (who eventually played Paul Drake). Producer Gail Patrick Jackson wanted Raymond Burr for the part, but he was sixty pounds overweight at the time. Burr always battled his weight and was determine...

    Though the title of the show was Perry Mason, the series was really an ensemble. The character of Mason often didn't appear much in the first half of the episode - a format that prefigured Law & Order- with the focus instead on his eventual client. His legal team supported him in the investigation and trial that followed in the second half of the e...

    Besides the unique format of the investigation followed by the trial, Perry Mason created the DNA of numerous other television shows in the years since. Nearly every single show based around some aspect of the legal profession - not just Law & Order - owes an enormous debt to Perry Mason. RELATED: Law & Order: 5 Things About Criminal Law That The S...

    Television shows tend to make their heroes, well, heroic, but Perry Masonwent even further. The erstwhile lawyer never lost a case in the entire run of the series, from 1957 to 1966. He did come close a couple of times. In the episode “The Deadly Verdict,” the client is found guilty but Mason discovers evidence at the end of the episode that saves ...

    The show had an impact on culture at large that went far beyond just an hour of diversion each week. Proving that life is stranger than fiction, the show was cited in over 250 different judicial opinions. Beyond that, the show was referenced in almost five hundred legal briefs and nearly a thousand law review articles. In fact, Supreme Court Justic...

    One area Perry Mason did not impact much on culture was in its depiction of diversity. In nearly three hundred episodes, Mason never represents an African-American client. African-Americans are only shown in background parts, and rarely. Despite the social and cultural upheaval in the 1960s with regards to race - and cultural touchstone in To Kill ...

    Given the enormous popularity of the series, it was a magnet for guest stars. Some of the most notable included screen legend Bette Davis, who filled in as a defense attorney for Perry Mason when Raymond Burr was out for several episodes due to surgery (he phoned in - literally - for a cameo). RELATED: Bette Davis: 10 Most Iconic Roles, Ranked (Acc...

    Fans know today that everything old is new again, but it was a relatively new phenomenon in the 1980s for then old shows or films to come back. But Perry Mason did, with a vengeance. Raymond Burr and Barbara Hale returned in a series of made-for-TV movies on NBC (much like The Incredible Hulkat the time) that picked up with the characters twenty ye...

    The show is returning again this June with an ambitious reboot of the series, starring Matthew Rhys of The Americansin the title role. This take on the character is a prequel, featuring his time as a private detective before he becomes a lawyer. This seems to be a little bit more of the hardboiled version from the original books by Erle Stanely Gar...

  2. William Hopper. William DeWolf Hopper Jr. (January 26, 1915 – March 6, 1970) was an American stage, film, and television actor. The only child of actor DeWolf Hopper and actress and Hollywood columnist Hedda Hopper, he appeared in more than 80 feature films in the 1930s and 1940s. After serving in the United States Navy during World War II ...

    Year
    Title
    Role
    Notes
    1916
    Baby
    Credited as William DeWolf Hopper Jr.
    1936
    Soldier
    Offscreen credit [4]
    1936
    Photographer
    Offscreen credit as DeWolf Hopper [4]
    1936
    Ship's Officer
    Uncredited [30]
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Perry_MasonPerry Mason - Wikipedia

    Perry Mason is a fictional character, an American criminal defense lawyer who is the main character in works of detective fiction written by Erle Stanley Gardner.Perry Mason features in 82 novels and four short stories, all of which involve a client being charged with murder, usually involving a preliminary hearing or jury trial.

  4. Feb 9, 2023 · Perry Mason makes its return to HBO on Monday, March 6. Delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic, Perry Mason Season 2 brings back Emmy-winner Matthew Rhys in the titular role along with Juliet Rylance ...

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  5. Jun 21, 2020 · In the first Perry Mason novel, Street is revealed to have come from a wealthy family that lost everything in the stock market crash of 1929. In the new show, Della must stand her ground in a man ...

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  7. Mar 6, 2023 · Katherine Waterston plays Ginny Aimes, an optimistic schoolteacher in Perry Mason, who happens to work at the same school attended by Perry's son. Her presence brings a ray of hope into their ...

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