Tightrope

1959
Tightrope

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

EP1 Getaway Day Sep 08, 1959

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EP2 The Casino Sep 15, 1959

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EP3 The Frame Sep 22, 1959

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EP4 Stand on Velvet Sep 29, 1959

The agent joins the gang of William Kane, their objective is to run the leader of the numbers racket out of town.

EP5 The Cracking Point Oct 06, 1959

The undercover agent joins in on a robbery.

EP6 Thousand Dollar Bill Oct 13, 1959

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EP7 Music and Mink Oct 20, 1959

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EP8 Man in the Middle Nov 03, 1959

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EP9 The Patsy Nov 10, 1959

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EP10 The Money Fight Nov 17, 1959

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EP11 Black Tie Kill Nov 24, 1959

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EP12 The Perfect Circle Dec 01, 1959

Barney MacCready puts his train-robbery plan into action. First he kidnaps a detective, then he has two of his henchmen board the train one posing as the missing detective the other as his prisoner.

EP13 The Lady Dec 08, 1959

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EP14 Cold Kill Dec 15, 1959

An undercover agent assumes the identity of a killer hired to rub out a murder witness. But the intended victim is hiding, and the first task is to smoke him out.

EP15 The Neon Wheel Dec 22, 1959

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EP16 Two Private Eyes Dec 29, 1959

Sam Keely and Jeff Stewart are a bit on the shady side. The undercover agent's strategy is to muscle in on their racket.

EP17 Night of the Gun Jan 05, 1960

Dan Hawley and David Johnson, witnesses to a murder committed by gangster Jimmy Farrow, are a target for Larry Maddox, a hired killer. After Maddox kills Hawley, police take Johnson's wife and children into protective custody. Johnson, fearing for his life, goes into hiding. Nick is put on the case.

EP18 Broken Rope Jan 12, 1960

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EP19 Cold Ice Jan 19, 1960

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EP20 Appointment in Jericho (a.k.a. Assignment in Jericho) Jan 26, 1960

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EP21 Three to Make Ready Feb 02, 1960

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EP22 The Model and the Mobster Feb 09, 1960

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EP23 The Long Odds Feb 16, 1960

A detective assigned to investigate a phoney health club is killed by one of the club owners. An undercover agent follows up, convincing the gangsters that he's a gambler on the run.

EP24 The Brave Pigeon Feb 23, 1960

Underworld leader Max Rommey wants Paul Anderson dead. To protect Anderson, the undercover agent becomes part of Rommey's gang.

EP25 First Time Out Mar 01, 1960

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EP26 Park Avenue Story Mar 08, 1960

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EP27 Big Business Mar 15, 1960

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EP28 The Chinese Pendant Mar 29, 1960

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EP29 Achilles and His Heels Apr 05, 1960

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EP30 The Gangster's Daughter Apr 12, 1960

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EP31 The Penthouse Story Apr 19, 1960

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EP32 The Shark Apr 26, 1960

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EP33 The Horse Runs High May 03, 1960

The undercover agent is assigned to break up a gambling ring that bets heavily on certain horses--and then makes sure they win by doping them.

EP34 The Hired Guns May 10, 1960

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EP35 Borderline May 17, 1960

The undercover agent is assigned to smash a dope ring that sells to Americans from a base in Mexico.

EP36 A Matter of Money May 24, 1960

Nick is assigned to break up a gang headed by Steve Taylor. This particularly unsavory gang uses threats and violence to force small shopkeepers to pay for protection.

EP37 Bullets and Ballet May 31, 1960

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8.2| 0h30m| en| More Info
Released: 08 September 1959 Ended
Producted By: Screen Gems Television
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Tightrope is an American crime drama series that aired on CBS from September 1959 to September 1960, under the alternate sponsorship of the J.B. Williams Company, and American Tobacco. Produced by Russell Rouse and Clarence Greene in association with Screen Gems, the series stars Mike Connors as an undercover agent named "Nick" who was assigned to infiltrate criminal gangs. The show was to have originally been titled Undercover Man but it was changed before going to air.

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Reviews

A_Different_Drummer Don't forget, TV was a new medium. They needed to muck about to see what worked.. and what did not. In Ringo, the hero used a gun that shot 6 normal cartridges ... and also a shotgun load. Most if not all of the episodes ended with the bad guys walking up to Ringo, all smiles because he was out of ammo ... ka-pow -- no more bad guy. (Based on a real gun, made in France, BTW). In Have Gun Will Travel the hero had a derringer hidden in his belt. Time and again poor Palladin would be captured and forced to turn over his gunbelt .. only to palm the derringer. In Wyatt Earp, Hugh O'brien had a custom gun with an extra long barrel, designed by Ned Buntline. Episode after episode, the baddies would challenge him to a gunfight and he would distance himself from them so that, ultimately, only his gun had the proper range. (Same gimmick used effectively in several Lee Van Cleef films later on). In WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE, McQueen could swivel aim and fire his weapon without the need to actually clear the holster, buying him precious seconds, and always winning the contest. And here in Tightrope, a series best remembered for launching Connors to Mannix fame, almost every single episode ended with the main character going for that pistol strapped to his back (a trick re-used decades later by no less than Bruce Willis in one of the Die-Hards). No disrespect to any of the earlier reviewers who loved the show -- IT WAS A FUN SHOW, and Mike was great -- but mainly it was about the gimmick.
logila2001 It was one of my favorite as a child. In my native Dominican Republic it was shown in its Spanish-speaking version with excellent voices absolutely right for each character. The suspense was masterful. The episodes being so short honored the adage "What is good, if short, doubly good". And there is a paradox about the title in its dubbed version in Spanish. Tighrope can be translated to Spanish as "La cuerda tensa", but the title in Spanish was "En la cuerda floja" that is exactly the opposite though a better description of the plot. I would love to see it again. Besides I would love to see somebody make an updated version starring Robert De Niro or Johnny Depp. Or would it be a good idea to cast Leonardo DiCaprio? How would you like it on Sunday nights like The Sopranos? Author: Juan Lora.
mike rice The show was fine. Mike 'Touch' Connors had been a B movie actor in the early fifties who couldn't get arrested in a decent film. Then he came along and did this immaculate TV series. I just went looking for this series and another with Frank Lovejoy, Meet McGraw, on Netflix, with no luck.In the early days of TV, the opening billboard sequences of TV shows were often better than the shows. But with 'Touch' Connors behind the voice, the ultimate film noir voice-over had been met and joined with the premiere of this show.I would die just to hear Connors do the opening sequence to the show, let alone get DVD copies.Connors played an undercover cop who wore his .38 stuffed in a holster in the small of his back. He wore a black suit in every episode, and was as cool as a TV detective can get. The series was as noir as TV could manage. The suit was always dark, so was Touch's hair, the rooms were dim and dingy, but the night was bright with dark promise.In that opening Billboard, Touch would recite the litany of the undercover man walking that tightrope, and my brother and I would be writhing with excitement from the effect, in our chairs. Then the show would come on and it would be something of a letdown. But Tightrope was a good show as fifties detective shows go.Later, Connors would get a bigger TV show called Mannix, which was not as good, and become famous for the sense of parody he brought to the voice-over. I'm not sure he intended that, but years later, after Mannix was ancient history, the effect was saluted in an episode of Murder She Wrote. Connors played a disembodied voice, whose recording was used to illustrate his own murder. A little like William Holden in Sunset Boulevard, only trashier.It was great. Elizabeth Ashley played a down-at-the-heel waitress in the episode, and Connors' voice-overs were wittier than a dead man should be, and funny.But its the Tightrope Series that I long for. Could some of the others among you try to help start a drumbeat for this series to appear on DVD? Just write to Sony and beg them to produce a DVD series.TV and movies today are now so boring that the old stuff is bound to come back on DVD.Besides, someone has to try and bring this marvelous series back. Someone has to walk that tightrope and that someone is you!
skoyles A fine if formulaic series. The star's escape as the police closed in was the high point of suspense. He also wore his .38 in a distinctive position - behind his back. If "Tightrope" were to be issued on DVD I would buy it in an instant.