U.N.C.L.E. the Show
Background and History
Contributors Behind the Scene
Actors
Episode Guide
The Return Movie
The Characters
The Gadgets
The Soundtrack
Print Tie-ins
TV Schedule
Articles
Other Resources

Buying and Collecting U.N.C.L.E.
Vintage Collectibles
Memorabilia
Videos / Laser Discs
Where to Buy

U.N.C.L.E. Fan Fiction
Introduction
In Print
Online
Spotlight on Authors

Interact with Other Fans
Media Conventions
Mailing Lists
Fan Clubs
Newsletters

U.N.C.L.E. in Retrospect

Other U.N.C.L.E. Websites

Fun Stuff

Back Home

Email Webmaster

U.N.C.L.E. Episode Guidegrey line

SEASON TWO 1965-1966

Excerpted from
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Book - The Behind-the-Scenes Story of a Television Classic , by Jon Heitland, (c) 1987

Used with permission from author

10:00 p.m. EST Fridays

For the entire season: Producers: David Victor (episodes 30-38), Mort Abrahams (episodes 39-48), Boris Ingster (episodes 49-59)
Assistant to the Producer: George Lehr

30 & 31. The Alexander the Greater Affair, Parts 1 and 2
Alexander (Rip Torn) a megalomaniac industrialist, plans to conquer the world like his namesake, Alexander the Great by breaking each of the ten commandments along the way. he has his henchman Parvix (David Sheiner) steal the army's "will gas" to help him do so, and Solo investigates. Solo encounters Tracey Alexander (Dorothy Provine), Alexander's ex-wife, who wants to tag along with Solo to get the money Alexander owes her. The trail leads Solo, Illya, and Tracey to a posh party at Alexander's, where Solo defeats him in a human chess game; to a tomb, where Alexander and his aide Dr. Kavon (David Opatoshu) leave Solo tied under a descending scimitar while Illya and Tracey are hanging over a bottomless pit with a candle burning their rope; To Alexander's farm in Virginia, where Illya is nearly cut in two by various farm implements.

Prod. #7458, 7459 (feature version, One Spy Too Many, #6014)
Airdate: September 17, 24, 1965
Filmed: July 15-16, 19-23, 26-30, August 2-5, 1965
Former Title: "The Alexander Affair"
Producer: David Victor
Writer: Dean Hargrove
Director: Joseph Sargent
Assistant Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Production Executive: Mort Abrahams
Editor: Henry Berman
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: None

32. The Ultimate Computer Affair
Illya gets himself thrown into a Latin American penal colony to try and find THRUSH's Ultimate Computer, a super machine which runs the entire organization. Solo poses as the husband of social worker Salty Oliver (Judy Carne) to get inside also, but Governor Callahan (Charlie Ruggles) and his Captain of the guards Cervantes (Roger C. Carmel) see through his cover, and trick Illya into blowing up a phony computer.

Prod. #7462
Airdate: October 1, 1965
Filmed: June 16-18, 21-23, 1965
Former Titles: "The Ultimate Affair", "The Calculated Risk Affair"
Producer: David Victor
Writer: Peter Allan Fields
Director: Joseph Sargent
Assistant Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Production Executive: Mort Abrahams
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Lalo Schifrin
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: April 22, 1966

33. The Foxes and Hounds Affair
Illya tries to obtain a thought-reading device from a magician but THRUSH agents Victor Marton (Vincent Price) and Lucia Belmont (Patricia Medina) are also after it. Mimi Doolittle (Julie Sommars), the magician's assistant, is drawn into the chase, and Solo is sent on a wild goose chase to distract Marton, complete with an exploding handkerchief and an untimely sneeze.

Prod. #7461
Airdate: October 8, 1965
Filmed: July 6-9, 12-13, 1965
Former Title: "The Elba Affair"
Producer: David Victor
Writers: Peter Allan Fields, Eric Bercovicci
Director: Alf Kjellin
Assistant Director: Tom McCrory
Production Assistant: Mort Abrahams
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: April 29, 1966

34. The Discotheque Affair
While U.N.C.L.E. tries to find a cache of THRUSH records hidden under a discotheque, THRUSH plant a sophisticated listening device in an apartment next to Waverly's office. Solo's arm is broken and in a cast, so he is assigned to take care of a rent dispute with tenant Sandy Wyler (Judi West); he turns up the device, while Illya infiltrates the discotheque, run by THRUSH agent Vincent Carver (Ray Danton), as a musician to kill Carver's girlfriend, Farina (Evelyn Ward), but she escapes and helps Solo before making up with Carver, who sets fire to the discotheque with Solo, Illya, and Sandy locked in a cell inside.

Prod. #7476
Airdate: October 15, 1965
Filmed: August 6, 9-13, 16, 1995
Former Title: "The Finnian Affair", "The Old Chameleon Affair"
Producer: David Victor
Writer: Leonard Stadd (story), Dean Hargrove (teleplay)
Director: Tom Gries
Assistant Director: Wilbur Mosier
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: May 6, 1966

35. The Recollectors Affair
Solo and Illya investigate the Recollectors, a group headed by Demos (George Macready) that hunts down and kills ex-Nazis in order to steal their looted art collections and resell them to the original owners. Gregori Valetti (Theodore Marcuse),Solo and Illya all vie to find the storehouse of art treasures

Prod. #7455
Airdate: October 22, 1965
Filmed: June 24-25, 28-30, July 1, 1965
Producer: David Victor
Writer: Alan Caillou
Director: Alvin Ganzer
Assistant Director: Tom McCrory
Production Executive: Mort Abrahams
Editor: Henry Berman
Music: Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: None

36. The Arabian Affair
Illya goes to find Thrush's vaporizing machine, but is captured by Sophie (Phyllis Newman), the headstrong daughter of the local tribal chief, Sulador (Michael Ansara). in New York Solo convinces retiring THRUSH agent David Lewin (Robert Ellenstein) that THRUSH intends to kill him, and elicits his help. Lewin and Solo are taken to the base in the desert, just as Illya leads the band of nomads, whose confidence he has gained, in an attack on the base.

Prod. #7484
Airdate: October 29, 1965
Filmed: September 14-17, 20-21, 1965
Producer: David Victor
Writer: Peter Allan Fields
Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Assistant Director: Wilbur Mosier
Production Executive: Mort Abrahams
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: May 13, 1966

37. The Tigers Are Coming Affair
Solo and Illya go to India to help Suzanne de Serre (Jill Ireland), a French botanist trying to find out why the jungle is dying and local natives are disappearing. Prince Panat (Lee Bergere) and Drusilla Davina (Florence Marly), along with Colonel Quillon (Alan Caillou), are systematically using a chemical to destroy the jungle and kidnapping natives to work in the jewel mines for the prince.

Prod. #7456
Airdate: November 5, 1965
Filmed: September 3, 7-10, 13, 1965
Producer: David Victor
Writer: Allan Caillou (teleplay), Paul Tuckahoe (story)
Director: Herschel Daugherty
Assistant Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck, Robert M. Webb
Production Executive: Mort Abrahams
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Francisco Lombardo
Rerun Date: None

38. The Deadly Toys Affair
THRUSH has plans to exploit boy genius Bartlett Warshowsky (Jay North) for its own purposes. Solo, posing as a toy salesman, and Illya, disguised as a hairdresser, try to rescue the boy from the clutches of THRUSH agent Noubar Talemakian (Arnold Moss). But Bartlett's aunt Elfie Von Donck (Angela Lansbury), an eccentric movie star, comes to assume his custody. Eventually she, her companion Joanna Lydecker (Diane McBain), and Solo and Illya must try to help Bartlett escape the THRUSH guards a the school.

Prod. #8401
Airdate: November 12, 1965
Filmed: August 25-27, 30-31, September 1-2, 1965
Former Title: "The Most Deadly Game Affair"
Producer: David Victor
Writer: Robert Hill
Director: John Braham
Assistant Director: Wilbur Mosier
Production Executive: Mort Abrahams
Editor: Henry Berman
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: June 10, 1966

39. The Cherry Blossom Affair
THRUSH eastern in Japan acquires a volcano-activating device, and Solo and Illya, along with Cricket Okasada (France Nuyen), a film student, infiltrate a toy store and a karate school to find it. THRUSH leader Mr. Kutuzov (Woodrow Parfrey) oversees local THRUSH head Harada (Jerry H. Fujikawa) in the operation, and Solo finds himself fighting for his life against a life size sword wielding puppet.

Prod. #7487
Airdate: November 19, 1965
Filmed: September 22-24, 27-29, 1965
Former Title: "The Tokyo Affair", "The Wargame Affair"
Producer: Mort Abrahams
Writers: Mark Weingart (teleplay), Sherman Yellen (story)
Director: Joseph Sargent
Assistant Director: Donald C. Klune
Production Executive: Boris Ingster
Editor: Henry Berman
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: June 3, 1966

40. The Virtue Affair
French fanatic Robespierre (Ronald Long) seeks to destroy France's vineyards in his quest for virtue, and Solo enlists the aid of scientist Raoul Dubois (Marcel Hillaire) and his daughter Albert (Mala Powers) in combating the plan. Illya is captured by THRUSH agent Carl Voegler (Frank Marth) and, with a target painted on his back, is hunted through the woods by Voegler's archers.

Prod. #8402
Airdate: December 3, 1965
Filmed: September 30, October 1, 4-7, 1965
Former Title: "The L.E.F. Affair"
Producer: Mort Abrahams
Writer: Henry Slesar
Director: Jud Taylor
Assistant Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Production Executive: Boris Ingster
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Francisco Lombardo
Rerun Date: August 5, 1966

41. The Children's Day Affair
A top-level U.N.C.L.E. conference is to be held in Switzerland, but a nearby boys' school is actually a THRUSH front run by Mother Fear (Jeanne Cooper) and Dennis Jenks (Warren Stevens) that is training its students to be assassins. Solo is captured by the boys, and, when he refuses to reveal the conference location, is forced to operate the controls of two electric trains so they do not collide with each carrying a vial of deadly nerve gas. Illya and Anna Paola (Susan Silo), a social worker who resent children, are also captured. The escape, and arrive at the conference just as the boy's choir is ready to kill Waverly and the others with THRUSH rifles from under their robes.

Prod. #7460
Airdate: December 10, 165
Filmed: October 11-15, 18, 1965
Former Title: "The Most Dangerous Affair"
Producer: Mort Abrahams
Writer: Dean Hargrove
Director: Sherman Marks
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Production Executive: Boris Ingster
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried, Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: May 27. 1966

42. The Adriatic Express Affair
Solo and Illya board the Adriatic Express train on New Year's Eve to intercept Madame Nemirovitch (Jessie Royce Landis), a THRUSH agent who is carrying a chemical that is capable of stopping the reproductive process. Eva (Juliet Mills), a young girl who delivers a message to Madame Nemirovitch as the train leaves, is caught on board. Throughout the evening, the THRUSH agent and Solo and Illya engage in a battle of wits as the train speeds along its route.

Prod. #8406
Airdate: December 17, 1965
Filmed: October 20-22, 25-28, 1965
Former Title: "The Vienna-Venice Affair"
Producer: Mort Abrahams
Writer: Robert Hill
Director: Seymour Robbie
Assistant Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Production Executive: Boris Ingster
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Gerald Fried, Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Francisco Lombardo
Rerun Date: June 17, 1966

43. The Yukon Affair
Squire G. Emory Partridge (George Sanders) returns, having acquired in Alaska a large quantity of Quadrillenium X, a very heavy metal with high magnetic powers which THRUSH wants to use to disrupt world communications. Solo and Illya are nearly killed by the local Eskimos, but are saved by the chief's daughter, Murphy (Tianne Gabrielle). Partridge and his niece Victoria (Marion Thompson) capture them, but they escape only to end up in a tavern brawl.

Prod. #7477
Airdate: December 24, 1965
Filmed: August 17-20, 23-24, 1965
Producer: David Victor
Writer: Marc Siegel
Director: Alf Kjellin
Assistant Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried, Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Francisco Lombardo
Rerun Date: None

44. The Very Important Zombie Affair
Solo and Illya travel to the Caribbean to help Dr. Delgado (Ken Renard), who is under a voodoo curse and in a zombielike trance thanks to the local dictator, El Supremo (Claude Akins), and his chief of police, Captain Ramirez (Rodolfo Acosta). The U.N.C.L.E. agents are assisted by Suzy (Linda Gaye Scott), an American hairdresser whom El Supremo will not let leave the island. They eventually turn to voodoo queen Mama Lou (Maidie Norman) to turn the tables on him.

Prod. #8404
Airdate: December 31, 1965
Filmed: October 29, November 1-5, 1965
Producer: Mort Abrahams
Writer: Boris Ingster
Director: David Alexander
Assistant Director: Donald C. Klune
Production Executive: Boris Ingster
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Charles THompson
Rerun Date: May 20, 1966

45. The Dippy Blond Affair
THRUSH agent Harry Pendleton (Fabrizio Mioni) is captured and commits "suicide" with a reversible chemical, but his superior, Simon Baldinado (Robert Strauss), refuses to revive him because he is attracted to Pendleton's girlfriend, Jojo Tyler (Joyce Jamison), Solo gets Jojo to help U.N.C.L.E. retrieve the ion projection machine Baldinado has hidden at the mortuary front for THRUSH by feigning affection for Baldinado, who allows his personal plans for Jojo to affect his judgment.

Prod. #7485
Airdate: January 7, 1966
Filmed: November 9-12, 15-17, 1965
Former Title: :The Very Grave Affair"
Producer: Mort Abrahams
Writer: Peter Allan Fields
Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Production Executive: Boris Ingster
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Francisco Lombardo
Rerun Date: None

46. The Deadly Goddess Affair
Solo and Illya travel to Circe to intercept a drone plane carrying a load of THRUSH cash. There, they encounter THRUSH agent Colonel Hubris (Victor Buono), as well as tow local girls who are looking for husbands.

Prod. #8412
Airdate: January 16, 1966
Filmed: November 18-19, 22-24, 26, 1965
Producer: Mort Abrahams
Writer: Robert Hill
Director: Seymour Robbie
Assistant Director: Wilbur Mosier
Production Executive: Boris Ingster
Editor: Ray Williford
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: July 15, 1966

47. The Birds and Bees Affair
THRUSH has developed with the aid of Dr. Elias Swan (John Abbott), a strain of minute, deadly bees. THRUSH agent Mr. Mozart (John McGiver) captures Illya and Tavia Sandor (Anna Capri) and uses a high-frequency sound machine that threatens to shatter their eardrums to force Illya to take him to U.N.C.L.E. headquarters so he can release the bees. Illya does so, but Mozart is intercepted, and in a battle on a rooftop Mozart is shot and the bees get loose.

Prod. #8411
Airdate: January 21, 1966
Filmed: December 8-10, 13-15, 1965
Former Title: "The Pygmallion Affair"
Producer: Mrt Abrahams
Writer: Mark Weingart
Director: Alvin Ganzer
Assistant Director: Wilbur Mosier
Production Executive: Boris Ingster
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Jack Mills
Rerun Date: July 1, 1966

48. The Waverly Ring Affair
When secret "File 40" documents turn up outside headquarters, Waverly assigns Solo and Illya to find out if George Donnell (Larry Blyden) is a double agent. Carla Drosten (Elizabeth Allen) is too anxious to accuse Donnell and Solo must use special "Waverly rings" to try and expose the real double agent.

Prod. #8409
Airdate: January 28, 1966
Filmed: December 16-17, 20-23, 1965
Producer: Mort Abrahams
Writer: Jerry McNeely
Director: John Brahm
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Production Executive: Boris Ingster
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: July 8, 1966

49 & 50. The Bridge of Lions Affair parts 1 and 2
Illya investigates the mysterious disappearance of cats in Soho, and he and Solo discover that a salon run by Madame De Sala (Vera Miles) is a front for her plan to develop a rejuvenation process, which De Sala plans to use on the now elderly target of her romantic desires, Sir Norman Swickert (Maurice Evans). Assisted by Joanna Sweet (Ann Elder), a nurse, they end up in the bottom of a wine press. Meanwhile, THRUSH agent Jordin (Bernard Fox) plots to obtain the process for THRUSH.

Prod. #7481, 7482 (feature version, One of Our Spies Is Missing, #6013)
Airdate: February 4, 11, 1966
Filmed: December 28-31, 1965, January 3-7, 10-12, 1966
Former Title: "The Wounded Time Affair"
Producer: Boris Ingster
Writers: Howard Rodman (teleplay), Henry Slesar (story)
Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Assistant Director: Wilbur Mosier
Production Assistant: None credited
Editor: Henry Berman (Part 1), Bill Gulick (Part 2)
Music: Robert Drasnin, Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Charles THompson (Part 1 and feature), Jack Mills (Part 2)
Rerun Date: None

51. The Foreign Legion Affair
Illya parachutes out of a plane carrying THRUSH code documents, but lands in the desert at an abandoned Foreign Legion post run by Captain Basil Calhoun (Howard Da Silva). Illya is accompanied by a stewardess, Barbara (Danielle DeMetz) while Solo races to find them before THRUSH does.

Prod. #8415
Airdate: February 18, 1966
Filmed: January 13-14, 17-20, 1966
Former Title: "The Beau Jest Affair", "The Beau Geste Affair"
Producer: Boris Ingster
Writer: Bernie Giller
Director: John Brahm
Assistant Directors: Richard Bennett, Bill Finnegan
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Jack Mills
Rerun Date: September 9, 1966 (first half preempted by football)

52. The Moonglow Affair
While investigating a THRUSH plot to sabotage space shots, Solo and Illya are incapacitated by a quartzite radiation projector. Waverly assigns new trainee April Dancer (Mary Ann Mobley) along with over the age of retirement agent Mark Slate (Norman Fell) to find the antidote and destroy the plan. April infiltrates the cosmetics company of THRUSH agent Arthur Caresse (Kevin McCarthy) as a model, but she is uncovered by Caresse's sister Jean (Mary Carver).

Prod. #7490
Airdate: February 25, 1966
Filmed: November 30, December 1-3, 6-8, 1965
Former Title: "The Girl From U.N.C.L.E. Affair"
Producer: David Victor
Writer: Dean Hargrove
Director: Joseph Sargent
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Production Executive: Boris Ingster
Editor: Henry Berman
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: None

53. The Nowhere Affair
Solo, while searching for a secret map in Nevada, swallows an amnesia capsule just before being captured. THRUSH agents Arum Tertunian (Lou Jacobi) and Longolius (David Sheiner) try to revive his memory with a seductive female agent, Mara (Diana Hyland), while Illya races to find him before he starts to remember.

Prod. #8414
Airdate: March 4, 1966
Filmed: January 17-21, 24, 1966
Former Title: "The Contained Affair", "The Corsican Affair"
Producer: Boris Ingster
Writer: Robert Hill
Director: Michael Ritchie
Assistant Director: Eddie Saeta
Production Executive: None credited
Editor: Henry Berman
Music: Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: June 24, 1966

54. The King of Diamonds Affair
Solo and Illya discover that the world diamond market is being affected by a gang of English criminals headed by Blodgett (Larry D. Mann), who smuggle diamonds inside pudding sold unwittingly by Victoria Poque (Nancy Kovack). They enlist the aid of a master diamond thief, Rafael Delgado (Ricardo Montalban). Solo and Victoria end up in Brazil, with Solo tied to the front of a cannon and about to be executed.

Prod. #8410
Airdate: March 11, 1966
Filmed: January 24-28, 31, 1966
Producer: Boris Ingster
Writer: Ed Blum (story and teleplay), Leo Townsend (teleplay)
Director: Joseph Sargent
Assistant Director: Wilbur Mosier
Production Executive: None credited
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Jack Mills
Rerun Date: September 2, 1966

55. The Project Deephole Affair
THRUSH agent Elom (Leon Askin) tries to kidnap a geologist who has developed an earthquake activating machine, but mistakes debt-ridden salesman Buzz Conway (Jack Weston) for the scientist. Solo and Illya let THRUSH go on thinking Conway is the scientist, while Elom lets his attraction for THRUSH agent Narcissus Darling (Barbara Bouchet) interfere with his judgment. Conway is captured, and Solo and Illya must rescue him and find the machine.

Prod. #7491
Airdate: March 18, 1966
Filmed: February 1-4, 7-8, 1966
Producer: Boris Ingster
Writer: Dean Hargrove
Director: Alex March
Assistant Director: James Sullivan
Production Executive: None credited
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried, Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: July 22, 1966

56. The Roundtable Affair
Lucho Nostra (Bruce Gordon) and a group of criminals take over a tiny European country, Ingolstein, because it has no extradition treaty. Prince Frederick (Reginald Gardiner) is afraid to kick them out, so Solo convinces princess Vicky (Valora Nolan) to return and do so, only to find that she cannot because the treasury has been replaced with IOU's to Nostra for the prince's gambling debts. Nostra arranges for permanent protection by forcing a marriage between Vicky and one of his henchmen, Artie King (Don Francks), but the two actually do fall in love. King duels Nostra, with the fate of the country riding on the outcome.

Prod. #8403
Airdate: March 25, 1966
Filmed: February 9-11, 14-16, 1966
Former Title: "The Future Affair", "The Animal Fare Affair"
Producer: Boris Ingster
Writer: Robert Hill
Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Assistant Director: Wilbur Mosier
Production Executive: None credited
Editor: Henry Berman
Music: Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Jack Mills
Rerun Date: August 26, 1966

57. The Bat Cave Affair
Solo uses hillbilly clairvoyant Clemency McGill (Joan Freeman) to counter the efforts of Count Zark (Martin Landau), a vampirish THRUSH agent who plans to use radioactive bats to jam the world's radar systems from his castle. Solo and Clemency make their way to the castle with Illya, but Zark manages to release the bats.

Prod. #8418
Airdate: April 1, 1966
Filmed: February 17-18, 21-24, 1966
Former Title: "The Night Flight Affair"
Producer: Boris Ingster
Writer: Jeff McNeeley
Director: Alf Kjellin
Assistant Director: Eddie Saeta
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: August 12, 1966

58. The Minus X Affair
Solo and Illya try to protect Professor Lillian Stemmler (Eve Arden) from THRUSH after she invents a drug called Plus X, which heightens all the human senses. Unbeknownst to them, she is a THRUSH agent herself who at first cooperates willingly, then has second thoughts. But THRUSH agent Rollo (Theodore Marcuse) kidnaps her daughter Leslie (Sharon Farrell) and forces her to cooperate. The drug is given to three THRUSH agents who will attack a U.S. government plutonium plant using their superior senses, while at the same time the guards will be given a dose of Minus X, which dulls the senses.

Prod. #8419
Airdate: April 8, 1966
Filmed: February 25, 28, March 1-4, 10, 1966
Producer: Boris Ingster
Writer: Peter Allan Fields
Director: Barry Shear
Production Executive: None credited
Assistant Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Jack Mills
Rerun Date: July 29, 1966

59. The Indian Affairs Affair
THRUSH agent L.C. Carson (Joe Mantell) uses an Indian reservation as a front for his plan to assemble a hydrogen bomb, and kidnaps the tribe's chief, High Cloud (Ted DeCorsia), to ensure cooperation. Solo arranges for the Chief's daughter Charisma (Angela Dorian) to return, but she ends up being kidnapped along with Solo and Illya, who is disguised as an Indian. Solo and Illya, along with a band of young Indian warriors on Motorcycles, encircle Carson and his men and try to stop them before its too late.

Prod. #7492
Airdate: April 15, 1966
Filmed: March 4, 7-11, 14, 1966
Producer: Boris Ingster
Writer: Dean Hargrove
Director: Alf Kjellin
Assistant Director: Eddie Saeta
Editor: Henry Berman
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Charles Thompson
Rerun Date: August 19, 1966
Note: This episode was preempted November 26, 1965 by The Incredible World of James Bond.

Back to EPISODE GUIDE Index Page