7 Works in Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) (1969)
Listing Works
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Dearly Beloved/Departed by Timeless A-Peel (timelessapeel)
Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) (1969)
6 Jan 2012
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Drabble for the original 1960s series. Marty reflects...
- Words:
- 100
- Chapters:
- 1/1
- Hits:
- 42
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- Words:
- 1,504
- Chapters:
- 1/1
- Kudos:
- 2
- Hits:
- 67
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Summary
The ties that bind. Jean Hopkirk is trying to move on with her life after Marty's death, but Jeff Randall knows that he is a hard man to forget. Oneshot.
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Not all it's cracked up to be by Deanna (SweetSorcery) for lakester
Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) (1969)
24 Dec 2009
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It's hard to get a good night's rest when your best friend is a nervous ghost.
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Jeff knows how to handle Marty.
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"Oh dear," a voice floated out of the darkness, "wasn't anyone here to greet you?"
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Coda. One of the darker episodes, Donald James' screenplay 'Could You Recognise The Man Again?' first aired in January 1970, and has poor Jean Hopkirk abducted and held hostage by the Rodens, a family of gangsters in the style of the Kray twins, to prevent her and Jeff testifying against George Roden (Stanley Meadows) in a murder trial. Jeannie's dangerous predicament really disturbed me, not least because it's inferred that Mort Roden (Dudley Sutton) would like to play more than cat and mouse with her. As Jeff and Marty's search for her descends into an ever-decreasing circle, Jean is left to fend off Mort's lecherous advances, aware that only the presence of his mother is holding him back. When Mrs Roden leaves for her other son's trial, Mort attacks ... Jeannie is spared at the last moment, of course, and whisked off to court to testify, but it was too close for comfort. I had to write this for Jeannie, as an outlet for the tension in the episode; not a lot happens, but Marty, Jeannie and Jeff finally have time to reflect.
