PERRY MASON EPISODE

Perry Mason is the series to hold a record of longest running lawyer series in the American Television history. The title characters of this series are Perry Mason (Raymond Burr), his secretary (Della Street), a private detective Paul Drake (William Hopper) and the district attorney Hamilton Burger (William Tallman).

Perry Mason was the first mystery series in which chalk and tape outlines were featured in its episodes in order to mark the spots where bodies were found. Here is one of the interesting episode of Perry Mason series, 'The case of the ugly Duckling'. Alice is the main cast in this episode, her father is dead and lefts behind an odd will. According to will, Alice would be the sole owner of his entire property, but only if she gets married within a year. Until then some board of directors along with her wheelchair bound uncle Harry would run the company. The major issue was that Alice was ugly. She fells in love with an artist who portraits her picture, but the problem is that uncle Harry is playing behind the scene by arranging this love scene between her and artist just for his own sake. Alice discovers this and pushes her uncle from wheelchair. Later Alice is arrested as Uncle Harry is found dead. Perry fights from her side as defense attorney but it is one of the toughest cases he faced because even Alice is feeling guilty thinking that she is the real murderer.

One more most of the popular episode is the last episode of this series titled as 'The Case of the Killer Kiss'. In this one Mark Stratton, featured as a soap opera star is murdered on set while kissing one of his co-stars. One among the soap casts is accused of the murder, Perry later comes to help her in this case, but the case goes on getting complicated as almost everyone seems to had a reason to kill Mark, but real answer is linked to mysterious man who is being traced by Ken. Eventually as usual Perry solves the case by finding the real culprit. This was the last episode of Raymond Burr, who deceased on September 12, 1933.