TV Guide (September 25, 1954)

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* Roy Rogers gives bad man the old treatment in Roy Rogers Show. ing switched from a foreign corre¬ spondent to the owner and operator of a casino hotel. Both T-Men in Action and Ellery Queen are changing from live to film, with Hugh Marlowe tak¬ ing over the Queen role from ^ee Bowman; and Big Town is losing both its stars to replacements. Mark Stevens, late of Martin Kane, takes over the Steve Wilson role from Pat McVey, and young Trudy Wroe re¬ places Beverly Tyler as the intrepid Lorelei Kilbourne, girl reporter. COWBOY and COPS suave and very capable Cesar Ro¬ mero as an American diplomatic cour¬ ier. It is being produced for syndica¬ tion by ABC. The same network will also present a live adventure program, The Vise, and a series called Postal Inspector, based on what happens when a three-cent stamp goes wrong. The Falcon, a long-time radio fa¬ vorite, is making the move into TV via film, with Charles McGraw starred in the title role. The series will be syndicated. Also in syndication will be Stories of the Century, based on legendary characters of the West and already being seen in some areas, and Alarm, a Richard Arlen starrer based on the activities of a big city fire de¬ partment. And from radio, too, will come The Whistler, a CBS whodunit of considerable prestige. Four old favorites among the ad¬ venture shows are being revamped. Foreign Intrigue is undergoing a rather drastic change, with Gerald Mohr replacing James Daly as Mi¬ chael Powers, and Powers himself be- Lineup lads: Warner Anderson, Tom Tully. Dropped from the lists will be Mar¬ tin Kane, Pentagon Confidential, Sus¬ pense and Mr. and Mrs. North. All but the last were live shows and will doubtless never be seen again in their original form. The North series, how-