
As an episode filled with surprise twists, If The Frame Fits ended the second season of Murder, She Wrote on a bright spot.
For twelve seasons, as true fans often lovingly joke about, Angela Lansbury’s Jessica Fletcher had an endless supply of friends and relatives.
Here the action begins as she is coaching an old acquaintance, played by Norman Lloyd of Jaws of Satan (photo below), wherein Lucifer manifests himself into the body of a snake, with his mystery writing. Thankfully, the execrable task of analyzing his unpublishable scribblings is relieved when a crime is committed and Jessica is able to finally do what she does best – sleuth!

The list of suspects contains a bevy of television and film regulars. Chief among them is Deborah Adair’s Ellen Davis, an executive at a country club. Despite her professional appearance, Davis, Jessica eventually susses out, is having an affair with the victim’s husband. Her partner-in-cheating, Christopher Allport’s Donald Grainger also comes into range as he stood to inherit a huge life insurance policy upon his wife’s demise. John De Lancie’s quirky Binky. meanwhile, may have done it for the love of Ellen, whose feigned interest in him may have led him to a homicidal heart.
While the afore mentioned trio don’t have A Nightmare on Elm Street sequel or the like among their credits, they do have filmic fright alliances. Adair co-starred with television heartthrob Jack Scalia in The Rift (AKA Deadly Ascent– photo below), a water logged project about monstrous seaweed. Allport, meanwhile, memorably portrayed photog Freddy, who meets a grizzly end in the opening sequence of Gary Sherman’s Dead and Buried, a project that has developed a large cult following in the decades since its release. Lastly, De Lancie enacted the molesting Dr. Mott in The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, one of the most popular thrillers of the early ’90s.

Perhaps most significantly, this entry in the ever popular detective show was helmed by Paul Lynch, a Canadian auteur whose credits include the original Prom Night (with Jamie Lee Curtis) and Humungous, a beast in the woods opus that ran perpetually on late night cable in the mid-80s. Which besides the lovely charms of the always affable Lansbury, might make this a real reason for fright fans to check this enjoyable early finale out.
Until the next time, SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!






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Scripted by Lynne Kelsey, this storyline actually is one of the long running show’s most poignant. Graced with the series’ usual down home charms and lighthearted mystery, it also reflects, subtly, the emotional damage inflicted by parental misadventure. Runyon’s bruised portrayal aids greatly here, allowing the audience to feel, fully, for her character and proving that she would have been perfect to play tortured heroines in those gloomy noir epics of the 40s.