Beacon Hill

Season 1

CBS spent (and lost) a lot of money on this "Upstairs, Downstairs" ripoff detailing the relationships, battles and dramatic incidents involving members of the well-to-do Lassiter family in 1920s Boston and their Irish servants.

Where to Watch Beacon Hill • Season 1

11 Episodes

  • Beacon Hill
    E1
    Beacon HillIn the first episode, directed by Fielder Cook, it is learned that Benjamin Lassiter is a self-made multimillionaire who immigrated to Boston as a young man and married the daughter of one of the city's most prominent Irish families. He is shown to be heavily involved in local politics and at the dawn of Prohibition is buying a distillery in Scotland.
  • The Colonel and the Fawn
    E2
    The Colonel and the Fawn
  • The Marblehead Club
    E3
    The Marblehead ClubBen Lassiter is suddenly recognized by a socially prominent neighbor, who until now has snubbed the Lassiters, and suggests putting Ben up for membership in an exclusive club.
  • The Poor Little Thing
    E4
    The Poor Little ThingThe below-stairs staff awaits the arrival ol another of Mrs. Hacker's nieces from Ireland who impresses everyone as a shy, timid soul until she seems to respond to Brian and upsets Rosamond.
  • The Soldiers
    E5
    The SoldiersMr. Piper's son, Grant, a bookkeeper before he joined the Army, returns from World War 1 and refuses to bow to the Lassiters for a job.
  • The Shining Example
    E6
    The Shining ExampleThere's a lot of substance about politics, morality, and intrigue in this vivid and occasionally frightening hour. Democrat Benjamin Lassiter wants to keep his hand in the political arena, and even though he believes the republicans will take over the White House, he's determined to get a Democrat elected to the House of Representatives. How his plan of action interferes with the new "nightclub" Harry Emmett is putting over on young wounded Rob Lassiter, and how Harry's dangerous affair with the Lassiter granddaughter Betsy affects Rob add up to quite a drama.
  • The Speakeasy
    E7
    The SpeakeasyThings get down to the nitty gritty of life in prohibition Boston, in this thoroughly absorbing episode, during which young Rob Lassiter becomes an unwitting and furious dupe. Also, the Lassiter servants downstairs are so bewildered by the thought of a restaurant that doesn't serve food, that chauffeur Brian's curiosity is whetted to go barging into Harry Emmet's unscrupulous domain. The series is beginning to come into its own, as the characters, well played throughout, take on sufficient individuality to give the writers a better opportunity to improvise on their lives.
  • The Million Dollar Gate
    E8
    The Million Dollar GateLively, well played active episode, brimming with the life of the household, downstairs and up, written with a flair for the period and the series characters by Allan Sloane. Chauffeur Brian, beset with money troubles and ambition, becomes the dupe of a cool operator in the basement of the State House, and is arrested for illegally transporting films of the Dempsey-Carpentier fight across state lines. What is even more spectacular is the fact that Rob — self-pitying Rob — is actually talked into taking on Brian's case, the first time he's functioned as a lawyer since the war.
  • The Suitors
    E9
    The SuitorsThe best thing about this episode is its focus on Rosamond (Kitty Winn) as a young woman attractive to eligible men. In fact, watching Rosamond come alive under the attentions lavished on her by a handsome widower and an aggressive young bounder, is a particularly welcome change-of-pace from the "plain Jane" personality she's been stuck with on this series to date. Whether or not viewers will buy the contrived ending of the episode remains a question, but Rosamond aglow is a relief.
  • The Test
    E10
    The TestMovie buffs will get a special charge out of the best scene of the hour, when sappy dilettante Fawn get a choice opportunity to make a film test for a bit part in a D. W. Griffith movie. While arrogantly belittling cameraman Billy Bitzer's directions, she is magically interrupted by the great man himself who gives her a showstopping pointer or two. Roberts Blossom is particularly effective as Griffith, in an hour that also wakes brother Rob out of his alcoholic torpor on meeting a bright, sophisticated woman.
  • The Pretenders
    E11
    The PretendersJust as the series has been given the ax, the characters of the Lassiter family have begun to jell, their problems deepened, and their relationships enriched. Tonight, for example, there's a touching scene between brother Rob and sister Fawn that goes to the very marrow of his wounding fear he'll never be acceptable to women. There's another that shows the mettle of Benjamin Lassiter faced with a snub from the Brahmins in his family; and still another calling the shots on an unscrupulous investment speculators.
  • Maeve McGuireMaude Palmer
  • Nancy MarchandMary Lassiter
  • Holland TaylorMarilyn Gardiner
  • Beatrice StraightMrs. Hacker
  • Michael NouriGiorgio Bullock
  • Stephen ElliottBenjamin Lassiter
  • Edward HerrmannRichard Palmer
  • Linda PurlBetsy Bullock
  • David RoundsTerence O'Hara
  • Susan BlanchardMaureen Mahaffey
  • Kathryn WalkerFawn Lassiter
  • David DukesRobert Lassiter
  • George RoseArthur Hacker
  • Richard WardWilliam Piper
  • Kitty WinnRosamond Lassiter
  • Paul RuddBrian Mallory
  • Roy CooperTrevor Bullock
  • Barry SniderHarry Emmett
  • Sydney SwireEleanor
  • DeAnn MearsEmily Bullock

 

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