What I like about this episode is the Wilde's find themselves in the first of many catch 22 situations.
The laugh of it all, is Rupert is doing research for his latest novel, but unknown to him and his wife Amy, it leads them into a Hitchcock type situation.
What I like about this episode is everybody is spying on everyone. The result is that they all misunderstand each other. This episode has got a phoney telephone engineer, a beautiful female spy posing as a au pair, senior RAF officers, a spy chief, a suspected white-slaver, an irate literary agent and a pickpocket.
Both the two stars of this television show, Julia Foster and John Stride are a class act, and it is a good on screen partnership, which is similar to the Charles Bronson and Lee Remick partnership from the film Telefon which had just come out in cinemas at the same time.
The guest stars Judy Buxton, Jerome Willis and Donald Burton give fine performances in this episode.
I would describe this story as bittersweet.
The laugh of it all, is Rupert is doing research for his latest novel, but unknown to him and his wife Amy, it leads them into a Hitchcock type situation.
What I like about this episode is everybody is spying on everyone. The result is that they all misunderstand each other. This episode has got a phoney telephone engineer, a beautiful female spy posing as a au pair, senior RAF officers, a spy chief, a suspected white-slaver, an irate literary agent and a pickpocket.
Both the two stars of this television show, Julia Foster and John Stride are a class act, and it is a good on screen partnership, which is similar to the Charles Bronson and Lee Remick partnership from the film Telefon which had just come out in cinemas at the same time.
The guest stars Judy Buxton, Jerome Willis and Donald Burton give fine performances in this episode.
I would describe this story as bittersweet.