with
Robert Wagner in
It Takes a Thief, 1968
It Takes a Thief, which was created by television writer
Roland Kibbee, featured the adventures of Alexander Mundy, a cat
burglar, pickpocket, and thief, who steals to finance his life as a polished playboy and sophisticate. He is serving time in San Jobel prison when the U.S. government's SIA (the fictional Secret Intelligence Agency) proposes a deal to Mundy: steal for the government in exchange for his freedom. Mundy is puzzled and asks, "Let me get this straight. You
want me to steal?" In the main opening titles, his new SIA boss, Noah Bain, uses the catch phrase, "Oh, look, Al, I'm not asking you to
spy. I'm just asking you to
steal." In pre-production, the title for a while was
Once a Crook. The series opened with its
pilot episode, a ninety-minute (with commercials) special premiere titled "A Thief is a Thief is a Thief", written by Kibbee and directed by
Leslie Stevens. When the series was released in syndication in the 1970s, the pilot episode was withheld from the package and was expanded into a 99-minute feature film for overseas release; this was eventually released in a separate domestic syndication package, under the title
Magnificent Thief. The pilot feature film version was released on home video in the 1990s. In the series' third season, Throne was replaced by
Edward Binns as Mundy's SIA boss, Wally Powers, in some episodes. As Throne explained: "They had this idea of shooting the whole season in Italy, but they wanted me to stay behind and give Wagner’s character...orders over the phone. I told them if I didn't go I'd quit, and I did. The show didn't last another half a season." Throne's version of events was incorrect, as the third season was not shortened. In the end, portions of season three were filmed in Europe and Binns, Throne's replacement, filmed some scenes there. Also during the third season,
Fred Astaire played Alistair Mundy, Alexander's father, in five episodes (four on screen, one voice over that's not credited). Alistair is also a master gentleman-thief, who says bemusedly, at the start of each episode in which he appears, "I've heard of stealing
from the government, but
for the government?" Alistair was the lead character in most episodes in which he appeared, rather than Wagner's character of Alexander, who was relegated to supporting or even cameo roles in these episodes. This is somewhat reminiscent of the way the 1950s TV series
Maverick would introduce a relative of the previously established main character, and then alternate the two characters the leading series role from week to week. It was creator Roland Kibbee's idea to have a semiregular on the show who was related to Wagner's character, Alexander Mundy. The idea of Fred Astaire playing Alister Mundy came from Wagner's wardrobe man Hugie McFarland who also handled wardrobe for Astaire as well as for John Forsythe. Astaire was paid $25,000 per episode he appeared in, a tidy sum for 1970. Producer Glen Larson came up with the idea of how to introduce Alistair Mundy according to Wagner's autobiography,
Pieces of My Heart. Astaire's character makes his first appearance in the third season, episode four titled "The Great Casino Caper". This episode was shot in Venice. The story line was that Alistair had become estranged from Al because earlier in his career Al had been caught and was serving time in prison. This greatly disappointed Alistair. In the episode all is forgiven and they team up to rob a casino. This formula where father and son team up to pull off a heist was often repeated when Alistair Mundy appeared.
Susan Saint James appeared in five episodes.
Charlene Holt appeared in three episodes.
Ricardo Montalbán appeared in two episodes.
Stefanie Powers (Robert Wagner's future costar in the later series
Hart to Hart) appeared in one (third season) episode. Other guest stars included prominent veteran Hollywood movie stars such as
Bette Davis,
Gale Sondergaard,
Joseph Cotten,
Elsa Lanchester,
Hermione Gingold,
Paul Henreid,
Fernando Lamas, and
Ida Lupino. ==Cast==