Mr. Lucky
Producer Blake Edwards had a hit with his unconventional TV detective show
Peter Gunn in 1958–59, and decided to create another show around an equally unlikely protagonist. For the 1959-60 television season he sold
CBS and two sponsors on
Mr. Lucky, a professional gambler who helped out others. As with
Peter Gunn actor
Craig Stevens, Vivyan was cast by Edwards for the way his appearance and style suggested film star
Cary Grant. Edwards even took both lead actors to his own tailor, to ensure their clothes projected a debonair style. Vivyan's own comment to an interviewer was "Nobody said I looked like Grant before this series". The show was an immediate success, helped considerably by the
Henry Mancini theme music and the presence of actor
Ross Martin as "Andamo", Mr. Lucky's sidekick. Mr. Lucky had his gambling operation on a yacht called
Fortuna II, anchored just beyond the then 3 mile legal limit for a major California port.
Tom Brown played "Lt. Rovacs", a police officer who was grudgingly helpful to Mr. Lucky and Andamo.
Pippa Scott played a recurring character who served as Mr Lucky's occasional love interest. Off-camera, she reportedly called John Vivyan "Vookie", as a teasing reference to his real last name and the then popular character of "Kookie" on
77 Sunset Strip. The real name of the character Mr. Lucky was never heard during the series, though a CBS network press release announcing a mid-season format change identified it as "Lucky Santell". The show used a former Las Vegas casino dealer named Joe Scott as the technical advisor for gambling. He also played a dealer on the
Fortuna II then its maitre d' after the casino yacht was converted to a restaurant. Despite critical acclaim and high ratings, Newspaper columnists offered several possible reasons, and for a while there was an effort by the producers to sell the show to other networks, but to no avail. Thus, Vivyan's fall from fame was almost as fast as his rise. ==Later career and life==